Zanetto Susanna’s Secret review – swooning melodies, colour and wit
almost 6 years in The guardian
St Mary’s Church, HaddingtonScottish Opera returned to the Lammermuir festival in upbeat form with a pair of contrasting one-act operas
Following on from last year’s Lammermuir festival to which they brought one of Britten’s stylised, quasi-religious Church Parables, Scottish Opera returned with a pair of contrasting one-act operas. Wolf-Ferrari’s Susanna’s Secret, a witty comedy of manners and misunderstanding, is a work that gets more than an occasional outing; the same cannot be said of Pietro Mascagni’s Zanetto, apparently receiving its Scottish premiere here 120 years after its first performance.
Zanetto is a melodrama-tinged piece, not so much a rounded one-act opera as a sketch detailing an encounter between its two characters: Silvia, a worldly-wise courtesan, here played by soprano Sinéad Campbell-Wallace, and Zanetto, a carefree travelling minstrel (mezzo Hanna Hipp). In best Brief Encounter fashion, they meet, connect and ultimately go their separate ways. It’s an operatic storm in a teacup; nothing really happens to justify Mascagni’s passionate, overwhelming music, at times reminiscent of his more familiar Cavalleria Rusticana. But it’s easy to sit back and let the swooning melodies overwhelm, especially here given the richly sung performances, Campbell-Wallace’s powerful but burnished soprano sinuously intertwining with Hipp’s seductive darker hues. Continue reading...