Tag Archives: Janet Baker

Dame Janet Baker performs Dido’s Lament, Glyndebourne (1966)

Dido and Aeneas is a Baroque opera by Eng­lish com­pos­er Hen­ry Pur­cell, com­posed around 1688, and based on Book IV of the Aeneid, the Latin epic poem writ­ten by Vir­gil in the sec­ond decade BCE, that tells the leg­endary sto­ry of Aeneas, a Tro­jan who trav­elled to Italy to found a city and become the ances­tor of the Romans.

Book IV recounts how his ship, en route from Epirus to Sici­ly, is blown off course and lands on the shores of Carthage in North Africa, where Aeneas falls in love with their queen, Dido, and she with him. How­ev­er, Aeneas is remind­ed by the gods of his des­tiny and he must duti­ful­ly depart for Italy, leav­ing Dido in despair at her aban­don­ment.

The opera cul­mi­nates with its most famous aria, When I Am Laid In Earth, pop­u­lar­ly known as Dido’s Lament, where­in Dido slow­ly dies of a bro­ken heart.

Here, we will enjoy Dame Janet Bak­er per­form­ing the role of Dido at Glyn­de­bourne in 1966. It is wide­ly con­sid­ered to be one of the great­est expo­si­tions of tragedy in mod­ern oper­at­ic his­to­ry. The lament is divid­ed into two parts: the “recita­tive” which sets the scene, and the aria which fol­lows and leads us to Dido’s death. Here we will cut to the aria. Dido’s sis­ter, Belin­da, her face radi­at­ing a deeply-felt empa­thy, springs for­ward to sup­port Dido both moral­ly and phys­i­cal­ly. Now watch Dido begin her lament. Here’s the libret­to by Nahum Tate:

When I am laid, am laid in earth, may my wrongs cre­ate
No trou­ble, no trou­ble in thy breast;
Remem­ber me, remem­ber me, but ah! for­get my fate.
Remem­ber me, but ah! for­get my fate.

The music is in G Minor, the ulti­mate key for express­ing sad­ness and tragedy, and the bassline (pas­sacaglia) repeats as if in waves of despair, descend­ing, like Dido, toward the grave. Janet Bak­er has been quot­ed as say­ing: “if the Fates are with you, the mag­ic will descend”; they must have been with her here: her manip­u­la­tion of the vibra­to and lega­to, her bear­ing, the gen­uine pathos – the scene is mes­meris­ing.

With superb silent sup­port from Sheila Arm­strong as Belin­da, Bak­er’s immer­sion in the role is absolute and all-con­sum­ing. Take a look at 1:49 and again at 1:56, at the end of the words “Remem­ber me”, and note her head and throat momen­tar­i­ly sag with anguish. Her legs give way at 4:12 and the ladies-in-wait­ing, in uni­son, take a fear­ful step for­ward. The lament now descends chro­mat­i­cal­ly, semi­tone by semi­tone, as Dido descends inch by inch, dead, to the ground.

The repeat­ed phrase “Remem­ber me” is wring­ing with sen­ti­ment; it is no sur­prise to find Purcell’s music to the lament used at Remem­brance Day ser­vices around the coun­try, to poignant effect.

Dame Janet Bak­er in Dido’s Lament