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            Giacomo PUCCINI 
              (1858 - 1924)  
              Tosca (1900)  
                
              Daniela Dessì (soprano) - Floria Tosca; Fabio Armiliato (tenor) 
              - Mario Cavaradossi; Claudio Sgura (baritone) - Il barone Scarpia; 
              Nikolay Bikov (bass) - Cesare Angelotti; Paolo Maria Orecchia (bass) 
              - Il sagrestano; Max De Angelis (tenor) - Spoletta; Angelo Nardinocchi 
              (bass) - Sciarrone; Robrto Conti (bass) - Un carceriere; Luca Arrigo 
              (boy treble) - Un pastore  
              Orchestra, Boys’ Choir and Chorus of the Teatro Carlo Felice/Marco 
              Boemi  
              Stage Director and Lighting Designer: Renzo Giacchieri; Set Designer: 
              Adolf Hohenstein; Directed for TV and Video by Andrea Dorigo  
              rec. live, Teatro Carlo Felice, Genoa, 2010  
              Sound formats: PCM Stereo, DD 5.1; Subtitles: IT, GB, DE, FR, ES, 
              Korean; Picture format: 16:9; Region code: 0  
                
              ARTHAUS MUSIC 101 594   
              [140:00]  
             
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                  I have long since lost count on how many productions of Tosca 
                  I have seen, live or in TV- and DVD-versions, but it is always 
                  a pleasure to return to this work. It has been castigated for 
                  being crude, vulgar, melodramatic - you name it. Joseph Kerman’s 
                  description of Tosca as a ‘shabby little shocker’ 
                  has become legendary. There may be a grain of truth in all this 
                  but it is in many ways as subtle as Puccini’s other mature 
                  works. The difference is that in Tosca he applies the 
                  colours with broader brushstrokes and louder nuances. The production 
                  under scrutiny is hardly the most subtle: neither the stylized 
                  but efficient realistic sets nor the big-boned reading of the 
                  score. However they go well together and the singing and acting 
                  are in the same mould. One gets the feeling that one is in Rome 
                  during a very turbulent period in history and it is easy to 
                  be drawn into the conflicts. Being filmed live there are the 
                  usual drawbacks: the odd slip of precision, disturbing applause 
                  - especially the one after Vissi d’arte, which 
                  totally breaks the spell. It is well deserved, though, and results 
                  in the aria being reprised. This is a rarity nowadays and for 
                  dramatic continuity it is devastating. The same thing happens 
                  after the sensitively sung E lucevan le stelle in the 
                  last act and the second time Armiliato makes it even more inward 
                  with even more beautiful pianissimo. The positive side of this 
                  is that one get an even stronger feeling of actually being there, 
                  but playing the whole performance a second time a couple of 
                  days later I found it rather tiring to have the drama drawn 
                  out like this.  
                     
                  None of the singers, bar Daniela Dessì and Fabio Armiliato, 
                  were previously known to me but the minor roles are on the whole 
                  well taken. Angelotti’s singing is shaky, which isn’t 
                  that inappropriate considering he has just escaped from prison, 
                  is frightened, exhausted and in a bad physical state. The Sacristan 
                  is burlesque and not very subtle but he is quite entertaining 
                  and expressive. Spoletta and Sciarrone are good without being 
                  exceptional and the shepherd boy in the last act sounds more 
                  rural than angelic - also in tune with the concept at large. 
                   
                     
                  It is always a pleasure to see and hear real-life couple Daniela 
                  Dessì and Fabio Armiliato together in a performance. 
                  They know each other so well that one senses the rapport between 
                  them, they are good actors and though they have been appearing 
                  on the world’s great stages for more than 25 years they 
                  are still in wonderful vocal shape. There are a few signs that 
                  age is beginning to take its toll but those small blemishes 
                  are insignificant when the gains of art and experience are so 
                  obvious. Dessì’s Tosca is a real character, deeply 
                  in love but terribly jealous in the first act, unhappy, desperate 
                  but strong-willed and efficient in the second. After the killing 
                  of Scarpia she doesn’t speak E avanti alui tremava 
                  tutta Roma but sings it as a recitative. She’s euphoric 
                  in the third act until the truth dawns on her: it wasn’t 
                  a mock-execution, her beloved Mario is dead. Armiliato in the 
                  first act may be a little overloaded, he seldom sings below 
                  mezzo-forte, but he is a convincing actor. He is heroic in the 
                  Vittoria! scene in act II. In the third act, when Tosca 
                  tells him that Scarpia is dead, he sings the most lovely O 
                  dolci mani I have heard in a long time, warm and caressing 
                  but in the end realizing that Scarpia is the winner.  
                     
                  And Scarpia? Claudio Sgura is still at the relative beginning 
                  of his career and sang his first Scarpia as recently as 2008 
                  in Macerata. He is a tall man, dominating the stage both through 
                  his height and through his demeanour. He is a splendid actor 
                  and certainly one of the cruellest looking Scarpias I’ve 
                  seen. Raimondi and Bruson in various DVD issues and Uusitalo 
                  in the flesh have managed to adopt the same tyrannous looks 
                  and Sgura is arguably even more tremendously evil. Vocally he 
                  is also magnificent. He may not be in the Gobbi or Taddei class 
                  when it comes to nuances and colours but he is good even so. 
                   
                     
                  Sound and picture quality is satisfying. Readers looking for 
                  a revolutionary staging and interpretation of Tosca need 
                  not bother about this one, but everybody else won’t be 
                  disappointed with this issue.  
                     
                  Göran Forsling   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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