Verdi Otello in Verona
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Giacomo Puccini
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 144
Catalogue Number: 4509-99220-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Madama Butterfly |
Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Eleonora Jankovic, Suzuki, Mezzo soprano Giacomo Puccini, Composer Gianni Brunelli, The Bonze, Bass Giulio Chazalettes, Wrestling Bradford Giuseppe Zecchillo, Prince Yamadori, Baritone Lorenzo Saccomani, Sharpless, Baritone Mario Ferrara, Goro, Tenor Marisa Zotti, Kate Pinkerton, Mezzo soprano Maurizio Arena, Conductor, Tenor Nazzareno Antinori, Pinkerton, Tenor Raina Kabaivanska, Madama Butterfly, Soprano Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra |
Composer or Director: Giuseppe Verdi
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 130
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 0630-19390-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Nabucco |
Giuseppe Verdi, Composer
Aronne Ceroni, Abdallo, Tenor Bruna Baglioni, Fenena, Soprano Dimiter Petkov, Zaccaria, Bass Francesco Ellero d' Artegna, High Priest, Bass Ghena Dimitrova, Abigaille, Soprano Giovanna di Rocco, Anna, Soprano Giuseppe Verdi, Composer Maurizio Arena, Conductor, Tenor Ottavio Garaventa, Ismaele, Tenor Renato Bruson, Nabucco, Baritone Renzo Giacchieri, Wrestling Bradford Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra |
Composer or Director: Giuseppe Verdi
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 139
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 4509-99214-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Otello |
Giuseppe Verdi, Composer
Adriano Schiavon, Roderigo, Tenor Antonio Bevacqua, Cassio, Tenor Flora Raffanelli, Emilia, Mezzo soprano Gianfranco Casarini, Lodovico, Bass Gianfranco de Bosio, Wrestling Bradford Giuseppe Verdi, Composer Kiri Te Kanawa, Desdemona, Soprano Orazio Mori, Montano, Bass Piero Cappuccilli, Iago, Baritone Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra Vladimir Atlantov, Otello, Tenor Zoltán Peskó, Conductor |
Composer or Director: Giuseppe Verdi
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 160
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 0630-19389-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Aida |
Giuseppe Verdi, Composer
Alfredo Zanazzo, King, Bass Anton Guadagno, Conductor Carlo Zardo, Ramfis, Bass Fiorenza Cossotto, Amneris, Mezzo soprano George Iancu Giampaolo Corradi, Messenger, Tenor Giancarlo Sbragia, Wrestling Bradford Giuseppe Scandola, Amonasro, Baritone Giuseppe Verdi, Composer Ileana Iliescu Maria Chiara, Aida, Soprano Maria Gabriella Onesti, Priestess, Soprano Nicola Martinucci, Radames, Tenor Richard Duquesnoy Rosalba Garavelli Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Corps de Ballet Verona Arena Orchestra |
Composer or Director: Giuseppe Verdi
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 144
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: 4509-99215-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(Il) trovatore |
Giuseppe Verdi, Composer
Bruno Balbo, Messenger, Tenor Bruno Grella, Old Gypsy, Bass Fiorenza Cossotto, Azucena, Mezzo soprano Franco Bonisolli, Manrico, Tenor Giampaolo Corradi, Ruiz, Tenor Giorgio Zancanaro, Count di Luna, Baritone Giuliana Matteini, Ines, Soprano Giuseppe Patroni Griffi, Wrestling Bradford Giuseppe Verdi, Composer Paolo Washington, Ferrando, Bass Reynald Giovaninetti, Conductor Rosalind Plowright, Leonora, Soprano Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra |
Composer or Director: Giacomo Puccini
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 125
Catalogue Number: 4509-99219-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Tosca |
Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Alfredo Giacomotti, Angelotti, Bass Daniel Oren, Conductor Eva Marton, Tosca, Soprano Giacomo Aragall, Cavaradossi, Tenor Giacomo Puccini, Composer Gianni Brunelli, Gaoler, Bass Giuseppe Zecchillo, Sciarrone, Bass Graziano Polidori, Sacristan, Bass Ingvar Wixell, Scarpia, Baritone Mario Bonizzato, Shepherd Boy, Treble/boy soprano Mario Ferrara, Spoletta, Tenor Sylvano Bussotti, Wrestling Bradford Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra |
Composer or Director: Giacomo Puccini
Genre:
Opera
Label: NVC Arts
Magazine Review Date: 13/1997
Media Format: Video
Media Runtime: 115
Catalogue Number: 4509-99217-3

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Turandot |
Giacomo Puccini, Composer
Antonio Bevacqua, Pong, Tenor Cecilia Gasdia, Liù, Soprano Ghena Dimitrova, Turandot, Soprano Giacomo Puccini, Composer Giampaolo Corradi, Emperor Altoum, Tenor Giuliano Montaldo, Wrestling Bradford, Soprano Graziano Polidori, Ping, Baritone Ivo Vinco, Timur, Bass Maurizio Arena, Conductor, Tenor Nicola Martinucci, Calaf, Tenor Orazio Mori, Mandarin, Baritone Piero Francesco Poli, Pang, Tenor Verona Arena Chorus Verona Arena Orchestra |
Author:
Madama Butterfly is the most intimate and least spectacular of the filmed operas in this series; it is also the film to which I myself would be most likely to return. Raina Kabaivanska seems at first an unlikely Butterfly. She is too tall and too old: the voice has lost its youthful purity and is not reliably steady. Yet this is a masterly performance and all the better for being seen at close range. “Un bel di”, for example, begins serenely, like a child reciting a lesson learnt by heart and repeated now for Suzuki, whom she addresses, looking at her directly as she questions “Chi sara?” and “Che dira?”. Then, with “un po’ per non morir”, the recitation becomes something else: her own vision takes control with a terrible urgency, a vision she can see as clearly as reality till it begins to fade in her eyes, and there is nothing there. Kabaivanska most touchingly lives the role throughout. Much of her singing is fine too (as in the thrilling cry of “m’ha scordata?” and the “Che tua madre” solo); but sound alone would have misrepresented the artistic achievement of a performance which needs to be seen, not from a seat in the vast arena but through the eye of the camera.
This is true of a few (very few) other individual performances – Maria Chiara’s Aida, Ingvar Wixell’s Scarpia and (most of all) Dame Kiri Te Kanawa’s Desdemona. Beautifully sung and precious simply in sound-recording, this is also a characterization marked by skilful acting. Those who say she learns her roles parrot-fashion and sings without understanding should see this, and follow, for instance, her closely detailed reactions to Otello’s words in Act 3 or enter with her into the girl’s troubled state in Act 4. Again the video is valuable both in itself and as evidence: from sound alone it might be possible (though still wrong) to think ‘bland’ a defensible word; nobody would be likely to use it having seen the video.
Other fine performances here – Vladimir Atlantov’s Otello, Fiorenza Cossotto’s Amneris, Giorgio Zancanaro’s Count di Luna – are good to see as well as to hear; but there are also many – for instance, Nicola Martinucci in Aida and Turandot, Ghena Dimitrova in Turandot and Nabucco – where sight adds little or nothing of value. Raw or uneven tone quality can be shown up quite cruelly: Eva Marton a vocally rebarbative Tosca, Dimiter Petkov a wobbly Zaccaria, Cossotto a great singer markedly in decline by the 1985 Trovatore.
In sum, the series is satisfying neither as opera nor as film. Musically, the balance is a hit-and-miss proposition, and because of the size of the place most of the singers most of the time are concerned with getting their voices across rather than with any refinement of their art. As film, too much (for one thing) is underlit, with faces too dim or distant or turned away. A certain atmospheric charm may be found in the shots of the Arena and the light of a thousand or so candles among the audience. Each of the films begins outside earlier in the day, with people queuing and scene-shifters hammering nails or transporting the lion of Venice in cross-section. There are other incidental interests – the difference in response among singers to the applause, for instance (Kabaivanska looks out over the sea of applause at the end of “Un bel di” with the stricken face of Cio-Cio-San hoping for a ship in the distance, while Marton, after “Vissi d’arte”, freezes, then unbends, acknowledges gravely, then with some signs of pleasure, then with a broad smile but without rising from the kneeling position in which she has been singing – it is all rather absurd).
I recommend the Butterfly for Kabaivanska, the Otello for Te Kanawa and Atlantov, and – but more faintly – the Aida for Chiara and Cossotto. Which underlines the paradox: the special thing about opera in the Arena is the Arena itself, but, as to opera in the Arena on the box, what tells, moves and has value is the individual performance, and then only if the singer defies the Arena and sings with refinement and acts with subtlety.'
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