Christmas Eve 1951, and the world’s first television opera, 
                  Amahl and the Night Visitors, is aired in the US. NBC, 
                  who commissioned the work, turned it into a festive tradition, 
                  screening it every Christmas until 1966. Here in the UK the 
                  BBC broadcast a live version in December 1955 and a filmed one 
                  in 1959. A third production, directed by Francesca Zambello 
                  and conducted by the late Richard Hickox, was aired in 2002. 
                  The latter would be most welcome on DVD or Blu-ray, as Hickox 
                  never got round to recording Amahl as part of his Menotti 
                  cycle for Chandos. For now this all-American version from Naxos 
                  has no rivals, with the exception of the original cast recording 
                  – in mono – conducted by Thomas Schippers (RCA Gold Seal 6485). 
                  
                    
                  Menotti’s opera has the usual iconography of Christmas – the 
                  star ‘as large as a window and with a glorious tail’, the three 
                  Kings bearing gifts and the shepherds – with the crippled boy 
                  Amahl recalling Tiny Tim in Dickens’ Christmas Carol. 
                  The opera’s narrative, direct and unencumbered, is conveyed 
                  in music of great charm and simplicity; just listen to Amahl’s 
                  artless pipe-playing at the outset and his wide-eyed wonderment 
                  at the strange star in the night sky. Contrast that with the 
                  declamatory – and dissonant – piano chords associated with his 
                  exasperated mother. It’s a reassuring and familiar scene that 
                  also speaks of another – more innocent – age. 
                    
                  The boy treble Ike Hawkersmith is a convincing Amahl, combining 
                  good diction with a strong sense of character. Kirsten Gunlogson 
                  also makes a good impression as his mother, her voice big but 
                  not overwhelmingly so, her delivery clear and even. The recorded 
                  sound is very immediate – for that read closely miked – and 
                  some listeners may feel it’s a touch too bright. On the plus 
                  side this performance never slides into sentimentality, even 
                  when Amahl comforts his distraught mother in ‘Don’t cry, Mother 
                  dear’ (tr. 5). Their voices blend reasonably well in the touching 
                  ‘good nights’ that follow, the orchestra modulating into a stately, 
                  rather exotic, processional that heralds the arrival of the 
                  three Kings (tr.6). 
                    
                  Kevin Short has a big, imperious voice that suits the role of 
                  Balthazar, rather dwarfing his companions when they sing of 
                  their arduous journey. There is more than a hint of the swaying 
                  ox-cart of Mussorgsky’s Bydlo in the orchestral accompaniment 
                  at this point, a vivid evocation of their long and burdensome 
                  trek. The Nashville band’s playing under Alastair Willis is 
                  alert and upfront throughout; sample those scurrying pizzicato 
                  strings as Amahl tells his mother who is at the door, the Kings’ 
                  voices blending in sonorous unison (tr. 8). Their singing surely 
                  suggests a distant, churchly chant entirely appropriate to these 
                  holy men. 
                    
                  Indeed, Menotti’s score brings together so many different strands 
                  and styles in a most original and refreshing way. There’s a 
                  perky little march as the visitors enter the hut and simple 
                  piano flourishes accompany them as they warm themselves by the 
                  fire (tr. 9). The excitable Kaspar – who also happens to be 
                  deaf – is well sung by Dean Anthony. Ditto Kevin Short as Balthazar, 
                  who responds to Amahl’s cross-questioning with a mixture of 
                  patience and weariness (tr. 10). The interaction between Kaspar’s 
                  parrot and Amahl injects a note of humour, with King Melchior 
                  (Todd Thomas) cranking it up a notch or three as he explains 
                  that the mystery box contains all his worldly goods – and his 
                  treasured supply of liquorice (tr.11). 
                    
                  The close recording is not a major problem here, although the 
                  plucked basses that accompany Amahl’s mother, Melchior and Balthazar 
                  in tr. 14 sound jumbo-sized and rather muffled. That said, this 
                  trio certainly rises to a powerful climax, from which shepherds 
                  – laden with food – take their cue. There’s some lusty a 
                  cappella singing here, but the combined Nashville and Chicago 
                  choruses are much too close for comfort. However, the sinuous 
                  orchestral dance that follows – Boléro, anyone? – is 
                  beautifully done, with some delectable playing from the Nashville 
                  woodwinds (tr. 18). Balthazar’s thanks and the shepherds’ lyrical 
                  farewell are amongst the lovely moments when lingering doubts 
                  about this performance are dispelled and all caveats are forgotten. 
                  Quite magical. 
                    
                  The mother’s turmoil in tr. 20, as she ponders the Kings’ gold 
                  and what it could mean for her and Amahl, is sung with a Janácek-like 
                  intensity that reminds me so much of the late – and much lamented 
                  – Elisabeth Söderström in Sir Charles Mackerras’s Decca recording 
                  of Jenufa. But then Amahl is such an eclectic 
                  work, and I daresay most listeners will hear other echoes too. 
                  For once the immediacy of this recording pays dividends, adding 
                  real frisson to the mother’s anguish and the orchestral 
                  set-to that follows when she is caught trying to steal the visitors’ 
                  gold (tr. 21). Hawkersmith is most affecting as he vigorously 
                  – and physically – defends his mother, his repeated cries of 
                  ‘Don’t you dare’ (tr.22) a telling vocal counterpoint to his 
                  struggle with the Page. 
                    
                  One of the opera’s most potent messages – that of forgiveness 
                  – is brought home by Melchior, who tells Amahl’s mother that 
                  she can keep the gold (tr. 23). It is an aria of tenderness 
                  and compassion, radiantly scored. The other must surely be selflessness 
                  through the act of giving, as epitomised by Amahl’s spontaneous 
                  offer of his crutch as a gift to the Christ child. In doing 
                  so he finds that he can walk, a moment greeted first with awe 
                  and astonishment by the Kings and then with jubilation (tr. 
                  24). The opera moves to a close as Amahl persuades his mother 
                  to let him accompany the three Kings to Bethlehem. Gunlogson 
                  sings with warmth and affection here, the parting duet accompanied 
                  by some of the loveliest music on this disc (tr. 26). The choruses 
                  return as the procession – Amahl in tow – resumes its momentous 
                  journey. 
                    
                  The Nashville chorus is centre-stage in My Christmas, 
                  which Menotti sets to his own texts in 1987. They sound remarkably 
                  bold and full-bodied here, their singing interspersed with music 
                  of chamber-like proportions. There is much to enjoy here, not 
                  least the ecstatic climaxes and Menotti’s unusual orchestration. 
                  Listen to the sudden instrumental fragments that recall Britten, 
                  and to the rhythms that hint at the Bernstein of Chichester 
                  Psalms. That said, the piece has a strong identity of its 
                  own, and I can’t imagine why we don’t hear it more. Oh, and 
                  a bottle of celebratory brandy for the Nashville horn player 
                  who rounds off the work so eloquently. 
                    
                  This Amahl is a real cracker, deserving of its place 
                  at the top of the tree. Texts aren’t supplied, but that hardly 
                  matters when the diction is this clear. As for the recorded 
                  sound it’s a little too bright and forward for my tastes, but 
                  that’s easily overcome by tweaking the treble control on your 
                  amp. 
                    
                  Dan Morgan 
                See also review 
                  by Simon Thompson