As is usual with Walhall, 
                there are no notes, no timings, no synopsis 
                and precious little recording information. 
                Perhaps less usual is a Giovanni 
                shorn of Overture; a footnote - merely 
                says it was missing in the original 
                source. So we are plunged into Leporello’s 
                ‘Notte e giorno faticar’. A somewhat 
                leaden tempo sets the scene for what 
                follows; modern conducting this ain’t. 
                But Baccaloni is excellent, his big 
                bass voice in total control; beware 
                he fades away as he moves around the 
                stage away from the microphones. A keen 
                audience attempts to applaud him, despite 
                the segue. His credentials are 
                reinforced by his Catalogue Aria, sounding 
                on the slow side but the spirit is all 
                there. I wonder what’s going on, prop-wise? 
                As he reads he seems to flick over something 
                that gets a laugh from the audience 
                …. If voice/orchestra co-ordination 
                in the slower section is not all it 
                could be, there is plenty of suavité 
                ... and what a meal he makes of the 
                end! This is not Baccaloni’s only Leporello, 
                for he takes the role in Glyndebourne 
                under Busch, presently available on 
                Naxos Historical 8.1101357. Musically 
                this set cannot compete, but collectors 
                might want to make the comparison. 
              
 
              
But of the Don himself? 
                Paolo Silveri is a natural with recitatives, 
                presenting them believably paced and 
                with varied shadings. His ‘Là 
                cì darem’ is full of confidence, 
                not as legato as some, for sure, with 
                more masculine edges. Nadine Conner’s 
                Zerlina is excellent casting, innocent 
                without being completely fresh-faced. 
                But as the opera goes on it does rather 
                appear she is content to sing prettily. 
                Her ‘Batti, batti o bel Masetto’ is 
                nice enough but it would be difficult 
                to glean the dramatic, placatory, import 
                of the words without recourse to plot/synopsis/libretto. 
              
 
              
Possibly the most formidable, 
                in a positive sense, cast-member is 
                Regina Resnik as Donna Elvira. Right 
                from the beginning of ‘Ah, chi mi dice 
                mai’ one is aware of her vocal stature. 
                Resnik is ever dramatically present, 
                always dragging the listener in; she 
                is feistiness personified also at ‘Ah, 
                fuggi il traditor’. Donna Anna is Ljuba 
                Welitsch, who sang the same role for 
                Furtwängler in Salzburg, July 1950. 
                She manages Reiner’s slow, nay comatose, 
                speed for ‘Non mi dir’ well 
              
 
              
Eugene Conley’s Ottavio 
                seems to be promising, sweetly phrasing 
                ‘Dalla sua pace’. Reiner’s tempo and 
                some violin lines that seem to slither 
                rather detract from the experience. 
                Similarly, his Act 2 ‘Il mio tesoro’ 
                is better than many. 
              
 
              
Reiner has a dynamic, 
                onward-moving sense of the drama right 
                from the beginning. The opening fight, 
                then, is set to succeed, and succeed 
                it does; as does the sense of near-stasis 
                Reiner sets up immediately after the 
                mortal wound is inflicted. Off-beat 
                accents at the beginning of Act 2 are 
                similarly on-the-ball. The orchestra 
                plays well throughout for him and is 
                clearly well-schooled by Reiner. 
              
 
              
Recitatives seem to 
                be accompanied by fortepiano (or is 
                it a tinnily-recorded piano?), which 
                might take some adjustment. Stage effects 
                include a whistling that accompanies 
                the entrance of the Commendatore - a 
                wind machine of some sort? 
              
 
              
Definitely not a version 
                with which to get acquainted with Mozart’s 
                masterpiece. Interesting for a couple 
                of the singers, though, in particular 
                Regina Resnik. 
              
 
              
Colin Clarke