Tomaso Albinoni, a prolific composer of concertos, also wrote some fifty full-scale operas, but only Zenobia and Statira are extant in complete form. Engelberta, on a libretto by the ‘reform’ poets Apostolo Zeno and Pietro Pariati, premiered at Venice’s Teatro San Cassiano during the Carnival season of 1709. According to recent research, Act IV and V might (or not) have been composed by Francesco Gasparini, who – however – took official credit for the whole score. The plot revolves around the figure of Engelberga, wife of the Carolingian emperor Ludwig II, here depicted as an unpretentious and gullible woman. Although this hardly matches the historical reality, it gives occasion to several arias in a tender, lyrical vein before her innocence triumphs in the end.
First performance in modern times
Lodovico II Miranda Ying Quan
Engelberta
Ligia Ishitani
Miao Tang
Metilde
Sara Fogagnolo
Silvia Porcellini
Bonoso Yuxian Liu
Arrigo Yihao Duan
Ernesto
Ilaria Ospici
Marcus Dias
Ottone
Xiangbo Zhang
Yangchun Ou
Conductor Francesco Erle
Director Francesco Bellotto
Sets Alessia Colosso
Costumes Carlos Tieppo
light designer Fabio Barettin
La Fenice production
with Conservatorio di Musica Benedetto Marcello di Venezia
The performance lasts about 2 hours and 5 minutes