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Giuseppe VERDI (1813–1901) Nabucco(1842), highlights
1. Overture [7:08]
Part I:
2. Gli arredi festivi giù cadano infranti … Sperate, o
figli! [6:30]
3. Lo vedeste? Fulminando egli irrompe nella folta [1:18]
Part II:
4. Anch’io dischiuso un giorno … Salgo già del trono aurato [7:48]
5. Vieni, o Levita … Tu sul labbro de’veggenti
fulminasti [5:56]
6. S’oda or me! Babilonesi [5:21]
Part III:
7. Chi è costei? … Oh, di qual’onta aggravisi [7:07]
8. Va, pensiero, sull’ali dorate [5:11]
Part IV:
9. Dio di Guida! [5:53]
10. Va! la palma del martirio [12:13]
Matteo Manuguerra
(baritone) – Nabucco; Veriano Luchetti
(tenor) – Ismaele; Nicolai Ghiaurov (bass) – Zaccaria; Renata
Scotto (soprano) – Abegaille; Elena Obraztsova (mezzo) – Fenena;
Robert Lloyd (bass) – High Priest of Baal; Kenneth Collins
(tenor) – Abdallo; Anne Edwards (soprano) – Anna; Ambrosian
Opera Chorus; Philharmonia Orchestra/Riccardo Muti
rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 10-20 July 1977 and 5-8 February
1978 CLASSICS
FOR PLEASURE 3933742 [64:45]
I own the complete set in the original LP version. I bought
the set fairly soon after it was first issued, but I have never
been
very fond of it. Some of Muti’s early opera recordings for
EMI: Aida, Un ballo in maschera, La forza del destino and Don
Pasquale - the latter I reviewed in highlights form on
an ArkivCD not long ago - are all among the top contenders. Nabucco,
however, immediately struck me as far too crude, aggressive
and hard-driven. It can certainly be quite thrilling in a primitive
way but in the long run one longs for more subtlety, more caressing
of the beautiful writing also offered beside the punchy parts.
This becomes at once evident in the overture, where the last
part – after the well-known melody from the Hebrew Slaves’ Chorus – is
so Rocky Marciano hard-hitting that I was floored before I
had even raised my guard. And this is the way it goes through
the opera with ferocious fortissimos and slugger tempos. Perversely
the Chorus of the Hebrew Slaves, which should have some flow – they
are standing on the banks of the Euphrates – is so viscous
that it seems they have already thrown in the towel. There
is nothing wrong with the Ambrosian Opera Chorus, though. They
are, as always, a fine body of singers and here they have rich
opportunities to show this in Verdi’s most chorus-oriented
opera.
The fine line-up of soloists doesn’t quite fulfil the promise. Robert
Lloyd in the small role as High Priest of Baal is excellent
with steady black tone while Elena Obraztsova, whose Fenena
is briefly heard in the finale (tr. 10) is quite sensitive
but also shaky.
Nicolai Ghiaurov recorded most of Zaccaria’s scenes for a couple of
recital records on Decca in the 1960s and early 1970s. There
he was superb with warm, well-focused tone and a sap in the
voice that could challenge Siepi or – even further back – Pinza.
Alas by 1977-78 he had lost too much of this: the tone is grey
and he has to work hard to be heard. The warmth is still there
and the phrasing is as sensitive as before but the singing
is less than inspired.
Renata Scotto, having during the 1970s taking on heavy roles like
Tosca and Norma, had also lost the youthful freshness of a
decade earlier. She also sings sensitively and phrases with
her accustomed feeling for the text and the dramatic situation.
However there are many moments of strained and squally tone.
She invests the part with as much intensity as she possibly
can, but compared to Elena Suliotis on the benchmark Gardelli
recording she even feels over-parted, no doubt through Muti’s
relentless turbo-drive. In the finale she is at her very best.
The singer that stands out is Matteo Manuguerra, whose bright baritone
I have always admired. He makes a youthful Nabucco and a thrilling
one. The duet with Scotto’s Abigaille (tr. 7) is splendid and
in his aria in Part IV (tr. 9) he is monumental, but also rather
monochrome. Muti rushes through the cabaletta.
The excerpts chosen give a fair picture of the opera, even though
there are important scenes that could have been included in
full. No texts but a fairly detailed cue synopsis. The sound
is impressive – as I have already indicated.
There haven’t been too many recordings of this opera. The only digital
offering, a DG recording under Sinopoli with Cappuccilli, Domingo
and Nesterenko, is no more recommendable. What remains is the
old Decca from the mid-1960s with Gardelli a sure-footed Verdian,
Suliotis a sensational Abigaille in her debut recording and
Tito Gobbi a truly expressive Nabucco. Vocally he was a bit
past his best and the supporting cast is no more than serviceable
but this is still the one to have. It is available, but only
complete so those who want only highlights have to make do
with Muti. There are some good things here, especially Manuguerra’s
vital reading of the title role, but too much is hard-driven
and unsubtle.
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