The list of recordings of Andrea Chenier is impressively 
                  long, beginning during the acoustic era with Carlo Sabajno conducting 
                  La Scala forces in 1920. The best known of the singers is Adolfo 
                  Pacini as Gérard. Nine years later Lorenzo Molajoli used the 
                  same chorus and orchestra for the first electric recording with 
                  Lina Bruna Rasa and Carlo Galeffi as Maddalena and Gérard. That 
                  recording is now available on Naxos. So also is the 1941 version 
                  under Oliviero 
                  de Frabritiis with Beniamino Gigli, Maria Caniglia and Gino 
                  Bechi in the leading parts. Again La Scala hosted the recording. 
                  
                  
                  The first LP recording, from the early 1950s, was a Cetra set 
                  with Renata Tebaldi as Maddalena but with a mediocre supporting 
                  cast this was more or less a non-starter. She got a second chance 
                  in 1957 when Decca issued a recording with Gianandrea Gavazzeni 
                  conducting forces from Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia 
                  in Rome. Tebaldi was partnered by Mario Del Monaco and Ettore 
                  Bastianini. This set was also issued in stereo later on. EMI 
                  came up with a competitor in 1963, set down at the Rome Opera 
                  House, conducted by Gabriele Santini and with Franco Corelli, 
                  Antonietta Stella and Mario Sereni taking the principal parts. 
                  Then there was a gap of thirteen years to the RCA recording 
                  made with the National Philharmonic in London, conducted by 
                  James Levine and with another stellar trio: Placido Domingo, 
                  Renata Scotto and Sherrill Milnes. THe National Philharmonic 
                  was employed again in 1984 when Decca recorded the first digital 
                  Chenier with Riccardo Chailly at the helm and Luciano 
                  Pavarotti, Montserrat Caballé and Leo Nucci singing the main 
                  roles. Sony released a set in 1986, recorded with the Hungarian 
                  State Opera Orchestra under Giuseppe Patané. José Carreras, 
                  Eva Marton and Giorgio Zancanaro were Chénier, Maddalena and 
                  Gérard. Finally Capriccio issued a set recorded at the Frankfurt 
                  radio with Marcello Viotti conducting with a cast headed by 
                  Franco Bonisolli, Maria Gulegina and Renato Bruson. Besides 
                  these there are, or have been, some live recordings and there 
                  are also a couple of DVDs with Placido Domingo in the title 
                  role and some years ago I reviewed a set with José Cura and 
                  Maria Guleghina on superb form (see review). 
                  
                  
                  Now, the question is: how does this new Decca recording stand 
                  up against such keen competition? Recorded in 2007 (why has 
                  it taken three years to issue it?) it has the advantage of state-of-the-art 
                  recording and the sound is truly impressive, well balanced and 
                  with a lot of orchestral detail registered. Giordano’s score 
                  lacks the subtlety of Puccini’s contemporaneous masterworks 
                  but even though this is a punchy performance Marco Armiliato 
                  manages to show up some beautiful scoring and in the midst of 
                  the rather noisy music he also strives for softer nuances. But 
                  first and foremost this is a hard-hitting opera and Armiliato 
                  urges on his admirable orchestra and chorus, never letting the 
                  tension slacken. This is a work that has to be played for all 
                  its worth or not at all. This is a performance that has the 
                  listener sitting on the edge of the chair, eager to hear the 
                  next turn of the proceedings. 
                  
                  Besides the three main characters this opera requires a large 
                  number of secondary characters and many of them have quite demanding 
                  tasks to fulfil. The results are variable. La Contessa di Coigny 
                  is wobbly, and former superstar Elena Obraztsova is an over-dramatic 
                  Madelon and her vibrato – always rather generous – has now widened 
                  further. But Stella Grigorian is a splendid Bersi: beautiful 
                  tone, glittering delivery and with a lot of power when needed. 
                  Gregory Bonfatti sings and acts un ‘incredibile’ with real ‘face’ 
                  and superb enunciation and Alessandro Busi is a powerful and 
                  intense Mathieu. 
                  
                  Lucio Gallo has been much in demand in all the great opera houses 
                  for quite some time and his is a strong but not very subtle 
                  baritone, giving considerable thrill in the dramatic climaxes 
                  but he tends to force and under pressure the tone sometimes 
                  becomes unsteady. Nemico della patria is formidable in 
                  its intensity and he also manages to find some nuances in this 
                  testing aria. Compared to Sherrill Milnes (RCA) and Ettore Bastianini 
                  (Decca) he has to be ranked in a lower division when it comes 
                  to beauty of tone and vocal line. 
                  
                  Violeta Urmana has a long and varied discography and Maddalena 
                  has become one of her signature roles. She certainly has the 
                  spinto quality and the expressiveness needed for the role. She 
                  hasn’t quite the grandezza and sumptuousness of Tebaldi (but 
                  who has?), she is occasionally over-vibrant but she is deeply 
                  involved and there is a vulnerability in her reading that Tebaldi 
                  lacks. La mamma morta is sung with a feeling that makes 
                  it hard not to be moved by. 
                  
                  When it comes to Andrea Bocelli I immediately had my doubts 
                  concerning his suitability for so heavy a role. Having already 
                  reviewed his Werther, where he was surprisingly successful, 
                  and the verismo twins Cav and Pag, two roles that 
                  far over-stretched his capacities, I couldn’t imagine that his 
                  basically lyric voice could ride the orchestra in this often 
                  thickly scored work. In a recording studio this is possible 
                  to some extent through manipulating the balance and Bocelli 
                  is never drowned by the orchestra as he probably would have 
                  been in a live performance but the outcome is still unsatisfactory. 
                  
                  
                  There is no denying his musicality and he quite often phrases 
                  well and softens the tone in lyrical passages. There is also 
                  a great deal of passion and feeling, especially in the third 
                  act, where he excels in some attractive legato singing in Si 
                  fu soldato. Better still is the last act Come un bel 
                  di di maggio, one of the few lyrical moments in the whole 
                  opera. Here he is noble and sensitive, possibly the best thing 
                  I have heard from him. But where he is ruled out is in the actual 
                  tone, which is monochrome and quite often strained at the top. 
                  One has the feeling that a size M singer is trying to fill out 
                  a size XL T-shirt. Why not offer him L’Elisir d’amore 
                  next time instead of Tosca or Turandot or any 
                  other heavy-weighter? 
                  
                  Any recording of Andrea Chenier without a first-class 
                  titular hero is ruled out in the keen competition. Del Monaco, 
                  glorious but unsubtle, Corelli, Domingo, Pavarotti, Bonisolli 
                  and on DVD Cura are all far preferable, and since the supporting 
                  casts are of comparable excellence none of those sets are likely 
                  to disappoint. 
                  
                  Bocelli’s admirers will want the present set anyway but for 
                  me Levine (RCA) with Domingo, Scotto and Milnes is still the 
                  top recommendation, while I also feel very strongly for Gavazzeni 
                  and was quite overwhelmed by the DVD with Cura. 
                  
                  Göran Forsling