Description
FERNANDO DE LUCIA (NAPLES, 11 OCTOBER, 1860 – NAPLES, 21 FEBRUARY, 1925)
He studied at the Naples Music Conservatory with Vincenzo Lombardi and Beniamino Carelli. He made his debut at the Teatro di San Carlo, Naples, as Gounod’s Faust in 1885. Over the next two or three years he sang in Spain, South America and in the smaller Italian opera houses, in Linda di Chamounix, Dinorah, L’elisir d’amore, Fra Diavolo and La sonnambula. While in Madrid he was hired by Augustus Harris and Herman Klein for his first London appearances in the Drury Lane season of 1887; but although Klein liked his Alfredo, he went comparatively unnoticed due to the British debut of the charismatic tenor Jean de Reszke. His Almaviva in Il barbiere di Siviglia (a role later closely associated with him) was described as “truly detestable” by The Times newspaper. On October 31, 1891, De Lucia took part in the world premiere of L’amico Fritz, singing the role of Fritz Kobus opposite the French diva Emma Calvé. The opera had been composed by the up-and-coming musician Pietro Mascagni and its debut occurred in Rome at the Costanzi Theatre. For a singer later upheld (by some) as the rarified model of bel canto style the situation was originally quite otherwise; De Lucia was, in fact, famous during his career not as a bel canto stylist, but as a performer of Mascagni and Ruggero Leoncavallo’s earthy, melodramatic verismo characters. De Lucia capitalized on Europe’s Mascagni craze of the early 1890s. Accordingly, in November 1892, he was engaged by the Florence opera house to create the tenor lead in Mascagni’s third opera, I Rantzau. Appearing with him in the work was the virtuoso baritone Mattia Battistini. De Lucia’s verismo-opera career continued apace with the first English performance (on 19 May 1893, with Enrico Bevignani conducting), of Leoncavallo’s Pagliacci, opposite Nellie Melba and Mario Ancona. De Lucia sang the part of Canio, which had been created a year earlier in Milan by Fiorello Giraud. Klein describes an audience breathless with excitement, and De Lucia’s burning intensity in the role as a triumph of realism. Mascagni made his own London debut at Covent Garden, conducting L’amico Fritz on June 19, 1893 with Calvé and, of course, De Lucia in the cast. Soon afterwards, again with Calvé, and accompanied by the song composer Paolo Tosti, De Lucia sang excerpts from Cavalleria rusticana for Queen Victoria at Windsor. On July 7 of that year, appearing in a cast which included soprano Nellie Melba and the baritones Mario Ancona and David Bispham, he gave the first British performance of I Rantzau at Covent Garden. (The opera was not a great success.). In 1893-94, De Lucia sang in New York City at the Metropolitan Opera. He repeated his Canio with Melba and Ancona, and this was esteemed; but he was disliked as Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni and as the Duke of Mantua in Rigoletto. He did not repeat the experience. In London in 1894, he performed both Cavalleria rusticana and Pagliacci (together on the one night) at Covent Garden, with Ancona in the lead baritone parts. Shawadmired the “‘altogether exceptional dramatic force” which their performances gave to the pair of works. That season he was also in a bilingual (French-Italian) Faust, with Melba, Ancona and Bauermeister. De Lucia sang at La Scala in 1895 in the world premiere of Mascagni’s Silvano, and also appeared in the first Milan performances of Puccini’s La bohème and Massenet’s La Navarraise. The American baritone David Bispham thought De Lucia admirable in Fra Diavolo that year. The cast of Auber’s light-hearted opera featured Bispham and Mme Amadi (as Lord and Lady Allcash) and Marie Engle (as Zerlina), as well as the bass Vittorio Arimondi and the buffo baritone Antonio Pini-Corsi (as brigands). In 1896, in Milan, De Lucia appeared as Cavaradossi in Tosca, and again as Almaviva. The next year, he sang in a state concert at London’s Buckingham Palace to mark Queen Victoria’s Royal Jubilee. At the Costanzi Theatre, Rome, on 22 November 1898, he created the role of Osaka in Mascagni’s Iris, and at Covent Garden on 12 July 1900 he played Cavaradossi in the first performance of Tosca in England, supporting the Floria Tosca of Milka Ternina, with Antonio Scotti as Scarpia and Luigi Mancinelli conducting. De Lucia was also admired in London as Don Jose in Bizet’s Carmen. He appeared, too, in the same composer’s I pescatori di perle and in various works by Rossini, Bellini and Verdi. His last London season would be in 1905, in an outstanding operatic company assembled by Henry Russell for the Waldorf Theatre (now the Novello Theatre). In 1916, De Lucia delivered his farewell performance at La Scala as Rodolfo. He said goodbye to his loyal Neapolitan supporters the following year at the Teatro di San Carlo. De Lucia’s final appearance before the public occurred at the funeral of the incomparable Enrico Caruso in Naples in 1921. In his later years, De Lucia dwelt in Naples and taught at the conservatory there, in which he himself had been trained. His most famous pupil was the French tenor Georges Thill. He died in his native city of Naples.
His career evolved as follows:
1888 Madrid Teatro Reale Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1891 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Carmen (Don Jose)
1891 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Cavalleria Rusticana (Turiddu)
1891 Roma Teatro Costanzi Cavalleria Rusticana (Turiddu)
1892 Madrid Teatro Reale Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1895 St. Petersburg Acquarium Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1895 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Cavalleria Rusticana (Turiddu)
1895 Montevideo Nuovo Politeama Cavalleria Rusticana (Turiddu)
1896 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1897 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Cavalleria Rusticana (Turiddu)
1897 Buenos Ayres Teatro dell’Opera Boheme (Rodolfo)
1897 Montevideo Teatro Solis Boheme (Rodolfo)
1898 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1898 Lisbon Teatro San Carlo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1899 London Covent Garden Boheme (Rodolfo)
1899 Lisbon Teatro San Carlo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1900 London Covent Garden Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1901 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1902 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1903 Palermo Teatro Massimo Boheme (Rodolfo)
1904 Lisbon Teatro San Carlo Carmen (Don Jose)
1905 Milan La Scala Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1906 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1908 Roma Teatro Costanzi Barbiere di Siviglia (Almaviva)
1916 Milan La Scala Boheme (Rodolfo)
TRACKLIST
- Scetate (Costa) 92713 XPh4461 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-10
- Fenesta che lucive (Cottrau (label Bellini)) 92715 XPh4462 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-10
- Chi sa (Tosti) 92718 XPh4463 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-10
- Luna nova (Costa) 92702 XPh4465 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-10
- Serenata scumbinata (Valente) 92698 XPh4466 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Marechiare (Tosti) 92699 XPh4467 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Lu cardillo (Labriola) 92700 XPh4468 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Matenata (Nardella) 92697 XPh4469 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Comm’ ‘o zuccaro (Fonzo) 92711 XPh4470 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Ammore che gira (Buongiovanni) 92724 XPh4471 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Palomma ‘e notte (Buongiovanni) 92719 XPh4472 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- Durmenno (de Leva) 92703 XPh4473 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-11
- ‘O marenariello (Gambardella) 92706 XPh4474 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Mamma mia che vo’ sape (Nutile) 92723 XPh4476 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Si chiagnere me siente (Gambardella) 92722 XPh4477 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Tu sola! (Gambardella) 92721 XPh4478 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Serenata napulitana (Costa) 92717 XPh4479 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Voce ‘e notte (de Curtis) 92710 XPh4480 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Carmela (de Curtis) 92708 XPh4481 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Canta pe’ me! (de Curtis) 92716 XPh4482 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-12
- Era de maggio (Costa) 92712 XPh4483 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Torna a Surriento (de Curtis) 92705 XPh4484 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Dimme (Gambardella) 92707 XPh4485 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Napulitanata (Costa) 92714 XPh4486 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Luna lu (Ricciardi) (w. chorus) 92720 XPh4487 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- O sole mio (di Capua) 92701 XPh4488 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Vo’ turna (de Curtis) 92704 XPh4489 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Serenata a Surriento (de Curtis) 92709 XPh4490 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-13
- Mattinata (Leoncavallo) 92695 XPh4491 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-14
- A suon di baci (Baldelli) 92696 XPh4492 Fonotipia, Milano 1911-01-14

























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