Bellini - Norma / Eaglen · La Scola · Mei · Kavrakos · Maggio Musicale · Muti

Bellini - Norma / Eaglen · La Scola · Mei · Kavrakos · Maggio Musicale · Muti

On this CD:

  1. Norma, opera
    Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
    Performed by Maggio Musicale Fiorentino Orchestra, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
    with Dimitri Kavrakos, Ernesto Gavazzi, Jane Eaglen, Vincenzo La Scola, Eva Mei, Carmela Remigio
    Conducted by Riccardo Muti, Marco Balderi

Bellini - Norma / Eaglen · La Scola · Mei · Kavrakos · Maggio Musicale · Muti,Vincenzo Bellini,Riccardo Muti,Jane Eaglen,Vincenzo La Scola,Orchestra e Coro del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino,Eva Mei,Dimitri Kavrakos,Ernesto Gavazzi,Angel Records,Classical,Italian Romantic Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio


Bellini - Norma / Eaglen · La Scola · Mei · Kavrakos · Maggio Musicale · Muti
Average customer rating: 2 out of 5 stars
  • Now A Rarity, But You're Not Missing Much
Bellini - Norma / Eaglen · La Scola · Mei · Kavrakos · Maggio Musicale · Muti
Vincenzo Bellini , Riccardo Muti , Jane Eaglen , Vincenzo La Scola , Orchestra e Coro del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino , Eva Mei , Dimitri Kavrakos , and Ernesto Gavazzi
Manufacturer: Angel Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

Bellini, VincenzoBellini, Vincenzo | ( B ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)Romantic (c.1820-1910) | Historical Periods | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
ItalianItalian | Languages | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
Eaglen, JaneEaglen, Jane | Divas | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
ASIN: B000002RVG
Release Date: 1995-08-08

Tracks:

  1. Sinfonia/Overture - Richardo Muti
  2. 'Ite Sul Colle...Dell' Aura Tua Profetica' - Dimitri Kavrakos
  3. 'Svanir Le Voci!' - Vincenzo La Scola
  4. 'Meco All'Altar Di Venere' - Vincenzo La Scola
  5. 'Odi?...I Suoi Riti A Compiere...' - Vincenzo La Scola
  6. 'Me Protegge, Me Difende' - Vincenzo La Scola
  7. Norma Viene - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
  8. Sediziose Voci - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
  9. Casta Diva - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
  10. 'Fine Al Rito, E Il Sacro Bosco' - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
  11. 'Ah! Bello A Me Ritorna' - Jane Eaglen
  12. 'Sgombra E La Sacra Selva' - Eva Mei
  13. 'Eccola-Va, Mi Lascia' - Eva Mei
  14. 'Va, Crudele' - Eva Mei
  15. 'Vieni In Roma' - Eva Mei

Tracks:

  1. 'Vanne, E Li Cela Entrambi' - Jane Eaglen
  2. 'Adalgisa!' (Alma, Costanza...) - Jane Eaglen
  3. 'Oh, Rimembranza' - Jane Eaglen
  4. 'Ah Si, Fa Core, Abbracciami' - Jane Eaglen
  5. 'Ma Di...L'Amato Giovine?' - Jane Eaglen
  6. 'Oh, Di Qual Sei Tu Vittima' - Jane Eaglen
  7. 'Perfido!...Or Basti!' - Jane Eaglen
  8. 'Vanne, Si, Mi Lascia, Indegno' - Jane Eaglen
  9. Introduzione - Richardo Muti
  10. 'Dormono Entrambi!' - Jane Eaglen
  11. 'Ola! Clotilde!' - Jane Eaglen
  12. 'Mi Chiami, O Norma?' - Carmela Remigio
  13. 'Deh! Con Te, Con Te Li Prendi' - Jane Eaglen
  14. 'Mira, O Norma?' - Carmela Remigio
  15. 'Cedi...Deh, Cedi!' - Jane Eaglen
  16. 'Si, Fino All'Ore Estreme' - Jane Eaglen

Tracks:

  1. 'Non Parti?' - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Florentino
  2. Guerrieri! A Voi Venire - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Florentino
  3. 'Ah! Del Tobro Al Giogo Indegno' - Dimitri Kavrakos
  4. 'Ei Tornera. Si!' - Jane Eaglen
  5. 'Squilla Il Bronzo Del Dio!' - Jane Eaglen
  6. 'Guerra! Guerra!' - Coro Del Maggio Musicale Florentino
  7. 'Ne Compi Il Rito, O Norma?' - Jane Eaglen
  8. 'In Mia Man Alfin Tu Sei' - Jane Eaglen
  9. 'Gia Mi Pasco Ne Tuoi Sguardi' - Jane Eaglen
  10. 'Dammi Quel Ferro!' - Jane Eaglen
  11. Qual Cor Tradisti - Richardo Muti
  12. 'Norma!...Deh! Norma, Scolpati!' - Vincenzo La Scola
  13. 'Deh! Non Voleri Vittime' - Jane Eaglen

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Now A Rarity, But You're Not Missing Much.......2006-05-23

This is one of those digital-era opera recordings (taped July 1994, issued the following year) that seemed to appear and then go out of print in approximately the amount of time it would take to play them twice. And, while I was happy to finally have tracked down a "like-new" copy via Amazon marketplace, twice is about as many times as I wanted to hear it.

I had looked forward to hearing this particular score played under the exacting baton of Maestro Muti, a controversial figure venerated by many for his scholarship, his remarkably acute ear, and his high standards of ensemble, and excoriated by others for what they see as killjoy pedantry and excessive strictness (he generally proscribes unwritten high notes and severely limits ornamentation from even star singers). It seemed to me that his customarily disciplined, taut, urgent leadership would be a stimulating corrective or at least an alternative to the slack and sleepy conducting and/or second-rate execution that has compromised many previous recordings of Bellini's masterpiece, however vividly sung and acted. And that did hold true in the main. Muti runs a tight ship as usual, and the orchestra and chorus of the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino (an ensemble with which he has very deep roots; it was his work as their principal conductor that launched him to international prominence 25 years before) rises to the challenge. Only here and there does the reading get too hard-driven, with the brisk tempi pursued to the point of hectic joylessness (much of the overture suffers this way, as does the "Guerra! Guerra!" choral outburst). Still, while this is not the most inspired performance I have heard from this conductor in terms of musical shaping and flow, it is a reading of both vitality and sensitivity -- the canny pacing of the Adalgisa/Pollione duet is an example of discreet accompaniment at a very high level. In technical terms, the live recording is well balanced, and it's nice in this opera to hear choristers audibly "right in the thick of things" when they're in mass formation on stage, and not illogically distanced, as sometimes is the case in studio-made products.

It is a shame that one of our great living conductors of Italian opera was not matched in this work with an equally adept cast. Eaglen makes some attractive sounds in the middle of her range at mezzo-forte or less, but Norma does not seem to be a role for which she is particularly well suited, at least on the evidence here. The voice is fatally lacking in flexibility, so that florid patches are barely marked; pitch is often errant, especially on top; and the sound tends to harden and take on a glassy quality when she needs to step up the volume. La Scola's Pollione is worse, and provincial to a depressing extreme: it's all so much gritty, colorless hectoring, innocent of style, blowsy of line where legato is called for, and with registers poorly equalized. That leaves Mei. For most of the recorded era, the role of the young priestess Adalgisa, who ideally should have a more vulnerable, less mature sound and bearing than that of her rival Norma, was cast with mezzos. Many of them were fine musicians, some even legendary singers; but simply by dint of their natural endowment, they made the character sound inappropriately matronly. The best for which one could hope in those times would be either a very young mezzo (Ludwig at the time of the second Callas recording) or a mezzo with some soprano characteristics (Cossotto and Verrett, both of whom had a wide enough range to successfully essay select soprano roles), or both. Soprano Montserrat Caballe, herself a distinguished former Norma, made a mark on the opera's performance history when she took the part on Joan Sutherland's second commercial recording of the opera in the early 1980s, and the casting trend in recent decades has followed suit. Eva Mei on the present recording gives the most satisfying performance of the three principals. She's a pleasant-sounding Adalgisa in the modern/authentic lighter-voiced/soprano mold, and she can make her voice move to the specifications of the music. Her shortcoming, alas, is one she shares with Eaglen and La Scola -- none of them is, here, a particularly engaging, expressive or imaginative singer or dramatic presence; collectively they make for an object lesson in singers "filling" roles rather than inhabiting them. And a NORMA with three dramatic ciphers, two of whom also have significant strikes against them in the pure-singing sweepstakes, is simply not a recommendable NORMA.

I wish I could marry the virtues of Muti's conducting here to the vocal glamour and security of the 1972 RCA recording featuring Caballe, Cossotto, and Domingo (the principals of Muti's later AIDA recording, come to think of it). That set (perfunctory and anonymous conducting by Cillario notwithstanding), both of the Callas/EMI recordings under Serafin, the legendary Caballe/Vickers/Veasey live performance at Orange (on DVD), and still others far surpass this one. It would have been an acceptable way to pass an afternoon if encountered in radio-broadcast form, but was scarcely worth preserving.

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  6. Franz Lehár: The Merry Widow
  7. Gaetano Donizetti: Lucia de Lammermoor
  8. Georg Friedrich Handel: Xerxes
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  10. Gilbert & Sullivan: The Yeomen of The Guard / Marriner

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