| 1. Overture |
| 2. Beach |
| 3. Lady Macbeth |
| 4. Inverness: Macbeth's Return/The Preparation/Fanfare/Duncan's Arrival |
| 5. Banquet |
| 6. Dagger and Earth |
| 7. At the Well/The Princes' Escape/Coronation/Come Sealing Night |
| 8. Court Dance |
| 9. Fleance |
| 10. Groom's Dance |
| 11. Bear Baiting |
| 12. Ambush/Banquo's Ghost |
| 13. Going to Bed/Blind Man's Buff/Requiescant/Sere and Yellow Leaf |
| 14. Cauldron |
| 15. Prophesies |
| 16. Wicca Way |
Music of Macbeth,Third Ear Band,Blueprint UK,Experimental,Pop,Prog-Rock/Art Rock,Rock
Average customer rating:
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Match Point
Various Artists Manufacturer: Milan Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BU0C7K Release Date: 2005-12-20 |
Tracks:
- 'Mal Reggendo All'aspro Assalto' From 'Il Trovatore'
- 'Un Di, Felice' From 'La Traviata'
- 'Mia Piccirella' From 'Salvatore Rosa'
- 'Gualtier Malde!...Caro Nome' From 'Rigoletto'
- 'Mi Par D'udir Ancora' From I Pescatori Di Perle'
- 'Arresta ... Quali Sguardi!' From 'Guillaume Tell'
- 'O Figli, O Figli Miei!' From 'Macbeth'
- 'Desdemona Rea, Si, Per Ciel' From 'Otello'
- 'Una Furtiva Lagrima' From L'elisir D'amore'
Album Description
Match Point tells the story of social-status climber Chris, a modest tennis instructor. His marriage to Chloe gains him comfort and prestige in society, but his passion leads his astray into the arms of his soon-to-be sister-in-law, the very sexy American, Nola. In Match Point, which deals with luck, ambition and guilt, writer/director Woody Allen draws on the talent of actors Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, Emily Mortimer, and in the role of Nola, Scarlett Johannson.Customer Reviews:
Music that calms me.......2007-02-08
Interesting Choices.......2007-01-05
Great for non experts.......2006-10-05
On-Point.......2006-05-12
For Those so Engrossed by the Film, Here are the Excerpts that Molded It.......2006-04-28
Woody Allen created his character Chris as a lover of opera and integrated that love for opera into the family of wealth he 'enters'. The story is so well written and Allen is so well versed in opera that his selections for excerpts greatly added to the depth of the film.
Here are the old recordings of Enrico Caruso singing arias from 'Il Trovatore', 'Salvator Rosa', 'Les Pecheurs de perles', 'Macbeth', and 'L'elisir d'amore'. In addition to these are excerpts from contemporary singers performing arias form 'La Traviata' (performed by Monika Krause and Georg Tichy), 'Rigoletto' (sung by Alida Ferrarini with Alexander Rahbari conducting), 'William Tell' and 'Otello' (performed by Igor Morozov and Janez Lotric with Johannes Wildner conducting the Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra). Probably copyright laws prevented the use of the 'live performances' at Covent Garden we heard in the film with very fine young singers, here substituted with Slovak recording artists. But the mood is still there.
This soundtrack recording makes for nice reminiscing about a fine film while adding a bit of flavor to the usual classical music collection! Grady Harp, April 06
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Viaggio Italiano / Andrea Bocelli
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041OA Release Date: 1997-11-18 |
Tracks:
- Turandot: Nessun dorma
- L' Arlesiana: Lamento di Federico
- Macbeth: Ah, la paterna mano
- Rigoletto: La donna e mobile
- Elisir d'amore: Una furtiva Iagrima
- Panis Angelicus
- Ava Maria
- O Sole Mio
- Core n'grato
- Santa Lucia luntana
- I' te vurria vasa
- Tu, 'ca nun chiagne!
- Marinarello
- Piscatore 'e Pusilleco
- Message Bocelli
- Adeste Fideles (bonus track)
Amazon.com essential recording
Opera is in fashion, and the woods are full of pop vocalists who think they have the chops to sing arias. The best contender so far is Andrea Bocelli, who at least has a real voice, if a small one, and sometimes manages a really exciting tenor sound. Unfortunately, he is inconsistent in his tone and production, and, despite the fact that he's singing in his native language, he often sounds as though he has only the barest idea of what the words mean. The Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Vladimir Fedoseyev, plays stodgily. Anyone with a real interest in tenor arias would be much better advised to check out recordings by the young Luciano Pavarotti. --Sarah Bryan MillerCustomer Reviews:
A Marvelous Performance of Adeste Fideles.......2006-11-13
Bocelli never disappoints!.......2006-07-07
Worst C.D Ever...But still a great artist.......2006-06-22
I just had to write this review. I recently purchesed 3 Bocelli C.Ds and was rewarded with 1 Very good , 1 not bad, n this one that STINKS...IF THE REVIEWERS WERE HONEST I COULD HAVE SAVED SOME MONEY.... I buy a lot from Amazon, ITs a great site, and 99 percent of the time when i read reviews they are on the money and help me out a great deal....With that said
Let me say that this cd entices you with all the big name italian songs, BUT DONT LET IT FOOL YOU..It sounds like it was made in 1 day. Who ever mixed the album has Bocellis voice so loud it sounds like he is SCREAMING ( I THINK HE IS) AND the
orchestra sounds like it is made of 3 pieces as you can only faintly hear it. There is not 1 song on this C.D ID recommend.
But dont worry , if you like Bocelli and dont know what to buy
let me tell you that I Enjoyed (Cieli Di Toscana) The first song Melodramma Rivals Bocellis Con Te Partiro Which is on his ROMANZA C.D AND HIGHLY Recomended, Also Sogno is Another very good C.D. So save yourself money and stay away from this one.
Also his Verdi CD IS VERY well made, not as strong a voice as Caruso , but once you hear Bocelli you wont care. Great Great voice that is very Hypnotic and when you hear him you wont care if he is as good as Caruso because he is Different , totally different and there both great Tenors. Peace
the Perry Como of operatic tenors.......2006-03-25
Absolutely lovely!.......2006-02-25
I am not an opera expert by any means, so I don't get hung up on whether or not someone is techically perfect or not. If I like it, that's good enough for me!
My teenage sons and I were in a pizza place the other day and above the noise, I heard a beautiful song- a male singer- and was shushing the boys, trying to determine who it was. With great patience, my 17 year old son said, "Mom, that's Andre Bocelli. Can't you tell?"
Enough said.
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Verdi: Requiem & Operatic Choruses
Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003CUH Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Requiem: 1. Requiem & Kyrie
- Requiem: 2. Dies Irae
- Requiem: 3. Offertory
- Requiem: 4. Sanctus
Tracks:
- Requiem: 5. Agnus Dei
- Requiem: 6. Lux Aeterna
- Requiem: 7. Libera Me - 1. Libera Me - 2. Dies Irae - 3. Requiem Aeternam - 4. Libera Me
- Requiem: Spuntato Ecco
- Requiem: Patria Oppressa!
- Requiem: Fuoco Di Gioia
- Requiem: Va Pensiero
- Requiem: Gloria All'Egitto
Amazon.com
Robert Shaw learned from Arturo Toscanini, and in his stupendous 1987 recording for Telarc he managed to surpass the master on some points. He is unerring in his pacing and staging of climaxes, and draws phrasing and dynamics from the chorus that other conductors can only dream of. Points are made with exhilarating effect throughout the account: never has the bass drum in the Dies irae been as splendidly hammered as here, and the whooping brass in the Tuba mirum is breathtaking. The all-American solo quartet sounds a bit driven, especially the light-voiced Susan Dunn and Jerry Hadley, but their contribution is a strong one nonetheless. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
A memorable album by Robert Shaw.......2007-04-16
Robert Shaw (1916 - 1999), of course, is practically a god in the choral world. And while he has done well as an orchestral conductor, his claim to fame to most will always be his work with choruses.
So here we have an operatic requiem written by one of history's greatest opera composers, conducted by one of history's greatest choral conductors. How does it turn out?
The Atlanta Symphony Chorus is very, very good. Their sumptuous sound becomes even more memorable thanks to the stunning reverberation of Atlanta Symphony Hall. Their Libera Me fugue was literally a wall of sound that seemed for a moment to encompass your entire world. The Dum Veneris passage following that was the best I'd ever heard: all four parts were distinct and incredibly powerful.
The four soloists, however, really stole the show for me. Susan Dunn and Diane Curry displayed a lot of passion in Recordare. They also created a wonderfully blended sound through their Agnus Dei duet, probably the best blend I'd ever heard so far.
Jerry Hadley is definitely one of my all-time favorite Verdi Requiem tenors. He reminded me of Richard Tucker in his commanding Kyrie entrance. His Ingemisco possessed a ringing power that left me breathless.
Paul Plishka was probably the "weakest" of the four. In Confutatis, it sounded like he was punching his voice. However, he sounded very good in the Offertorio.
And speaking of Offertorio, that was truly a soloist high point for me. The four singers literally turned into a mini-opera; it was quite dramatic hearing their voices trade back and forth.
The sound of the orchestra was truly a pleasure to hear. This music demands power and virtuosity, and the Atlantans provided both in spades. And drum lovers will be quite satisfied with the almost violent sound of the bass drum in Dies Irae.
The album also features five popular choruses from Verdi's operas. If, like me, you got carried away listening to the Requiem soloists, here's your chance to hear this remarkable chorus without any soloist distraction. The "Don Carlos" chorus (sung in Italian not French) was a rousing affair. "Patria oppressa" was appropriately subdued and melancholy. Fuoco di gioia proved the virtuosity of these choral masters. "Va pensiero" was smooth and rich. "Gloria all'Egitto" featured the chorus in all its mighty grandeur. The orchestra provides excellent accompaniment throughout. You will thoroughly enjoy listening to these choruses.
The recorded sound is absolutely fabulous. The four sections of the chorus are much more evenly miked than on most CDs. The great engineering makes the orchestra an audiophile's dream.
The liner notes contain texts and translations. However, a previous reviewer has found that the "Hostias" paragraph is missing the words "Fac eas, Domine, de morte transire ad vitam."
The tracks use an index system which I suspect is not available on most DVD players, the result being that the Dies Irae is put on a single 36 minute track.
This CD was recorded in April 1987 in Atlanta Symphony Hall, Atlanta, GA. The Requiem duration is 84'23", so the tempos are about average for this piece.
Great version.......2007-02-26
Superb.......2005-10-20
Don't miss the final track on the second disk!
Brings back memories.......2001-05-04
With all the flap over the recently released Gergiev recording of the Verdi Requiem on Philips, with its unfortunate choice of Andrea Bocelli - a pop singer masquerading as an operatic singer - as tenor soloist, it is once again - and always - a pleasure to turn to a truly definitive recorded performance, that of Robert Shaw. As points of reference whenever I turn to this performance, I always have in mind earlier recordings by Giulini and Solti, among others. (I include a truly visceral one by Karel Ancerl and the Czech Philharmonic, featuring Galina Vishnevskaya with a "Libera me" to die for, and the type of Slavic excitement that Gergiev tries for but fails.)
Verdi's Requiem is, without doubt, the most operatic of such works as have become part of the liturgical canon. But it doesn't necessarily follow from this that the best recordings are the ones which utilize operatic superstars. Were that the case, Solti's recording, with Joan Sutherland, Marilyn Horne, Luciano Pavarotti and Martti Talvela, would be unchallenged (particularly when one throws in the Vienna Philharmonic, as well as the typically excellent mid-60's sound that Decca was so good at). But, true to form, Solti just couldn't find the proper sensitivity and balance to make his performance the definitive one.
Shaw does what Solti could not do. In a work that requires efforts of equal quality by orchestra, soloists and chorus, there simply is no better chorus than a Shaw chorus. Shaw's four soloists, while perhaps not of the marquee value of the ones on the Solti recording, are outstanding. A previous customer reviewer certainly got it right when he said that Susan Dunn was a Verdi soprano to be reckoned with. And Diane Curry, Jerry Hadley and Paul Plishka are equally excellent. (Plishka, as I mention later, is one of my "memories.") Moreover, in a work which demands that the cataclysms of the Dies Irae and the tenderly supplicant closing pages of the Libera me be captured in proper proportions, none are better than Telarc at this challenge.
The personal friendship between Robert Shaw and the Cleveland-based Telarc team of Bob Woods and Jack Renner goes back to the days when Shaw was George Szell's assistant at the Cleveland Orchestra. Thus it was, when Woods and Renner introduced the "all-digital" Telarc label in the late 70's, that they turned to Shaw and his Atlantans as an enduring source for the recording of choral masterpieces. With the passing of Shaw some two years ago, it is now time that someone sum up his recorded legacy, which, under the aegis of Telarc, exceeds three dozen recordings. In my humble opinion, he will be remembered for a long, long time for three works that Telarc recorded with his forces: The Bach B Minor Mass, the Brahms German Requiem, and this Verdi Requiem.
Oh! The memories! For several years, at a time when Shaw's Atlanta forces were as good as they were to get, in the early 80's, I was fortunate to live in the Atlanta area, and to attend many of his concerts. And, in the fall of 1965, when Paul Plishka had just won a "young artist" award that was to lead to his Metropolitan Opera career, I was fortunate to have been a member of an amateur chorus which performed this work with a semi-pro orchestra and four young soloists. The names of the other three soloists were long ago relegated to the dustbin of history. But the bass soloist at that 1965 performance was none other than Paul Plishka. He's still banging the boards at the Met. One durable dude!
Once again, kudos to Mr. Grant for his superb review, and for his reminding me that I had some "unfinished business" to attend to.
Bob Zeidler
Apologies to Puccini........2000-12-04
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Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk
Shostakovich , Vishnevskaya , Gedda , and Rostropovich Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000063UM3 Release Date: 2002-04-09 |
Tracks:
- Act One, Scene One: Akh, Nye Spitsa Bol'she, Poprobuyu - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene One: V Dyevkakh Luchshe Bylo - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene One: Gribki Sevodnya Budut? - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene One: Prigotov Otravu Dlya Krys - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene One: Govori!... Plotinu-to Na - Leslie Fyson
- Act One, Scene One: Proshchay, Katerina - WErner Krenn
- Act One, Scene One: Chevo Vstal? Chevo Ostanovilsa? - Dimiter Petkov
- Act One, Scene One: Interlude - London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Act One, Scene Two: A! Ay! Ay! - John McCarthy
- Act One, Scene Two: Barynya!... Ay!... Shto S Toboyu? - Robert Tear
- Act One, Scene Two: A Nu-s, Pozvol'te Ruku-s - Robert Tear
- Act One, Scene Two: Interlude - London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Act One, Scene Three: Spat' Pora. Dyen Proshol - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene Three: Zherebyonok K Kobylke Toropitsa - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act One, Scene Three: Kto Eto, Kto, Kto Stuchit? - Nicolai Gedda
- Act One, Scene Three: Ya Poydu... Proshchay - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Four: Shto Znachit Starost' - Dimiter Petkov
- Act Two, Scene Four: Pod Oknami U Chzuhikh - Dimiter Petkov
- Act Two, Scene Four: Proshchay, Katya, Proshchay! - John McCarthy
- Act Two, Scene Four: Ustal... Prikazhete Mnye Postegat'? - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Two, Scene Four: V Kladovuyu Sergeya Zaperli - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Two, Scene Four: Vidno, Skoro Uzh Zarya - John McCarthy
- Act Two, Scene Four: Batya, Ispovyedatsa - Dimiter Petkov
- Act Two, Scene Four: Akh, Boris Timofeyevich - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Two, Scene Four: Interlude - London Philharmonic Orchestra
Tracks:
- Act Two, Scene Five: Sergey, Seryozha! - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Five: Katya, Prikhodit Konyets Lyubvi Nashey - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Five: Nye Pechal'sa, Sergey - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Five: Opyat Usnul - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Two, Scene Five: Nu? Chevo Tebye? - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Five: Slushay, Sergey, Sergey! - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Two, Scene Five: Katerina!... Kto Tam? - WErner Krenn
- Act Two, Scene Five: Tepyer Shabash - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Three, Scene Six: Shto Ty Tut Shoish? - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Three, Scene Six: U Menya Byla Kuma - Robert Tear
- Act Three, Scene Six: Interlude - London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Act Three, Scene Six: Sozdan Politseysky Byl Vo Vremya Ono - Leslie Fyson
- Act Three, Scene Six: U Izmaylovoy Seychas Pir Goroy - Martyn Hill
- Act Three, Scene Six: Vashe Blagorodie!... Chevo Tebye? - Leslie Fyson
- Act Three, Scene Six: Intelrude - London Philharmonic Orchestra
- Act Three: Scene Eight: Slava Suprugam - John McCarthy
- Act Three: Scene Eight: Shto Takoe?... Zamok Sorvan - John McCarthy
- Act Three: Scene Eight: Shto Takoe? Pozdno! - Leslie Fyson
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Vyorsty Odna Za Drugoy - John McCarthy
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Stepanych! Propusti Menya - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Nye Lekhko Posle Pochota Da Poklonov - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Moyo Pochtyenye! - Birgit Finnila
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Ladno Dostanu! - Nicolai Gedda
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Na Chulki! Idyom, Tepyer Ty Moya! - John McCarthy
- Act Four: Scene Nine: V Lesu, V Samoy Chashche Yest' Ozero - Galina Vishnevskaya
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Znaesh Li, Sonyetka - Birgit Finnila
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Vstavay! Po Mestam! Zhivo - Leslie Fyson
- Act Four: Scene Nine: Akh!... Bozhe Moy! Shto Takoe? - Leslie Fyson
Amazon.com
Written between 1930 and 1932, Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk was one of the most brilliant achievements of Shostakovich's long career. It was also the work that got him into trouble with Stalin. When the Soviet leader attended a performance in Moscow in 1936, almost two years after the opera's acclaimed Leningrad premiere, he personally ordered the publication of a scathing article in Pravda ("Muddle Instead of Music"), unleashing a ruthless campaign to reduce the arts in Soviet Russia to a state of dogmatic subservience to the regime. Lady Macbeth would disappear from the repertory for 30 years, and Shostakovich, despite his great gifts for opera, would focus his attention on symphonic and chamber music instead.But what an opera this one was! Notwithstanding its title, it has nothing to do with Shakespeare's Macbeth and quite a lot to do with Dostoevsky (even though it's based on a story by another 19th-century writer, Nikolai Leskov). The plot has all the elements of a Russian epic--boredom, need, irresistible sexual longing, infidelity, murder, suicide--and the music is vintage Shostakovich, swinging between farce and tragedy with astonishing sureness, magnificently intense, deeply absorbing, yet approachable. The opera's climactic scenes are driven by music of incredible power, and there are pages of haunting lyric beauty as well, such as Katarina's aria in scene 3, or the extraordinary music that begins the love scene between Katarina and Sergey--mysterious, edgy, sensuous, and vast. It's all brought home on this recording, a labor of love from two of the composer's closest friends and greatest champions. Vishnevskaya, the great exponent of the role of Katarina, sings with untrammeled splendor, while Rostropovich, the supreme interpreter of the music of Shostakovich in our time, conducts a characterful, white-hot performance by the London Philharmonic. --Ted Libbey
Customer Reviews:
Stunning.......2006-02-25
Still the top recording of this opera beyond all doubt!!!.......2005-06-04
Those who don't like Vishñévskaja's voice, in my opinion, will still find her much more classy and appealing - as well as orthodox in treating her part - compared to Ewing on the Chung recording. Although both take a few liberties with the occasional note and/or rhythm, there's no question that Vishñévskaja is far more convincing, respectful of the composer's intentions and tasteful (that she studied the part with Shostakóvich himself {they were very close friends!} is so obvious as to defy any attempt at refutation). The same applies to Rostropóvich, even though brass-haters might gravitate to Chung on that basis (here the brass really let rip, though nobody is slighted all the same!): the seal of authenticity is impossible to shake from this recording even though DGG has a somewhat clearer sound allowing more detail to come across at times (and Chung has to also get credit no doubt too for that extra-transparent sound there). No question that I find Petkov much more sinister compared to Haugland with Chung as the evil, incestuously lecherous father-in-law Borís (quite aside from Chung encouraging all his singers to think more along the lines of "Sprechstimme" to the point of abuse!) - and here Haugland is more in his element as the Police Sergeant. All in all, although some details occasionally get muddied up (e.g., Borís's first entry in ghost-form obliterating the woodwinds on this recording), this reading is far more compelling in every way (and it shows just how every bit of Shostakóvich's vocal writing is eminently singable - contrasted to the complaints of his first singers before Stáljin banned the opera outright, as Vishñévskaja relates in her autobiography).
Don't hesitate, anybody who reads this and wants to explore this opera (especially for the first time!!!): THIS is the recording to get!!!! Afterwards you can also check out the other two or more that may be around; but even a seasoned Lady-Macbeth "lover" like me gravitates back to this recording each and every time without fail!
Very Moving.......2004-02-16
For me, and this is only my opinion, the music is wonderful and very easily appreciated, and the men sound far Freer and natural while singing. Personally, I have never found Russian sopranos very exciting. To my ear, most of them, especially the lighter ones, sound strained, pushed, "hooty", and whinny. This dramatic soprano (the conductor's real life wife) is less like all that, but still has all those qualities. I find the Slavic voice sounds better when in lower ranges. Russian Mezzos are thrilling, and most of them have fabulous high C's and even D's, and in this case, I think the opera would be better served having a high Mezzo sing the lead female role. That, however, is just me, as I don't like the Russian Soprano sound.
All in all, though, this is an extremely wonderful recording of a very vital work. I would recommend it to anyone. And for those who are not sure of Russian opera, or even modern opera (and this falls into both catagories), don't worry, you won't be scared off by it in any way.
A beautiful recording!!.......2003-12-15
Stalin Didn't Like It Much!.......2003-04-12
The plot is primarily what angered Stalin...Lady Macbeth is a rather dark and erotic melodrama, which probably offended the former seminarian's latent puritanical sensibilities. Katerina, the opera's main character, is caught in a dull and lifeless marriage to a petty merchant. When she falls in love with a young worker, she first kills her father in law and then her husband. When discovered by the police, both she and her lover are sent to Siberia, where he abandons Katerina for another woman. Driven mad with jealousy and despair, Katerina pushes the other woman into a river, jumps in after her and both are drowned. The bare bones of the plot do not do justice to the power of the work. No character in the opera is virtuous...the murdered father-in-law secretly lusts after Katerina, the husband is a whimpering whiner, the lover is shallow and a real brute, and Katerina herself is vicious in the extreme. However, Shostakovitch garners real sympathy for Katerina in the marvelous musical depiction of the utter despair and boredom of her life...the almost helplessness of her seduction, and the barbarity of both her father-in-law and her husband. The work can almost be read as a proto-feminist tragedy, except that Shostakovitch still clearly abhors all of this characters' behavior.
It is also not a long stretch to see in the trauma of Katerina a portrait of Stalinist society. Repressed, held back by convention and ultimately crushing boredom (a trait familiar from much Russian literature) Katerina is almost a symbol for the sickness that artists saw eating away Russian society at it's core.
The work moves dizzyingly from tragedy to satire to pathos. Scenes involving the peasants are broadly ribald...almost shockingly so. The scenes of the police station are really a thinly veiled satire on the state of Soviet justice and the petty nature of officialdom. Katerina's mad scene, when her dead father-in-law haunts her has the drama of Mussorgsky. And in the final scene, as the prisoners trudge to Siberia, you know that everyone in the audience must have felt the resonance with the political events of the time. This scene has a depth that goes beyond the story on the stage and is clearly projected in the music. It is as powerful as the end of Janacek's House of the Dead or the Forest Scene in Boris. All of the composer's talent is employed in this work...this is Shostakovitch at his highest and most impressive. It's a work that burns itself into your brain, much like the work of Dostoevsky or Bulgakov.
This performance can only be considered a classic. Recorded by Rostropovitch after the revival of the work in the 70s in it's original form (as opposed to the reworking the opera recieved in the 50s at the hands of the composer....a reworking that cut much of the political bite of the original) The opera stars Rostrapovitch's wife Galina Vishnevskaya as the heroine. Though I am not an unbridled fan of the singer...her slavic "hoot" sometimes gets on my nerves...she is marvelous in this role and a really talented vocal actress. She is by turns, pathetic, bathetic, sarcastic, cruel and finally tragic. Also impressive in the cast is Nicolai Gedda, who looses just a bit of his customary honeyed tone in his turn as the shallow Sergey. Rostropovitch is a conductor I generally don't care for. He is a marvelous cellist, but I've heard too many National Symphony Orchestra concerts where he had no control over balances and let the brass and percussion drowned out everything else. But in Shostakovitch and Prokofiev...(and Britten actually) he is superlative on the whole. This is a great example of that. Rostrapovitch has lived everything in this music and it shows.
This is a must-have CD for any opera fan or any fan of Shostakovitch. And if you count yourself as neither, it is still a powerful artistic statement on the effects of repression on the human soul. Certainly, it stands with the very finest in the Russian operatic tradition.
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Luciano Pavarotti - Nessun dorma (Arias & Duets)
Luciano Pavarotti , Mirella Freni , and Katia Ricciarelli Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004Z32N Release Date: 2001-03-27 |
Tracks:
- La Traviata: Libiamo ne' lieti calici (Brindisi)
- Werther: Pourquoi me reveiller
- L'Elisir d'Amore: Una parola ... Chiedi all'aura
- La Gioconda: Cielo e mar
- La Traviata: Parigi, o cara
- L'africana: Mi batte il cor ... O paradiso
- Turandot: Nessun dorma
- Petite Messe solennelle: Domine Deus
- Requiem: Ingemisco
- La Traviata: Lungi da lei ... De' miei bollenti spiriti
- Macbeth: Ah, la paterna mano
- I lombardi: La mia letizia infondere
- Otello: Gia nella notte densa
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Verdi: Macbeth (complete opera live 1952) with Maria Callas, Enzo Mascherini, Victor de Sabata, Orchestra & Chorus of La Scala, Milan
Giuseppe Verdi , Victor De Sabata , Maria Callas , Enzo Mascherini , Orchestra e coro del Teatro alla Scala , Italo Tajo , Gino Penno , Andrea Maffei , Dario Caselli , and Attilio Barbesi Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000630X Release Date: 1998-03-17 |
Tracks:
- Macbeth: Preludio
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene One - Che faceste? Dite su!
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene One - Giorno non vidi mai (Macbeth - Banco)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene One - Pro Macbetto! Il tuo signore
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene One - Due vaticini compiuti or sono (Macbeth - Banco)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene One - S'allontanarono!
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Nel di della vittoria io le incontrai
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Vien! t'affretta! (Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Al cader della sera il re qui giunge (Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Or tutti sorgete, ministri infernali (Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Oh, donna mia! (Macbeth - Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Sappia la sposa mia (Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Regna il sonno su tutti
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Fatal mia donna! un murmure
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Allor questa voce m'intesi nel petto
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Il pugnal la riportate (Lady Macbeth - Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Di destarlo per tempo il re m'impose
- Macbeth: Act One: Scene Two - Schiudi, inferno (Macduff - Banco - Lady Macbeth - Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene One - Perche mi sfuggi (Lady Macbeth - Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene One - La luce langue (Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Two - Chi v'impose unirvi a noi?
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Two - Studia il passo, o mio figlio!
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Two - Come dal ciel precipita (Banco)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Salve, o re! (Macbeth - Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Si colmi il calice (Lady Macbeth - Macduff)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Tu di sangue hai brutto il volto (Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Che ti scosta, o re mio sposo (Lady Macbeth - Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Si colmi il calice
- Macbeth: Act Two: Scene Three - Sangue a me quell'ombra chiede (Lady Macbeth - Macduff - Macbeth)
Tracks:
- Macbeth: Act Three - Tre volte miagola la gatta in fregola
- Macbeth: Act Three - Ballo
- Macbeth: Act Three - Finche appelli (Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Three - Fuggi, regal fantasima (Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Three - Ondine e silfidi dall'ali candide
- Macbeth: Act Three - Ove son io? (Macbeth - Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene One - Patria oppressa!
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene One - O figli miei!
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene One - Ah, la paterna mano (Macduff)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene One - Dove siam? che bosco e quello? (Macduff)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Two - Vegliammo invan due notti
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Two - Una macchia e qui tuttora (Lady Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Three - Perfidi! All'Anglo contro me v'unite!
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Three - Pieta, rispetto, amore (Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Three - Ella e morta!
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Four - All'armi! all'armi! (Macduff - Macbeth)
- Macbeth: Act Four: Scene Four - Vittoria! (Macduff)
Customer Reviews:
Verdi: Macbeth.......2007-03-11
The Goddess.......2006-01-17
An Observation of Gino Penno's Macduff!.......2005-09-16
Penno's sound had been a mystery to me because it seemed too vacuous and throaty. I did not like it then, but I found out that he had one of the largest voices, if not the THE largest voice on the stage at that time, not just among tenors but all voices. Gruadually, I understood the unique timbre and grew to respect his tendency to hold back his voice and protect his musicality, which is quite careful and delicate.
In this performance, he brings Macduff to a Shakespearean level. His "innigkeit" is a surpassing experience. His plea "O figli, miei" is a sympathetic outpouring of pure pity and affection. He says it the way a real man and father would do. It is touching, of course, as it should be.
Penno is easy to ignore, especially when the Callasian volcano is erupting about him, but listen intently with a libretto in one hand and a hankerchief in the other ... to dry your tears.
MARIA ONCE AGAIN.......2005-08-26
Now that I, again, have reached a time in my life that I am, sort of, retreating into my own private world, I find myself turning, once again, to Maria Callas and to her singing for some solace. This time, my emphasis is (and will be) her "live" recordings--what used to be called the "pirated" recordings. After all, the technology restoring these live recordings has advanced unbelievably far. This recording of Maria's complete Lady Macbeth is a prime example. It is stupendous to hear Maria tackle the entire opera and to hear it in reasonably good sound. This performance catches her at her vocal peak! There is nothing Verdi throws at her that she can't do. In addition, even at the young age that she was during these La Scala performances, she was a very mature artist and was dramatically awesome-no wonder she became a legend. At this time she was vocally able to do anything. WOW, what a performance!!
Do yourself a favor by purchasing this recording to hear WHY Maria Callas is the operatic legend that she is today
Bone-chilling and Evil.......2005-01-26
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Very Best of
Montserrat Caballe Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000083GOF Release Date: 2003-04-22 |
Tracks:
- Ritorna Vincitor
- Qui Radames Verra... O Patria Mia
- Pace, Pace Mio Dio
- Una Macchia E Qui Tutt'ora
- Tu Che Le Vanita
- Ave Maria
- L'altra Notte In Fondo Al Mare
- Voi Lo Sapete, O Mamma
- Ils S'Eloignent Enfin... Sombre Foret
- Las Fuentecitas De Parque
- Cuba Dentro De Un Piano
- Chevre
- Punto De Habanera
- Cancion De Cuna Para Dormir A Un Negrito
- Canto Negro
Tracks:
- In Quelle Trine Morbide
- Si. Mi Chiamano Mimi
- Donde Lieta Usci
- Vissi D'Arte
- Un Bel Di Vedremo
- Tu, Tu, Piccolo Iddio!
- Signore, Ascolta
- In Questa Reggia
- Tu Che Di Gel Sei Cinta
- O Mio Babbino Caro
- Chi Il Bel Sogno Di Doretta
- Son Vergin Vezzosa
- O Rendetemi La Speme... Qui La Voce Sua Soave...
- Torno Il Riso Sul Suo Aspetto... Vien Diletto
- Oh! S'io Potessi Dissipar Le Nubi...
- Col Sorriso D'Innocenza...
- Qual Suono...Oh, Sole! Ti Vela Di Tenebre Oscure
Customer Reviews:
Early Caballe, covering the range of her opera roles.......2006-09-20
The reviewers below have given deserved praise to Caballe's abilities as diva. My onw opinion is that she was better on records than in the opera house. She wasn't gifted as an actress and cut a short, wide figure onstage. But as a vocal actress on disc she was very convincing, despite her over-reliance on pathos and delicacy. One longs at times, amid all the beauitful floated notes, for more spine and guts to her heroines. (I find her acclaimed Aida, for example, a one-note portrayal.) Lady Macbeth needs to be more sinister, Elisabetta more tragically enduring.
In all, this two-fer serves as a fine survey of her early career, and for listeners like me, who don't necessarily buy Caballe's complete opera sets, it may be all we need.
A great collection of diva Caballe's best singing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2005-12-26
REALLY GOOD !.......2004-02-19
Cut-and-Paste Caballe.......2003-05-17
For Caballe fans that already own the backlist of her recitals, there is not enough here to entice you to buy this new recital, unless you like the unique combination of arias. Tracks 1-5 on disc one are wonderful interpretations by Caballe of Verdian arias. I especially like the one from Macbeth- perfectly executed, with the pianissimi in all the right places. Equally as thrilling is her Tu Che Le Vanita, a dramatic, long aria that shows off the interpretive power she was capable of, when she wasn't in a lazy mood. As for the Ave Maria, I find it curious that they chose to cut the preceding Willow Song. In my mind, you can have a Willow Song on a soprano's recital disc without the Ave Maria, but it seems inappropriate for the reverse to be the case. Personally, I don't think that Caballe has anything on Mirella Freni, who is perhaps the most perfect Desdemona of her era.
I must admit to not having heard Caballe's interpretations of L'Altra Notte and Voi Lo Sapete. To imagine Caballe singing Santuzza really seems like a stretch to me. My favorite Santuzzas are Callas, Bumbry, and Verrett (in that order). Of course, Caballe did sing a lot of roles, and it isn't impossible that she could do justice to the aria, but I just can't imagine it, try as I might. A final selection worth mentioning is the aria from William Tell, from a supreme bel canto recording of Rossini's masterpiece.
Tracks 1-11 on the second disc are culled from her famous Puccini Arias recording, with the exception of In Questa Reggia from Turandot (a role that she would sing very late in her career, as opposed to the more familiar and suitable-for-her-voice role of Liu). What is notable is what didn't make the cut. Listeners will be deprived of her heart-wrenching, powerful interpretation of Sola, Perduta, Abbandonata, with its sinister clarinet obligato. They will also miss out on an enchanting aria from Puccini's little known and rarely staged Le Villi. This is a shame, since the original Puccini Aria disc is currently out of circulation.
The rest of disc two focuses on Bellini, in the form of I Puritani and Il Pirata. Listeners will be treated to both the polacca and the mad scene from Bellini' final opera. Caballe, of course, cannot hold a candle to Joan Sutherland, who was a true coloratura soprano (Caballe was more lyrical), but she isn't bad, either, as Elvira. The Bellini role that would garner her more acclaim was Imogene from Il Pirata. This two-disc recital draws to a close with her divine reading of Imogene's mad scene. This is the stuff of operatic legend.
All in all, minor quibbles aside, this is a great introduction to those not familiar with Caballe's grand art.
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Essential Verdi
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000056JSW Release Date: 2001-02-13 |
Tracks:
- Rigoletto: La donna e mobile - Luciano Pavarotti
- Nabucco: Va pesiero - Chicago Symphony Orchestra
- La forza del destino: Overture - Kirov Orchestra
- La Traviata: Un di felice - Joan Sutherland
- I Vespri Siciliani: Merce dilette amiche - Maria Chiara
- La Traviata: Libiamo ne' lieti calici - Joan Sutherland
- Il Trovatore: Di quella pira - Jose Carreras
- Il Trovatore: Vedi! le fosche notturne spoglie - Chicago Symphony Orchestra And Chorus
- Il Trovatore: Stride la vampa! - Stefania Toczyska
- Aida: Ritorna vincitor! - Leontyne Price
- Don Carlo: Dio che nell'alma infondere - Carlo Bergonzi
- La Traviata: Prelude - Orchestra E Coro Del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
- Rigoletto: Caro nome - Joan Sutherland
- Don Carlo: O don fatale - Olga Borodina
- Aida: Se quel guerrier io fossi! Celeste Aida - Carlo Bergonzi
- Emani: Ernani! Ernani involami - Joan Sutherland
- Un Ballo in Maschera: Di tu se fedele - Jussi Bjorling
- Un Ballo in Maschera: Morro ma prima in grazia - Margaret Price
- Luisa Miller: Quando le sere al placido - Luciano Pavarotti
- Aida: Gloria all'Egitto - Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Tracks:
- Requiem: Dies irae - Wiener Philharmoniker
- La forza del destino: Pace pace mio Dio - Angela Gheorghiu
- Rigoletto: Questa o quella - Carlo Bergonzi
- Rigoletto: Bella figlia dell'amore - Luciano Pavarotti
- Otello: Ave Maria - Renee Fleming
- La Traviata: Parigi o cara - Frank Lopardo
- Macbeth: Ah la paterna mano - Luciano Pavarotti
- Il Trovatore: Squilli echeggi la tromba guerriera - Chicago Symphony Orchestra And Chorus
- Don Carlo: O Carlo ascolta - Dmitri Hvorostovsky
- Requiem: Ingemisco - Luciano Pavarotti
- Simon Baccanegra: Come in quest'ora bruna - Kiri Te Kanawa
- Macbeth: Salve o Re! Si colmi il calice - Lucia Aliberti
- Aida: O patria mia - Leontyne Price
- I lombardi: La mia letizia infondere - Placido Domingo
- Aida: Lo sguardo avea degli angeli - Montserrat Caballe
- La forza del destino: Solenne in quest'ora - Nikolai Putilin
- Macbeth: Patria opressa - Chicago Symphony Orchestra And Chorus
- Il Trovatore: Tacea la notte - Katia Ricciarelli
- I due Foscari: Dal piu remoto esilio - Odio solo ed odio atroce - Jose Carreras
- Don Carlo: Spuntato ecco il di esultanza - Orchestra E Coro Del Teatro Alla Scala Di Milano
Customer Reviews:
OKAY, TAKE ME AWAY........2006-01-20
Last summer we had an incredible 20th anniversary trip to Italy. As a side trip from Venice, we planned a night in Verona. Neither my wife or I had been to an opera.
Is this how its supposed to be...
...an incredible star filled night with a three quarter moon, the largest stage and outdoor theatrical production on the planet, all taking place in a roman colleseum (arena) built in 180 a.d., an incredible colorful set and production with a full symphony orchestra and voices that don't come easy. Aida.
Now I know what all the hpye is as you opera fans sure are lucky to have such a beautiful setting for all your productions.
Okay, we got spoiled. But I also found myself getting spoiled on the Italian composer Verdi.
For me, this set is not only a "take me back to Verona" trip, but a great introduction to Verdi's other works. With some of the biggest names in the opera world in starring roles, I listened to both discs twice the first night they arrived.
And, of course, we are planning a return trip to Verona in the very near future to see some more Verdi...perhaps Nabucco or Otello or Macbeth...I'll even settle for Aida again. It was such a magical experience and a superb introduction to opera and Verdi.
This set continues that magical moment for us and provides a great introduction to a master of the opera...Verdi.
Great music...stunning recording quality.......2002-11-01
Incredible.......2002-06-05
Just Stunning!.......2002-01-26
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Italian Opera Arias
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00018TIOA Release Date: 2004-02-10 |
Tracks:
- Lamento: E La Solita Storia
- Recitativo E Romanza: Inosservato...Angelo Casto E Bel
- Aria: Quanto E Bella
- Aria: Una Furtiva Lagrima
- Recitativo Ed Aria: Tombe Degli Avi Miei...Fra Poco
- Aria: Il L'ho Perduta...Io La Vidi
- Aria: Io L'ho Perduta...Io La Vidi
- Aria: O Figli...Ah! La Paterna Mano
- Scena Ed Aria: Ella Mi Fu Rapita...Parmi Veder
- Canzone: La Donna E Mobile
- Scena, Aria E Cabaletta: Lunge De Iei...De' Miei Bollenti...O Mio Rimorso
- Aria: Che Gelida Manina
- Aria: E Lucevan Le Stelle
- Aria: Anche Tu Beppe Giungi...O Amore
- Aria: Vergini, Muse...Quando Al Soave Anelito
Amazon.com
This is a glorious debut recital by a tenor, from whom, if he sings the right roles and keeps way from jet-setting and too much singing, might just be the lyrico-spinto tenor we've been waiting for. He has the class of Carlo Bergonzi and a ringing tone which is somewhere between Domingo's big, dark sound and Pavarotti's brightness; he sings with a true mezza voce (not a falsetto); he always obeys the composer's markings and delineates character. He seems incapable of vulgarity, refusing to gulp or sob when a musically expressive gesture will do. The opening aria here--from L'Arlesiana--is so beautifully, touchingly sung that it's a heartbreaker; he doesn't take the usually opted-for high note near the end, but never fear: in the Traviata and Bohème excerpts, Villazon offers big, whopping high Cs. This CD is a knockout; let's hope it's only the beginning of an illustrious career, both recorded and live. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Another supeb tenor........2007-05-13
The one........2006-06-24
A New Star voice.......2005-09-25
I don't really want to ruin the magic of his singing, with caddy comparisons, but it is sufficient to say that he excellent. Many compare his to Domingo, to that I would say that Villazon has an ease to his top that Domingo never had, but perhaps lacks the focus and thickness of Domingo's lower registers.
Overall what hits you most about Villazons performance, is the induviduality of his interpretations and voice. The top of his voice has a ring and tone that sets his apart from the pack.
To my ear, he sounds at his best in the Mid Period verdi, where the cut of voice come through in the long high-lying passage, (expecially the cut from Traviata,
Enjoy this incredible singer
Quite Good.......2005-05-26
Promising debut by new lyric tenor.......2005-05-05
This recital of Italian opera arias presents Villazon near the alpha of his career (one appearance as the Steersman on the Barenboim Flying Dutchman before, for Teldec) and the conductor at his omega - the just deceased Marcello Viotti, at the age of 52, who suddenly replaced Sinopoli in Berlin for the second of two performances of Verdi's Aida in 2001. Sinopoli had passed away at 54 the night of the first performance that weekend in Berlin.
On first impression, Federico's lament from Cilea's L'Arlesiana is taken too slowly, and yet from repeated listening to this disc, it is one of nearly half a dozen selections that contribute the most to making this an interesting recital. The lachrymose manner and delivery here, though, sets a little too much of an overall tone for the rest of the recital, including its several or so lighter numbers. Said to also be a Caruso favorite, the aria from Donizetti's Duca d'Alba is a real highlight as close to being Schubertian in feeling as some Verdi - as late into Verdi's work as Forza and Don Carlo. Villazon's singing here is as warmly ardent as you'll find anywhere on this disc, and his personal identification with the character of Don Carlo, several tracks later, is as complete as that of its best interpreters of the recent past, Placido Domingo especially.
The two Elisir d'amore selections are pleasant vocally, but too dark, especially the start to so many phrases of "Una furtiva." The remorse felt during the opening aria of the Tomb Scene from Lucia, after a slightly uncertain start, is entirely felt. Oronte's brief aria from Verdi's Lombardi is handled with an easy, pleasant swagger from both Villazon and Viotti, leading one to expect similar lightness in selections that soon follow, and which is not entirely forthcoming; the beginning of the recitative to "Parmi veder" from Rigoletto shows a palpable anxiety in this peculiar moment for the Duke in which he finds himself. Intonation falters momentarily at the end of this aria. "Ah! la paterna mano", after good recitative, gets pushed a little too forward, robbing the crest of several lines in it their full expressive potential. Contrast of expression between Alfredo's aria and cabaletta from Traviata is so minimal, almost to have been erased altogether; Viotti here, so deft and highly musical an accompanist he is for most of the rest of this disc, is similarly disengaged. Connecting music between aria and cabaletta and repeat of the latter both get awkwardly cut.
That leaves four verismo tracks for the remainder of this disc. Most distinctively sung is "E lucevan le stelle" from Tosca, but frequently quite close to sounding a copy of Domingo's interpretation. The honeyed placement for the top of the staff, once the voice takes on the melodic line, could hardly remind you of anyone else. "Che gelida manina" is also given a fine performance here, but begins to lose all consonants on a couple of words right before the ascent to the high C in the aria. After hearing Dino Borgioli and Cesare Valletti as Fritz, each more of a benchmark than Pavarotti, it is hard to identify the villager Fritz, from how disinteresed Villazon sounds. A slight cut is taken between two portions of recitative before Fritz's Act III aria. "Quando al soave anelito" from Mascagni's Nerone, obviously a rarity, is one for which I can only find a Domingo recital before. Here, the singing is fine, but the youthful sense of wonderment for Nero, in his vision of Venus, as wordly-wise a fellow he is, gets understated. Accompaniments to these four arias are mostly as fine as the others, but all come to abrupt endings, the endings of Boheme and Amico Fritz which lose all their shimmer here.
Much criticism here, but there is also much hope felt from listening to this disc, for a bright future for Mr. Villazon still. He is only seldom a conscientious and musical performer, but as opposed to what the liner notes might say, part of being musical in singing such selections or opera in general, is being specific for each character being portrayed here. Villazon should also take note that his singing is most interesting and also most easy to distinguish from his widely celebrated mentor, when he sings lightly. First impressions are strong - I first anticipated awarding this disc five stars - but unfortunately it just barely deserves four. Sound quality, if a bit heavily miked for climaxes and a bit recessed for the orchestra, especially at closings to arias, is warm and full.
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Salvatore Licitra - The Debut
Giuseppe Verdi , and Carlo Rizzi Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000068TL8 Release Date: 2002-07-02 |
Tracks:
- Puccini: Tosca: E lucevan le stelle
- Puccini: Turandot: Nessun dorma
- Puccini: La Fanciulla Del West: Ch'ella mi creda
- Puccini: Tosca: Recondita armonia
- Puccini: Manon Lescaut: Donna non vidi mai
- Puccini: Madama Butterfly: Addio fiorito asil
- Verdi: Aida: Celeste Aida
- Verdi: La Forza Del Destino: La vita e inferno...Oh tu che in seno
- Verdi: Simon Boccanegra: Sento avvampar nell'anima
- Verdi: Un Ballo In Maschera: Baccarole: Di tu se fedele
- Verdi: Un Ballo In Maschera: Forse la soglia attinse
- Verdi: Macbeth: Ah! La paterna mano
- Verdi: Il Trovatore: Manrico? Che?...Di quella pira
Amazon.com
Tenor Salvatore Licitra recently made headlines when he stepped in at the last moment for the, sad to say, probably finished Luciano Pavarotti at the Metropolitan Opera's final Toscas of the season. In fact, there's little Licitra could have done wrong under the circumstances, but he was a great success, and judging from his recent Trovatore and this recital CD, he will be most welcome. The good-sized, somewhat dark-hued voice is appealing--and truly Italian--with an innate caressing quality and sense of line, even from top to bottom (he takes the very low option in the Ballo Barcarolle, which most tenors take up an octave), and nice and free on top. He has no trouble sustaining the high tessitura (or big sound and broad phrases) of Alvaro's aria from Forza; he sounds sincerely regretful as the caddish Pinkerton, and might even be the Dick Johnson (in Fanciulla) we've been looking for. This is an impressive debut recital, recommended for those who have been waiting for Italian opera to fall back into the hands of an Italian tenor. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Verdi is rolling in his grave.......2007-02-24
As a voice teacher, conductor and tenor I can tell you that he CAN NOT SING!!!!
Nice sound, but an all time great?.......2007-01-09
I always love hearing tenors take a shot at Verdi's "Di quella pira" from "Il Trovatore." Once, in a moment of madness, I taped 10-15 tenors, back to back, singing this. What a range of singers! Caruso, Tucker, Corelli, and so on, and so on. Some great, some not so great, some poor. But you can really divide up the singers by listening to one after the other (ad nauseam). Truthfully, Licitra can't handle this work, compared with the greatest of those luminaries. His light voice is overwhelmed at the end by the orchestra and chorus. While his technique seems okay, he just doesn't have the voice to make this memorable. A Franco Corelli or Richard Tucker or Mario del Monaco just soars over the orchestra and chorus.
I thought he did much better in "Nessun Dorma" and the two Tosca arias, "E Lucevan le stella" and "Recondita armonia," and others. To me, his voice seemed to fit those more compellingly.
Again, keep in mind that I am not an expert, but his "Celeste Aida" featured (is this the right term?) scooping as he went from "celeste" to "Aida." I have a clear memory of listening to Richard Tucker singing this (I can't get my hands on the tape right now) where he went from one note to the other without a scoop. Same with "forma divina," if I understand aright.
All in all, "Debut" is a nice work, a promising start to a career, but we all ought to hold off on any comparisons with the greats until Licitra has a chance to grow and earn such accolades.
Oh dear oh dear..........2006-10-29
You're kidding, right?.......2006-08-22
The New Pavarotti.......2005-10-13
Licitra opens the album with a stunning "E Lucevan La Stelle" from Tosca, still the opera he is most famous for interepreting. His Cavaradossi is a welcome change from past interpretors, though Licitra is more along the lines of Pavarotti's lyric bravura and razzle-dazzle than the more cerebral portrayals of Corelli, Domingo or Carrerras. Other impressive arias on here include "Di Quella Pira" from Trovatore, another successful Verdi venture of his. He has the right tone for Manrico's bravura and even passion. I foresee that this tenor's career will be composed of Verdi, Puccini, (perhaps Wagner if he trains hard for it) and certainly he has the voice for Mozart and French repertoire (possibly Hoffman is in his future or Romeo or Des Grieux if he hasnt already sung Des Grieux). His Calaf from Turandot is outstanding. He is more like Franco Corelli in some respects but his biggest influence is Pavarotti, no doubt about it. It's possible he will parallel the career of Roberto Alagna but any comparisons would be unfair since both singers bring in something different to the table. Let's hope the press doesn't pull the wool over our eyes and have Licitra and Alagna portrayed as rivals. If youre a fan of Licitra, this recording is a must have. I highly recommend it. It's gorgeous and he has a sexy, strong presence on stage. His eyes are the handsomest blue I have ever seen. He is the new Pavoratti and better too.
Music Album: