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Published: Monday, 18 November 2024 at 11:32 AM


Read on to discover the fantastic plots and marvellous music from 15 forgotten operas ripe for rediscovery…

Here’s a mystery: if there are 1,800 individual works worth an entry in the Grove Dictionary of Opera, how come everyone just wants to see Carmen, La bohème and La traviata all the time? Why are we fixated on watching the same few unlucky girls hurrying to their early graves, when there exist so many more imaginative ways to slaughter your heroines?

Galloping to the rescue, repeatedly, comes record label Opera Rara, whose multiple recordings of forgotten operas show that there are loads of exciting ways for your heroine to snuff it: we discover Gabriella di Vergy keeling over from shock when presented with the still-warm heart of her beloved; Rosmonda being poshly stabbed to death by Eleanor of Aquitaine; and Maria Padilla dying out of ‘a surfeit of joy’. The company has been ahead of the game in restoring Donizetti and Rossinis overlooked works, so here are a few more suggestions for the next decades…

Forgotten operas ripe for rediscovery…

1. Tsar Saltan – Nikolay Rimsky-Korsakov, 1900

Where to start? How about here, with Rimsky-Korsakov, the most prolific opera composer to be almost completely ignored (outside Russia, at any rate). Prince Gvidon turns into a bumblebee in the score’s only well-known bit. The reason? Well, he needs to get a message to his father in the royal court and deliver a couple of well-aimed stings to his horrid aunts there too. There’s also a squirrel with golden nuts. It’s an enchanting fairy-tale opera, and the orchestra makes the most amazing sounds.