Email Me Home Calendar Composers Other Writings Share View comments Previous Next |
February 27: Giuseppe Verdi: Celeste Aïda from Aïda I cannot decide whether culturally, we are better or worse off than a hundred years ago. Certainly during this century radio, television, and now the Internet have the potential to bring information and knowledge to even the remotest parts of the globe. At first blush, you might think few places remain untouched by Western culture. (Of course, many Europeans might say, "corrupted" by American culture.) This technology coupled with universal free education, could-in the last decade of the 20th and the first decade of the 21st centuries-cause an absolute explosion of ideas. Radames a young warrior in Pharaoh's army sings the aria, Celeste Aïda (heavenly Aïda) at the beginning of the opera. The army is about to go to war with Ethiopia, and he will lead the campaign. In the aria, he declares his love for the slave girl Aïda, who is the captured daughter of the King of Ethiopia. Aïda serves Amneris, Pharaoh's daughter, who is in love with Radames. (You can see where this is going.) In Radames' aria he hopes that he can lead his troops well and win the battle so he can say to Aïda, "I've fought for you. I've won for you." Then he sings:
Such grand themes. What connection did this story have with the people of Verdi's day? Aïda is based on a story created by a leading Egyptologist of the day. The previous century Napoleon had campaigned in Egypt, and his troops discovered the Rosetta Stone. With the spoils he sent back and Champollion successfully translating hieroglyphics, Europe came under the spell of Egyptiana. Both England and France were busy building empires during the 19th century, which some might argue did more damage than any McDonalds at the foot of the Great wall of China.
Verdi wrote Aïda in 1871 for the Khedive of Egypt to commemorate the opening of the Suez Canal. Verdi was 58 at the time and of such a stature that he was able to command the equivalent of $200,000 in today's money, to write the opera. It premiered in Cairo on Christmas Eve and in Milan about a month and a half later. It was met with immediate success and remains a standard of the repertoire.
When Verdi died in 1901, the entire population of Italy went into mourning for him. I used to marvel at this, until I moved to Naples in 1980. When I first arrived, a friend of a friend put me up in an old 18th century palazzo that had been turned into apartments. He had a daughter who was about 9 or 10 at the time. My room was next to the bathroom. One day, I awoke to the sound of this little girl, who during her morning ablutions, stopped to belt out a rousing popular Neapolitan song of the day. On another occasion, while sitting in a restaurant in the back streets of Naples one Sunday morning, a middle-aged man drove up on his Vespa on which he had affixed a crate for carrying the bottles of seltzer water he was delivering. When he alit, he stopped and suddenly burst into a beautiful love song that echoed throughout the narrow streets.
Sometimes artists put down the common people as being philistinic and unappreciative of their art, but the fact of the matter is that how technology and education is used and who uses it is a political decision with serious economic underpinnings. Before we go name calling, it's important to figure out who's pulling the strings.
|