Rossini Il barbiere di Siviglia
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Gioachino Rossini
Genre:
Opera
Label: Decca
Magazine Review Date: 9/1989
Media Format: Cassette
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 425 520-4DH3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(Il) Barbiere di Siviglia, '(The) Barber of Seville' |
Gioachino Rossini, Composer
Bologna Teatro Comunale Chorus Bologna Teatro Comunale Orchestra Cecilia Bartoli, Rosina, Mezzo soprano Enrico Fissore, Doctor Bartolo, Baritone Gioachino Rossini, Composer Giuseppe Patanè, Conductor Gloria Banditelli, Berta, Mezzo soprano Leo Nucci, Figaro, Baritone Michele Pertusi, Fiorello, Bass Paata Burchuladze, Don Basilio, Bass William Matteuzzi, Almaviva, Tenor |
Composer or Director: Gioachino Rossini
Genre:
Opera
Label: Decca
Magazine Review Date: 9/1989
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 161
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 425 520-2DH3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(Il) Barbiere di Siviglia, '(The) Barber of Seville' |
Gioachino Rossini, Composer
Bologna Teatro Comunale Chorus Bologna Teatro Comunale Orchestra Cecilia Bartoli, Rosina, Mezzo soprano Enrico Fissore, Doctor Bartolo, Baritone Gioachino Rossini, Composer Giuseppe Patanè, Conductor Gloria Banditelli, Berta, Mezzo soprano Leo Nucci, Figaro, Baritone Michele Pertusi, Fiorello, Bass Paata Burchuladze, Don Basilio, Bass William Matteuzzi, Almaviva, Tenor |
Author: Richard Osborne
Clearly, Bartoli's Rosina is going to be one of the set's talking-points. She is a talented and immensely personable singer with more dramatic vibrancy than some Rossinian mezzos we have had in recent years. She is also, even on record, alluringly youthful in manner. If there is a reservation to be made it must be about the musical interpretation, particularly in the cavatina, ''Unavoce poco fa'', where the final pages are rather lavishly and unevenly decorated. The young Adelina Patti did much the same thing before Rossini in Paris in the early 1860s and received a famous rebuke. Patti had been put up to it by her teacher, Maurice Strakosch. In Rossini's word she had been ''Strakoschonized'' and here it is not so much how Bartoli sings as what she has been encouraged to sing.
Nucci has recorded the role of Figaro under Chailly (CBS). As he showed on his recent bel canto recital disc (Decca (CD) 421 129-2DH, 12/88), he has some skills in music of this period and there are many agreeable details, both in the execution and the dramatization of the part on this new recording. That said, he doesn't strike me as a born Figaro. He may not be as menacing in the role as, years ago, Gino Bechi notoriously was, but I find him a good deal less ingratiating than Gobbi managed to be on the EMI set with Callas, conducted by Galliera. Burchuladze is also a slightly heavy-handed Basilio. ''La calunnia'' is back down in C where basses have invariably taken it. There is no harm in that but there have been more mordant Basilios on record. Enrico Fissore's Bartolo, by contrast, is excellent: skilfully sung, keenly acted, and capable of opening up several contrasting aspects of the old mentor's personality. Rossini built a lot of finely crafted comic detail into the portrait of Bartolo and Fissore is alive to most of it. He and the Almaviva William Matteuzzi, make a lot of their scenes together. By contrast, Matteuzzi's Act 1 duet with Nucci is a stop-go affair that lacks a proper rhythm.
This, in part, is the conductor's fault, of course. Patane does many excellent things. In the Act 1 finale the Rossini train sways safely over the points and there are such things as the brief moments of choral stasis nicely attended to. The orchestra tend to come and go rather, both in quality of playing and in actual physical presence but the real problem is the inconsistent pacing of some of the big arias and duets. Patane is also remarkably slow in the opera's opening scene giving the whole thing an unnaturally sluggish feel at the outset. With more consistent conducting—Marriner on Philips and Galliera on EMI are both superior—the elements might have come together rather better than they do on a set that is within hailing distance of being a success. As it is, I would find the Marriner the better, the Galliera the more irresistible buy; though one day EMI will surely put on to CD the old Glyndebourne set with los Angeles and Bruscantini and the most guileful conductor of them all, Vittorio Gui.'
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