Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
          Otello (1884-1886)
          Otello – Mario del Monaco (tenor)
          Desdemona – Victoria de los Angeles (soprano)
          Iago – Leonard Warren (baritone)
          Emilia – Rosalind Elias (mezzo-soprano)
          Cassio – Paul Franke (tenor)
          Lodovico – Nicola Moscona (baritone)
          Montàno – Clifford Harvuot (baritone)
          Roderigo – Charles Anthony (tenor)
          Herald – Calvin Marsh (baritone)
          Orchestra and Chorus of the Metropolitan Opera/Fausto Cleva
          rec. live, 8 March 1958 at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York
          PRISTINE AUDIO PACO154 [2 CDs: 123:32]
        
          
          Otello had been a rarity at the Met during the first half century 
          of the work’s existence. A single performance with de Reszke in 
          1891, four with Tamagno in 1894/1895, four with Alvarez in 1901/1902, 
          eleven with Slezak between 1910 and 1913, then nothing until December 
          1937 when Martinelli assumed the role for the first time. From then 
          on, it became a regular feature, firstly as Martinelli’s exclusive 
          property until his retirement from the Met in 1945. Torsten Ralf and 
          Ramon Vinay sang some performances thereafter, but for many it was only 
          with the appearance of Mario del Monaco in 1955 that there was a true 
          successor to Martinelli.
          
          I was particularly interested in this recording because I thought that 
          it really was time I listened objectively to del Monaco after decades 
          of dismissing him. The roots of my antipathy go back about 40 years, 
          when I acquired, pretty well by chance, the Decca LP of excerpts from 
          Zandonai’s Francesca da Rimini with Olivero and del Monaco. 
          I fell head over heels with both the music and Olivero, but del Monaco 
          seemed to do everything in his power to ruin the experience. It was 
          undoubtedly a fine voice, but his model for the role of Paolo il Bello 
          (!) seemed to be that of a rag and bone man coming calling down the 
          street. I found what he did on that recording simply unforgivable. My 
          feelings began to soften a few months ago when I read a passage from 
          an interview with Olivero included in the third volume of Stefan Zucker’s 
          Franco Corelli - a Revolution in Singing. She recalls that 
          recording session: “When he listened to the playback he exclaimed 
          ‘I can’t believe it! After [you sang] that soft poetic phrase 
          I come in and what do a sound like - a boxer punching with his fists!’ 
          He recorded the phrase again, but the second attempt more or less was 
          the same because he was incapable of singing piano. He was furious with 
          himself because he wanted to. He tried everything, but his technique 
          would not permit him to sing softly since it was totally based on the 
          muscles” (p. 214). It is difficult to feel so antipathetic towards 
          someone who so clearly wanted to do the right thing but simply could 
          not because of circumstances beyond his control.
          
          So, has listening to de Monaco’s Otello been a revelation 
          of quality unfairly dismissed? The answer must be a resounding “yes”. 
          Del Monaco was never a deep musician, but nor, in fact, was he simply 
          the stereotype of the big dumb tenor whose only wish was to wow the 
          gallery. What this recording showed me was that his musicianship, though 
          instinctive rather than rational, in this role at least provides a gut 
          truth which is often outside the ability of more intellectual singers. 
          I never though I would ever utter this phrase, but as Otello, del Monaco’s 
          assumption is more successful than Jonas Kaufmann’s. What he has 
          which Kaufmann cannot provide is an animal unpredictability and raw 
          intensity without which the character of Otello cannot really work. 
          I love Kaufmann’s work, but he is a creature of the intellect, 
          whereas Otello thinks with his blood. No-one who is essentially rational 
          could fall so completely for Iago’s machinations.
          
          The first act of Otello is one of the most difficult beginnings 
          of any opera for the tenor. The obvious first difficulty is that he 
          has to come on and, without so much as a semiquaver’s warming 
          up, sing the “Esultate!”. These few seconds are vital for 
          the character because if, as Aristotle said, a tragedy is the fall of 
          a great man, then this is all that Otello has to demonstrate his greatness. 
          Two present-day cultural trends are positively designed to make that 
          almost impossible to achieve. Firstly, the very idea of the hero who 
          stands and triumphantly proclaims news of his success in sending the 
          enemy to the bottom of the sea would now be seen as a textbook example 
          of “toxic masculinity”. Secondly, in our mincingly come 
          scritto age, conductors no longer allow the freedom of declamation 
          needed to do this and demonstrated by such early singers as Tamagno 
          (the role’s first singer), Zenatello and Martinelli. Secondly, 
          when Otello returns at the end of the act, he must sing a Love Duet 
          which requires exactly the sort of long-breathed, legato lines and poised 
          pianissimos that are the very thing that heroic tenors generally find 
          the most difficult to manage. Certainly, both Zenatello and Martinelli 
          (Tamagno did not record anything the from the Love Duet) are at their 
          least successful in this section.
          
          Del Monaco lived before these two problems reached the acute stage that 
          they have today. His “Esultate” positively struts and exhibits 
          the sort of freedom within a basically very slow tempo that Tamagno 
          uses. The trumpet-tone and superb breath control make this exactly what 
          an “Esultate” should be; there is no doubt about the heroic 
          accomplishments of this character. “Abasso le spade”, when 
          Otello re-enters to quell the fight, exhibits the same quality. When 
          he moves into “Già nella notte densa”, we see that problems 
          begin. The dynamic is reasonably quiet, but there is a definite feel 
          of the tightrope walker here. The voice does not move easily and the 
          pitch is sometimes approximate; the G flat on “immenso” 
          is not a comfortable note. The more vigorous middle section of the duet 
          suits him better. He tries hard with “Venga la morte!”, 
          but the inability to sing really softly noted by Olivero vitiates his 
          attempt somewhat. Unsurprisingly, the final pianissimo A flat on “venere 
          splende” utterly defeats him (as it does 90% of Otellos - here, 
          Kaufmann is superb), but overall this is a very creditable performance 
          and nowhere near the bawl that some Otellos make of it.
          
          Then we move into Act 2. From now on del Monaco is on home turf. In 
          the duet with Iago, the volcanic volatility of the character is immediately 
          on show. “Pel cielo, tu sei l’eco dei detti miei” 
          metaphorically grabs Iago by the throat and the incipient madness is 
          already there in “miseria mia… amore e gelosia vadan disperse 
          insieme”. Del Monaco manages a calmness at Desdemona’s first 
          pleadings for Cassio which is very effective, and when he does lose 
          composure the violence is frightening. During the succeeding quartet 
          where he wonders if it is his own failing that have caused Desdemona’s 
          change, he lacks the necessary introspection and self-doubt. “Tu?! 
          Indietro! Fuggi!!” and “Ora a per sempre” show him 
          in his element, the burnished tone conveying the character to perfection. 
          He does lack, perhaps, the specific verbal detailing that Martinelli 
          (for me, the greatest Otello) brings here and his “Sangues” 
          before “Si pel ciel”, though fine, similarly lack the cataclysmic 
          effect of the older singer, but the act is brought to a thrilling conclusion.
          
          In the “Dio ti gioconda” duet with Desdemona near the start 
          of Act 3, de Monaco cannot quite do the ironic, icy calm that Martinelli 
          brings to his early phrases and the “dolce” markings are 
          ignored. Even so, as his passion rises while Desdemona continues to 
          plead for Cassio, his accusation and cry “Giura e ti danna” 
          are terrifying. Again, he cannot quite manage the faux-calm irony of 
          the return of beginning of the duet, but the hurled “quella vil 
          cortigiana che è la sposa d’Otello” is devastating. “Dio 
          mi potevi” is less successful, far too fast. It fails what John 
          Steane called the “A flat test”, by which he meant that 
          the singer must not deviate from the notated pitch for the two pages 
          until the line rises slowly to B flat then C. Otello should be numb 
          at this point. The less thoughtful singers use this as a chance to emote 
          all over the place, virtually making it sprechgesang (listen 
          to McCracken in the Barbirolli recording for a truly grotesque example 
          of this). Del Monaco is not among the worst – there is still far 
          too much emoting here – but “Ma o pianto o duol” is 
          very well handled. There will be much tutting at the length that he 
          holds onto “O gioia!”, but I am sure the burst of applause 
          from the audience would have been sufficient reward as far as del Monaco 
          was concerned!
          
          In the final act del Monaco is on his best behaviour at his entrance, 
          staying scrupulously to the notated pitch, only as the scene progresses 
          does he become wilder until the murder. After, however, “Calma 
          come la tomba” is perfectly delivered, “Niun mi tema” 
          is again a little fast and external at the start, though it becomes 
          increasingly involved as it progresses and is a very moving account 
          which never descends into bathos.
          
          De los Angeles ought to be the perfect Desdemona, and there are indeed 
          some lovely moments, but I was rather disappointed by her performance. 
          I do not think she has the heft necessary for the part. She needs to 
          dominate over some pretty large forces at times (for example the Act 
          3 concertato), but even in the quieter moments, the need to fill the 
          vast spaces of the Met means that she often seems to be forcing her 
          voice. She was a pure lyric soprano, not even a lyrico-spinto, let alone 
          the full spinto that the part needs at times. As a result, the voice 
          sometimes takes on a rather shrill edge. This is not helped by that 
          fact that, even though tonally it sounds as though she has a high soprano, 
          she actually had quite a short voice. She was only really comfortable 
          up to B flat; she had a B, but it is distinctly strained, at least on 
          the night of this recording, and the expected exquisite floating of 
          the line happens only intermittently. She is at her best in the “Dio 
          ti gioconda” duet and the “Esterrafatto fisso” section 
          in Act 3 after Otello has damned her, but the Love Duet, Willow Song 
          and Ave Maria disappoint (though there is a beautifully poised B flat 
          at the end).
          
          Warren’s Iago is a fine performance. The part was his at the Met 
          for over decade. He was the Iago in all eight Met broadcasts of Otello 
          between 1946 and 1958 and would doubtless have continued to sing the 
          role had he not died onstage aged only 48 in 1960. He had taken over 
          the role from Lawrence Tibbett (who sang all the four Met broadcasts 
          of Otello prior to 1946) and the comparison is not in Warren’s 
          favour. Tibbett had a verbal insight and ability to characterise which 
          were simply far greater than Warren’s. Warren is at his best in 
          the Brindisi in Act 1 where a good rollicking delivery is essentially 
          all that is required, though I was very taken with his hangdog delivery 
          of “Avessi io prima stroncati i pie che qui m’adduser!” 
          where he pretends to be devastated at having to tell Otello of Cassio’s 
          drunkenness. In the conversation with Cassio at the start of Act 2, 
          he does not approach the subtlety of Tibbett’s “matiness”. 
          The Credo is a splendid, forthright sing, but again Tibbett brings a 
          fanatical fury and variety of colour, for example in his sneer at pious 
          old women. The same is true of “Era la notte” – but 
          I would simply become tediously repetitious if I continued.
          
          Cleva’s conducting is very much of a piece with the rest of he 
          performance. There is plenty of vim and vigour, and the storm is exciting 
          though he does not have the cataclysmic force of Panniza (compare the 
          two in “Dio fulgar della bufera”) or the sense of calm-after-the 
          -storm relief in “Fuoco di gioia”. Tempi are regularly just 
          that bit too fast for the music to make its full effect. The real sign 
          that we are not in the presence of a true master, though, is in the 
          careless way he treats the transitional sections between the “big 
          bits”. He just wants them over and done with. Listen to the blankness 
          of the phrasing between the end of the “Abbasso le spade” 
          section and the start of the Love Duet, or the feebleness of those mountainous 
          chords in Act 3 after “A terra e piangi!”, or the lack of 
          atmosphere and foreboding in the orchestral introduction to the last 
          act.
          
          Andrew Rose’s transfer is beyond reproach. The sense of atmosphere 
          and place is palpable and there is no appreciable distortion in even 
          the most hectic parts of the Storm or surface noise in even the quietest 
          parts of the Ave Maria. The voices come over with wonderful presence 
          and immediacy. It is a real privilege to be able to experience a performance 
          from 60 years ago without any sense of looking through a veil.
          
          Although I have been critical of the rest of the cast (though only because 
          the great is the enemy of the good), this issue has been a revelation 
          to me as far as del Monaco is concerned. If you have been dismissive 
          of him as I was, I do urge you to give this a go. Perhaps you too will 
          have “road to Damascus” experience.
          
          Paul Steinson
          
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