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Me protegge me difende

Opera details:

Opera title:

Norma

Composer:

Vincenzo Bellini

Language:

Italian

Synopsis:

Norma Synopsis

Libretto:

Norma Libretto

Translation(s):

English Deutsch

Duet details:

Type:

duet

Role(s):

Flavio / Pollione

Voice(s):

Tenor / Tenor

Act:

1.06

Previous scene: Odi i suoi ritia compiere
Next scene: Norma viene le cinge

Francesco Merli - Me protegge, me difende

Singer(s): Beniamino Gigli Francesco Merli

Francesco Merli (1887-1976) was born into a family of humble means on a farm just outside Milan. The young man began his working life as a school janitor but always displayed a talent for singing. Merli had a few scattered voice lessons over the years, but never completely took his singing seriously. However, in June of 1913, the Milan City Council sponsored a concert at the Teatro dal Verme, intended to encourage musical education in the city’s schools. As a school janitor who was popular with students, Merli was asked to participate in the program. With two other vocalists, he sang the trio from Verdi’s I Lombardi, impressing all in attendance with his powerful voice. So impressed was the city council, that they promoted Merli from school janitor to janitor of the municipal offices!

Perhaps the honor of sweeping floors at Milan’s government buildings was not quite the result Merli was expecting, for he began to turn his attentions more and more to singing. When famed conductor and impresario Cleofante Campanini organized an international competition for young singers in Parma the following year, Merli entered. He took first prize in the division for dramatic tenors and second prize overall. Coincidentally, the top prize was awarded to a fledgling tenor from Recanati…Beniamino Gigli. Merli’s rise to fame was not a smooth one, however. At the time of the aforementioned competition, he was essentially a natural singer with no real technique. A sponsor (Tullio Serafin’s brother) arranged for a stipend to be provided that would allow Merli to take a one year leave of absence from his city janitorial duties. Arrangements were also made to pay for the young tenor’s vocal studies. However, this good fortune came to a grinding halt when Merli was conscripted into the Italian Army. He continued vocalizing in the trenches and, according to an entry in his diary, entertained both his comrades and the enemy Austrian soldiers while singing “Cielo e mar” at the front lines!

Merli came through the war unscathed and made his debut toward the end of 1916 in the small role of Alvaro in La Scala’s production of Spontini’s Fernand Cortez. In the fall of 1918, he made a second debut at La Scala, this time in the more substantial role of Elisero in Rossini’s Mosè in Egitto. This was the beginning of a long association with this prestigious theater. It also marked the start of a major international career for the tenor. Over the course of the next thirty years, Merli appeared in the major theaters of Verona, Florence, Palermo, Naples, Padua, Trieste, Rome (singing Calaf in the Roman premiere of Turandot), London (he was also Covent Garden’s first Calaf), Sydney (yes, he was the first Calaf there, too), Melbourne, Paris, Brussels, Copenhagen, Sao Paolo, Buenos Aires and New York. His Met debut came on March 2, 1932 as Radames in Aïda. However, after singing only eight performances of four operas, including Lucia di Lammermoor, Simon Boccanegra and Madama Butterfly (as well as a pair of concerts), Merli was taken ill and had to return to Italy. Sadly, he never again returned to the U.S.

Merli’s repertoire was vast, encompassing over 40 roles in such works as Pagliacci, Cavalleria Rusticana, Siberia, Andrea Chénier, La Fanciulla del West, Manon Lescaut, Turandot, La Gioconda, Carmen, Samson et Dalila, Lohengrin, Die Meistersinger, Fidelio, La Forza del Destino, Ernani, I Lombardi, Il Trovatore and, what was considered his greatest triumph, Otello. He sang nearly 300 performances as the Moor, culminating in a final Otello in Trieste in 1946. The veteran tenor retired two years later and devoted himself to teaching during the final three decades of his life. Merli passed away in Milan in December of 1976, just six weeks shy of his 90th birthday.

Francesco Merli’s recorded legacy, preserved on scores of discs made for Columbia between 1926 and 1937, includes a complete recording of Il Trovatore and the very first complete recording of Turandot. These recordings reveal a sturdy, well balanced dramatic tenor, capable of explosive top notes as well as some truly delicate singing. Here, Merli sings the cabaletta "Me protegge, me difende" from Bellini's Norma. This recording was made in Milan for Columbia on June 25, 1935.

Watch videos with other singers performing Me protegge me difende:

Norma 1997 Remastered Version Meco all alta di Venere Me protegge me difende 224236
5 - Franco Corelli
5 - Piero de Palma
Elena Mosuc Bellini Norma Paris 2013 116596
5 - Gianluca Floris
5 - John Osborn

Maria CallasMario Del Monaco LIVE NORMA Bellini 2 from 13wmv 149854
1 - Maria Callas
5 - Mario Del Monaco
Francesco Merli Me protegge me difende 166275
5 - Beniamino Gigli
5 - Francesco Merli

John Alexander Meco all altar di VenereMe protegge me difende Boston 1971 94486
5 - John Alexander
6 - Donald Gramm
Oreste Mieli Me protegge me difende Norma RARE 166277
5 - Alfio
5 - Fernando De Lucia

Me protegge me difende Norma Maria Callas 166278
1 - Maria Callas
5 - Mirto Picchi

Norma Act I Svanir le voci Meco all altar di Venere Me protegge me difende  94504
5 - Charles Anthony
5 - Plácido Domingo

Bellini Norma Act 1 Me protegge me difende 166316
5 - Enrico Di Giuseppe
5 - Robert Tear
Russell Thomas sings Pollione in Norma by Bellini 24615
5 - Russell Thomas

Meco all altar di venereMe protegge me difende Gregory Kunde 2015 94416
5 - Gregory Kunde
Tenore GIANNI RAIMONDI Norma Meco all altar di Venere Scena aria e cabaletta Live 1972 24612
5 - Gianni Raimondi

Carlo Cossutta Svanir le vociMeco all altar di VenereMe protegge me difende Norma 94422
5 - Carlo Cossutta
Elena Mosuc Bellini Norma Zurich 2011 75100
1 - Elena Moșuc
5 - Robert Wilson

Bellini Norma Zoran Todorovich sings Polione 94427
5 - Zoran Todorovich
Lando Bartolini Svanir le vociMeco all altarMe protegge me difende Norma V Bellini 94455
5 - Lando Bartolini

Robleto Merolla Meco all altar di VenereMe protegge me difende 1971 Madrid 94465
6 - James Morris
Norma Act 1 Me protegge me difende un poter maggior di loro Pollione 224369
5 - Mario Filippeschi

Norma Me protegge me difende Pollione Flavio Coro Voice 166284
5 - Giuseppe Giacomini
Norma Norma Act I Meco all altar di venere Me protegge me difende 224317
5 - Kurt Baum

Norma Norma Act I Meco all altar di venere Me protegge me difende 94505
5 - Pier Miranda Ferraro

Norma Act I Scene 1 Svanir le voci Meco all altar di Venere Me protegge me difende 94508
5 - Vincenzo La Scola

Norma Act I Me protegge me difende Pollione 166288
5 - Jon Vickers
Norma Casta Diva  149879
1 - Joan Sutherland
1 - Maria Callas
2 - Ebe Stignani

Norma Act I Me protegge me difende Pollione 166300
5 - Gino Penno
Bellini Norma Act 1 Me protegge me difende 166320
5 - Roberto Alagna

Libretto/Lyrics/Text/Testo:

POLLIONE
Me protegge, me difende
Un poter maggior di loro
È il pensier di lei che adoro,
È l'amor che m'infiammò.
Di quel Dio che a me contende
Quella virgine celeste,
Arderò le rie foreste,
L'empio altare abbatterò.

FLAVIO
Vieni, vieni …
Scoprire alcun ti può …
Vieni … Fuggiam …

DRUIDI
sempre lontani
Sorta è la Luna, o Druidi.
Ite, profani, altrove,
Ite altrove.

POLLIONE
Traman conguire i barbari,
Ma io li preverrò!

English Libretto or Translation:

POLLIONE
A Power greater than they
Protects me, defends me.
It is the thought of her,
It is Love itself, which inflames me!
I shall burn the evil forest
Of that god who would
Take her from me,
And I shall destroy his blasphemous altars!...

FLAVIO
Oh, come let us go.
If found here we are both lost.

VOICES
distant
The moon has risen, o Druids!
Let none stay here, unless he believe.

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