It’s clear from the catalogue in the booklet that Dynamic have 
                  recorded an enormous range of operas. Several of these I have 
                  reviewed during the last few years. Many of them are rarities 
                  and several of the composers are little represented elsewhere 
                  in the catalogues. Bottesini, Cagnoni, Da Capua, Galuppi, Jomelli, 
                  Leo, Marchetti, Mercadante, Mosca, Paisiello, Piccinni, Sacchini, 
                  Salieri, Sarro, Scarlatti and Spontini are by no means seen 
                  and heard every year; not even every decade. Of the household 
                  names we still find Dynamic featuring works that are off the 
                  beaten track. In other words Dynamic is a treasure trove for 
                  opera lovers with a taste for the little known. The quality 
                  of the works may vary. Not all the singing is world class and 
                  since these are invariably live recordings one has to accept 
                  odd balance and stage noise. Very often the quality is in every 
                  respect fully comparable to that achieved by the big labels. 
                  Today most of the traditional ‘majors’ have been overshadowed 
                  in quantity by Dynamic.
                   
                  This sample disc is, I believe, a way to show those not yet 
                  convinced that the company delivers high-quality products. By 
                  and large it was a pleasure to listen through this collection. 
                  The composers’ names are all well known; not all the operas 
                  are.
                   
                  Demetrio e Polibio for instance is very early Rossini, 
                  begun in 1806 when he was not yet fifteen. It wasn’t premiered 
                  until 18 May 1812. By then the composer had turned 20 and five 
                  of his operas had already been played. Even so, it was still 
                  almost a year before his real breakthrough: Tancredi 
                  in February 1813 and L’italiana in Algeri in May the 
                  same year. He shows his paces in Demetrio e Polibio. 
                  The melody is beautiful and the accompaniment is skilfully orchestrated. 
                  Both singers have good voices, that initially don’t blend too 
                  well - they get better.
                   
                  Donizetti’s Pia de’ Tolomei is a more mature work. 
                  The composer was 40 when he wrote it, the same year, incidentally, 
                  as Roberto Devereux (1837). In the duet the voices 
                  tend to shrillness. Both are quite vibrant, but Ciofi on her 
                  own is very attractive and her voice is a pliant instrument. 
                  In the aria Sposo, ah tronca ogni dimora! she sings 
                  beautifully and with feeling. The death scene is touching.
                   
                  She is even better in the long aria from I Capuleti e i 
                  Montecchi where the solo horn player in the introduction 
                  and long recitative is excellent.
                   
                  I reviewed 
                  the complete Adriana Lecouvreur not so long ago and 
                  was very enthusiastic about Marcelo Alvarez’s singing but had 
                  reservations about the others. Returning to some of the music 
                  now I was just as satisfied with Alvarez, glorious and lyrical, 
                  and found Carosi more to my liking this time. In her deeply 
                  felt identification with the dying Adriana she is at her very 
                  best.
                   
                  There are more highlights to come in Verdi’s Attila. 
                  Dimitra Theodossiou’s Odabella is another highly attractive 
                  reading to add to an already long list of roles she has recorded 
                  successfully. She floats the high piano notes in the aria so 
                  beautifully. And her dramatic ability is amply demonstrated 
                  in the duet with Foresto. There Carlo Ventre is powerful – maybe 
                  forceful is a better word – but hardly subtle. By all means 
                  Attila is probably one of the least subtle of Verdi’s 
                  operas.
                   
                  Attila himself is formidably sung by Furlanetto, larger than 
                  life perhaps, but that’s what the ruler of the Huns was. He 
                  has tremendous vocal resources, the voice is black, intense 
                  and impressively steady. I suspect people sitting in the first 
                  rows had to bend down to avoid being blown away by his fortissimos. 
                  He definitely out-sings both Raimondi and Nesterenko on the 
                  two studio recordings from the 1970s and 1980s: Philips and 
                  Hungaroton respectively, both conducted by Lamberto Gardelli.
                   
                  In Ernani Giacomo Prestia’s Silva is on the whole an 
                  acceptable reading, but where Furlanetto is rock-steady over 
                  his whole range, Prestia has a disfiguring wobble on too many 
                  sustained notes. Still he gets more ovations from the Parma 
                  audience than the Trieste people bestow on Furlanetto. Carlo 
                  Guelfi, a reliable singer, is heard to good effect in O 
                  sommo Carlo.
                   
                  This is, in sum, a collection that offers some extraordinary 
                  singing, but also some that is not quite up to the mark. For 
                  Alvarez, Theodossiou, and Furlanetto I’ll keep this disc close 
                  to my CD-player – and Ciofi is also worth an extra listen.
                   
                  Göran Forsling
                  
                  
                  Complete tracks and performers:
                Gioachino ROSSINI (1792 
                  – 1868)
                  Demetrio e Polibio
                  1. Questo cor ti giura amore (Lisinga, Siveno)[5:18]
                  Christine Weidinger (soprano - Lisingo), Sara Mingardo (mezzo 
                  - Siveno), Graz Symphony Orchestra/Massimiliano Carraro
                  Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797 – 
                  1848)
                  Pia de’ Tolomei
                  2. Fra queste braccia (Pia, Rodrigo) [4:23]
                  3. Sposo, ah tranca ogni dimora! (Pia) [5:26]
                  4. Ah! di Pia che muore (Pia) [5:14]
                  Patrizia Ciofi (soprano – Pia), Laura Polverelli (mezzo – Rodrigo), 
                  Orchestra of the Teatro La Fenice di Venezia/Paola Arrivabeni
                  Vincenzo BELLINI (1801 – 
                  1835)
                  I Capuleti e i Montecchi
                  5. Oh quante volte, oh quante (Giulietta) [10:07]
                  Patrizia Ciofi (soprano – Giulietta), Orchestra Internazionale 
                  d’Italia/Luciano Acocella
                  Francesco CILEA (1866 – 1950)
                  Adriana Lecouvreur
                  6. La dolcissima effige (Maurizio) [2:09]
                  7. Che? Tu tremi ... (Maurizio, Adriana) [9:21]
                  Marcelo Alvarez (tenor – Maurizio), Micaela Carosi (soprano 
                  – Adriana), Orchestra of the Teatro Regio di Torino/Renato Palumbo
                  Giuseppe VERDI (1813 – 1901)
                  Attila
                  8. Liberamente or piangi (Odabella) [6:21]
                  9. Qual suon di passi! (Odabella, Foresto) [8:00]
                  10. Mentre gonfiarsi l’anima (Attila) [7:16]
                  Ferruccio Furlanetto (bass – Attila), Dimitra Theodossiou (soprano 
                  – Odabella), Carlo Ventre (tenor – Foresto), Orchestra of the 
                  Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi di Trieste/Donato Renzetti
                  Ernani
                  11. Infelice! ... E tuo credevi (Silva) [5:16]
                  12. O sommo Carlo (Carlo, Silva, tutti) [4:08]
                  Marco Berti (tenor – Ernani), Susan Neves (soprano – Elvira), 
                  Carlo Guelfi (barotine – Don Carlo), Giacomo Prestia (bass – 
                  Don Ruy Gomez de Silva), Nicoletta Zanini (soprano – Giovanna), 
                  Samuele Simoncini (tenor – Don Riccardo), Alessandro Svab (bass 
                  – Jago), Orchestra of the Teatro Regio di Parma/Antonello Allemandi