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             Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) 
              Aida - Opera in four acts (1871) 
                
              Il Re, King of Egypt - Roberto Tagliavini (bass); Amneris, his daughter 
              - Luciana D'Intino (mezzo); Radamès, captain of the guards 
              - Marco Berti (tenor); Amonasro, King of Ethiopia - Ambrogio Maestri 
              (baritone); Aida, his daughter - Hui He (soprano); Ramfis, High 
              Priest - Giacomo Prestia (bass) 
              Chorus and Orchestra of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino/Zubin Mehta 
              rec. live, 74th Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Festival (Florence), 
              2011 
              Stage Direction: by Ferzan Ozpetek  
              Set Design: Dante Ferretti 
              Television Director: Benoît Vlietinck 
              Sound: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1. Picture: 16:9. Region: 0 (worldwide) 
              Subtitle Languages: Italian (original language), English, German, 
              French, Spanish, Korean 
                
              ARTHAUS MUSIK 101 598   
              [151:00]  
             
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                My very first recording of Aida back in the 1960s - on LPs - was with 
                  a star-studded cast, including Birgit Nilsson, Grace Bumbry 
                  and Franco Corelli with the young Zubin Mehta conducting. If 
                  I remember correctly this was his debut recording and it was 
                  tremendously thrilling. The glories may have paled a bit during 
                  the intervening 45 years and I have added quite a few other 
                  recordings with comparable casts, but in my heart that old recording 
                  still has a special place. Thus it was very interesting to hear 
                  - and watch - the same opera with the same conductor so many 
                  years later. Zubin Mehta has not always been hailed for his 
                  opera recordings during the last couple of decades. ‘Routine’, 
                  ‘uninspired’, ‘no special insights’ 
                  have been recurring verdicts, and I didn’t expect too 
                  much from this performance. It is true that he lacks the individuality 
                  of, say, Karajan, Solti or Muti; on the other hand there are 
                  no idiosyncrasies either. We hear an honest, middle-of-the road 
                  reading with excellent playing and singing from the Maggio Musicale 
                  Fiorentino forces.  
                     
                  The production is also, by and large, rather middle-of-the-road. 
                  The sets are less spectacular than in many productions I have 
                  seen and none the worse for that. I must admit, though, that 
                  I don’t understand the symbolism with the little blood-stained 
                  girl running about during the ballet in the triumph scene. Overall 
                  this is a production that is straightforward and concentrates 
                  on the main conflicts. The acting is good and the singing, with 
                  a few exceptions, fully worthy of the occasion. Ramphis (Giacomo 
                  Prestia) is rather shaky in the first act but grows in stature 
                  in act II and is quite magnificent in the third act. Il Re (Roberto 
                  Tagliavini) is excellent, something one cannot always say of 
                  this character. Ambrogio Maestri, who since his debut at La 
                  Scala in Falstaff in 2001 has become one of the most 
                  important of present-day baritones, is very much a Verdi specialist. 
                  He is an imposing Amonasro, visually and vocally, and in the 
                  Nile scene practically owns the stage. Marco Berti’s Radamès 
                  has heft and brilliance and makes some attempts at softer nuances 
                  but first and foremost he is powerful but unsubtle. In the tomb 
                  scene he manages to scale down and sing at least at mf. 
                  Luciana d’Intino as Amneris is also big-voiced and impressive 
                  and the big emotions are well handled. The greatest surprise 
                  is no doubt the Aida of Hui He. This Chinese soprano has since 
                  her acclaimed Madama Butterfly in Bordeaux 2003 conquered 
                  the world’s stages in the lirico-spinto repertoire. Aida 
                  and Tosca are her most celebrated roles. Hers is not the larger-than-life 
                  ear-splitting type of voice but a subtly sensitive and lyric. 
                  She couples this with the expansion of dynamics that allows 
                  her to ride the orchestra also at tutti. Her pianissimos in 
                  the Nile aria and later in the tomb scene are truly ravishing. 
                   
                     
                  There have been quite a few Aida productions lately that 
                  have made me wonder whether a decree has been issued from the 
                  opera director’s union that all opera favourites should 
                  be mercilessly slaughtered beyond recognition. This one, thank 
                  God, has restored one’s faith in the art of stage direction. 
                   
                     
                  Göran Forsling 
                see also review of Blu-ray version by Robert 
                  Farr 
                Masterwork Index: Aida 
                 
                  
                   
                 
             
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