Editorial Board
MusicWeb International
Founding Editor Rob Barnett Editor in Chief
John Quinn Contributing Editor Ralph Moore Webmaster
David Barker Postmaster
Jonathan Woolf MusicWeb Founder Len Mullenger
Angela & Roberto Forever Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924) 1. La
Bohème: O soave fanciulla [3:48] Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848)
2. Don
Pasquale: Tornami a dir che m’ami [4:10] Charles GOUNOD (1818-1893)
3-4. Faust: Il
se fait tard! Adieu! [9:06] Hector BERLIOZ (1803-1869) 5. Les
Troyens: Nuit d’Ivresse [8:24] Charles GOUNOD (1818-1893) 6. Roméo
et Juliette: Madrigal: Ange adorable [4:05]
Georges BIZET (1848-1918) 7-8. Carmen: C’est
toi! C’est moi! [8:50] Jules MASSENET (1842-1912) 9-12. Werther:
Il faut nous separer [10:49] Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924) 13-18. Tosca: Mario!
Mario!... son qui [12:52] Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) 19-20. Aida: La
fatal pietra sovra me si chiuse [11:20] 21. La
Traviata: Brindisi [2:55]
Angela
Gheorghiu (soprano), Robert Alagna (tenor)
Orchestra of the Royal Opera House/Covent Garden/Richard
Armstrong (1-5); Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse/Michel
Plasson (6-8); London Symphony Orchestra/Antonio Pappano
(9-12); Orchestra of the Royal Opera House/Covent Garden/Antonio
Pappano (13-18); Berlin Philharmonic/Claudio Abbado (19-21)
rec. July & September 1995, Lyndhurst Hall, London
(1-5); October 1995, Halle aux Grains Toulouse (6); March
2002, Halle aux Grains Toulouse (7-8); August 1998, Studio
1, Abbey Road, London (9-12); August 2000, Studio 1,
Abbey Road, London (13-18); February 1998, Jesus-Christus
Kirche, Berlin (19-21) EMI
CLASSICS 2145992 [76:18]
This compilation disc
contains a good selection of hits but it is excellent
only in parts. It gathers together excerpts from the
golden couple’s complete recordings of Roméo, Carmen,
Werther and Tosca, together with selections
from their 1998 album Verdi per due and their
1995 collection Duets and Arias. EMI have made
much of their partnership with this pair and, for a while
at the start of the decade, they could do no wrong. That
has changed recently since Alagna’s highly publicised
walk-out during La Scala’s 2006 Aida; Britain
has not seen much of either of them since Covent Garden’s
magnificent Faust in 2004. Parts of this album
show them at their very best, but parts also point up
their weaknesses. With no new material whatsoever on
this disc, one wonders why EMI bothers.
The best material is,
perhaps not surprisingly, that excerpted from their complete
recordings. These recordings of Roméo, Carmen, Werther and Tosca have
shot to the top of many people’s lists. When it was released Roméo knocked
all competition out of the ballpark and the Act 1 madrigal
is a natural choice for inclusion here. The booklet notes
- which are pretty awful - make much of how Alagna’s
and Gheorghiu’s voices blend so well. That is shown perfectly
here, especially the section at the end when they sing
in thirds, showing the couple’s first stirrings of love.
The Romantic lushness of Werther is lovely too,
and they make a compelling pair of lovers. The longest
extract, Tosca, is probably the best of all. Gheorghiu
is totally believable as the suspicious diva who enters
the church in search of Cavaradossi’s lovers. Her hurtful
shriek is shrill, and Alagna calms her in the most tender
style. Qual occhi al mondo itself, however, betrays
the roughness around the edges of Alagna’s voice, and
he struggles for the brief top notes. Both rise to the
occasion for the visceral passion of the Carmen finale.
I have always found their complete recording an excitingly
alive performance, especially when Jose turns on Carmen
in Act 3. It is good to have the final moments represented
here.
The earlier recitals are
fine too. Both voices combine delightfully in all the
1995 numbers, though this period of Alagna’s career was
a time when he was cutting out virtually all portamento.
For this reason moments such as the higher notes in Faust and
the end of Bohème can sound a bit clipped when
compared to the excerpts mentioned above. The Berlioz
is absolutely marvellous, though. Singing as closely
as they do, they are perfect for the heady sensuousness
of the Carthaginian evening; the whole duet is heady
and disarming. They will probably never record the complete
opera, but I am glad they have captured this moment.
Traviata is a role
in which they have both had success, and it was Violetta
that catapulted Gheorghiu to stardom at Covent Garden
in 1994. They sound great in the Brindisi and
the (uncredited) chorus lend good support. The final
scene from Aida sounds frankly bizarre, however!
Alagna seems to be intentionally straining his voice
as if to make himself sound heroic (unsuccessfully!),
and Gheorghiu sounds absolutely nothing like a slave
girl: it’s more as if Mozart’s Countess had wandered
into the tomb by mistake! This merely confirms that Verdi
just doesn’t suit Alagna’s voice. There’s a school of
thought that might say that his recent performances of Trovatore in
Orange confirmed this even further, something he should
perhaps have considered before accepting La Scala’s Aida.
So, on the whole, this
disc is good fun, but in terms of quality it’s a mixed
picture. It’s a far more satisfying experience to hear
them in the complete operas they have recorded together
and this compilation is a bit piecemeal in comparison.
But if you don’t want to stretch to those and you would
like to hear them in this repertoire then this disc will
do. The sound is very good throughout and each conductor
shapes the music characterfully, but they take a definite
back seat to the singers. It’s asking a lot to pay full
price for this disc, however, and EMI should find some
way of reducing the cost in view of how competitively
the complete sets are priced.
Reviews
from previous months Join the mailing list and receive a hyperlinked weekly update on the
discs reviewed. details We welcome feedback on our reviews. Please use the Bulletin
Board
Please paste in the first line of your comments the URL of the review to
which you refer.