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
Ettore Bastianini: A Life in Opera Gioachino ROSSINI(1792
- 1868) Il barbiere di Siviglia:
1. Largo al factotum [5:01]
2. All' idea di qual metallo [7:55] Gaetano DONIZETTI(1797
- 1848) Lucia di Lammermoor:
3. Cruda, funesta smania [5:56]
4. Lucia tra poco a te verrà [14:41] La Favorita:
5. Giardini dell'Alcazar [7:02] Giuseppe VERDI(1813
- 1901) La forza del destino:
6. Urna fatale del mio destino...Egli è salvo! [5:15] Amilcare PONCHIELLI(1834
- 1886) La Gioconda:
7. O monumento! [5:53] Giuseppe VERDI(1813
- 1901) Un ballo in maschera:
8. Alla vita che t'arride [2:43]
9. Ahimé! s'appressa alcun [7:24]
10. Alzati… Eri tu che m'acchiave quell' anima [6:05] Don Carlo:
11. Quest'è la pace che voi date al mondo [6:36]
12. Per me giunto è il dì supreme [2:42]
Ettore
Bastianini (baritone)
Alvino Misciano (tenor) (2); Renata Scotto (soprano)
(4); Ivo Vinco (bass) (3); Anita Cerquetti (soprano)
(9); Gianni Poggi (tenor) (9); Cesare Siepi (bass) (11);
Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino/Alberto Erede
(1; 2; 5); Orchestra e Coro del Teatro alla Scala di
Milano/Nino Sanzogno (3; 4); Orchestra dell’Accademia
di Santa Cecilia/Francesco Molinari-Pradelli (6); Orchestra
del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino/Gianandrea Gavazzeni (7);
Orchestra del Teatro Communale di Firenze/Emidio Tieri
(8; 9; 10); Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino/Antonino
Votto (11; 12)
rec. 1955 (5; 6), 1956 (1; 2; 11; 12), 1957 (7; 8; 9; 10),
1958 (3; 4); tracks 8-13 live. URANIA URN 22.368 [77.02]
Ettore
Bastianini died of throat cancer in 1967 at only forty-four
years old. In a career spanning little more than a dozen
years, he came to typify the ideal Verdi baritone. His
voice had a burnished, brazen quality that carried an inimitable
thrill even if at times he lacked subtlety. His early training
as a bass, before he shifted tessitura in 1952, seemed
to give the lower reaches of his voice a stentorian heft
that does not sound as if it could be comfortably carried
up. Despite this he developed the most brilliant upper
extension rising to a ringing top A flat. His diction was
exemplary and he was handsome of physique; perhaps the
only baritone who could properly measure up, physically
and vocally, to Franco Corelli and Mario Del Monaco on
stage. Just occasionally, a certain ennui would creep into
his performances. He could, with some justification, be
accused of merely going through the motions when it came
to dramatic nuance – but with a voice as grand as his,
few complained. On record, this tendency towards carelessness
of characterisation and even monotony of sound can be more
noticeable, yet there are so many purely vocal compensations
that it seems churlish to demur. John Culshaw, the famous
Decca producer, claimed that as his career developed, Bastianini
grew tired of the baritone repertoire that ideally suited
him and perhaps even began to regret the change he had
made from bass to baritone. If this was true, it lends
a horrible irony to the onset of the disease and the manner
of his death. An intensely private man, Bastianini concealed
the illness that was so soon to kill him, resulting in
some booing of his performances at the Met in 1965 which
in retrospect seems shameful. Very few people had any idea
of his terrible affliction, even though towards the end
of his career it manifested itself in unpredictable hoarseness.
Here, however, we hear him at his best. Pavel Lisitsian
was the only contemporary baritone who could rival him
in sheer Italianate amplitude of voice; to find their equal
you would have to go back to Ruffo, Stracciari and Amato,
putting Bastianini in exalted company.
This
well-filled recital disc from Urania is made up of both
studio and live recordings. It is slightly odd that it
does not include any of his famous performances in “Il
Trovatore”, yet the booklet contains a photograph of him
as di Luna accompanied by Corelli. We still have here
a healthy selection of Verdi, plus Ponchielli, Rossini
and Donizetti. Although neither of the latter two composers
was exactly ideal for his voice, he was singing at a time
when the “big-boned” approach to Donizetti was still prevalent
and any baritone worth his salt had to sing the Barber.
It is nonetheless in Verdi and verismo roles that he excelled,
especially Gérard in “Andrea Chénier”, Michonnet in “Adriana
Lecouvreur” and Tonio in “I Pagliacci”, but none of the
latter is present. So although there is much to enjoy in
this compilation it does not comprehensively reflect Bastianini’s
achievement, nor do I know of a disc that does. For so
major a singer, there is at present comparatively little
available, although I have recently acquired recital discs
from Andromeda and Myto. Otherwise, Bastianini made about
a dozen studio recordings of complete operas, mostly with
Decca.
The
first half of the disc consists of seven extracts from
five complete sets; the remaining five tracks are from
two live recordings: a 1957 “Un ballo in maschera” and
a 1956 “Don Carlo”. Track seven is wrongly described as
live; it is from the 1957 studio recording of “La Gioconda” with
an exalted cast: Cerquetti, Simionato, Del Monaco, Siepi
and Bastianini himself, here singing “O monumento!”. Track
five, from “La Favorita”, contains a misprint in the title
and should read “Giardini dell’Alcazar”.
The
first excerpts from the complete 1956 recording of “Il
barbiere di Siviglia” finds Bastianini in rock-solid voice,
belting out top Gs with gusto and making an excellent
job of exploiting the comic possibilities of the rôle.
His diction, expression and timing are superb, and although
Erede’s speeds are steadier than those of Schüchter in
the 1954 recording of the “Largo”, Bastianini is more characterful
and the recording quality superior. The second extended
excerpt is with Alvino Misciano, a worthy tenor previously
unknown to me. It goes very well and there is a lovely
lilt in the concluding “Già viene l’oro”. Next come excerpts
from the complete “Lucia di Lammermoor” with Renata Scotto
in excellent form. This set has been overlooked in favour
of those starring Callas and Sutherland. It is true that
by 1958 Di Stefano is already in less than freshest voice
and Scotto is a little anonymous; even so there is much
to enjoy here. There is no mention of the source for these
re-masterings, but some thumps, swooshes and fluctuations
of pitch suggest that they have been taken from LPs. Bastianini
does not attempt much subtlety in his characterisation
but Edgardo is in any case a bit of a brute, so he does
what is required and in glorious voice delivers a forthright
account of those hectoring arias. I have not been able
to discover who the uncredited comprimario tenor is – the
one who sings Normanno; no doubt someone who owns the complete
set can supply this information.
The
soulful aria from “La Favorita” allows Bastianini to display
his beautiful legato and even a trill. We are then back
on his real home territory with “Urna fatal” from “La forza
del destino”, where the richness of the lower regions of
his voice is deployed to telling effect. Why are so many
of the great baritone rôles such absurd and unpleasant
people? I think it a pity that the selections from “Un
ballo in maschera” are from the live Florence performance
when the live 1957 set from Milan with Callas and Di Stefano
is preferable. The sound in both is pretty crumbly, but
the latter is definitely superior artistically. Bastianini
in particular gives us a more refined Renato in Milan.
In Florence “O dolcezze perdute” is a little crude and
even unsteady. Poggi - alongside whom Bastianini too often
found himself performing - is a distinct liability compared
with Di Stefano at his finest.
Finally,
the two excerpts from “Don Carlo” present Bastianini as
he is best remembered. The great confrontation with Philip
is riveting, especially as he is in the company of the
finest post-war exponent of the role of King in Cesare
Siepi, who evokes a terrible world-weariness which juxtaposes
tellingly with the brash idealism of Posa. Siepi’s concentrated
economy of expression makes the perfect contrast with Bastianini’s
extraversion; both singers are perfectly in character.
A comparison with the 1958 live recording from Salzburg
conducted by Karajan reveals a remarkable consistency between
their performances. On both occasions Siepi makes Philip’s
sudden emotional revelation very moving and Bastianini
wholly captures Posa’s wide-eyed amazement as he sees his
king crumble. The difference between the two performances
lies more in the nature of the recorded sound and conducting
rather than in the singers. In Salzburg the overall sound
picture is clearer but the voices are more recessed and
Karajan finds more detail in the score. In Florence, Votto
creates more momentum and voices are more forward, but
the sound is generally fuzzier. Both performances are treasurable.
If you want a studio recording then the hard-to-find 1962
DG set with Christoff is also very fine but Bastianini
is in marginally drier, less pliant voice.
Given
the current paucity of Bastianini recitals, this Urania
edition makes a valuable contribution to the discography.
It will doubtless urge many to become better acquainted
with this uniquely vibrant voice by exploring his complete
recordings. He might not always have been the most nuanced
of artists but the splendour of his baritone carries all
before.
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.