Claudio Abbado's career with Deutsche Grammophon stretched back over more than four decades. He was as much a man of the theatre as he was one of the greatest of all late 20th century symphonic conductors and many of his opera recordings remain unsurpassed in the catalogue. Building on the huge success of CLAUDIO ABBADO - THE SYMPHONY EDITION, comes THE OPERA EDITION: 60 CDs presenting Maestro's complete opera recordings for Deutsche Gramophone and Decca.
T**R
Musical Clarity and Illumination at Bargain Prices
Forget what might not be here; what is in the box of goodies that makes up "Claudio Abbado: The Opera Edition" is mouth-watering. Twenty complete operas, plus discs of overtures and choral highlights; recital discs by Nicolai Ghiaurov, Roberto Alagna, Bryn Terfel, Anna Netrebko, and Jonas Kaufmann; and live recordings of gala concerts with the Berlin Philharmonic. Even better is the fact that DG's engineering allows all of this music to come through with crystalline clarity. While you might occasionally wish for more reverberation or concert-hall acoustics, you get to hear both the orchestral details and the give-and-take between singers and orchestra exceedingly clearly. This may be the point--Abbado's recordings may not always be the most theatrical discs around, but musically they are superb. Even the few problematic performances make illuminating points.The key to understanding this Abbado box set is in the Rossini discs. The overtures disc is probably the best Rossini overture collection I've ever heard: clean, crisp, and driven. In the opera recordings, you can hear Abbado--a noted Rossini expert--goad the orchestra into precise staccatos and clean attacks that delineate the musical line clearly. Then let singers like Teresa Berganza execute the brilliant coloratura vocal lines that mesh with this, and you're in opera heaven. The box gives you two versions of "Il barbiere di Siviglia" (do you want Herman Prey's Germanic Figaro or Placido Domingo's pallid first attempt at a baritone role?), "Cenerentola," "L'italiana in Aligeri," and best of all the premiere recording of "Il viaggio a Rhiems"--the zenith of Rossini's ensemble writing.The clarity of presentation that Abbado adopts for Rossini clearly became something of a hallmark for him, and it works well in some unexpected corners of the repertoire. His "Lohengrin" is luminous, and early Wagner clearly benefits from a little disinfecting Italian sunlight. (It's probably just as well Abbado never ventured into the Ring cycle; the orchestral excerpts are less convincing, although his accompaniment to Terfel and Kaufmann's "Parsifal" excerpts for once sound truly spiritual.) "Pelleas et Melisande" is almost too bright--for Abbado, the moon is always full in this nocturnal opera--but Debussy's shimmering chording and delicate harmonies do sound miraculous. And while Abbado's Mozart probably won't displace any classic recordings like the Giulini "Don Giovanni," they are well worth hearing for their sense of ensemble. "The Marriage of Figaro" is probably the best of the bunch, with immaculate pacing and vivid interactions during the Act II & IV finales. While "Don Giovanni" takes some time to warm up, the scene in which Giovanni is dragged down to hell is one of the most terrifying on record.Then there are the Verdi discs, which take up a quarter of the box. If Rossini was Abbado's touchstone, his Verdi was also renowned. Two of these performances, "Simon Boccanegra" and "Macbeth" are essentially reference recordings and have rarely been equaled on disc. Abbado captures the dark and brooding majesty of "Boccanegra," and part of his genius is that he manages to make the original music from 1857 and the revisions from 1881 sound like they belong in the same work. He does something similar with "Macbeth," aided and abetted by Shirley Verett's incisive and terrifying Lady--I'm not sure that even Callas put that much venom into the Letter Scene. Close on the tail of these two works is Abbado's "Falstaff": Terfel's knight is Shakespearean in depth, and if Abbado's conducting lacks the quicksilver intensity of Toscanini, we certainly get to hear Verdi's orchestration in luscious detail. Abbado's lightness of tone works well in "Ballo in Maschera" as well, although he's at his best in the French fripperies of the first scene.Interestingly, the two weakest operas in the box are also Verdi. "Aida" is disappointing; Abbado's downside a the lack of healthy, earthy vulgarity--and you need a little to make "Aida" tick. This reading is just a little too refined. Elena Obraztsova isn't in good voice as Amneris, and Domingo sounds bored as Radames. Then there's "Don Carlos": Abbado leads a powerful rendition of the score, but the entire cast sounds as if they would rather be singing in Italian rather than French, which is distracting. (Admittedly, they were hired for an Italian version, but were switched to the French version when DG tried to cancel the recording.) Also, if you're going to record the "1867 Paris version," why are all the passages cut for the Italian revisions in the Appendix and not the body of the recording?That aside, there are lots of other goodies in here. Abbado made some marvelous Schubert recordings, and makes the best possible case for his opera "Fierrabras"--plenty of gorgeous melodies, although a lack of theatrical contrast may explain why this one never took off in the opera house. Abbado gives us a powerful reading of "Wozzeck"; again, his insistence on musical clarity pays dividends, as it makes Berg's modernism much more approachable. Then there is "Khovanschina," which may be the best version on record. I think Abbado makes an even more compelling case for Mussorgsky's other opera than Valery Gergiev does: there no longueurs here. The various gala recordings are fun, and Abbado proves a sensitive accompanist for the solo recitals, especially for Netrebko and Kaufmann.So, if you're going to lay out money for an opera box set, this is a pretty good bet. Abbado was accused by some critics of playing it safe when it came to his musical interpretations, but I think this set proves that Abbado refused to sacrifice musical values for transitory excitement. You won't give up your preferred versions of "Carmen" or "The Magic Flute" for Abbado, but these recordings still provide enjoyment and insight into the works. Try this box and you won't be disappointed--unless you were expecting sung texts and libretti, which you're never going to get in a budget box these days anyway. You'll just have to settle for hours of quality music-making instead.
J**H
It does a good job holding the discs but i wish the box ...
This is intended strictly as an overview of the Abbado Opera Edition. I plan on reviewing each opera separately as I listen to it to give enough detailto be helpful to a prospective buyer. So as to the product itself, it complies all of Claudio Abbado's opera recordings for DG - it also contains his Decca recording of Fidelio with the Lucerne Festival Orchestra. The box housing the CD's is a cube with a flip-top lid. It does a good job holding thediscs but i wish the box were a bit sturdier - the box moves at an angle when I hold it to lift up the lid and remove the contents. So care must be taken when you handle the box. The CD's are held in those ubiquitous paper sleeves we see nowadays in these mega-sets. But again the sleevesare thinner than what one usually sees in these types of releases, so care must be taken in taking out a CD and putting it back in the sleeve as well as taking the sleeve out of the box. Oh, and the sleeves have no track listings, just cast listings and disc timings. For track listings you must go to the included booklet which contains said listings and an article about Abbado and his opera legacy with pictures. But ALERT - there are no libretti for any of the operas or recital discs - not so much of a problem I guess for the more familiar operas but less so for some of the others.As to the performances themselves, I can say that none may replace or eclipse versions you may already have, but most are very good to excellentwith the Mozart operas IMHO the weakest entries (see my separate reviews for details). The best are the Verdi, the Rossini, the Fidelio, Carmen, the Wozzeck, the Lohengrin and the Verdi and Rossini overtures discs, not to mention the recital discs with various soloists.So while this set may appeal best for die-hard Abbado fans (of which I am one) there may very well be those who amy find the varied repertoire in this set intriguing and find Abbado's approach a welcome amd interesting contrast to recorded versions one may already have. If you can get thisset for $100.00 or less this would be a better deal. Paying more than that would be overpriced, i think. Stay tuned for my individual reviews.
S**R
Squandered opportunity: The Jessye Norman ELEKTRA
The record label squandered the opportunity to release, after nearly 30 years in captivity, their studio recording of Strauss' ELEKTRA that Maestro Abbado and the Vienna Philharmonic recorded in the late 1980s. Read the main cast for a moment: Jessye Norman, Cheryl Studer, Helga Dernesch, Victor Braun. Today, for myriad reasons that I will not go into, it has become impossible to put together such an important, aristocratic and mouthwatering ensemble for a project. And yet there it remains, hidden for too long. Why?
R**T
Muy buena colección de óperas y con buen sonido y relación calidad precio.
Abbado era de los mejores directores de óperas y siempre se rodeaba de buen@s cantantes que aumentan aún más su caché y solvencia.
J**F
classique et opera
Qualite sonore exceptionnel , des heures de plaisir.
H**N
gut und schnell
Ich bin sehr zufrieden mit der Lieferung und der Qualität der Lieferung.
L**E
GRAZIE SUBLIME MAESTRO
Spedizione perfetta e nei tempi previsti.Credo che tutti gli amanti della lirica non dovrebbero perdere l'occasione di avere tutte queste meraviglie nella propria discoteca.Abbado è quel maestro generoso e geniale che tutti sappiamo e lo conferma ognuna delle opere che ritroviamo in questo meraviglioso box.Se potessi darei almeno 7 stelle.
U**R
Abbado thought that only composers are great, the task of conductors is to understand this greatness and turn it into sound
This set was obtained from Amazon .de because the carrier sent back my order to Brit Amazon, because it was not addressed properly or the parcel was ruined. However, it does pay to look around other Amazon's for you may pick up your CD's cheaper, but you can still review the order on your home Amazon.ABBADO:Abbado hated being called "Great" He was always open to new points of view and had an ability to listen carefully to those to whom he was talking to. Thus it may be these features that characterized Abbado's work with the orchestra, for he seemed to make no demands of his orchestra and appeared to want nothing in exchange. His secret was to let the orchestra make music. Conductor Daniel Harding explained "it was his idea to make himself superfluous as a conductor" Abbado created a atmosphere by which it reflected his ideal of" performing chamber music with an orchestra", by which he meant listening closely and reacting flexibly to each other. " Listening is more important then speaking" was one of Abbado's maxims. He often demanded in rehearsal that passages be repeated without explaining exactly what should be changed, initially left his players perplexed. But the results soon spoke for themselves, and the tone of the orchestra became warmer, more mellow and above all more soulful. Instead of offering an " interpretation" of the notes on the printed page with the airs and graces of a conductor to prove he knew it all already. He summed up his philosophy by stating " I am Claudio to everyone. No title."Musicians gave up their leading positions in some of the world's most famous orchestras in order to have sufficient time and leisure to work with Abbado in one or other of the ensembles that he helped to found, most notably the Lucerne Festival orchestra that he created in 2003. A hand picked ensemble that contained, at his core, the Mahler Chamber orchestra. It was a true " super-orchestra". He consulted the original manuscripts of the scores he was studying. He also absorbed the findings of other musicians working in the field of historically informed performance practice. Yet Abbado's view of the world was political, and his attempts to improve the world around him were down to earth and realistic. He was highly influenced by Furtwangler, who was inspired by Nikisch, the Hungarian Conductor, who believed the score was a blank page, to be interpreted subjectively, who in turn was influenced by Wagner's conducting values.BOX SET:The Cardboard box is made of thin cardboard, much like the DGG Boulez box set, and has a thick fold back top attached to the box, with Abbado's signature underneath. At the back of this box are the CD numbers, and the composers and their operas in the colours of their sleeves, with the orchestras. You can hold it with one hand. The Sleeves are not the originals, but are in coded colours, for example, Mozart light blue, Rossini, Olive green, Wagner ultramarine blue,Verdi Cobalt blue, Berg, Netrebko, Kauffmann arias, shades of orange. Orange and blue are complementary colours, which shows some thought has gone into the box set. Looking into the top of the box the spines produce a rainbow effect. The sleeve has the composer on the front, the opera and acts, on the back the CD number in white written in big letters.also the cast and the roles they are singing. The CD,s has the operas name and cast printed in black with big CD number in white. You cannot get lost. Four are DECCA CD's, the rest are DGG. A marvellous box set, with great singers, swift tempi and Abbado's unique way with the music, what more can you ask for.BOOKLET:Essay, "an extraordinary operatic legacy. Claudio Abbado: the opera edition". Black and white pictures of the conductor. No translations. Opera cast and track numbers and arias. Then Index, composer, opera, orchestra, CD number and page number.SOUND:ADD: Analogue tape recorder used during session recording, digital tape recorder used during subsequent mixing &/or editing and during mastering (transcription). DDD: Digital tape recorder used during session recording, mixing &/or editing, and mastering (transcritption). EMI. I do own the Abbado Simon Boccanegra stereo, from the originals, taken from LP's and transfered to CD. ADD. Original Bit processing, which makes it possible to remix older recordings in order to" recreate" the original sound image. thus the audible results will be greater presence and brilliance and a more natural spatial balance then previously attainable. Of course the question has to asked, has this entire box set been remastered. The answer is I do not know. There is no indication that it has. Many of the operas are in DDD, totally digital, the rest Analogue transfered to digital. But when?. I had the same problem with Karajan- the opera recordings. However the sound is good.THE OPERAS:MOZARTDIE ZAUBERFLOTE:( 2006) (LIVE) Rene Pape, Dorothea Roschmann, Christoph strehl, Hanno-Muller-Brachmann, George Zeppenfeld. Mahler Chamber orchestra. This recording obtained a rosette from Penguin classical guide.The freshness and charm , with ravishing playing from the Mahler Chamber orchestra, reminds us of our first encounter with the celebrated Fricsay recording. Griendl, Streich, Haefliger, Fischer-Dieskau, Otto. I own this Fricsay opera and choral works box set, A Hungarian conductor inspired by Nikisch. However, Abbado's cast is finer still, for here Pape's magnificent Sarastro dominates the opera, just as intended. Erika Miklosa's Queen of the night second aria, Der Holle Rache, is quite as dazzling as Rita Streich's celebrated version, and slightly filler in tone. Roschmann and Strehl are perfectly matched Pamina and Tamino, for both have lovely voices. Strehl is ardent, and Roschmann is infinitely touching when she thinks Tamino is lost to her for ever. The smaller parts are without flaw. Kurt Azesberger is a splendid Monsostatos, and even the speaker, George Zeppenfield, has a honeyed voice. But most magical of all are the little ensembles. Abbado revels in the lyrical beauty of Mozart's wonderful score.DON GIOVANNI: (1998) Simon Keenlyside, Matti Salminen, Carmela Remigio, Uwe Heilmann, Soile Isokoski, Bryn Terfel, D' Arcanegelo, Patrizia Pace. Abbado's pace is swift and this is a sparkling performance. Chamber Orch of Europe. Terfel as Leporello, Keenlyside as Don Giovanni complement each other. Carmela Remigio as Donna Anna sings her arias with emotion, but the Donna Elvira of Soile Isokoski is outstanding. D' Arcangelo as Masetto shows why he went on to to sing Leporello plus Don Giovanni found in W. A. Mozart 225 box set. Zerlina Patrizia Pace is inside her part. A good version of this opera. BONUS: (2005) Le Nozze di Figaro. Deh vieni, non tardar, o gioia bella. Idomeneo Oh smania! ah furie. Don Gioanni. Fuggi, crudele, fuggi with Strehl. Idomeneo. Zeffiretti lusinghieri. Anna Netrebko soprano. Orchestra Mozart.Authentic instruments.LE NOZZE DI FIGARO: (1994) Boje Skovhus, Cheryl Studer, Sylvia McNair, lucio Gallo, Cecilia Bartoli, Anna Caterina Antonacci, Ildebrando D' Arcangelo, Andrea Rost. Vienna Philharmonic.Abbado draws beautiful sounds from this orchestra with a cast of mainly young singers. His tempi are brisk, so the plot moves speedly. Mcnair, Studer, and Bartoli are all characterful and musically imaginative and it is worth hearing this recording for these three singers alone.BEETHOVEN:FIDELIO, ( 2011 ) (LIVE) Mattei, Struckmann, Kaufmann, Stemme, Harnisch, Strehl. Mahler Chamber orchestra/Lucerne festival.Orchestra. Kaufmann the greatest living tenor and Stemme the greatest living soprano team up. This recording was showered with awards. Slowish conducting by Abbado.ROSSINI:.OVERTURES. (1991) Il barbiere di Saviglia, Semiramide, L' italiana in algeri, Guillaume Tell, La Cenerentola, La scala di seta, La Gazza ladra. Chamber Orchestra of Europe.Il ITALIANA IN ALGERI: (1989). Raimondi, Pace, Gonda, Corbelli, Lopardo, Baltsa, Dara. Cond Vienna Philharmonic. Another Rosette by Penguin Classical guide 1993. Baltsa is a fire eater in the title role, and Raimondi with his massive bass gives weight to the role without undermining the comedy. The American tenor, Frank Lopardo, proves the most stylish Rossinian, singing with heady clarity, while both Buffo baritones are excellent too. This set has all the sparkle of Il viaggio a Reims and uses the authentic score. This is one of the most captivating of all the recordings of this opera. This recording was awarded a rosette by Penguin Classical guide.IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA. (1972) (LONDON) Luigi Alva, Enzo Dara, Teresa Berganza, Hermann Prey, Paolo Montarsolo , Renato Cesari, Stefania Malagu, Luigi Roni, London Symphony Orchestra. Berganza is a agile Rosina and reliable, Prey is also good as Figaro, Alva is a Rossini tenor to the core. The playing has that extra degree of polish and sparkle. The text is not absolutely complete. IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA.(1992). (FERRARI). Lopardo, Gallo, Battle, Domingo, Raimondi, Domingo is Figaro, after all he started out as a baritone years ago and is the recording's biggest success, the rest of the cast is good. Battle makes a minx of a Rosina, coy but full of flair, Lopardo is stylish.. Abbado is freer and more spontaneous-sounding, but misses much of the sparkle of his earlier set. Chamber Orchestra of Europe.LA CENERENTOLA: (1971) Luigi Alva, Renato Capecchi, Paolo Montarsolo, Teresa Berganza. London Symphony Orchestra. Recording made in conjunction with performances at the 1971 Edinburgh Festval. This is a sparkling rendition of the score with a lovely light touch and well-judged tempo's from Abbado and the LSO. The chief delight is Berganza's Angelina, creamy in tone and as warm as she's precise. The supporting cast is full of character, with Luigi Alva and Renata Capecchi, gleeful and mischievous as he takes on being prince for the day.IL VIAGGIO a REIMS (1985). Cecilia Gasdia, Lucia Valentini Terrani, Lella Cuberli, Katia Ricciarelli, Edoardo Gimenez, Francisco Arziza, Samuel Ramey, Ruggero Raimondi, Enzo Dara, leo Nucci. Rossini wrote this fizzing piece of comic nonsense as a gala piece for the coronation of Charles X in Paris. The opera has virtually no story, with the journey to Rheims never actually taking place, only the prospect of it. The wait at the Golden Lily Hotel at Plombieres provides the opportunity for the ten star characters to perform, each in turn. The recording was edited together from various performances which the DG engineers put on tape, the result is Abbado is freer and more spontaneous- sounding. Rossini used some of the material from this opera in Le Comte Ory. The established stars do not require any commendation. The inspiration never flags and Abbado's brilliance and sympathy draw the musical threads compellingly together with the help of the Chamber Orchestra of Europe.SCHUBERT:FIERRABRAS:(1990).(LIVE) Holl, Mattila, Hampson, Gambill, Polgar, Studer, Chamber Orchestra of Europe. There are jewels in plenty in this score. Many solos and duels develop into delightful ensembles, and the influence of Beethoven's Fidelio is very striking. Abbado directs an electrifying performance. Both tenors Gambill and Protschka are on the strenuous side, but have a fine feeling for Schubertian melody. Studer and Mattila sing ravishingly, and Hampson gives a noble performance as the knight.WAGNER:ORCHESTRAL MUSIC: (2003) Tannhauser overture. Parsival Prelude Act 1. (LIVE) Suite from Act 3. Good Friday music. Transformation music and procession. Tristan und Isolde. (Prelude Act 1. Isolde's Liebestod. LIVE.)LOHENGRIN: (1994) . Moll, Jerusalem, Studer, Welker, Meier. Vienna Philharmonic. Abbado's Lohengrin adds another magnificent reading to set alongside such classic performances as Solti and Kempe. Whereas Solti takes a very measured view, Abbado keeps Wagner's square rhythms flowing more freely, allowing himself a great measure of rubato. That in turn reflects his experience with these same performers at the Vienna State opera and the recording reflects this. Abbado's speeds are faster then Solti's. Studer is at her sweetest and purest, bringing out the heroine's naivety touchingly. Jerusalem's voice is not as fresh as it once was, he sings with beauty and a true Heldentenor quality. Meier and Moll are both superb. But for me the greatest Lohengrin is that conducted by Kempe with the VPO, Thomas, Grummer, Ludwig and Fischer-Dieskau.BRYN TERFEL;(2002) Berlin Philharmonic. The Overture and Die frist ist um from the flying Dutchman are live, the latter is on the slow side. But the illumination of words is as revelatory here as elsewhere on the disc. All the items are vividly realized, such as the two Hans Sachs monologues from Die Meistersingers and the expressive portrait of Wotan in Die Walkure monologue. Not forgetting the two Amfortas items from Parsifal.GALA.(1994) (LIVE). Soloists Jerusalem, Meier, Studer and Terfel. Berlin Philharmonic. Tannhauser overture. Dich teure Halle. O du mein holder Abenstern. Lohengrin. In ferner Einsamkeit des Waldes, Um Gott, was klagest du mich an. Meistersinger. Prelude to Act 1. Abbado brings to the forefront the lovely melodies with fast Speeds. A different rendition to what we are generally use to. Fliedermonolog. Die Walkure. Winterstume wichen dem Wonnemonde. The ride of the Valkyries. Lighter then usual and you can hear the interwoven melodies very clearly. Abbado would have conducted an interesting Ring cycle. Hearing these singers live is better then on studio CD's.VERDI:VERDI OVERTURES & PRELUDES.(1997) Berlin Philharmonic. CHORUSES (1975-1985)Teatro alla Scala.When this recording was first issued in 1975 it was awarded a rosette by penguin classical guide for excellence.Apart from Falstaff with the Berlin Philharmonic, the rest of the Verdi operas are with La Scala orchestra from the 1970's-1984 which were immediately acclaimed, with his company of singers, Freni, Ricciarelli, Domingo, Cappucilli and Verrett. For Abbado inspired levels of commitment and communication from the singers and players that resulted in performances and recordings that have stood the test of time.MACBETH:(1976). Cappucilli, Ghiaurov, Verrett, Malagu,Domingo, Orchestra Teatro alla Scala. The Penguin guide states that Abbado's speeds are slow but he springs the rhythm. They are wrong, his speeds are fast. Each of the principles is meticulous about observing Verdi's markings. Verrett, powerful above the stave, makes a virtue out of necessity in floating glorious half-tones, and with a characterful a voice she makes a highly individual Lady Macbeth. Cappuccilli has never sung with a finer range of tone or more imagination on CD then here. However Callas live recording of Lady Macbeth captures Verdi's idea of a she-devil, as does Mara Zampieri with a biting voice rather then beautiful,she matches Verdi's request for the voice of a she-devil. With a fine Macbeth of Renato Bruson. Deutsche Oper, Berlin Cond Sinopoli, who creates dramatic intensity by his preference for extreme dynamics, DVD.SIMON BOCCANEGRA: (1977). Cappuccilli, Freni, Ghiaurov, Carreras, Van Dam.. 2008 Penguin Classical Guide gave it a Rosette. They say that Abbado's 1977 recording of this opera is one of the most beautiful sets ever made. The playing of the orchestra is brilliantly incisive as well as refined, so that the drama is underlined by extra sharpness of focus. Cappuccilli, always intelligent, gives an intense and illuminating performance. Ghiaurov sings beautifully, Freni sings with freshness and clarity, while Van Dam is impressive. This is a set states Penguin to even outshine Abbado's Macbeth.UN BALLO IN MASCHERA: (1981). Domingo, Bruson, Ricciarelli, Obraztsova,Gruberova, Raimondi, Abbado's reading is powerful, admirably paced and with a splendid feeling for the comedy. A real theatrical experience. The cast is very strong, with Ricciarelli (Spinto soprano) at her very finest and Domingo sweet of tone. Bruson sings magnificently. Obraztsova and Gruberova are voices that are suited to their roles. A traditional staged 1990 DVD has Domingo, Nucci, Barstow and Sumi Jo, Vienna Philharmonic orchestra cond Solti, who took over from Von Karajan who had just died. Good performance, especially Josephine Barstow, the under recorded soprano. DON CARLOS: (1985). Five act version of 1886. (the four -act revision of 1882-83 preceded by the revised Fontainebleu act of 1867). Includes a Appendix: Six of the pieces dropped before the first performance of 1867, eliminated in the four-act revision of 1862-83, or recomposed in that revision. Raimondi, Domingo, Nucci,, Ricciarelli, Ghiaurov Corbelli. Valentini Terrani, Murray, Auger. Abbado's set was the first recording to use the language which Verdi originally set, French, in the full five act text. The cast is a strong one. All the major singers are outstanding.AIDA: (1982) Raimondi,Obraztsova, Ricciarelli, Domingo, Ghiaurov, Nucci, de Palma, Valentini Terrani. Abbado's speeds are quick and adds to the excitement, and brings freshness to the score which I felt I was hearing for the first time. Domingo gives a superb performance as Radames, and the two bass roles are cast from strength in Raimondi and Ghiaurov. Leo Nucci makes a dramatic Amonasro. Ricciarelli in many ways is an appealing Aida, she approaches the role differently to Leontyne Price in the Solti version, and Caballe in the Muti recording, and makes you rethink the role. Aida -Teatro alla Scala Milan, cond Carlo Sabajno. Pertile, Duolina Giannini, Irene Minghini-Cattaneo, Giovanni Inghilleri. Recorded 1928. Cedar-Audio restoration.Digitalized. Phonographe. 1994 Nuova Era Records italy.FALSTAFF: (2001). Bryn Terfel. Adrianne Pieczonka, Hampson Roschmann, Diadkova. Berlin Philharmonic. Abbado's is a big scale view of Falstaff, helped by the weigty recorded sound and upfront balance of voices, matching the larger then life characterization of the fat knight by charismatic Bryn Terfel. he gives a three dimensional reading. The final fugue at a very fast tempo is thrillingly precise, thanks to Abbado's strong, thoughtful direction. Adrianna Piecczonka is a superb Alice and Roschmann a charming Nannetta with Larissa Diadkova a fruity Mrs Quickly. The male characters are well contrasted too. Bernstein's version with Fischer-Dieskau based on a production of the Vienna State opera, and the fleetness of execution at hair-raising fast speeds suggests that Bernstein was intent on out-Toscanini-ing Toscanini, but they never sound rushed, and always Bernstein conveys a sense of fun. Panerai, Resnik Sciutti and Oncina are first rate. My favourite Falstaff.ALAGNA: (1998) Berlin Philharmonic. Arias from Luisa Miller, I Lombardi, Aida. Ernani. Un ballo in maschera, Othello, Lr Forza del destino, Macbeth, Jerusalem, Il trovatore. He shows in the most demanding programme imaginable, that there is little if anything wrong with his technique and a great deal right with his sense of Verdian style.GHIAUROV: (1969) London Symphony Orchestra. Great scenes from Nabucco, Macbeth, I Vespri siciliani, Simon Boccanegra. These are arias for a Bass. He produces marvellous tone and stylish phrasing. Excellent accompaniment.BIZET:CARMEN:(1978) Based on original sources by Fritz Oeser. This recording benefits from being made after the 1977 Edinburgh Festival stage production. Berganza, Domingo, Milnes, Cotrubas, Kenny (Australian),LLoyd. Milnes and Domingo are outstanding. Abbado is in tune with the music. But the problem is that Berganza has made a wild gypsy, who for the part must be extremely sexy and treat men as play things, into a Suburbian sophisicated woman. Her reasoning was that the Carmen of tradition is a slight on Spanish womanhood. Forgetting that this was about a particular gypsy woman and not all gypsies either, and certainly not about Spanish womenhood. I like Maria Ewing's version as Carmen at the Royal Opera house cond Mehta. She is sexy and wanton .Also the filmed version by Rosi with Julia Migenes portraying Carmen as she should be. Even the Carmen produced at Earls Court in the late 1980's with Ewing, Gauci, Alain Fondary which shows what Carmen must be, with authentic flamenco singers and fast tempi. DVD'sBONUS: Berlin gala 1997. (LIVE) A Salute to Carmen. Soloists Alagna, Gens, Otter (Carmen), Terfel. Berlin Philharmonic. Abbado's conducting is fast. Otter is another who cannot get into the true character of Carmen. After all Bizet had never been to Spain, so it was a Frenchman's concept of Spanish life. But at the time he wrote it and it was shown at the theatre, the public were outraged for it was too realistic. But now it is one of the most beloved operas, for it is timeless. I mean today, we could not care if a single lady likes to sleep around, but in those times Carmen was composed it was a scandal. Even the ending when Jose kills Carmen for he cannot take being rejected is not uncommon today, with the violence against women which I profoundly disagree with. I know in Australia that a few men in a fit of jealousy kill. But we must remember this was a opera written by a young man, he was 36 when he died before it became famous in Vienna, and has all the energy of youth. Therefore we must never be conservative about this opera as some critics can be.DEBUSSY:(1992) Pelleas et Melisande. Maria Ewing, Francois Le Roux, Jose Van Dam, Christ Ludwig, Pateizia Pace. Vienna Philharmonic. 2008 Penguin Classical guide states that Abbado's outstanding version broadly resolves the problem of a first CD recommendation in this opera. If among modern versions the choice is hard to make between Karajan's romantic account, and Dutoit's clean cut, direct one, Abbado satisfyingly present a performance more sharply focused that the one and more freely flexible than the other; altogether more urgently dramatic. The casting is excellent with no weak link. Ewing's Melisande is unconventional and strikingly seductive.Le Roux as Pelleas sounds younger and more ardent then his rivals. Golaud Van Dam is a biting yet beautifully sung portrait.The first performance in 1902 symbolizes Pelleas et Melisande's standing at the junction of two centuries, it grandly surveys a complex tradition of French opera which had always been intensely literary in character, and it transformed at a stroke the most potent operatic force of the age, the work of Wagner. At the same time it opened up a new musical language which became the basis for many far reaching ideas right up to out time.KHOVANSHCHINA. (1990) (LIVE) Vienna Staatsoper. Haugland, Atlantov, Kotscherga, Burchuladze, Lipovsek, Zednik, Vienna Staatsoper orch. Abbado's live recording brings the most vivid account of this epic Russian opera yet on disc, giving cohesion to a sequence of scenes even more episodic than those in Boris Godunov. With the text left incomplete and in a fragmentary state at the composer's death, there is no clear answer to the work's textual problems, but Abbado's solution is more satisfying than any other: he uses the Shostakovich orchestration (with some cuts) darker and harmonically far more faithful than the old Rimsky-Korsakov version. Yet Abbado rejects the triumphant ending of the Shostakovich edition and follows instead the orchestration that Stravinsky did for Diaghilev in 1913 of the original, subdued ending as Mussorgsky himself conceived it. Lipoviek's glorious singing as Marfa, the old believer sets the seal on the performance. Aage Haugland is a rocklike Ivan Khovansky and, through Burchuladze is no longer steady of tone as he once was. he makes a noble Dosifei.To Paul Rosenfeld , this opera is a "glowing portrait of the collective entity... the Russian people...executed with a feeling and truthfulness and a power matched by no other of its musical portraitists and by only a few of the composers who have enriched the world..The music of Khovantchina is vocal of the very essences of the people, its forces, its sense of the starkness of life, and of the inevitability of suffering, its Asiatic fatalism" BONUS: JOSHUA. (1994) (LIVE) Elena Zaremba mezzo soprano. Berlin Philharmonic.BERG:WOZZECK:(1988) (LIVE) Phillip Langeridge, Heinz Zednik, Aage Haugland, Hildegard Behrens. vienna Philharmonic. Recorded live in the opera house, is very compelling in its presentation of the drama, given an extra thrust through the tensions of live performance. The cast is a good one, headed by a clear toned yet lightweight Wozzeck in Frank Grundheber, Hildegard Behrens sings affectingly as Marie.ANNA NETREBKO. (2004) Mahler chamber orchestra. Verdi La traviata E Strano! e strano! Sempre libera. Bellini La Sommambula, I Puritiani, Donizietti Lucia Di Lammermoor, Verdi Othello, Arias from these operas. She came to fame via 2004 Salzburg production of La Traviata with the tenor Villazon. Vienna Philharmonic cond Carlo Rizzi. DVD or Bluray.JONAS KAUFMANN:(2009). Lohengrin. Die Zauberflote, Fidelio. Die Walkure. Parsifal. The greatest tenor of his generation. Mahler Chamber Orchestra.BERLIN GALA 1999. (LIVE). Alvarez, Freni, Keenlyside, Schafer. A marvellous performance from all concerned. A fitting end to a great set especially with all the clapping.If you enjoyed this set, you may like Claudio Abbado the complete RCA and Sony Album collection. read my review. Symphonies, concerto's and Mussorgsky Boris Godunov the original score. Berlin Phil. Verdi Simon Boccanegra. Vienna Staatsoper LIVE. The second version of Rossini' Il viaggio a Riems. Berlin Phil. LIVE. New Years Eve concert 1992. Richard Strauss. Berlin Philharmonic. Music inspired by the Poet Friedrich Holderlin. Berlin Phil. Prometheus-the myth in Music. Live. Berlin Phil.I feel honoured to be able to review the operas of such a great conductor, he would have hated me saying that. Yet you may notice, it is as though he has cleaned the dirty glass and made it shine again, for we often hear the opera as if for the first time.
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