I am interested in knowing your favorite recording(s) of Verdi's La
Traviata. I currently own these two:
1. Kleiber conducting, with Domingo, Milnes,and Contrubas on the DG label.
2. Antonicelli conducting with Steber, Di Stefano, and Merrill on the Naxos
Historical label.
What other good ones are out there worth having?
Thanks in advance,
Ralph
At the other end of the scale, Giulini's La Scala live performance with
Callas, Di Stefano and Bastianini is a poor technical job but worth
hearing for some spine chilling moments.
The De los Angeles/Serafin set is generally underrated if only because
De los Angeles is a more understated and less obviously vivid Violetta
than Callas. Nevertheless, she's absolutely magnificent in her modest,
understated, and inward way, different from but not inferior to Callas,
and Serafin, like Molinari-Pradelli, is the real deal, although perhaps
not quite at his very best. In an imperfect world, this might very
well be the Traviata I'd take to a desert island if only allowed one.
Callas, De los Angeles, and Albanese are probably my favorite
Violetta's: all three are supremely musical singers and singing
actresses of a very high order, and all of them are temperamentally
very well suited to the role, but not everybody likes Albanese's
brittle timbre. I do. If anything, I think it makes her sound more
touchingly vulnerable. Unfortunately, Toscanini's NBC broadcast of
Traviata is the most overdriven and least convincing of his NBC Verdi
broadcasts. Albanese and Peerce are well nigh ideal in their roles,
though, and the dress rehearsal for the broadcast, available on Music &
Arts, finds a less nervous Toscanini in much more convincing form.
(I'd still like to find another Toscanini-less Traviata with Albanese,
preferably again with Peerce, but haven't tried hard enough yet.)
I'm not sure which Callas Traviata to recommend. I think the famous
Scala performance with Di Stefano, Bastianini, and Giulini is
overrated. Giulini turns in a reasonable enough performance, but he
goes slack in crucial places, and his performance as a whole lacks
backbone despite distinctive touch after distinctive touch. The Cetra
recording with Callas is typical Callas and stems from early enough in
her career that the voice is in very reliable condition, but her tenor
and baritone are abysmal. I'm not overwhelmed by the so-called Lisbon
Traviata, either, except for Callas, of course.
I had some hopes for the Stella-Di Stefano-Gobbi-Serafin set when
Testament reissued it on CD. They were dashed. Stella's not yet in
full decline but nothing special, Di Stefano is not in as good form as
I had been lead to expect he would be, and Gobbi and Serafin are not
enough to save the show.
I abhor Carlos Kleiber's performance in his DG set more than almost any
other performance of a Verdi opera I've ever heard. For my detailed
brief against this ghastly, wrong headed, unidiomatic,
singer-strait-jacketing, and far more overdriven than Toscanini ever
dreamed of being travesty, though, you'll have to do a Google search.
For a gloriously sung uncut Traviata, try
Caballe-Bergonzi-Milnes-Pretre. In some ways, Caballe sings circles
around De los Angeles, Callas, and Albanese, especially in the fast
florid passages, but she was never remotely as musically interesting or
as intense an actress as they were. At least she's not the snooze that
Sutherland was, and this stems from the period when she was most
involved in her studio performances. Bergonzi is an incomparable model
of how it should be done, and the young Milnes has a big fat gorgeous
authentic "Verdi baritone" sound, but Pretre is no Serafin or
Molinari-Pradelli.
Renata Scotto is another Violetta worthy to be mentioned alongside
Callas and Albanese, and her first recording finds her in reasonable
voice, although it's another "brittle" voice like Albanese's and with a
less easily produced top. (The recording with Scotto, Kraus, and Muti
from a decade and a half later comes from way too late in her career,
although Todd Kay has made me curious to revisit a couple of passages
from this performance at some point). I'm afraid to say too much about
this performance because I haven't listened to it in a while, although
I do remember liking it. I generally admire Antonino Votto enormously,
but I don't really remember what I thought of him here. I do know you
can do better than Gianni Raimondi's decent enough Alfredo.
I've never heard the Monteux set--reissued on Myto, I think, and to be
reissued again on Testament--that many people seem to have found a bit
underwhelming. I'm keeping my fingers crossed until I break down and
buy it: with Carteri, Valetti, and Warren, it looks very promising on
paper. Monteux was a superb musician, although I've never heard him
conduct Italian opera, and if Carteri is in good form, she should give
Callas, de los Angeles, and Albanese a run for their money.
Moffo's RCA set finds her in characteristic form, and fans of her
honest and affecting approach will not be disappointed by her
contribution. Vocally she's in good and characteristic form, but I
don't think she scales quite the heights that she does in her RCA Luisa
Miller (for my money, the best thing she ever did). The problem is her
conductor. Previtali is inconsistent in approach, although I don't
have the patience to enumerate some of the odd things he does. And
while Tucker sings with intensity and ardor and a generous supply of
sound (and a few provincial mannerisms that annoy others more than they
annoy me), he's past his prime, as is Robert Merrill, who is also less
alert here than under Toscanini. For Moffo-at-all-costs addicts only.
I've been scared off the Naxos issue of a live Met Traviata with
Ponselle by reports that the performance finds her badly off form. I
would love to have somebody tell me I've been misinformed.
-david gable
-david gable
I also realize the futility of following Maestro Gable on this one,
since I'm still a work in progress as an Italian opera fiend, but I
want to point out a few things:
I have both of the above, and neither is satisfactory. Steber doesn't
sound as convincing in this role as she does in Puccini, Berlioz, Bach,
Mozart, or countless other repertoire. Somehow the pathos didn't quite
suit her in this performance. Kleiber has been ripped to shreds
already. Yes, his Verdi is all "wrong" and it is not ideal, but as a
"Kleiber" experience--tense, vivid, electric--it is worth hearing.
Molinari-Pradelli is sublime in early Verdi--you must hear him (or
others like him) to get a really satisfying experience. Kleiber in
Otello is a different matter, however; this suits him much better.
I think your next Traviata should be either the Lisbon-Callas, because
it is what it is, or perhaps the Opera d'Oro release of
Scotto/Carreras, conducted by Nino Verchi. Scotto is marvelous, and
this (1973) is not too late in her career. The Toscanini rehearsal with
Albanese is definitely interesting, but maybe a third or fourth option
at this point.
--Jeff
-david gable
Don thinks "Gheorgiu is a wonderful actress," but "much too gorgeous
and healthy looky to really portray a consumptive." As suspension of
disbelief goes, better that than a Violetta ample and matronly.
-david gable
This is not my favorite opera, though it's been growing
on me lately. My two favorite sopranos, Elizabeth
Futral and Patricia Racette, have sung Violetta,
but I apparently missed Racette (Santa Fe 1997,
when I skipped Traviata) and Futral hasn't appeared
here or close by in the role that I know of.
Last two Violettas I experienced were Fleming (Houston)
and Swensen (San Francisco). Maybe that
explains how I am liking the opera more and more.
One of the reasons I'd like to see Racette or
Futral is for their acting. In Boheme (Chicago,
2002), Racette looked great in the first three
acts, yet somehow she really looked sick by
the end. And Futral is simply beautiful on stage.
No need to suspend belief with either of these
great singers.
I picked up the Solti DVD and have not seen it
yet. What thoughts on the film from Zefferelli,
cuts and all? (Why a taut little work like this
would need cuts is beyond me; they never seem
to cut the stuff that really needs it.)
--
A. Brain
Remove NOSPAM for email.
The opera is shown in flashback, opening and closing with the view of a
handsome young worker moving Violetta's packed belongings out of her
apartment. He peeks in on Violetta on her deathbed at the beginning
and at the end with the sort of concern that saccharine and
sentimentally depicted orphans with gigantic eyes in paintings on black
silk sold at flea markets are intended to elicit. We're insulated from
any suggestion that the subject is real pain by the sheer distancing
cuteness and therefore unreality of it all.
I recall Stratas as a very fine and deeply expressive Violetta, one so
convincingly consumptive appearing and acting as to be alarming. I
also recall that Domingo sang very well and even acted rather well as
Alfredo. Unfortunately, Domingo's simply not the actor Stratas is, and
he's basically incapable of shedding his own sunny, sane, and stable
demeanor and incarnating an impetuous and at times irrational young
hothead instead--the young Di Stefano would have been perfect for the
role--a still immature boy trying to act--with an all too often
embarrassing lack of success--like a man. And it was a colossal
mistake to juxtapose Domingo at his age at the time of the film to a
gratuitously added worker the right age for the role. More's the pity,
because Domingo actually looks fairly youthful--he lost weight for the
film--but Zeffirelli undermines Domingo and Verdi for silly reasons of
his own with his sentimental conceit.
I don't remember anything about MacNeil's Germont or Levine's
conducting, but, speaking of Stratas as Violetta, there's a live
mid-60's Traviata on Orfeo with Stratas, Wunderlich, Prey and Patane.
That's one I've always wanted to hear but never have. (I still haven't
gotten around to listening to the Preiser reissue of an old EMI
Columbia recording with Guerrini, Infantino, Silveri, and Bellezza that
I picked up months ago.)
-david gable
DAMMIT! Not paintings of orphans on black silk, paintings of orphans
on black velvet (from my hatchet job on Zeffirelli). Posting on the
Internet is going to give me a heart attack yet.
-david gable
And lucrezia bori in a experimental 6 minute recording format:
http://www.nps.gov/edis/edisonia/audio/EDIS-WXT-02.mp3
(for more of this site see:)
http://www.nps.gov/edis/edisonia/opera.htm
Greetings
rolf
> I don't remember anything about MacNeil's Germont or Levine's
> conducting, but, speaking of Stratas as Violetta, there's a live
> mid-60's Traviata on Orfeo with Stratas, Wunderlich, Prey and Patane.
> That's one I've always wanted to hear but never have.
I've heard the highlights, but I think you would be disappointed. First of
all because it's sung in german ... By the way, do you know Krips' life
Traviata (Vienna 1971) on Arkadia with Cotrubas as the most moving Violetta
I have ever heard (much better than in the Kleiber recording), Gedda (I'm
usually not to fond of him but as Alfredo he is almost ideal) and Cornel
MacNeil (not at his best). Choir and the comprimari are a bit undisciplined,
but IMO a great performance all the same.
Benjo Maso
Don't worry, David, I doubt most of us here are really into fabrics.
The Caballe/Bergonzi/Pretre is lovingly prepared and absolutely worth
having. If only she had invested about the same amount of work in
preparing her subsequent roles...
Were you wearing silk while posting?
Simon
You already have my favorite studio recording, Kleiber's, though the reasons why
are more-or-less limited to Cotrubas and (pace David G) Kleiber. I also
wouldn't want to be without the best sung Alfredo, Bergonzi's for Sutherland
(better than on the Caballe/Pretre set, which I don't care for; then again,
Sutherland and Pritchard are hardly ideal), and have a soft spot for Maaze's
excitingly conducted effort on Decca, despite its rather odd cast. It's been a
while since I last wheeled out any live performances, so I'll refrain from
mentioning any of those.
Simon
Only when writing about Wagner.
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Matthew B. Tepper: WWW, science fiction, classical music, ducks!
My personal home page -- http://home.earthlink.net/~oy/index.html
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Take THAT, Daniel Lin, Mark Sadek, James Lin & Christopher Chung!
> I recall Stratas as a very fine and deeply expressive Violetta, one so
> convincingly consumptive appearing and acting as to be alarming. I
> also recall that Domingo sang very well and even acted rather well as
> Alfredo. Unfortunately, Domingo's simply not the actor Stratas is, and
> he's basically incapable of shedding his own sunny, sane, and stable
> demeanor and incarnating an impetuous and at times irrational young
> hothead instead--the young Di Stefano would have been perfect for the
> role--a still immature boy trying to act--with an all too often
> embarrassing lack of success--like a man. And it was a colossal
> mistake to juxtapose Domingo at his age at the time of the film to a
> gratuitously added worker the right age for the role. More's the pity,
> because Domingo actually looks fairly youthful--he lost weight for the
> film--but Zeffirelli undermines Domingo and Verdi for silly reasons of
> his own with his sentimental conceit.
It doesn't help that Domingo and "father" (and "sister" in flashbacks) have
ridiculous red hair, suggesting the Germont family is distant ancestor to
the Harkonnens.
>the overwhelming majority of
>listeners is not going to be able to listen through Poggi's provincial
>mannerisms and the odd gulping and bleating characteristic of his vocal
>production
And why should they, after all? Those are sufficient disqualifiers from
serious consideration -- unless, I suppose, Poggi were delivering blinding
insights that nobody else in history had ever discovered.
>The De los Angeles/Serafin set is generally underrated if only because
>De los Angeles is a more understated and less obviously vivid Violetta
>than Callas.
I would say that if it's underrated, it's because of the provincial tenor.
I've always found the lady herself touching and elegant here, and Serafin
contributes one of his unostentatiously "right" jobs.
>I abhor Carlos Kleiber's performance in his DG set more than almost any
>other performance of a Verdi opera I've ever heard.
We know, we know. :-) But there are so many worse examples around, I have
to wonder how much serious comparison you've done. It's not even the most
unidiomatic, singer-strait-jacketing, overdriven *Traviata* around, by a
long shot. That would be Maazel for Decca -- a recording that I listened
to with shock as he launched into the big tune in the Prelude, my only
reaction being "Omigod, he doesn't *get* it! -- how can that be, when so
many conductors before him did?" (And surely Muti comes ahead of Kleiber
on the list, too, along with a few others.)
Anyway, I now stay away from this recording myself, because of the ghastly
Cotrubas. (She's not as pouty and affected and unable to control pitch as
she later became, but the seeds are there.)
>Caballe-Bergonzi-Milnes-Pretre. In some ways, Caballe sings circles
>around De los Angeles, Callas, and Albanese, especially in the fast
>florid passages
Actually, though I would expect her to do well there, to my ears that's
particularly where she falls down. She sounds best in the very "simplest,"
quietest passages, like "Alfredo, Alfredo" and "Addio del passato," which
are both quite beautiful.
>I've never heard the Monteux set--reissued on Myto, I think, and to be
>reissued again on Testament--that many people seem to have found a bit
>underwhelming. I'm keeping my fingers crossed until I break down and
>buy it: with Carteri, Valetti, and Warren, it looks very promising on
>paper. Monteux was a superb musician, although I've never heard him
>conduct Italian opera, and if Carteri is in good form, she should give
>Callas, de los Angeles, and Albanese a run for their money.
So many writers I admire think well of this set, I bought it on Myto. I
like what Monteux does (but a warning: some have called it "unidiomatic");
it's an un-pushy lyrical conception, well-scaled to Valetti's way of
rendering Alfredo. Warren is mostly magnificent too, even though this was
not one of his trademark roles. But I just don't like Carteri, and I'm not
sure if she wasn't in good form or if this was just the way she sounded
and I'm immune to the charms of the "1940s-50s Italian prima donna"
timbre, with its touches of acidity and harshness.
>I've been scared off the Naxos issue of a live Met Traviata with
>Ponselle by reports that the performance finds her badly off form. I
>would love to have somebody tell me I've been misinformed.
Well, if I have any credibility left in your eyes, let me tell you: you've
been misinformed. I think she sounds terrific here (and Tibbett ain't
chopped liver either). It's the sumptuous, creamy Ponselle timbre, as
impeccably and movingly guided as ever. My only problem with her is in the
big confrontation at Flora's, where she starts making noises while Alfredo
is denouncing her, as if she'd lost faith in her ability to communicate
musically, and had to resort to unmusical gasps and sobs and squeaks to
stay in the scene. (It's an embryonic form of the lapses in judgement that
make her live Carmen so horribly disappointing and dispiriting from such a
great voice and great artist.) The whole performance is, however, more a
matter of great individual scenes and moments than a superbly coherent
whole -- understandable, I guess, given the distance in time and the dim
sound.
And, on reflection, I couldn't say that any of the Traviata recordings
offers a "superbly coherent whole," despite so many fine individual
elements in many of them. I don't think I could just point to one and say
"buy with confidence." I'd have the same problem recommending a Don
Giovanni or a Tristan und Isolde.
Jon Alan Conrad
Department of Music
University of Delaware
con...@udel.edu
In addition to that and the flaws noted by David, I would add that Stratas is
completely defeated by the coluratura requirement of the part, which is
unfortunate. Better to watch her in Boehm's Salome instead....
Simon
On 1/2/05 4:08 pm, in article cto9i...@drn.newsguy.com, "Simon Roberts"
<sd...@comcast.net> wrote:
> In addition to that and the flaws noted by David, I would add that Stratas is
> completely defeated by the coluratura requirement of the part, which is
> unfortunate. Better to watch her in Boehm's Salome instead....
>
> Simon
>
Stratas is defeated by the coloratura but, for once, I don't mind it, just
because of her amazing acting skills. She is, by far, the most convincing
acting soprano I've ever seen in any role. A friend of mine saw the video of
the Muti/Fabbricini production and told me her acting was also impressive,
but I haven't had the chance of checking it myself (it's not on DVD, is
it?).
josep
<<I'm not sure which Callas Traviata to recommend>>
There's another one you didn't mention. It used to be around - I don't
know about now - but it's by far my favorite among the Callas
performances - the 1958 Covent Garden performance with Valetti as
terrific Alfredo and Resigno conducting. I think it's a great deal
better than Lisbon, which was a few months before. She's really living
the part and the last act really gets me every time I hear it.
<<Ponselle by reports that the performance finds her badly off form.
I would love to have somebody tell me I've been misinformed.>>
I haven't heard it in a long while but I can't say that it really
stands out in my memory. What I do remember
is that she transposes Sempre Libera down, which is more than a tad
jarring in context.
Dan Plante
Here's a taste for anyone interested:
A possible antidote:
http://weasleyismyking.org/boots/
Stephen
Yes, that's what I meant. My mistake.
Benjo Maso
Believe it or not, Dan, I had intended to e-mail you and invite you
over to rmcr to do a run-down on the live Callas Traviata's. (I
assumed you'd be up to the task.) Does the one with Valetti and
Rescigno have Zanasi as Germont? I've always wanted to figure out
which Callas Violetta I prefer, but in addition to all the non-Callas
Traviata's I have or have heard, I have the Cetra studio recording with
Callas and the Scala with Di Stefano, Bastianini, and Giulini, and I've
heard the Lisbon, so there's not a crying need.
-david gable
-david gable
Among fanciers of singing, I am almost uniquely indifferent to the
actual sound of voices and vocal production if other circumstances are
favorable (although I am also capable of appreciating sheerly gorgeous
vocalism if the singer has more than that to offer). Knowing that,
long-time contibutors will heed my warning and avoid Mr. Poggi's
Alfredo, which at moment after moment makes even me wince. I, on the
other hand, have not avoided Mr. Protti's Alfredo for the simple fact
that he appears in a problematically cast but incomparably conducted
performance, and one can't take Maestro Molinari-Pradelli and leave Mr.
Poggi. One consequence of this is that I'm very familiar with those of
Mr. Poggi's instincts that are revealed in his performance despite his
singing narrowly defined, and one reason that one might listen to
Signor Poggi is to hear, as if preserved in amber, not only the record
of an old fashioned "provincial" approach to vocal expression
characteristic of many Italian opera singers in a less purist era but
also evidence of a manner of phrasing, homespun but expressive,
characteristic of that same tradition, evidence revealed in the
performance of a singer whose intentions are very often if not
invariably far less crude than his often unfortunate vocal production.
Now I would never hold up Poggi as the very model of the ideal Alfredo
even in his instincts, but he has instincts, and they're very often
good ones. I'm not even sure that I like Poggi's performance. Like's
not the right word. But I've come to admire crucial aspects of it, and
there are even passages in it when its glaring deficiencies are held in
abeyance long enough that its modest but expressive virtues come
shining through untarnished.
-david gable
Benjo ask, "By the way, do you know Krips' live Traviata (Vienna 1971)
on Arkadia with Cotrubas as the most moving Violetta I have ever heard
[ . . . ] Gedda [ . . . ] and Cornell MacNeil (not at his best)."
Unfortunately, I haven't heard it, although you make it sound very
tempting. Gedda's in good voice? 1971 was already a bit late for him
(and for MacNeil).
-david gable
Yes, Mario Zanasi is Germont. I have no idea if this version is
available these days. I got mine sometime in the late 80s on the
pirate label Virtuoso for cheap. If you come across it, it's really
worth it and if you need to, trade Cetra and EMI in to make room.
<<I've always wanted to figure out which Callas Violetta I prefer,
but in addition to all the non-Callas Traviata's I have or have
heard, I have the Cetra studio recording with Callas and the Scala
with Di Stefano, Bastianini, and Giulini, and I've heard the Lisbon,
so there's not a crying need.>>
One has to be rational about these things and I don't blame you. There
are actually quite a few Callas Traviatas floating around.
There are two from Mexico City. Of them, the first from 1951 is
interesting. She was new to the role and even though it's uneven, some
moments really show that she's making a connection. I have it on LP
and haven't heard it in ages but I remember liking the opening scena on
Act 1. But, it's only for for people who want to trace her Violettas
over her career.
There's also a Mexico City performance from 1952 that's really
not very good from what a Mariaphile friend of mine tells me. The
singing isn't very sensitive. I haven't heard it. However, while she
had a halfway decent conductor for 1951, di Fabriitis. In 1952 the
cast is conducted by a bandmaster - a mariachi band. Mugnai You
really have to hear her 1952 Rigoletto with the same conductor to
realize how awful this guy is. Callas wasn't often very good when she
had to put up with a clutz on the podium.
Her only studio recording was for Cetra, in 1953 (I've also read 1952).
It's really sad she did it then because she was only just beginning to
get into the character. Besides, the whole production is more than
slightly provincial. But having done it, she was then prevented by her
Cetra contract to do it for another label for a good while. This is
why she didn't make one for EMI. She and Legge wanted to.
There are two from La Scala (and Giullini). The one most people know
is from 1955. Personally, of all of Callas Traviatas I know, I think
her voice is the most dependable on this one. If I were to make a
selection of excerpts of a Callas Traviata for someone, or suggest a
Callas Traviata for someone who wanted an introduction to her art, this
is definitely the one I'd pick. But, I still don't think she was
"there" yet in terms of the character.
There is also a Guilini/La Scala performance from 1956. There is a new
Alfredo. I've never heard it.
1958 - Lisbon Traviata. This is pretty pedestrian stuff. The only
reason that this has become so well known is because EMI got the rights
for the air check and put it out with lots of marketing. Ghioni is
very clunky and she never gave her best when others were not with her
in what she wanted to do.
1958 - Covent Garden. This one tears my heart out. The sound on
Virtuoso seems like it was recorded off the air with a microphone in
front of somone's radio, with some fine-tuning done on the frequency
throughout the Overture. (I'm not kidding!) Also, her voice seems not
to have been well rested and is iffy in spots. But - if one can get
through those things, the performance is really special. To my
imagination, at least, she IS Violetta from first note to last and you
sense that she KNOWS more than she ever lets on in Act 1. Roscigno is
with her from beginning to end, the cast is really fine, and she gives
150%. Occasional vocal problems are not even a consideration as far as
I'm concerned. If I could only have only one Callas Violetta, this is
the one I'd keep without a moment's hesitation.
So, that's my quickie line-up on Callas and Traviata.
Dan Plante
I know exactly what you mean, but do you know the more or less
contemporaneous RCA Lucrezia Borgia and Verdi Rarities recital?
Mercifully, they at least are cut from similar cloth.
-david gable
I think his voice is an attractive enough "Italian lyric tenor" voice
well produced, and his performance is far from what I'd call provincial
. . . much farther than Di Stefano's, Tucker's, or Poggi's, that's for
sure. I think he's a rather stylish singer, and I think his
performance is ardently and convincingly acted: the guy really gets
inside Alfredo's shoes.
Given that Mario Sereni is a solid and musical Germont with a
reasonably rich facsimile of an authentic "Verdi baritone," and given
that the wonderfully convincing interactions among De los Angeles, Del
Monte, and Sereni are those of an alert ensemble cast perfectly in
character, I'd say the Traviata with De los Angeles and Serafin comes
pretty close to being a "superbly coherent whole."
-david gable
As for the superiority of Lucia di Lamermoor to Lucrezia Borgia, I
absolutely do not see it. There's not one movement in Lucia (for the
soprano or anybody else, but Lucia gets the opera's weakest music)
remotely on the level of the magnificent double aria for Lucrezia in
the prologue, and the mad scene from Lucia is the most threadbare thing
Donizetti ever tossed off, at least beginning with Anna Bolena in 1830.
-david gable
<david...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1107325803.8...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
<david...@aol.com> wrote in message p. in the second Act where frankly I
had a roblem keeping my
attention.news:1107325033.5...@l41g2000cwc.googlegroups.com...
Gedda was in excellent voice (he sings the cabaletta by the way), for
MacNeil it was indeed a bit late. There is no Italian in the cast and not
all the comprimari are quite idiomatic. I see that you think that Cotrubas
is not an adequate. It's true that she is more credible as the suffering
consumptive than as the radiant centre of the Parisian demi-monde. It's also
true that she is not quite up to the technically most difficult passages of
her role, and it's perhaps significant that she particularly good in the
reading of the letter and the parlando-passage at the end (infinitely more
convincing than in the Kleiber-recording). But on the whole I think her
interpretation is one of the most moving ever recorded.
Benjo Maso
Sure, we've spoken about that. And then, there is Kraus in it:
everything that Donizetti wrote lovingly and gracefully supplied, sigh...
> -david gable
>
> confessing to a bias exactly opposite mine. So perhaps it's not
> surprising that we disagree on Carlo del Monte's Alfredo in the
> performance with de los Angeles and Serafin.
>
> I think his voice is an attractive enough "Italian lyric tenor" voice
> well produced, and his performance is far from what I'd call provincial
I think he was Mexican BTW. Fond memories of Gianni Schicchi, possibly
the only really youthful-sounding Rinuccio on record. Poggi is the most
horrible tenor I have ever heard in the Italian repertoire.
> -david gable
>
If Victoria de los Angeles married Dickens' Artful Dodger would she be
.... ?
MIFrost
Is it as good as her Norma on DVD? I've not heard as much of her as you have,
and I don't think I've heard the Lucrezia, but among those I have heard, that
Norma is in a class by itself (especially the last 10 minutes or so).
Simon
I already expressed reservations about Caballe's "expressivity" similar
to yours in my very first contribution to this thread. Still, like
Ivailo, I think her very first RCA recordings, including the Traviata,
Lucrezia Borgia, and "Rarities" recitals, find her more involved than
she was in later studio efforts.
-david gable
-david
Don't know the Salome, although you're the second person to recommend
it to me on this newsgroup in a fortnight.
-david gable
[...]
>Don't know the (Caballé/Leinsdorf) Salome, although you're the second person
to recommend
>it to me on this newsgroup in a fortnight.
I shall not be a third. I'm often a fan of Caballé and Milnes (emphatically
including their shared TRAVIATA), and they were in peak vocal health when this
was made, but they seem to me to inhabit the wrong planet for it, musically,
stylistically and interpretively. The soprano is in her gossamer-monotonous
mode throughout, and that's even more bothersome when, as here, she's out of
her idiomatic comfort zone. Yes, there are some beautiful soft high notes,
that's not exactly worth stopping the presses for. (With Resnik and Leinsdorf
on hand too, they're just an Italianate tenor and a coloratura soprano away
from a pretty good UN BALLO IN MASCHERA cast; it's a shame they're doing
SALOME.)
This is a case when I think That British Magazine got it right, in its
unequivocal dismissal of this during the SALOME survey in the current issue.
(Of course, they -- and I -- give very high marks to Karajan/Behrens, so add
salt to taste...)
--Todd K
>that (Caballé/Vickers/Veasey)
Norma is in a class by itself (especially the last 10 minutes or so).
Simon, you recommended that to me ages ago, and I only got around to it last
week, having found a startlingly cheap still-wrapped copy for auction
somewhere. It is indeed something special on musical grounds, and, of course,
the mistral so enriches the atmosphere of the performance that it should have
received a production co-credit. The big surprise for me was Vickers's
tremendously effective Pollione, which leaves in the dust most of his recorded
competition. What a pleasure it is to hear a tenor in this part who, in every
sense, has the stature to suggest a real partnership with the Norma. I so
rarely enjoy him in Italian opera (Otello aside); I was not prepared. Doubters,
do give it a look: Caballé is not only at her most plugged-in and non-bland
here, she's also surprisingly *more* diligent and precise with the florid parts
than on her RCA studio recording, where she tends to be a bit smeary and lax in
her articulation. (I'd have expected the reverse, of course, because in the
studio she'd presumably have all the time she needed to go for the gold. I
wonder if her submissive hand-picked conductor, Cillario, should get some of
the blame.) Veasey and Ferrin are splendid, and Patane simply heroic in
difficult circumstances.
I do wish that it *looked* a little better, though. From what I've read, this
DVD is actually an improvement on previous incarnations, but the picture is
*very* dark, the camerawork pedestrian to put it kindly, and the film's source
material looks so soft and blurred that facial detail in all but the closest
shots is anyone's guess.
--Todd K
<<You already have my favorite studio recording, Kleiber's, though the reasons
why
are more-or-less limited to Cotrubas and (pace David G) Kleiber.>>
I like it mostly for the singers, but agree that, of them, Cotrubas is the
major draw. Her male colleagues are tasteful and attractive, but have done more
inspired and memorable work elsewhere, both together (FANCIULLA) and
separately. And Domingo's sound always strikes me as a bit bulky for this part.
<< I also
wouldn't want to be without the best sung Alfredo, Bergonzi's for Sutherland
(better than on the Caballe/Pretre set, which I don't care for; then again,
Sutherland and Pritchard are hardly ideal)>>
We differ here. I hear little to choose between Bergonzi with Sutherland and
Bergonzi with Caballé -- he seems to me close to ideal casting and in fine
voice both times, and I find the company he keeps on the RCA recording so far
preferable that I was able to jettison the Sutherland. Neither recording is
anything special as conducting goes; I guess I'd give a barely perceptible nod
in the direction of Pretre.
About Caballé, I'll chime in here that while she isn't as subtle as Callas,
Scotto, or Cotrubas, there's one thing that she absolutely nails as well as
anyone ever has done it on record, and that's the nature of Violetta's grace,
poise, and refinement. That's not *all* there is to the character, of course,
and I'll grant that other sopranos have cut deeper with the desperation and
anguish; but her Violetta is a lady with a capital "L," and when Germont Sr. in
their first encounter breathes, "Such manners!" we know precisely what he
means.
--Todd K
That's pretty much my reaction too. Nor is the conducting anything to write
home about. (And, although I can often hear, in recordings I don't like, what
others like about them, I just don't here.)
Simon
>I do wish that it *looked* a little better, though. From what I've read, this
>DVD is actually an improvement on previous incarnations, but the picture is
>*very* dark, the camerawork pedestrian to put it kindly, and the film's source
>material looks so soft and blurred that facial detail in all but the closest
>shots is anyone's guess.
Yes, it's unfortunate; you would think it was some amateurish pirate effort.
The Tristan looks similar, if I remember right.
Simon
Is this really another recording? The Lyrica releases I've seen look
like the same as the RCA. Of course, there is the rehearsal on Music
and Arts... Is Toscanini's singing audible on the Lyrica?
--Jeff
--
(To email me put a "1" between the "don" and the "rice")
> The albums I usually pull out when I want to here her are the Rarities
> sets she did for RCA in the 60s and, surprisingly, the Puccini set under
> Mackerras which has an incredible rendition of the aria for Rondine. best
> Richard
Why "surprisingly?" The Caballé Puccini album is one of the greatest
recital discs ever made.
MK