In Bruno Tosi’s Italian biography of Renata Scotto, he and colleague 
                Carlo Marinelli list the soprano’s last appearance as Violetta 
                in September 1973, in Tokyo. In the seven-year interim before Scotto 
                recorded this Traviata with Muti in 1980, the busy diva 
                added a number of new roles to her repertoire: Bellini’s Norma, 
                Verdi’s Luisa Miller, Il Trovatore, and Don Carlo, 
                Donizetti’s Anna Bolena, Puccini’s Il Trittico and 
                one of her most vocally-challenging roles, La Gioconda by 
                Ponchelli. In order to appreciate the soprano’s sympathetic and 
                at times intense portrayal of Verdi’s emotionally complex heroine, 
                listeners are asked to accept her vocal condition in this studio 
                recording which shows the wear these roles had taken on her lyric 
                soprano.  
              
Before 
                  taking a closer look at what Scotto had to offer her public 
                  by taking on this role again, we can look for reasons why EMI 
                  chose to re-issue this recording as one of their Great Recordings 
                  of the Century. 
                
The 
                  most striking element here is Riccardo Muti’s conducting. Some 
                  listeners may feel that at times he drives the music a little 
                  too hard, but there is no doubt the conductor gives the tender 
                  moments their due. This is particularly evident in his way with 
                  Violetta’s introspective arias, Ah, fors’ e lui, marked 
                  Andantino in Act One and Addio del passato, marked legato e dolce in 
                  Act Three. Muti and Scotto made the choice of recording the 
                  opera as Verdi wrote it, so we get to hear both verses of each 
                  aria. Also, in the preludes at the beginning of Act One and 
                  Act Three, Muti uses the strings to show the depth of Violetta’s 
                  melancholy. On the other hand, the conductor drives the music 
                  in the party scenes emphasizing the risky, haphazard behavior 
                  that permeates the life of a courtesan. One can even hear a 
                  sliver of anger in Muti’s emotion-laden interpretation. 
                
Muti 
                  brought Alfredo Kraus on board to sing Alfredo Germont. Kraus 
                  and Scotto had been friends and colleagues since the 1960s and 
                  two of their collaborations, around the time of this recording, 
                  were Manon in Chicago and Werther in Dallas. As in these productions, Kraus brought the same style and vocal grace 
                  to this recording. Unfortunately, the studio microphone accentuates 
                  the nasal quality his singing sometimes took on at this stage 
                  of his career, but his close artistic association with Scotto 
                  more than makes up for it. The intimate quality of their duets 
                  engenders a welcomed interpretative maturity not found in other 
                  recordings. 
                
Renato 
                  Bruson sings with an attractive dark sound as the elder Germont 
                  even without the ardent overtones typical of Verdi baritones. 
                  Technically, however, he easily fills out each note and gives 
                  full expression to every dynamic marking; the baritone offers 
                  a complete vocal interpretation that today’s Germonts find challenging. 
                  In the Act Two duet, Bruson and Scotto create a touching scene 
                  where Violetta’s heart is broken by Germont’s request to sacrifice 
                  her love for Alfredo so that his daughter may marry without 
                  any social opprobrium. Here Bruson matches Scotto’s sympathetic 
                  illumination of the text. 
                
Scotto’s 
                  ingrained artistic sense certainly allows her to express every 
                  emotion that Verdi flooded into a character that he evidently 
                  loved creating. If at this point in her career, the soprano 
                  wasn’t able to command the authority to cover every vocal demand, 
                  she is still able to portray the musical essence of the role. 
                  Patrick O’Connor, in his 2003 piece in Gramophone titled Dramatic 
                  Diva, said of this recording, “There are moments in this 
                  latter performance as Violetta where the rawness of her voice 
                  betrays her years … yet it is a small price to pay for the sincerity 
                  of the interpretation, and in every scene she illuminates the 
                  text with subtle insights.” If the listener appreciates the 
                  dramatic consequences of the Scotto/Muti collaboration, this 
                  recording is for you.
                   
                  Nick del Vecchio
                  
                see also Review 
                by Robert Farr