PUCCINI Tosca
A fresh look at the Met’s fabled Zeffirelli staging of Puccini’s unfinished final work
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Giacomo Puccini
Genre:
DVD
Label: Decca
Magazine Review Date: AW/2011
Media Format: Digital Versatile Disc
Media Runtime: 129
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 074 3426DH

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Turandot |
Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Andris Nelsons, Conductor Charles Anthony, Emperor Altoum, Tenor Eduardo Valdes, Pong, Tenor Giacomo Puccini, Composer Joshua Hopkins, Ping, Baritone Keith Miller, Mandarin, Baritone Marcello Giordani, Calaf, Tenor Maria Guleghina, Turandot, Soprano Marina Poplavskaya, Liù, Soprano Metropolitan Opera Chorus Metropolitan Opera Orchestra Samuel Ramey, Timur, Bass Sasha Semin, Prince of Persia, Tenor Tony Stevenson, Pang, Tenor |
Author: David Patrick Stearns
Telecast director Gary Halvorson has made the kind of choices that give the production integrity: Act 1 is darker than here than on the Met stage. And though Turandot’s court in Act 2 glitters so brightly that I once recommended sunglasses, the palette on this DVD is beige and muted gold. The Act 3 exchanges between Turandot and Calaf are captured with telling intimacy that binds the Franco Alfano ending more seamlessly to the rest of the opera.
The cast might be described as a B‑team that often rises to A‑team status. Maria Guleghina and Marcello Giordani, two of the Met’s more dependable regulars, won’t make anyone forget the legendary partnerships in these roles from Nilsson/Corelli onwards. But they’re the best that was available in 2009, both of them fairly new to their roles and singing them with a sense of new discovery. Both have ungraceful habits – Guleghina can resort to shouting and Giordani sometimes bullies his way through everything in chest voice. But they’re on good behaviour here. One of the more interesting touches from the revival’s stage director David Kneuss: both Turandot and Calaf walk into the riddle scene confident that they’re going to win.
In the secondary roles, Marina Poplavskaya and Samuel Ramey are certainly A‑team talents, Poplavskaya floating high notes beautifully and getting lots of theatrical mileage out of her strong jaw line, while the veteran Ramey is in far better voice than I’ve heard him in recent years. Turandot is certainly a conductor’s opera and Andris Nelsons finds layers of sound and meaning unlike anything I’ve heard since Karajan’s audio recording on DG.
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