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Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
Otello – opera in four acts (1887)
Otello – Jon Vickers (tenor)
Desdemona – Renata Scotto (soprano)
Iago – Cornell MacNeil (baritone)
Cassio – Raymond Gibbs (tenor)
Emilia – Jean Kraft (mezzo)
Roderigo – Andrea Velis (tenor)
Lodovico – James Morris (baritone)
The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus/James Levine
Stage production by Franco Zeffirelli
rec. live, Metropolitan Opera, 25 September 1978
Region Code: 0; Aspect Ratio 4:3; Sound LPCM Stereo, DTS 5.1
SONY 88697 910129 [144:00]

Experience Classicsonline

Parts of this DVD performance are very good, but the overall effect is rather lacklustre. It’s one of the early Met telecasts and, for those who remember him, we even get the interval announcements of veteran presenter Peter Allen. Most people will be interested in this DVD because it captures a staged performance from Jon Vickers, one of the greatest heroic tenors of the 20th century. The most remarkable things about Vickers’ voice is its size, which is still a marvel to behold in this performance. He can fill the vast auditorium in the big moments of rage and his two majestic entrances in Act 1. However, the voice was way past its best by the time he recorded this and the moments of lyricism and vulnerability, just as important in this role, are all but absent. Vickers’ voice always had a remarkably distinctive timbre, but there is little beauty here and he often sounds desiccated or raw, nowhere more damagingly than in the love duet. Niun mi tema also suffers for the same reasons. Renata Scotto’s Desdemona is better but rather self-conscious. She sings beautifully in the final act, but everything about her stage performance is larger than life, perhaps because of the immensity of Zeffirelli’s production; she seldom seems truly vulnerable or injured. MacNeil’s Iago is rather anonymous in the first act, but warms up brilliantly for the Credo, revelling in the devilry of his character, and orchestrating the action of Act 3 with a demonic snarl on his features, but not in his voice.

Zeffirelli’s production is so gargantuan as to be grotesque. In the background of Act 1 we see ships bobbing on the tossed waves, and a full scale galleon appears on stage in preparation for Otello’s Esultate! Acts 2 and 3 take place against the backdrop of hulking medieval castle walls, dwarfing the action and removing any intimacy. As Desdemona sings the Ave Maria in the final act, the bed beside which she kneels is so enormous that she can barely reach the pillows! This is far too monumental an approach to Verdi’s great masterpiece and, for me, it diminishes rather than enhances the overall effect. Levine’s direction is solid and the orchestra play well for him, but the technical aspects of this DVD get in the way of full enjoyment. The picture is grainy and limited and the cameras cannot cope with the dazzling light reflected by Peter J. Hall’s unnecessarily sparkly costumes. Most damagingly, the sound is boxy and restrictive so that, very unusually in my experience of opera DVDs, it’s actually better to listen to this one on 2.0 stereo rather than in DTS 5.1, and even then it’s nothing special.

Die-hard fans of Vickers or Scotto may decide to have a look at this DVD, but for any lovers of the opera there are far better alternatives out there, most obviously Solti’s fantastic Covent Garden performance on Opus Arte, featuring Domingo and Te Kanawa. If you insist on Jon Vickers then you can hear him to best effect on Serafin’s 1961 RCA set or you can see him on Karajan’s much maligned DG film - don’t listen to those who tell you the lip-sync doesn’t work: I didn’t find it off-putting and I enjoyed the film very much. Levine and Scotto are much better on another RCA recording from 1978 featuring Domingo and Sherrill Milnes. This Met DVD is okay, but nothing more.

Simon Thompson

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 


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