Antonio " Toto" Cotogni (; 1 August 1831 – 15 October 1918) was an Italian baritone of the first magnitude. Regarded internationally as being one of the greatest male opera singers of the 19th century, he was particularly admired by the composer Giuseppe Verdi. Cotogni forged an important second career as a singing teacher after his retirement from the stage in 1894.
After some initial studies at the Hospice of San Michele, where he was a student of Angelo Scardovelli, Andrea Salesi, and Ludovico Luccesi. He studied music theory at Santa Maria Maggiore under Fontemaggi. Soon after, he began working with Achille Faldi on the study of singing itself. Under his guidance, Cotogni made his first public ventures into solo singing but only in the principal churches of Rome and in small summer music festivals in the small towns of the province, such as Anagni, Valmontone, Subisco, Velletri, and Viterbo.
Early on, Cotogni worked part-time in a majolica plant and did not care much for theater. He had no pretensions for assuming a career there and was content to remain a church singer. He won his first success in 1851 singing Salvatore Capocci's oratorio Il martirio di Sant'Eustachio at the church of Santa Maria in Vallicella.
About his training prior to his Italian stage debut, Cotogni told a former student:
In the spring of 1857, he was signed by the impresario Jacovacci for Lucia di Lammermoor and Gemma di Vergy at Rome's Teatro Argentina. In September and October of that year, he performed I due Foscari and Luisa Strozzi at Teatro Rossini in Turin. It was then that he met the soprano Maria Ballerini. They married the next year but never had any children together.
Following that, Cotogni was engaged for Foscari and La traviata at Asti and then Cuneo, the Teatro Rossini again, Zara, in Genova, and at Turin for the opening of the new Teatro Alfieri. There he was asked by the impresario Scalaberni to take the place of the famous baritone Felice Varesi in an operatic company being formed for the theater in Nice. During his time in Nice, Cotogni studied the role of Don Giovanni with his predecessor, Italian baritone Antonio Tamburini, who had left the stage in 1855.
He sang with enormous success over the next year— I lombardi, Rossini's Otello, and Nabucco in Viterbo; again at Nice for Lucia di Lammermoor, Ernani, Trovatore, and Maria di Rohan; and at Barcelona's Teatro Principal for Saffo, Traviata, Attila, Gemma, Barbiere, and Trovatore. By October 1860, Cotogni had sung in 21 theaters, and it was at this point that he reached La Scala, Milan, debuting there in the role of Giovanni Bandino in Bottesini's L'assedio di Firenze. Cotogni had been nervous about this debuting, doubting his ability to do it justice and doubting the power of his voice to be heard in the theater. The reviews of the debut were encouraging, but one or two critics mentioned a certain tremulousness and constriction in his high notes. But Cotogni regained his composure after the premiere, and won over the Milan public with his other roles that season—William Tell, Achille Peri's Vittor Pisani, Rodolfo in La sonnambula, and Ezio in Attila.
During the ensuing decades, he also appeared at the leading opera houses in Madrid, Lisbon, Paris, London, Moscow, and Saint Petersburg. He became enormously popular with London audiences, performing at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, from 1867 to 1889. He sang at Saint Petersburg in 26 successive seasons.Eaglefield-Hull 1924.
It was in 1894 at Saint Petersburg that he gave his last operatic stage performance, in Donizetti's Don Pasquale. While Cotogni had spent his career singing the opera's baritone role of Dr. Malatesta, the younger baritone Mattia Battistini was now taking over many of the Cotogni's old roles. Nevertheless, Battistini requested Cotogni to honor the company by joining them in one final performance, only this time asking that he sing the lead comic bass role of Don Pasquale, which Cotogni obliged.
The qualities that made Cotogni revered and beloved in his career on the stage also made him an exceptional teacher, one who went out of his way for his students to give them what they needed musically, artistically, and often materially.
During this time, twelve-year-old Luigi Ricci (who would later become a vocal coach) began accompanying voice lessons given by Cotogni, who had performed several of Verdi's operas under the composer's supervision. At this early age, Ricci began taking meticulous notes on traditions that Cotogni passed on to him from his own work with Verdi and other 19th century composers and conductors information about elements that had been changed in rehearsal and practice but had never been notated officially, as well as traditions of variations and cadenza begun by various singers from the past century. Ricci continued his copious note taking throughout his life and eventually compiled these into a four-part collection entitled Variazioni-cadenze tradizioni per canto (two volumes and two appendices published by Casa Ricordi, 1963).
Cotogni died of old age in Rome less than a month prior to the 1918 armistice that ended World War I. A group of his friends, colleagues, and former students raised money for his tomb. His burial chapel is located at plot 98 in the Pincetto Nuovo section of the Campo Verano cemetery in Rome.
+ Sortable table | ||
Adolfo | Pacini | Baritone |
Alfredo | Alfredo Costa | Baritone |
Amleto | Pollastri | Baritone |
Augusto | Beuf | Baritone |
Benvenuto | Franci | Baritone |
Carlo | Carlo Galeffi | Baritone |
Cesare | Alessandroni | Baritone |
Cesare | Ferretti | Baritone |
Dante | Perrone | Baritone |
Dinh | Dinh Gilly | Baritone |
Domenico | Caporello | Baritone |
Enrico | Nani | Baritone |
Ettore | Bernabei | Baritone |
Giuseppe | Bellantoni | Baritone |
Giuseppe | De Luca | Baritone |
Guido | Caselotti | Tenor |
Jean | De Reszke | Baritone |
Leone | Paci | Baritone |
Luigi | Pasinati | Baritone |
Luigi | Rossi-Morelli | Baritone |
Mariano | Mariano Stabile | Baritone |
Marino | Emiliani | Baritone |
Mario | Basiola | Baritone |
Mattia | Battistini | Baritone |
Millo | Picco | Baritone |
Nazzareno | Bertinelli | Baritone |
Nikolai | Shevelev | Baritone |
Onofrio | Pirrone | Baritone |
Riccardo | Stracciari | Baritone |
Salvatore | Persichetti | Baritone |
Sergei | Diaghilev | Baritone |
Titta | Titta Ruffo | Baritone |
Evgeny | Dolinin | Tenor |
Ugo | Donarelli | Baritone |
Marcello | Marcello Giorda | Baritone |
Zygmunt (Sigismondo) | Zaleski | Baritone |
Aristodemo | Giorgini | Tenor |
Armando | Gualtieri | Tenor |
Beniamino | Beniamino Gigli | Tenor |
Pasquale | Funtò | Tenor |
Edgar | Herbert-Caesari | Tenor |
Ellison | Van Hoose | Tenor |
Enzo | Fusco | Tenor |
Franco | Tumminello | Tenor |
Giacomo | Eliseo | Tenor |
Giacomo | Lauri-Volpi | Tenor |
Giuliano | Romagnoli | Tenor |
Giuseppe Antonio | Paganelli | Tenor |
Guido | Ciccolini | Tenor |
Julian | Biel | Tenor |
Luigi | Ceccarelli | Tenor |
Luigi | Lucenti | Tenor |
Luigi | Pasinati | Tenor |
Manfredo | Miselli | Tenor |
Nicola | Bavaro | Tenor |
Rinaldo | Grassi | Tenor |
Vincenzo | Tanglongo | Tenor |
Berardo | Berardi | Bass |
Alfred | Blackman | Bass |
Emilio | Casolari | Bass |
Filippo | Valentine | Bass |
Gennaro | Curci | Bass |
Giuseppe | Quinzi Tapergi | Bass |
Irnerio | Costantini | Bass |
Paolo | Argentini | Bass |
Tadeusz | Orda | Bass |
Tito | Verger | Bass |
Umberto | Di Lelio | Bass |
Virgilio | Virgilio Lazzari | Bass |
Vladimir | Kastorsky | Bass |
Carmen | Carmen Melis | Soprano |
Marta | Wittkowska | Contralto |
Cecilia | Cao Pinna | Mezzo-Soprano |
The famed Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini remarked that Cotogni's voice was totally even and that "one didn't hear the transition between the registers... Hearing it, it seemed that everything was natural, while, instead, the poor Cotogni had practiced for years and years to acquire that perfection."
Two other recordings, at times believed to be of Cotogni, are in fact the voice of tenore robusto Francesco Tamagno's brother, Giovanni. Comparisons of these two recordings—"O casto fior" and Stanislao Gastaldon's "Ti vorrei rapire" (formerly misidentified as "Perché?")—with the Tamagno brothers' recording of the Otello duet "Si pel ciel" reveals the baritone voice to be identical in timbre and production, with its thin and nasal qualities, especially in the passagio. These stand in contradistinction to the voice confirmed to be Cotogni's (the Mulattieri duet), which is noticeably more even, round, and sonorous throughout—even to the two high G naturals that end the refrain. In the Roman school, and in Cotogni's own teaching, any nasality was seen as a defect to be expressly avoided.
+ Sortable table | ||||
Amadei | Roberto Amadei | Luchino Visconti | Lugo | |
Auber | Daniel Auber | Diamanti della corona | Rebolledo | London |
Auber | Daniel Auber | Le domino noir | Gil Perez | London |
Auber | Daniel Auber | Masaniello | Pietro | Lisbon |
Battista | Vincenzo Battista | Esmeralda | Lanciano | |
Beethoven | Ludwig van Beethoven | Fidelio | Don Pizarro | London |
Bellini | Vincenzo Bellini | Beatrice di Tenda | Filippo | Venice |
Bellini | Vincenzo Bellini | I Capuleti ed i Montecchi | Lorenzo | Genova |
Bellini | Vincenzo Bellini | I puritani | Riccardo | Milan |
Bellini | Vincenzo Bellini | La sonnambula | Rodolfo | London |
Berlioz | Hector Berlioz | La damnation de Faust | Méphistophélès | Rome |
Bevenuti | Tommaso Bevenuti | La stella di Toledo | Filippo II | Genova |
Bizet | Georges Bizet | Carmen | Escamillo | Lisbon |
Bottesini | Giovanni Bottesini | L'assedio di Firenze | Giovanni Bandino | Milan |
Brahms | Johannes Brahms | A German Requiem | baritone soloist | Rome |
Cagnoni | Antonio Cagnoni | Claudia | Milan | |
Cagnoni | Antonio Cagnoni | Don Bucefalo | Trieste | |
Cagnoni | Antonio Cagnoni | Il vecchio della montagna | Hassan | Milan |
Capocci | Salvatore Capocci | Sant'eustachio: azione sacra in due atti | Rome | |
Centolani | Ambrogio Centolani | Isabella Orsini | Lugo | |
Cimarosa | Domenico Cimarosa | Le astuzie femminili | Dottor Romualdo | London |
Cimarosa | Domenico Cimarosa | Il matrimonio segreto | Count Robinson | Madrid |
Clementi | Filippo Clementi | Pellegrina | Iacopo | Bologna |
Coccia | Carlo Coccia | Disertore per amore | Asti | |
Cohen | Henri Cohen | Estella | London | |
De Ferrari | Serafino Amedeo De Ferrari | Pipelet, ossia Il portinajo di Parigi | Nizza | |
De Ferrari | Serafino De-Ferrari | Il birraio di Preston | Orvieto | |
De Giosa | Nicola de Giosa | Don Checco | Lanciano | |
Delibes | Léo Delibes | Jean de Nivelle | Le comte de Charolais | St. Petersburg |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Belisario | Belisario | Trieste |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Don Pasquale | Dr. Malatesta | London |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Don Pasquale | Don Pasquale | London |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | L'elisir d'amore | Belcore | Rome |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | La favorita | Alfonso | Rome |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Gemma di Vergy | Earl of Vergy | Rome |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Linda di Chamounix | Antonio | Genova |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Lucia di Lammermoor | Enrico | Rome |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Lucrezia Borgia | Alfonso | London |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Maria di Rohan | Enrico, duca di Chevreuse | Spoleto |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | I martiri | Severo | Barcelona |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Poliuto | Severo | Barcelona |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Alina, regina di Golconda | Volmar | Bilbao |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Roberto Devereux | The Duke of Nottingham | Nice |
Donizetti | Gaetano Donizetti | Torquato Tasso | Torquato Tasso | Modena |
Faccio | Franco Faccio | Amleto | Claudio | Genova |
Faccio | Franco Faccio | I profughi fiamminghi | Il conte di Bergh | Milano |
Fioravanti | Vincenzo Fioravanti | Il ritorno di Columella | Torino | |
Flotow | Friedrich von Flotow | Alma l'incantatrice | Don Sebastian | London |
Flotow | Friedrich von Flotow | Marta | Plunkett | Madrid |
Gammieri | Erennio Gammieri | Niccolò de' Lapi | Saint Petersburg | |
Gentili | Raffaele Gentili | Rosamonda | Edgardo | Rome |
Gentili | Raffaele Gentili | Werther | Il Conte Alberto di Volheim | Milan |
Gomes | Antônio Carlos Gomes | Il Guarany | Gonzales | London |
Gounod | Charles Gounod | Faust | Valentin | Rome |
Gounod | Charles Gounod | Philémon et Baucis | Jupiter | Saint Petersburg |
Gounod | Charles Gounod | Roméo et Juliette | Mercutio and Capulet | London |
Gounod | Charles Gounod | Cinq-Mars | Saint Petersburg | |
Halévy | Fromental Halévy | L'ebrea | Ruggiero | London |
Hérold | Ferdinand Hérold | Le pré aux clercs | Comte de Comminges | London |
Hérold | Ferdinand Hérold | Zampa | Zampa | Bologna |
Kashperov | Vladimir Kashperov | Maria Tudor | Nice | |
Lenepveu | Charles Lenepveu | Velleda | Teuter | London |
Leoncavallo | Ruggero Leoncavallo | I pagliacci | Tonio | Saint Petersburg |
Liszt | Franz Liszt | Christus | Christ | Rome |
Lucilla | Domenico Lucilla | Il conte Rosso | Bologna | |
Lucilla | Domenico Lucilla | Eroe delle Asturie | Bologna | |
Manna | Ruggero Manna | Preziosa | Don Fernando d'Azevedo | Milan |
Marchetti | Filippo Marchetti | Romeo e Giulietta | Genoa | |
Marchetti | Filippo Marchetti | Ruy Blas | Don Sallustio | Venice |
Mascagni | Pietro Mascagni | Cavalleria Rusticana | Alfio | Saint Petersburg |
Massenet | Jules Massenet | Le Cid | Don Fernando, King of Castille | Saint Petersburg |
Mendelssohn | Felix Mendelssohn | St. Paul | bass | Rome |
Mercadante | Francesco Mercadante | Il giuramento | Manfredo | Cuneo |
Mercadante | Francesco Mercadante | I normanni a Parigi | Ordamante | Modena |
Mercadante | Francesco Mercadante | Orazi e Curiazi | Orazio | Perugia |
Mercadante | Francesco Mercadante | La vestale | Publio | Nice |
Meyerbeer | Giacomo Meyerbeer | L'africana | Nélusko | Bologna |
Meyerbeer | Giacomo Meyerbeer | Dinorah | Hoël | London |
Meyerbeer | Giacomo Meyerbeer | La stella del nord | Peter the Great | London |
Meyerbeer | Giacomo Meyerbeer | Gli ugonotti | Nevers | London |
Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Così fan tutte | Guglielmo | London |
Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Don Giovanni | Don Giovanni | London |
Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Il flauto magico | Papageno | London |
Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Le nozze di Figaro | Figaro | London |
Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Le nozze di Figaro | Count | London |
Mugnone | Leopoldo Mugnone | Birichino | Blachot | Venice |
Pacini | Giovanni Pacini | Bondelmonte | Bilbao | |
Pacini | Giovanni Pacini | Saffo | Alcandro | Barcelona |
Paladilhe | Émile Paladilhe | Patria | Comte de Rysoor | Rome |
Pedrotti | Carlo Pedrotti | Il favorito | Obolenski | Turin |
Pedrotti | Carlo Pedrotti | Guerra in quattro | Candido | Milan |
Pedrotti | Carlo Pedrotti | Isabella d'Aragona | Milan | |
Pedrotti | Carlo Pedrotti | Tutti in maschera | Abdalà | Trieste |
Peri | Achille Peri | Vittore Pisani | Vittore Pisani | Milan |
Persichini | Venceslao Persichini | Amante Sessagenario | Rome | |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | L'assedio di Leida | Armando Boasot | Turin |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | Celinda | Arnaldo | Turin |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | Giovanna di Napoli | Marino | Turin |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | Ione | Arbace | Saragozza |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | Marco Visconti | Marco Visconti | Barcelona |
Petrella | Enrico Petrella | Elnava | Cuneo | |
Piacenza | Pasquale Piacenza | Marinella | Cuneo | |
Ponchielli | Amilcare Ponchielli | La gioconda | Barnaba | St. Petersburg |
Ponchielli | Amilcare Ponchielli | I lituani | Arnoldo | St. Petersburg |
Poniatowski | Józef Michał Poniatowski | Gelmina | London | |
Puccinelli | Filippo Puccinelli | Santa Cecilia | Rome | |
Puccini | Giacomo Puccini | Manon Lescaut | Lescaut | St. Petersburg |
Ricci | Luigi Ricci | Chiara di Rosemberg | Nice | |
Ricci | Luigi Ricci | Chi dura la vince | Nice | |
Ricci | Luigi Ricci | Crispino e la Comare | Fabrizio | Venice |
Ricci | Luigi Ricci | Le Prigioni di Edimburgo | Nice | |
Rossi | Lauro Rossi | Domino Nero | Turin | |
Rossi | Lauro Rossi | Falsi Monetari | Turin | |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Il barbiere di Siviglia | Figaro | Genova |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | La Cenerentola | Dandini | Nice |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | La gazza ladra | Fernando Villabella | London |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Guglielmo Tell | Guglielmo | St. Petersburg |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Matilde di Shabran | Aliprando | Turin |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Mosè | Faraone | London |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Otello | Iago | Nice |
Rossini | Gioacchino Rossini | Stabat mater | Baritone soloist | Rome |
Rubinstein | Antonio Rubinstein | Nerone | Julius Vindex | St. Petersburg |
Sanelli | Gualtiero Sanelli | Luisa Strozzi | Turin | |
Sinico | Giuseppe Sinico | Aurora di Nevers | Filippo Conzaga | Milan |
Thomas | Ambroise Thomas | Amleto | Hamlet | London |
Thomas | Ambroise Thomas | Mignon | Lothario | Rome |
Ventura | Lionello Ventura | Alda | Marino Capece | Bologna |
Vera | Edoardo Vera | Valeria | Claudio Imperatore | Bologna |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Aïda | Amonasro | St. Petersburg |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Aroldo | Egberto | Turin |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Attila | Ezio | Zara |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Un ballo in maschera | Renato | Dublin |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Don Carlos | Posa | London |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | I due Foscari | Francesco Foscari | London |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Ernani | Don Carlo | Rome |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | La forza del destino | Don Carlo di Vargas | Spoleto |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | I lombardi | Pagano | Milan |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Luisa Miller | Miller | Turin |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Macbeth | Macbeth | Nice |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | I masnadieri | Francesco | Viterbo |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Nabucco | Nabucco | Turin |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Rigoletto | Rigoletto | Rome |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Stiffelio | Count Stankar | London |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | La traviata | Germont | Viterbo |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | Il trovatore | Di Luna | Madrid |
Verdi | Giuseppe Verdi | I vespri siciliani | Michele de Vasconcello/Guido di Monforte | Turin |
Wagner | Richard Wagner | Lohengrin | Telramund | Turin |
Wagner | Richard Wagner | Tannhaüser | Wolfram | Bologna |
Weber | Carl Maria von Weber | Oberon | Scherasmin | Bologna |
Cotogni also sang the baritone solo in the "Dies irae" section of Alessandro Busi's Messa da requiem performed in honor of Gioachino Rossini's death on 9 December 1868 at the church of San Giovanni in Monte in Bologna. His delivery of the solo was sublime: "...the audience, who literally filled the church, was so shaken that, forgetting they were in church, they applauded his wildly." That response was not unfamiliar; when he made his public debut in Sant'Eustachio in 1851, the audience's surprise and enthusiasm toward the young Cotogni's solo was so overwhelming that police had to be called in to restore order.
Cotogni's repertoire comprised between 150 and 160 roles. His operatic triumphs were not confined to Verdi's compositions. He was also an exponent of the elegant but technically demanding bel canto music of Gioachino Rossini, Gaetano Donizetti, Vincenzo Bellini, and Saverio Mercadante. He sang roles from the new Italian verismo literature, the French grand opera tradition, and some Richard Wagner. He was considered a Mozart specialist and keeper of some traditions of his works, even at a time when Mozart's works were not popular. He was particularly proud of his Don Giovanni, a role that he learned from his predecessor, the Italian baritone Antonio Tamburini, and which Cotogni then passed on to the inheritor of his traditions, Mattia Battistini.
Cotogni sang in the company of many of the most famous opera singers of his time—sopranos Adelina Patti, Teresa Stolz, Thérèse Tietjens, Marcella Sembrich, Christina Nilsson, Emma Albani, and Gemma Bellincioni; castrato Alessandro Moreschi; the Marchisio sisters; contralto Sofia Scalchi; tenors Mario, Francesco Marconi, Julián Gayarre, Angelo Masini, Pietro Mongini, Lodovico Graziani, Enrico Tamberlick, and Francesco Tamagno; baritones Charles Santley, Jean-Baptiste Faure, Francesco Graziani, Leone Giraldoni, and Mattia Battistini; and basses Foli, Eraclito Bagagiolo, and Édouard de Reszke.
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