Puccini La Bohème

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Giacomo Puccini

Genre:

Opera

Label: Grand Opera

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 112

Mastering:

ADD

Catalogue Number: 425 534-2DM2

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
(La) Bohème, 'Bohemian Life' Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Attilio d' Orazi, Sergeant, Bass
Carlo Bergonzi, Rodolfo, Tenor
Cesare Siepi, Colline, Bass
Ettore Bastianini, Marcello, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Benoit, Bass
Fernando Corena, Benoit, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Alcindoro, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Alcindoro, Bass
Fernando Corena, Benoit, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Wolf, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Alcindoro, Baritone
Fernando Corena, Zenobia, Baritone
Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Gianna d' Angelo, Musetta, Soprano
Piero de Palma, Parpignol, Tenor
Renata Tebaldi, Mimi, Soprano
Renato Cesari, Schaunard, Baritone
Santa Cecilia Academy Chorus, Rome
Santa Cecilia Academy Orchestra, Rome
Tullio Serafin, Conductor
Quite small points can colour your reaction to a recording of La boheme. ''Cerchi'' (''look for it'') says Mimi of the hastily pocketed door-key in Act 1, and in Tebaldi's authoritatively firm voice it's an order. ''Cerca?'' (''are you looking?''), she adds a moment or two later, and you rather feel that if Rodolfo doesn't find it soon he'll get a clout round the ear from her handbag. This Rodolfo mark you, could melt even such a self-possessed Mimi as she is: we'll find it in the moonlight, he says, ''and up here the moon is very close'', with the hint of a rueful smile: even garrets have their advantages for a poet. Tebaldi can sing quietly when needed, and she can of course spin a beautiful legato line; the problem is (and for many it will be no problem at all) that the amplitude of her voice and manner is not counter-balanced by those intimate details (colouring of words expressive subtlety of phrasing) that would have made her Mimi touching as well as finely and generously sung. Bergonzi is stylish throughout, as is Bastianini, and the rest of the cast is pretty strong, though you might find the Musetta a bit too shrill, the Benoit and Alcindoro caricatured (as usual) and the Colline is audibly corseting a vastly cavernous voice.
Tebaldi gives an undoubtedly star performance (though of Tosca, much of the time, not Mimi) but the real star of the recording is Serafin. Eighty years old when the recording was made, his ardour is as urgently youthful as his brilliance and his lightly touched detailing are so obviously the fruit of a long lifetime's loving study of the score. Beecham's EMI (mono) version remains hors concours: a performance as fine in all its parts as you are ever likely to hear. Serafin runs him pretty close, but does not unify his cast as magically. His account was famous in its day for the spaciousness of its recording (though the voices are recessed into the orchestra at times), and it still sounds good, if rather brighter in this format than it was.'

Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music. 

Stream on Presto Music | Buy from Presto Music

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.67 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Full website access

From £8.75 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.