by Paul E. Robinson

Classical Travels
Knowlton Festival Diary

One of the unique features of the two-year old Knowlton Festival (Québec) is the collaboration of the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia (ANSC), one of Italy’s leading music schools with the orchestre symphonique de Montréal under Kent Nagano.

The president of ANSC, Bruno Cagli, is involved in programme planning for the Knowlton Festival, and every season he includes performances by some of his outstanding students. This year,we heard six of them accompanied by the Festival Orchestra directed by Carlo Rizzari.

The concert was a sort of “Bel Canto Greatest Hits”, similar to the one presented last year by June Anderson and some ANSC students. Without a star of Anderson’s stature on the bill, however, it lost some of its audience appeal. With this in mind, the festival organizers might have considered reduced ticket prices. After all, an average price of $100 a seat is a lot to pay for a concert by students – however promising – whether they are from Rome or Montréal.

Maestro Rizzari also has a connection with the ANSC. He is the assistant conductor of its orchestra. One might assume that the ANSC orchestra is a “student orchestra” but one would be wrong. The Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia Symphony Orchestra is one of the best orchestras in Italy. Its current music director is Antonio Pappano and conductors of the stature of Masur, Eschenbach, Temirkanov, Tilson Thomas and Nagano appear with it regularly. Bernstein was a frequent guest conductor and made several recordings with the orchestra.

Festival Orchestra, Rizzari & Sparkling Rossini Overtures
On this night, Rizzari was in charge of the Festival Orchestra, which had already distinguished itself in the previous night’s performance of “La Sonnambula”. Most of the musicians were Québec players, but the concertmaster was Riccardo Minasi, a well-known Italian soloist and early music specialist.

Minasi teaches at the Conservatorio Bellini in Palermo and, earlier this year, took up a position as associate director of the Helsinki Baroque Orchestra. Presumably, the idea of engaging Minasi was to provide expertise in the area of bel canto style within the orchestra. The results were impressive. The orchestra gave us long singing lines and excellent precision, accompanied the singers with exceptional sensitivity and, on its own, contributed sparkling performances of two Rossini overtures.

Singers Delight Audience with Bel Canto “Hits”
With respect to the singers, I would say that they all displayed admirable training, but not much individuality – with one notable exception. And while this programme concentrated on bel canto repertoire, not one of the six seemed, in my opinion, outstandingly gifted in this idiom.

The notable exception was tenor Antonio Poli (photo: right). This young man has a voice of extraordinary natural beauty and he uses it with remarkable elegance and maturity. Poli and baritone Pedro José Quiralte Gómez sang beautifully in Bizet’s famous “Pearlfishers” duet, and in the quartet from Verdi’s “Rigoletto”, Poli really came into his element. His breath control and phrasing were outstanding and even in the loudest passages, there was never any sense of strain. I suspect that Poli will go on to a major career singing lyric roles in Mozart and early Verdi.

For the record, the other singers taking part were soprano Paola Leggeri, mezzo-soprano Anna Goryacheva and baritone Sergio Vitale. Their performances were certainly competent, but generally too studied to really come alive; for example, soprano Rosa Feola’s traversal of an aria from Rossini’s “La Donna del Lago”. Other interpretations were so restrained that I began to suspect the teachers at the ANSC of having actively discouraged any expression of passion or personality. It’s all very well to insist on the purity of bel canto style but in the final analysis, what makes music come alive is the combination of discipline and individuality. There was not much of the latter on display at this concert.

That said, it’s always a pleasure to hear young singers. This extraordinary collaboration between Knowlton and Rome is at the heart of the Knowlton Festival, and gives audiences an opportunity to hear voices trained at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, arguably the ultimate authority in bel canto style. Therein lies part of the excitement and the appeal of the Knowlton Festival each year. What will we hear this year, or next? Tomorrow’s stars? Possibly! The joy of discovery!

The evening’s audience may have been small – only about 300 in a tent which has been filled to a capacity of 850 at previous events, but if applause and standing ovations are a gauge of the success of a concert, it was definitely a success.

Next: Les Violons du Roy play Handel.

Paul E. Robinson is the author ofHerbert von Karajan: the Maestro as Superstar“, and “Sir Georg Solti: His Life and Music“, both available at Amazon.com.