“VERY BEAUTIFUL, IMAGINATIVE AND FULL OF STRONG SITUATIONS”: FIRST EDITION OF VERDI’S IL TROVATORE
VERDI, Giuseppe. Il Trovatore. Milan: Ricordi, [1853]. Oblong folio, modern three-quarter straight-grain green calf gilt, marbled boards and endpapers.
First authorized edition (and, according to Fuld, first edition), piano-vocal score, fully engraved.
Verdi originally intended to follow Rigoletto with a setting of Shakespeare’s King Lear, but it never got further than extensive notes by both Verdi and his librettist Cammarano. “Verdi then suggested Cammarano might take a look at El trovador by the Spanish playwright García Guttiérrez-a work described by the composer as ‘very beautiful, imaginative and full of strong situations.’ The composer bullied the writer into adapting the play into something that would give him the maximum of creative leeway: ‘the more he provides me with the originality and freedom of form the better I shall be able to do.’ The end product… is packed with crowd-pleasing solo turns, big choruses, thrilling climaxes and complex ensemble finales… Crucially, however, as Caruso remarked, it does require ‘the four greatest singers in the world” (Boyden, 225-6). First performed in 1853, Il Trovatore has remained one of Verdi’s most popular operas. The Ricordi edition is the first authorized edition, and likely the first edition as well, as so identified by Fuld. Fuld identifies this 1853 Ricordi printing as the first edition. With nine corner dates (between 4/2/52 and 9/6/53), as noted in Hopkinson. Fuld, 102-3. Hopkinson 54A(e).
Occasional light foxing. A beautiful copy. Scarce.