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Great Opera Arias Charles
GOUNOD (1818-1893) Faust, Prologue (Placido Domingo, Robert
Lloyd) [9:21] Avant
de quitter ces lieux
(Dwayne Croft) [4:01] Jules
MASSENET (1842-1912) Le
Cid, O Souverain (Placido Domingo) [5:28] Georges
BIZET (1838-1875) Carmen, Parle-moi de ma mere (Angela Gheorghiu,
Roberto Alagna) [10:01] Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) Don
Giovanni, La ci darem (Placido Domingo, Susan
Graham) [3:43] Gaetano
DONIZETTI(1797-1848) Don
Pasquale, Quel guardo (Leontina Vaduva) [6:46] L’elisir
d’amore, Caro elisir, sei mio (Placido Domingo,
Leontina Vaduva) [8:24] Fromental
HALÉVY(1799-1862) La
Juive, Rachel, quand du Seigneur (Roberto
Alagna) [6:35] Teodor
GRIGORIU
(b. 1926) Valurile
Dunarii, Muzica (Angela Gheorghiu) [3:20] Ernesto
DE CURTIS (1875-1937) Tu
ca nun chiagne (Roberto Alagna) [3:30] Richard
STRAUSS (1864-1949) Der
Rosenkavalier,
The Presentation of the Rose (Susan Graham, Lillian Watson)
[8:03] Pietro
MASCAGNI
(1863-1945) L’Amico
Fritz, Cherry Duet (Placido Domingo, Verónica
Villarroel) [9:08] Franz
LEHÁR
(1870-1948) Gold
und Silber Waltz (Orchestra
of the Royal Opera House/Placido Domingo) [6:33]
The Orchestra of the Royal Opera House Covent Garden/Asher Fisch rec.
gala concert, live, Royal Opera House, 12 December 1996 Region
Code 0, Aspect Ration 4:3, PCM Stereo only
OPUS ARTE OAR3109D
[89:00]
This glittering night was recorded by the BBC and is now released
by Opus Arte with good picture quality and clear sound, though
it’s in stereo only, no surround. Let’s get the gripes out of
the way first: there is nothing in the way of extras and we are
told absolutely nothing about the music. The booklet has only
a list of the tracks with some technical specifications and, perhaps
most seriously, we are told nothing about why the gala
was mounted. The Royal Opera House doesn’t really do evenings
like this any more, so it would have been nice to have been told
a bit about the occasion which merited such an event, or why the
Prince of Wales deigned to turn up. Anyway, if this doesn’t bother
you then you’ll enjoy what you see as well as hear.
The central figure of this gala is clearly
Domingo. He sings most often and he even takes over as conductor
during the Lehár waltz. Furthermore, while he conducts we are
treated to a screen montage of some of his great Covent Garden
roles. He is a worthy central figure, however, and this disc
merely confirms that 1996 still saw him in his very long prime.
He throws himself into roles as diverse as Faust, Le Cid and
Nemorino with equal ease and convinces as all of them: his voice
still has the burnished ring at the top. Perhaps Don Giovanni
was a step too far for him: it lies very low for his voice,
and so he misses the ardent yearning which Mozart builds into
the Don’s higher phrases. Still, if you’re ever going to try
an experiment like this then a Gala is the time to do it. He
sounds best in O Souverain, where his wounded hero reminds
one of his remarkable Otello. Perhaps his companions
aren’t quite up to his standard: Susan Graham is a detached
Zerlina, while Robert Lloyd doesn’t have the requisite boom
to be the Devil. Leontina Vaduva, on the other hand, is a fantastic
Adina: they strike sparks off each other in the duet from L’elisir
d’amore. She is also a marvellous Norina, headstrong and
coquettish, but utterly secure: her aria from Don Pasquale
is tremendous fun and she gets the warmest reception from the
audience in consequence. Villarroel is Suzel to Domingo’s Fritz
and in their hands the Cherry Duet sounds graceful, elegant
and quite charming.
When I first spotted this DVD I got the
impression that it would be good to hear but not so good to
see. I was wrong; seeing what you hear really does make a difference
here. Importantly for a DVD like this, everyone looks
good and there are some nice visual touches such as Nemorino’s
wine and Suzel’s cherries. Norina’s book of chivalry is a programme
for the Gala, while Faust signs his contract with Mephistopheles
on a Royal Opera playbill. The artists throw themselves into
the acting of the roles as well as the singing, seen in the
discrete facial close-ups. Alagna and Gheorghiu are on the threshold
of their international stardom here, and both perform very well.
Alagna in particular is free of the excessive portamento
which has marred his singing recently and his solo numbers are
both highlights. The ardency of the de Curtis song suits his
youthful persona, while he sings the aria from La Juive
with arresting subtlety as well as strength - save a slightly
dodgy top note towards the end. Gheorghiu is right at home in
her Romanian song, which the audience go mad for, while the
couple blend beautifully in the Carmen duet, despite
twice going out of sync with the orchestra.
Dwayne Croft sings beautifully for his one
appearance, and the Presentation of the Rose sounds great, but
is dull to watch, not surprising considering the stillness which
it is meant to convey in the opera. The orchestra is on stage
throughout the evening and we get the occasional close-up of
a prominent instrumentalist, such as the cor anglais during
the introduction to the Juive aria. Fisch conducts well,
but orchestra and conductor clearly take a back seat to the
galaxy of singers. There is a big screen behind the orchestra
which has a series of images projected onto it during the arias,
though they seemed abstract and unrelated to my eye, and the
direction of the TV camera means that we rarely get a clear
view of them. The auditorium - before the renovation - glimmers
golden and looks handsome kitted out in Christmas decorations.
A good quality production, then, and it’s
also inexpensive for what it is. Perhaps there’s not a lot to
it, but I enjoyed it tremendously. Everyone on stage is clearly
having great fun, and the chances are that you will too.
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