Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOREWORD BY JULIAN BUDDEN
- PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION
- PREFACE TO THE ITALIAN EDITION
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE TEXT
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- Chapter 1 Oberto and Un giorno di regno
- Chapter 2 Nabucco and I Lombardi alla prima crociata
- Chapter 3 Ernani to Attila
- Chapter 4 Macbeth and I Masnadieri
- Chapter 5 Jérusalem to La battaglia di Legnano
- BOOK III
- APPENDIX (BOOK IV UNFINISHED)
- A LIST OF VERDI'S OPERAS
- INDEX
Chapter 2 - Nabucco and I Lombardi alla prima crociata
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOREWORD BY JULIAN BUDDEN
- PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH EDITION
- PREFACE TO THE ITALIAN EDITION
- ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THE TEXT
- BOOK I
- BOOK II
- Chapter 1 Oberto and Un giorno di regno
- Chapter 2 Nabucco and I Lombardi alla prima crociata
- Chapter 3 Ernani to Attila
- Chapter 4 Macbeth and I Masnadieri
- Chapter 5 Jérusalem to La battaglia di Legnano
- BOOK III
- APPENDIX (BOOK IV UNFINISHED)
- A LIST OF VERDI'S OPERAS
- INDEX
Summary
The origins of Nabucco are steeped in an aura of legend, mostly because this opera marks the emergence of Verdi's individual style. In fact it began at the lowest ebb of his fortunes, after the young man had been practically booed off the stage, and had sent all the furniture from his Milanese home back to Busseto: he must have considered it useless and too painful to remain there alone after all the tender associations had been rooted out. The handwritten, almost too detailed list of furniture which Verdi sent to Barezzi has come down to us, and provides a brief glimpse into the sadness of this move:
…Six mattresses in six parcels; six cushions in one parcel, plus two walnut sofas, with nine frames and four arms, three walnut chests and eighteen walnut chairs, the eighteen cushions of which are wrapped in one parcel, and these sofas, chests and chairs are worth 150 Austrian lire. The weight of the wool is forty-one rubbi.
The furniture remained at Busseto, and Verdi put it out of his life, like his destroyed family. He returned to Milan, to feed his melancholy and lack of confidence, and also to attend a revival of Oberto, which did not however repeat its original success:‘ … the music (especially in the first act) seemed to many more insipid this year than last’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Story of Giuseppe VerdiOberto to Un Ballo in Maschera, pp. 49 - 68Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1980