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Verdi: Otello
CD DetailsComposer: Giuseppe Verdi Conductor: Myung-Whun Chung Orchestra: Bastille Opera Orchestra & Choir Performer: Plácido Domingo Performer: Cheryl Studer Performer: Sergei Leiferkus Performer: Denyce Graves Performer: Philippe Duminy Performer: Ildebrando D' Arcangelo Performer: Michael Schade Performer: Ramon Vargas Edition: Music CD CD Release Date: 1994-10-11 Music Label: Deutsche Grammophon Soundtracks: Music CD 1- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Una vela! Una vela!"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Esultate! L'orgoglio musulmano"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Roderigo, ebben che pensi?"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Fuoco di gioia!"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Roderigo, beviam!"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Inaffia l'ugola!"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Capitano, v'attende la fazione ai baluardi"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Abbasso le spade!"
- Otello, opera: Act 1.: "Già nella notte densa"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Non ti crucciar"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Vanne! la tua meta già vedo"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Credo in un Dio crudel"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Ciò m'accora..."
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Dove guardi splendono raggi"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "D'un uom che geme sotto il tuo disdegno"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Se inconscia, contro te, sposo, ho peccato"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Desdemona rea!"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Tu?! Indietro! fuggi!!"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Ora e per sempre addio"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Pace, signor"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Era la notte, Cassio dormia"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Oh! Mostruosa colpa!"
- Otello, opera: Act 2.: "Sì, pel ciel marmoreo giuro!"
Music CD 2- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "La vendetta del porto ha segnalato la veneta galea"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Continua" - "Qui trarrò Cassio"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Dio ti giocondi, o sposo"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Esterrefatta fisso"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Dio! mi potevi scagliar tutti i mali"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Cassio è là !"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Vieni; l'aula è deserta"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "... e intanto, giacché non si stanca mai"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Quest'è il segnale"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Il Doge de il Senato salutano"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Messeri!... Il Doge..."
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "A terra!... sì...nel livido fango"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Quell' innocente un fremito"
- Otello, opera: Act 3.: "Fuggite!"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Era più calmo?"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Mia madre aveva una povera ancella"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Piangea cantando nell'erma landa"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Ave Maria, piena di grazia"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Chi è là ? Otello?"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Diceste questa sera le vostre preci?"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Aprite! Aprite!"
- Otello, opera: Act 4.: "Nium mi tema"
Music reviews of Verdi: OtelloMusic Review: Best Otello Ever? Rating: 5 Stars
Despite some heavy competition, this is definitely a candidate for the best recording ever made of Verdi's penultimate opera. Nothing really needs to be said about the opera's merits; everyone recognizes its greatness, and I personally think it's the best opera to come from Verdi's pen--barely. I don't understand why it's not as well loved as La Traviata, Il Trovatore, and others--maybe it's just not as well known, since the tenor role is famously taxing.Placido Domingo, however, is no ordinary tenor and the role seems to pose no challenges to him. From the opening cry "Esultate!" to the incredibly moving final monologue, he is utterly convincing, somehow managing, as in all his performances, to be both forceful and incredibly beautiful of tone. This may be the role in which his singing, and acting, are displayed to their absolute greatest advantage--it is worthwhile seeing him perform Otello on video. He is a more than worthy hero (listen to his entrance), a suavely convincing lover ("Gia nella notte densa"), a frightening avenger (try the end of act II, "Si pel ciel marmoreo giuro"), and, by the end, a ruined man, but one who has achieved self knowledge ("Niun me tema"). Don't miss this performance; it's probably Domingo's best, though I want to hear his seventies live recording with Kleiber (!) conducting. Though Domingo dominates this recording vocally (as the Otello should), he is very well supported by the rest of the cast. Cheryl Studer makes a youthful and pure-toned Desdemona, with excellent high notes. Not much can be done with Desdemona's passive character, perhaps, but her music is gorgeous and Studer sings it with beauty and perception. I find her one of the most consistently excellent of modern sopranos, and cannot understand the flak she so often takes from reviewers. Sergei Leiferkus, with his oddly light and very Russian baritone, is always going to be a controversial Iago. Perhaps my view of his performance is overly informed by having seen him in the famous Solti video of this work, in which he acts the pants off of almost any opera star you could name, but I find his Iago to be marvelous and refreshingly "different". If you're looking for baritonal "beauty", a la Jose van Dam or Eberhard Waechter, you probably won't like Leiferkus' timbre, but his open-throated sound is highly dramatic and convincingly villainous, which strange as this may sound reminds me of a Slavic Tito Gobbi (though with less fullness in the lower register). What's more, he's as good a vocal actor as a physical one, and this reading is impressively intelligent, totally under the character's skin. And don't get me wrong, hs voice is not ugly: it just doesn't provide that honeyed warmth you get from some baritones. The supporting cast is uniformly excellent, with bass Ildebrando D'Arcangelo taking the part of ambassador Lodovico, the up-and-coming Mexican tenor Ramon Vargas as Cassio, and Denyce Graves sounding distinctive in her small role as Iago's wife Emilia. There are simply no weak links. But the main thing you're going to notice apart from the three leads is the orchestral playing and conducting. The Orchestre de l'Opera Bastille is a world-class ensemble which responds well to Myung-Whun-Chung's powerhouse direction. "Powerhouse" may actually give the wrong impression--there's nothing bombastic here. Chung maintains dramatic tension by brisk tempi, emphatic accents (though he never breaks up the flow), and perfectly paced buildup to the explosive climaxes. But he somehow does all this without damaging the musical phrases, becoming exhausting, or creating noise for noise's sake. This ought to be played in conducting classes to demonstrate how to maintain the drama in opera. In a word, this is a sensational performance, with the excitment of a live set but the polish of studio work, and a major event in recorded classical music. It belongs on the shelf of every opera lover--and the shelf of non-opera lovers too, because despite this work's general lack of "hit" arias, it is crammed with memorable tunes and the Shakespearean libretto is free of most of the dramatic goofiness we so often have to put up with in opera--and so could very well convert you to the genre. Not just a performance, but an experience. Don't miss it.
More Verdi: Otello free music reviews: 1 2 3 4 5 6
Description of Verdi: OtelloAll products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed. This is Plácido Domingo's third recording of Otello and arguably his best. Besides benefiting from years of study and restudy, the older, rougher, darker Domingo voice is better suited to the role than his prettier, younger self. Also, the title character's rage always seemed a bit forced in previous recordings; not so here. His colleagues aren't always at peak level of inspiration but they're consistently excellent. Sergei Leiferkus's metallic, Russian sound is ideal for Iago: besides being sinister, he sounds like an outsider. Conductor Myung-Whun Chung is anything but a routinist, particularly with the Bastille forces that he worked with intensively for years. This is a fine modern recording of a great, great opera. --David Patrick Stearns
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