I never heard this 
                  recording when it was new and have somehow managed to miss it 
                  until now. What I do recall is the drubbing that it came in 
                  for, with Sutherland’s suitability for Verdi being questioned. 
                  With the elapse of time we can, perhaps take a more balance 
                  view. Though I should first quote from the Gramophone review; 
                  in 1987 their reviewer said “Sutherland’s arrival raises 
                  doubts for even by this date her tone had loosened so that the 
                  firmness of one note did not guarantee the next. Each E flat 
                  in “Tacea la notte” needs a twist of the screwdriver to tighten 
                  it up and, though the trills and scales in “Di tale amor” are 
                  beyond reproach, the tone quality itself lacks sparkle”. Well 
                  that is one point of view.
                
For a slightly different 
                  take on the matter, we should consider the background of three 
                  of the main singers, Joan Sutherland, Luciano Pavarotti and 
                  Marilyn Horne. Though all three of them had quite a wide repertoire, 
                  their speciality tended towards early 19th century 
                  Italian opera. In fact, in many ways Sutherland, Pavarotti and 
                  Horne were amongst the shock troops of the Rossini/Bellini/Donizetti 
                  revival, not exactly the singers you might expect for such a 
                  dark Verdi opera.
                
A recent article 
                  in Opera magazine discussed Verdi’s Il Trovatore in terms 
                  of bel canto technique. In other words seeing Verdi’s opera 
                  in the context of the prevailing performance styles of the day 
                  rather than considering it in terms of the way it prefigures 
                  later operas. We tend to look at works from our own standpoint, 
                  seeing the music through the work’s later history and influence. 
                  But of course, it is perfectly valid to try and consider a piece 
                  of music on its own terms only. After all the first Leonora, 
                  Rosina Penco, was a lyric coloratura who specialised in the 
                  music of Rossini, Bellini and Donizetti and was renowned for 
                  her trill.
                
So, when you listen 
                  to Sutherland singing in the opening scene of part 4 do you 
                  hear a soprano who lacks firmness, as compared to say Rosalind 
                  Plowright or Leontyne Price? Or, like me, do you hear a soprano 
                  who sings with remarkable flexibility and shapeliness. Sutherland’s 
                  concern is less with the firm line than with the shaping of 
                  the notes and their relationship to each other. A key to this 
                  is her attitude to the ornamentation, which is far less than 
                  incidental in contrast to some of the more dramatic sopranos 
                  who have sung the role. For better or worse, Sutherland shapes 
                  and caresses the vocal line as if it were Bellini or Donizetti.
                
That said, this 
                  is not the Sutherland of 10 or 15 years previously, but her 
                  performance is still stupendous, if you can accept the parameters 
                  within which she operates.
                
About Marilyn Horne 
                  there are far fewer concerns about the quality of her vocal 
                  production. She combines admirable firmness with flexibility 
                  and shape. Hers must be one of the most beautifully sung Azucenas 
                  on disc. After all, Horne sang few of the Verdi dramatic mezzo 
                  roles and this shows in her vocal flexibility. She is dramatically 
                  vivid but seems never quite to find the darkness in the role 
                  that other singers have.
                
Surprisingly, Pavarotti 
                  seems to be the weakest of the three. Though having all the 
                  notes, in spades, he seems to be content to coast along singing 
                  everything rather too loud. In the first part we get none of 
                  the poetry which is supposed to have entranced Leonora. “Di 
                  quella pira” has, of course, the requisite top Cs but they are 
                  held on to and strung out in a manner which can only be described 
                  as ham.
                
Ingvar Wixell makes 
                  a notable villain, firm of voice and dramatic of utterance, 
                  and Nicolai Ghiaurov makes a wonderfully promising start to 
                  the opera.
                
So does it all work? 
                  Well, up to a point. But for me the set has one main weakness, 
                  the conducting of Richard Bonynge. He never does anything strictly 
                  wrong, but seems rather too content to let things jog along, 
                  happily using rubato to allow us to admire incidental felicities. 
                  But he never quite imbues the opera with dramatic impetus, nor 
                  does he particularly illuminate Verdi’s score. The dark places 
                  are not very dark and the tender places are just not very tender, 
                  Bonynge seems to have been content to allow singers and instrumentalists 
                  to coast.
                
Of course, this 
                  might be me hoisting myself with my own petard and viewing Bonynge’s 
                  conducting through the refracting glass of later centuries. 
                  But as a dramatic entity, this performance just does not quite 
                  work for me despite many beauties.
                
As a bonus, the 
                  set now includes Bonynge’s recording of the ballet music Verdi 
                  wrote for the Paris performances of the opera. This must have 
                  significantly affected the dramatic structure of the piece. 
                  As recorded here, Il Trovatore takes 138 minute and the 
                  ballet music takes some 25 minutes, which would be a significant 
                  proportion of the total running time. As a curiosity this is 
                  a fine performance, but ballet music was not Verdi’s strong 
                  point and this is not one of his strongest ballets.
                 
              
There are many incidental 
                beauties in this performance, but your attitude to the set will 
                vary depending on how much you like Sutherland’s distinctive technique 
                and Bonynge’s rather limp conducting.
                
                Robert Hugill