The Black Opera (24 page)

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Authors: Mary Gentle

BOOK: The Black Opera
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“When you're in jail!” Roberto Capiraso scrolled up his pages of notes, and slapped them down in front of Conrad, while he himself moved over to the piano. “Write me some verses, poet!”

Forty-eight hours later, Conrad leaned a hand on the desk to read the
stretta
of Act 1 Scene 6 over Il Superbo's shoulder, frowned and shook his head.

“The final scene doesn't have enough power. Put as much effort into it as you would the end of the
second
act!”

Roberto Capiraso looked first bewildered, and then annoyed. He scowled, as if temper might hide any momentary weakness. “Very well, Signore Professional Librettist—why the second act?”

Conrad raked his fingers through his hair, and realised he did not look Romantically dishevelled, like the English Mister Lord Byron, but like an urchin come in from fighting in the street.

“Where does the interval come? The
interval!”
Conrad persisted. “When they go out to eat and drink and gamble, and talk to their friends, and maybe don't come back to hear the rest of the opera? True, yes, you want word-of-mouth after the final act, friends telling friends how good the opera is and that they should see it. But if you don't get bums back on benches and bodies back in the Pit after the interval, you'll never make the third day when the run breaks even!”

Roberto Capiraso scowled again. Even if Conrad did note the corner of his mouth turn up.

“Very well. As much effort as would be necessary to nail a
professional
audience to their benches…”

The Conte di Argente dipped his pen-nib in the inkpot, crossed out half a page, and began to write on the staves again, slowly, with long pauses between phrases.

Two days after that, Roberto Capiraso, Conte di Argente, entered GianGiacomo Spinelli's lodgings, disguised from any observers in soundly middle-class clothing.

He tossed a sheaf of papers on the table. Conrad recognised it as the current synopsis (to Act III) and partial draft of Act I, annotated with suggested remaining voice-roles for the working-titled
L'Altezza azteca, ossia Il serpente pennuto—The Aztec Princess, Or, The Plumed Serpent
.

Conrad made introductions to Spinelli and the others present, and allowed the Count the pleasure of telling Sandrine Furino that she had a part in
The Aztec Princess
.

“As
the Aztec princess,” Roberto confirmed—seeming rather charmed by this slight, dark-haired, well-dressed woman, and the look on her face at the news. “Princess Tayanna, inheritor of her father's throne, ruler of the Aztec lands. Essentially a mezzo role, but I'm told your tessitura includes a strong contralto base?”

“Oh yes…” Sandrine beamed blissfully.

JohnJack patted her shoulder as he found his own seat around the ancient parlour-size grand piano. He read with Sandrine, since most of their first duet was in place. Velluti, who should have been present, apparently thought he need not join rehearsals just yet; Conrad resolved to have a word with the man about that.

Conrad also thought he might need to step in between Gianpaolo-Isaura and the Count. However, Roberto graciously allowed the boy to play the piano, on the grounds that he needed to examine the shape of the music without distraction.

“It's the end that's insufficient,” he muttered afterwards, while the rest were engaged in tea. “What on earth do you call this, Corradino? If you wanted to be a famous writer, you should have stuck with comedy; didn't you write a couple of successful comic operas for the Naples audience?”

Conrad found himself amused that il Conte di Argente had picked up Isaura's nickname for him, and used it without apparently noticing.

“By which you mean, all I can write is low-class Neapolitan dialogue? And Spinelli is “just” a comic bass used to singing in dialect?”

“No…”

It was interesting that Il Superbo did not particularly want to insult JohnJack—possibly, Conrad thought, because he made the Count's music sound sublime.

Lightly, Conrad remarked, “I've said it before, Count. You don't understand how we do it in commercial opera.”

“And what would an atheist writer of bedroom farces understand about art!”

Conrad laughed.
I could like this man
.

“I do write more than one act comedies,” Conrad said mildly. “Let me hear it. What's the problem?”

Roberto Capiraso might have been startled, Conrad thought, at how fast the others crowded back around the piano once he started playing. He adjusted the position of the lamp, so the light fell on the score—he had the libretto open at Cortez's entry, with his men, into the court of the Serpent-Queen. The pages were thoroughly covered in pencil with the freckles of musical notation.

The Count ran his fingers over the keys, calling up a jaunty march tune.

“…Not bad.”

He nonetheless sounded dissatisfied. Conrad suspected it wasn't the ancient small forte-piano's overtones he was unhappy about.

“It's not at all bad. But—” JohnJack Spinelli looked wary of outright criticism in front of Il Superbo.

There's that “but,”
Conrad found himself thinking; a chill in his belly.

Yes. Not that I have the musical literacy to tell him what's wrong, but…
There
. Some of what I hear from him has the bad habit of—pulling back from commitment?

Conrad frowned.

Is it possible that Roberto Capiraso might be out of his depth? A mediocre composer, in fact?

Or does “Il Superbo” conceivably suffer from lack of confidence?

The Conte di Argente slammed the piano's cover down, jolting Conrad out of his listening.

“No damn gravitas,” Roberto muttered, apologetically.

JohnJack said instantly, “Yes it has. Play it slower.”

“That's the oldest trick in the book and it won't work—!”

Conrad noted that the Count nonetheless opened up the lid of the piano, and let the fingers of his right hand briskly pick out the melodic line.

“—You see, nothing! Complete rubbish—”

The
basso
shook his head. “No,
much
slower!”

Roberto Capiraso re-seated himself and brought his left hand up to the keys. What had been a seaside
banda
march tune evolved and slowed under Capiraso's fingers, passing through a haunting aria of love—

Sandrine Furino wrinkled her nose. And got out her mirror to check her
maquillage
.

“Still clichéd,” she said, apologetically.

—And at its slowest tempo, the music underwent a sudden change into something that shivered the hairs all down the back of Conrad's neck.

“That's
an anthem!” Paolo-Isaura whispered.

As silently as he could without disturbing Roberto, Conrad took back his libretto pages from the top of the piano, drew a line through the military chorus, and added four lines of a Hymn for the Aztec Priests:

“We compel our spirits

Out of our earthly bodies;

We ask of the Sun our God,

Who are these strange white half-horse men?”

Roberto Capiraso craned his head to read. With a complete unselfconsciousness that Conrad decided he admired, the Count sung both the High Priest's and Chorus's parts, in a rough tone straining to imitate bass, so that each voice-part overlapped his music and came in on each other like a peal of bells.

“Need a soprano voice part.” Spinelli looked as if he were startled at his own unselfishness. “Set off the bass.”

Conrad noted
“Seconda donna?”
on the page. Roberto alternated the melody between the priests and a
la-la-la
in falsetto harmony for the soprano—for all the potential comedy of
that
, the music made Conrad's chest ache. The structure of it came clear: melody stopping to let the voices carry it, and then singers halting to let the orchestra pick it up, and then all together.

The silence in the lodging rooms rang after Roberto stopped and lifted his hands off the keys.

“Write the orchestration down before you forget it!” Conrad couldn't help the grin that stretched his mouth as the other man grabbed sheet-music and furiously scribbled. “Sounds to me like entrance music! And we could even reprise it as the seed of the end of Act One…”

Conrad realised that the quiet was intense. The apartments around Spinelli's had ceased arguing over trifles, quarrelling at meals, and gossiping over hanging their washing. There was an air of people listening, if no one yet went so far as to break into applause.

Because so far we have only snippets, out of context
.

Conrad sat back from the gossiping group and made a mental note.

The secret museum's too small, once we get a whole cast. Paolo needs to find us a more out of the way place for rehearsals.

Because we need to rehearse, but the traditional gathering in the composer's or singers' lodgings won't work. “Hide in plain sight,” yes. But not where
this
quality of music can be easily overheard.

CHAPTER 13

F
erdinand Bourbon-Sicily came the following day to JohnJack's lodgings, miraculously without a tail of servants and aides. The elderly piano, tuned, but past its natural lifetime, gamely accompanied the first rehearsals.

The King followed when Roberto Capiraso eventually left the singers and wandered over to the large table where Conrad had spread out his lists for Ferdinand to see.

It's il Conte's business as much as anybody's
, Conrad reflected, joining them and turning over the top page.

When he saw the King frown, he said, “You were right, sire, about how many singers have been scared off. Then again, when there's little to choose from, the casting process happens more quickly. We don't have Signore Rossini and Donna Isabella Colbran, but we're lucky enough that we
do
have Giambattista Velluti. My cousin Gianpaolo—”

Isaura bowed as Conrad waved a hand to introduce him to the King.

“—Who's acting as our secretary, confirms that he's now signed the contract.”

“Finally,” Roberto muttered. “Taken over a week.”

Conrad guessed that il Conte di Argente had not spent much of his time on the opera board in contact with actual singers.

Ferdinand, on the other hand, nodded, his expression showing pleasure at the world-class castrato's name.

“And in Signore Spinelli, we have one of the better up-and-coming coloratura basses in Italy.” Conrad unearthed a preliminary cast list, one with roles rather than character names. “Velluti for the hero, naturally. Madame Sandrine's mezzo, set against his contralto
tessitura
, will make her an ideal heroine.”

The King didn't blink, but as Conrad was learning, that didn't mean much.

“And naturally enough, Signore Spinelli for the male villain. We have little
in the way of capable tenors, so minor roles for them unless one turns up in the next week. We do have a very strong chorus here in Naples,” he interrupted himself, “and none of them show signs of backing out.”

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