Highlights 
                  discs like the present one can be quite frustrating. As soon 
                  as one gets involved in the drama we come to the end of the 
                  excerpt. More often than not this is in the middle of an act 
                  and the music is faded down. It is a blessing to find at least 
                  two longer stretches of continuous music on this disc: the duet 
                  between Pinkerton and Butterfly from act I. I just wish it had 
                  started even earlier, at Pinkerton’s Viene la sera, since 
                  Bergonzi sings his role so marvellously. Then comes a sequence 
                  in act II from Pinkerton’s short farewell Addio, fiorito 
                  asil until Butterfly’s death. In both cases there is a natural 
                  end-of-act.
                
It 
                  may seem unfair first of all to apostrophize the tenor in what 
                  is after all a soprano’s opera, but Carlo Bergonzi was in tremendous 
                  form, lyrical and ardent. He was probably the best Pinkerton 
                  on record, and I have not left out of the reckoning Gedda, Pavarotti 
                  or Björling. Björling, in his last complete opera was already 
                  marked by the heart-defect that took his life a year later. 
                  Bergonzi recorded the role several years earlier for Decca against 
                  Tebaldi and with Serafin conducting – also a recommendable set. 
                  This one is special on account of Sir John’s lovingly attentive 
                  conducting. As far as I can remember his only other opera recordings 
                  were Dido and Aeneas with Victoria de los Angeles and 
                  Otello with Gwyneth Jones, James McCracken and Dietrich 
                  Fischer-Dieskau. It is through this Butterfly that he 
                  is best remembered as an opera conductor. Barbirolli could be 
                  idiosyncratic, especially during his last years, but such was 
                  his commitment and love for the music that he almost always 
                  brought off even the most dangerously slow tempos. The Adagietto 
                  from Mahler’s Symphony No. 5 is a famous example of this 
                  and so are many memorable moments in this recording: the cherry 
                  blossom duet, the Humming Chorus and also the Pinkerton – Butterfly 
                  duet in act 1.
                
In 
                  Renata Scotto he has a Butterfly of exceptional sensitivity 
                  and insight. When Scotto made her operatic debut, aged 18, she 
                  first sang Violetta. Her second role was Madama Butterfly. After 
                  numerous performances over a period of almost fourteen years 
                  she was deeply inside the part by the time this recording was 
                  made and her voice was still in excellent shape. She was still 
                  mainly a lyrical soprano but early on showed such dramatic potential 
                  that it’s no wonder she gradually took on heavier roles like 
                  Tosca and Norma. I have a companion disc (Nabucco highlights) 
                  to the present one, recorded twelve years later, and it is instructive 
                  to notice how this kind of repertoire affected her voice. As 
                  Butterfly she has something of the bite and edge of Callas, 
                  and this was to develop during years to come. She has her moments 
                  of penetrating tone and a less than ideally controlled vibrato 
                  – listen to Un bel di vedremo – but the sensitive phrasing 
                  and feeling silences criticism. Her final scene, before her 
                  suicide, is truly heartrending.
                
The 
                  choice of excerpts concentrates on her rendering of the title 
                  role and leaves the rest of the cast – apart from Bergonzi – 
                  very much in the shadows. We hear a snippet of Rolando Panerai’s 
                  Sharpless and Anna di Stasio in the Cherry Blossom duet shows 
                  what a fine singer she was. The Rome Opera Chorus are soft and 
                  beautiful in the Humming Chorus. The vintage 1960s recording 
                  is atmospheric and the only adverse criticism I have is the 
                  parsimonious playing time. On the other hand the disc is inexpensive. 
                  No texts and translations but at least we get a cued synopsis.
                
The 
                  complete opera is now in EMI’s medium prices GROC series with 
                  full documentation. This must always be a first recommendation, 
                  but for readers who are already well stocked with Butterflies 
                  but want to have samples of two of the finest Italian singers 
                  of forty years ago, this is an excellent buy.
                
Göran 
                  Forsling