a portion of No. 2 from Part I : Jerusalem of Nabucco, an opera in Italian by Giuseppe Verdi
Libretto : Temistocle Solera (English translation)
Let's begin with the summary provided by The Aria Database.
- Role : Zaccaria, the High Priest of the Hebrews
- Setting : the Temple of Solomon, ancient Jerusalem
- Synopsis : The Assyrian army led by Nabucco has defeated the army of the Hebrews and is now poised to enter the city and defeat the Israelites once and for all. The Hebrews are scared of what is to come and begin to pray for deliverance. Zaccaria comes along, though, and revives their hope by telling them that Nabucco's daughter is their prisoner. Besides, he goes on to sing, didn't the Lord bring them out of Egypt safely? Likewise, God will defeat this army with the same power and might.
- Translation and/or Aria Text : Libretto entered by Robert Glaubitz.
- Recordings : Complete Opera Excerpts from Opera
- Where to Find It : Buy complete score online at Sheet Music Plus.
- Voice Part : bass Fach : lyric bass
- Range : A2 to F4. Tessitura : E3 to E4
Overall, this first scene of the opera shows Zaccaria supporting the Hebrews at their immanent defeat by the Assyrians. Following a complex of emotions from a chorus of Hebrews, Zaccaria encourages their hope with a recitative Sperate o figli.that has three distinct segments. Zaccaria's aria D'Egitto là su i lidi is a cavatina that has a form of A, B, A, B, Coda-cadenza.
Composed for performance in 1842, the scene uses accompanied recitative and chorus, much like cantatas by Bach (1685-1750) and operas by Mozart (1756-1791). Verdi was composing solidly in the shadow of Donizetti (1797-1848), Bellini (1801-1835), and Rossini (1792–1868)—and hoping for a success to bring his craft to light. And indeed, Nabucco was Verdi's first great success. It followed his first opera Oberto (1839), which was a moderate success, and his second opera Un giorno di regno (1840), which was a disaster. Nabucco established Verdi's reputation and catapulted him to the ranks of Donizetti, Bellini, and Rossini.
Of the three Italian composers, only Donizetti was still producing works for the opera house in 1842. In Germany, Richard Wagner had just premiered his third opera Rienzi in 1840 and was completing his Der fliegende Holländer for premiere later in 1842. In France, Meyerbeer's grand opera Les Huguenots (1836) may have had great influence on Verdi's developing style. Works for the Opéra Comique by Auber (Le domino noir of 1837 and Les diamants de la couronne of 1841) and Adolphe Adam (La rose de Péronne of 1840 and La main de fer, ou Un mariage secret of 1841) may have been noticed by Verdi.
Although Verdi was an inheritor of the bel canto style, his roles typically require a heavier tone to compete with the weightier orchestration. Perhaps to support the requirement for vocal production, both the recitative and aria hold to a limited tessitura and allow bravura high tones and low only in a few instances.
Recitative accompagnato
Page 21: recitative and chorus | |
Page 22: recitative and chorus |
Zaccaria's Cavatina follows a chorus that ends in an E-major expression of fear of the Assyrians. His rejoinder to hope in God starts with a recitative that moves from E major (pages 21 and 22) through B major, C-sharp, D major, and G major, which becomes the dominant seventh to his aria in C-major. The orchestration moves from brass domination at the end of the chorus toward the aria that has a gentler string orchestra mixture.
page 21—Recitative di Zaccaria: "Sperate o figli! Iddio del suo poter die segnol ei trasse inpoter mio un prezioso pegno; del re nemico prole, pace apportar ci puo." Chorus: "Di lieto giorno un sole forse per noi spunto!"
Key
The recitative begins in E major and progresses over ten measures through four tone centers (B, C-sharp, D, and G) to C major.Tempo
The recitative remains in common time throughout, though the bass has great opportunity to vary his declamation as needed, with and opening three measures unaccompanied followed by five paired measures of accompaniment that allow great freedom of expression. Only when the chorus interjects its hope does a conductor take charge, for a mere four measures. The bass resumes his soloist line to begin a small cadenza that includes the only points in the recitative where a single syllable of text has several tones—first with a C-major scale, and finally with an outline of the dominant seventh.Length
The recitative has 24 measures, including a two-measure repetition of the tonic in the orchestra before the primary declamation starts. A typical performance takes less than two minutes.Range
The recitative range spans A2 through E4.Tessitura
The recitative holds primarily to a limited tessitura of G3 to B3 until it reaches the codetta. The codetta begins with a single tone above (C4) and few tones below the middle tessitura (A2 to C3). Most contours in the cadenza are of steps or of small leaps of a third or fourth.
The highest tessitura is reached over five measures, starting at F3, scaling from C3 to C4, then reaching D4, stepping to C4 and dropping to G3, and making a leap of a sixth to E4 before the line drops into the middle register again to outline the dominant seventh and end on C3.Contour
The initial declamation holds strongly to repeated tones or to stepwise movement, with exceptions at the end of two phrases. The codetta has some larger leaps mixed with stepwise movement and small leaps of a third. The table provides a count of all movement other than repetitions and steps.Interval | Number of leaps up | Number of leaps down |
---|---|---|
Third | 3 | 3 |
Fourth | 2 | 3 |
Fifth | 2 | 1 |
Sixth | 2 | 0 |
Seventh | 1 | 1 |
Octave | 1 | 2 |
Ninth | 0 | 0 |
Tenth | 0 | 0 |
Eleventh | 0 | 0 |
Twelfth | 0 | 0 |
Thirteenth | 0 | 0 |
Fourteenth | 0 | 0 |
Double octave | 0 | 0 |
The phrase lengths average two measures until the codetta, where each phrase is more expanded to three measures.
Cavatina
Page 22: recitative and aria |
Chorus "Va pensiero" |
page 22—Zaccaria: "Freno al timor! Freno al timor! v'affidi d'Iddio l'eterna aita." Andante maestoso "D'Egito là sui lidi ...(Curb your fears! Place your trust in God's eternal help. There on the shores of Egypt...)
Page 23: aria A and B sections, with bassoon arpeggiation |
Zacccaria continues to express his belief and to urge the Hebrews to keep their hope. But a bassoon arpeggio joins him in the B section, as if to mock Zaccaria's assertion that God will support them, if their trust is pure.
page 23—"Egli a Mosè diè vita; di Gedeone i cento invitti ei rese undi... Chi nell' estremo evento fidando in Lui, in Lui peri? (... He procured Moses his life; once he made the hundred men of Gideon invincible. Who, trusting in him, has ever perished in the hour of extremity?)
Page 24: aria B section, chorus answer |
page 24—"chi nell' estreno, estreno evento fidando in Lui peri? fidando in Lui, chi fidando in Lui peri?" Chorus: "Di lieto giorno un sole," Zaccaria: "Freno al timor!"
Page 25: aria A' section, with chorus also voicing the primary theme |
page 25—Chorus: "...di lieto giorno un sole," Zaccaria: "Freno al timor!" Chorus: "...di lieto giorno un sole," Zaccaria: "...v'affidi d'Iddio...
Page 26: end of A' with B' |
As the A' section closes, the bassoon arpeggiation returns, along with Zaccaria's expression of his belief and urgings to keep their hope.
page 26—"l'eterna aita." Chorus: "...forse per noi spunto!" Zaccaria: "chi nell' estremo, estremo evento fidando in Lui peri?" Chorus: "per noi spunto!" Zaccaria: "chi nell' estremo,
Page 27: area of the flat third and a series of soft cadences to C major, with G7cadenza |
As if the chorus needs to understand how extreme the circumstance can become for them, Verdi jumps suddenly to a C-minor chord and then to a cadence of the dominant seventh and tonic of E-flat before he resolves in favor of C major.
Zaccaria offers many times his exhortation "Curb your fears!" ending with a final mini-cadenza before the last cadence.
page 27—"estremo evento fidando in Lui peri? fidando in Lui, fidando in Lui, chi fidando in Lui peri?" Chorus: "per noi spunto!" Zaccaria: "Freno al timor!" Chorus: "per noi spunto!" Zaccaria: "Freno, freno al timor"
Page 28: final tonic |
The aria ends on its tonic, but with the added insecurity of the woodwind choir swirling around the third and fifth of the scale.
page 28—final tonic of C major that immediately shifts to A minor for Ismaele to announce the coming of the Assyrian king, Nabucco.
Key
The cavatina begins in C major and remains in the same key with two repeated moments of tonal uncertainty. One moment occurs in E-flat major, for two measures that lengthen and soften a cadence that closes the B section. The other moment occurs in E major, for a swirling mordant that marks the recapitulation of the A section.Tempo
The cavatina is marked Andante maestoso in common time throughout, though each quarter note has a triplet figure in opposition to a dotted eighth. Thus, the overall effect is primarily 12/8.Length
The cavatina has 42 measures, including a two-measure "vamp" in the orchestra before the primary motive occurs. At a rate of quarter = 60, the cavatina may be performed in less than five minutes.Range
The range spans G2 through F4.Tessitura
Aria vocal line for Zaccaria |
The higher tessitura (D4, E4-flat, and E4) is exercised only for the tops of nine phrases through the middle parts of the aria, and the highest note (F4) occurs only once, in the cadence at the aria's end.
The lowest tessitura (G2 through D3) is used hardly at all, accounting for less than 10% of the tones. These low notes occur shortly after the highest note, in the final cadence.
Form
Zaccaria's aria D'Egitto là sui lidi is a cavatina that has a form ofA, B, A, B, Coda-cadenza
The two-phrase A section (mm. 163-170) is followed by a three-phrase B section (mm. 171-180). The A section and B section repeat with slight modifications. The coda-cadenza contains one phrase.
The primary motive is first stated in the orchestra as an introduction, then twice by Zaccaria. In the return of the A section, the motive is voiced four times by the chorus, and Zaccaria joins in part of the line only in the fourth occurrence. The first motive of the B section occurs only once each time the B section occurs.
Aria motif A |
This primary theme is first stated by the orchestra as introduction, then twice by Zaccaria (mm. 163 and 167). Then at the repetition of the A section, the chorus states it three times more (mm. 180, 182, and 184). Finally, Zaccaria states a portion at m. 185.
Aria motif B |
Aria motif C |
Aria motif D |
Aria motif E |
Aria motif F |
Aria motif G |
Aria motif H |
Aria motif J |
Aria motif K |
Aria motif L |
Aria motif M |
Aria motif N |
Aria motif Q |
Aria motif R |
Contour
The initial statement of the melodic motive and its one repetionby the bass constitute the primary example of a disjointed melody. The phrase that completes the initial motive has only one upward leap of a third, which is surrounded by steps. The answering phrase
is slightly more intricate and has the first use of the higher tessitura. The A theme retains a focus on stepwise movement with a few leaps a third up.
In contrast, the B theme revels somewhat in leaps. The theme's first phrase leaps up a major sixth, though the release is a generally stepwise descent to an octave. The leap relates to the minor-sixth leap in the initial motive of the A theme, though it is not emphasized with a second use.
The table provides a count of all movement other than repetitions and steps.
Interval | Number of leaps up | Number of leaps down |
---|---|---|
Third | 14 | 11 |
Fourth | 5 | 7 |
Fifth | 2 | 0 |
Sixth | 6 | 2 |
Seventh | 0 | 2 |
Octave | 2 | 2 |
Ninth | 0 | 0 |
Tenth | 2 | 2 |
Eleventh | 0 | 0 |
Twelfth | 0 | 0 |
Thirteenth | 0 | 0 |
Fourteenth | 0 | 0 |
Double octave | 0 | 0 |