Early 
                  in the 1970s Decca gathered a stellar cast under Zubin Mehta 
                  to sweep the board of all existing recordings of Turandot. 
                  The two leading divas of the day were there: Joan Sutherland 
                  and Montserrat Caballé as Turandot and Liù respectively. The 
                  King of the High Cs, Luciano Pavarotti sang Calaf and there 
                  were strong names in the supporting roles, including Peter Pears, 
                  as the Emperor. The set from which the present highlights CD 
                  derives also won acclaim, though some critics still supported 
                  Birgit Nilsson as the icy princess and saw Jussi Björling or 
                  Franco Corelli as more authentic representatives of Calaf. As 
                  far as I can remember Caballé was universally praised for her 
                  Liù, but this is still a fairly small part. At about this time 
                  Caballé was gradually moving to heavier roles, having taken 
                  on Norma, Tosca and Aida, so it was understandable that she 
                  eventually also wanted to try Turandot. When the present recording 
                  was made she had not yet sung the role on stage but was to do 
                  so just a couple of months later, opposite Pavarotti in San 
                  Francisco. Ideally it should have been the other way round, 
                  since stage experience is almost always an advantage when recording 
                  a role in the studio. This does not imply that her reading is 
                  in any way immature but she would probably have been even more 
                  intense with a dozen stage appearances behind her. The great 
                  set-piece In questa reggia is given a lyrical reading, 
                  very beautifully sung and with real heft in the last part with 
                  its cruelly high-lying tessitura. The drawback is that she seems 
                  rather distant. It’s the same story in the crucial riddle scene, 
                  which here lacks the almost physical impact of Nilsson’s tremendous 
                  readings. Nilsson recorded it twice: in the late 1950s with 
                  Björling and Tebaldi and almost a decade later with Corelli 
                  and Scotto.
                
In 
                  the same way the Calaf of José Carreras is not as imposing as 
                  the larger-than-life Corelli version, although in 1977 he remianed 
                  fresh-voiced and his whole-hearted intensity is just as engrossing 
                  as in other contemporaneous recordings. Carreras was basically 
                  a lyric tenor and his ambition to take on larger roles than 
                  was natural for him – as Giuseppe Di Stefano also did a generation 
                  earlier – eventually took its toll on his beautiful voice. He 
                  delivers a glowing Nessun dorma, which unfortunately 
                  is faded, something that could have been avoided if the compilers 
                  of this disc had been a little more generous. With playing time 
                  at just under 53 minutes there would have been room for another 
                  25 minutes. The third principal role, the slave girl Liù, is 
                  movingly sung by Mirella Freni and her two arias are real highlights. 
                  Paul Plishka is briefly heard after Liù’s death as a noble Timur.
                
With 
                  lighter voices than usual in the central parts the end result 
                  is less than overwhelming, but the real drawback with this recording 
                  is the uninspired conducting by Alain Lombard. A brilliant interpreter 
                  of French repertoire he seems to have little sympathy with Puccini’s 
                  powerful score. This is felt from the beginning, where the magnificent 
                  opening choral scene is small-scale and tepid. This is felt 
                  also in the riddle scene, which is low-key. Not until the final 
                  chorus (tr. 8) does he convey a sense of majesty.
                
As 
                  usual with these CfP highlights discs there is a track-related 
                  synopsis and the sound is more than decent. At budget price 
                  this disc could still be a decent investment for someone who 
                  wants the well-known arias sung with commitment by three of 
                  the foremost singers from the last quarter-century. However 
                  a far preferable solution is to get the complete opera in either 
                  of Nilsson’s recordings (Leinsdorf or Molinari-Pradelli), the 
                  Zubin Mehta/Joan Sutherland or the sensational Bilbao, recorded 
                  live in 2002 with a superb Alessandra Marc in the title role 
                  and magnificent orchestral and choral contributions (review).
                
Göran 
                  Forsling