Il Gusto Barocco - Muzio Scevola - Mozartsaal, Liederhalle Stuttgart

Immediately after performing George Frideric Handel’s Ariodante at the Göttingen Händel Festival, I segued into another Handel (pasticcio) opera project, Il Muzio Scevola, with Il Gusto Barocco in Stuttgart. This opera featured a Prologue which had been specially written for the occasion by Th. W. Leininger in 2021 to a text from 1723 (Hamburg). The first act was by Filippo Amadei, with a second act by Giovanni Bononcini and the third act by Handel. The concert began at 17:00 on Sunday 12th September 2021, and it took place in the Mozartsaal of Stuttgart’s Liederhalle. The performance of this extraordinarily long work finished at around 22:20; it ran in the format of Prologue, Act 1, interval, Act 2, interval, Act 3.

The trumpets were involved in the Prologue, which began with a suite of movements reminiscent of Rococo or Classical styles; a later movement in the Prologue included a trumpet aria in a different style. We were also involved in Act 1 with three movements and a trumpet call after the inscription ‘Si ferma per la Tromba’ [‘Stops for the Trumpet’] in one of the recitatives. We were tacet in all of Act 2, and did not play again until the end of Act 3. We worked out that we had until at least 20:30 before we needed to return to the hall. So I returned to the hotel, changed my shirt (it was hot on stage), and we had time to explore some more of Stuttgart and eat an apple strudel before returning to the hall for 20:30. When we returned we were still in plenty of time, and we returned exactly as the Third Act began. We followed a score from off stage, and the horns, flute, trumpets and timpanist [editorial] had been permitted to enter the stage after No.36, where the director, Jörg Halubek, had planned to make a short break for a tuning check. 

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I played first trumpet with Sam Kinrade on second trumpet. Sam had travelled out on Thursday to rehearse with Il Gusto Barocco at Kloster Obermarchtal on Friday. Sadly, I did not get to visit this historic venue, as I was performing in the Handel Festival in Göttingen on Friday. The orchestra had allowed me to arrive a day later and Sam kindly marked up my part with notes from the rehearsal in Obermarchtal. Early on Saturday morning, I departed Götttingen on a direct ICE train to Stuttgart and walked to the hotel. We rehearsed in the Mozartsaal and we rehearsed the piece and Südwestrundfunk (SWR) radio placed microphones to record us from their mobile studio van outside. The performance will be played back on the radio at a later date.   

Jörg Halubek (Director)
Muzio Scevola: Filippo Mineccia (Alto)
Orazio: Inna Husieva (Sopran)
Porsena: Josep-Ramon Olivé (Bass)
Clelia: Fanie Antonelou (Sopran)
Irene: Sedar Amir-Karayan (Alt)
Fidalma: Amelia Sciccolone (Sopran)
Traquino: Andrea Conangla (Sopran)

It was an extraordinary effort from all involved to perform such a time-consuming work. The continuo section deserves special mention for their infallible concentration and excellent playing over such a long period of time. It was also great to meet the two horn players who performed the first Brandenburg Concerto on Il Gusto Barocco’s CD of all six Brandenburg Concertos, of which I featured in the second concerto.

Before the concert began, we had a photoshoot with Steffen Geldner on a front-of-house staircase at the Mozartsaal. 

It was great to spend a few extra days in Germany after the Göttingen Händel Festival, and it was fantastic to explore Stuttgart with Sam. We did a fair amount of walking, exploring the markets and inner city area, and we also walked to the viewpoint at the top of the Karlshöhe park, with a good view over the city. After the concert, we unfortunately could not join the orchestra for the social event afterwards, as we had an early alarm (4:45am) before a 5am trip to the airport.

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Russell Gilmour
Russell Gilmour Blog
writing on music, photography, engraving, travel and life as a freelance professional musician.