Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
Performed by Italian International Orchestra with Iano Tamar , Emil Alekperov , Jae-Jun Lee , Sonia Lee , Andrea Papi
Verdi - Macbeth / Demerdijev · Tamar · Papi · La Rosa · Guidarini,Giuseppe Verdi,Marco Guidarini,Evgenij Demerdijev,Iano Tamar,Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia,Andrea Papi,Andrea La Rosa,Dynamic Italy,Classical,Classical Music,Italian Romantic Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio,Opera/Operetta
Average customer rating:
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Verdi - Macbeth / Demerdijev · Tamar · Papi · La Rosa · Guidarini
Giuseppe Verdi , Marco Guidarini , Evgenij Demerdijev , Iano Tamar , Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia , Andrea Papi , and Andrea La Rosa Manufacturer: Dynamic Italy ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000044KO Release Date: 1997-06-15 |
Tracks:
- Preludio
- Cor Delle Streghe: Che Faceste, Dite Su
- Ingresso Di Banco E Macbeth: Giorno Non Vidi Mai
- Duetto Banco/Macbeth: Due Vaticini
- Cor Delle Streghe: S'allontanarono!
- Recitativo E Aria: Vieni T'affretta
- Recitativo E Aria: Or Tutti Sorgete
- Recitativo E Marcia: Oh Donna Mia
- Aria E Duetto: Mi Si Affaccia Un Pugnal!
- Finale
- Scena E Aria: Trionfai!
- Cor Di Sicari: Chi V'impose Unirvi A Noi
- Scena E Aria: Come Dal Ciel Precipita
- Banchetto E Visione: Salve, O Re!
- Finale
Tracks:
- Cor Delle Streghe: Tre Volte Miagola
- Scena Delle Apparizioni: Che Fate Or Voi
- Scena Ed Aria: Vada In Fiamme
- Cor: Scozia Oppressa
- Scena Ed Aria: Ah! La Paterna Mano
- Malcolm E Soldati Inglesi: Dove Siam? Che Bosco E Quello?
- Scena Del Sonnambulismo: Uma Macchia
- Scena Ed Aria: Pieta, Rispetto, Amore
- Scena Della Battaglia: Ella E Morta!
- Act Four: Finale
Customer Reviews:
The Original Macbeth-Premiere Recording.......2001-03-31
The differences are substantial enough to persuade one to buy this recording. Some of the 1865 revisions included: 1. Substituting Lady Macbeth's familiar aria "La luce langue" for the fierce cabaletta "Trionfai! Secure alfine" 2. Replacing Macbeth's cabaletta "Vada in fiamma", which occurred after he faints in the witch's cavern, with his second duet with Lady Macbeth 3. Removing Macbeth's two-part aria-finale and replacing it with and ensemble finale. 4. Removing another chorus for the witches "Ondine e silfide", an invocation to wake the unconscious Macbeth. 5. Other melodic changes to numbers that stayed (there were substantial revisions to the duet "Fatal mia donna! Un murmure").
Objectively, the 1865 version is the preferable one, particularly because Lady Macbeth's words and music better reflect her gradual decline as her conscience gnaws away at her sanity. Nevertheless, the music unique to the 1847 version cannot be dismissed. "Trionfai!" and "Vada in fiamma" in particular, are wonderful pieces of invective, and admirably convey the ruthlessness of the royal usurpers. The excised witches' chorus "Ondine e silfide" is a typical early Verdi chorus on the surface, but its sprightliness ironically contrasts with the despair that made Macbeth swoon, and it underlines the witches' treatment of human beings as toys to play with. Here and there, too, one will hear an unfamiliar tune and have to go back to their Warren-Rysanek or Milnes-Cossotto recording and make a comparison. It's quite an interesting voyage of discovery to compare the two versions, and it's nice to know what audiences really heard at the triumphant premiere so long ago.
The performance itself is, alack, only average in quality. As Macbeth, Evgenij Demerdijiev gets a strong start, but by his final scene, he is rasping and losing volume. We are told in the introduction to the liner notes that he contracted the flu(!) but that the performance was important enough to be recorded anyway. Iano Tamar's round, plush tone was beautiful enough in the role of the innocent Ottavia in Pacini's L'Ultimo Giorno di Pompeii (Also on Dynamic-and highly recommended). Here she does not quite cut it as the malevolent Lady Macbeth. However, she certainly is not bad, and her rendition of the Sleepwalking Scene is good enough to make up for her being somewhat miscast in the role. I would kill to hear Linda Roark-Strummer sing the cabaletta "Trionfai!"! Andrea Papi and Andrea La Rosa, as Banquo and Macduff respectively, are both solid. Under the direction of Marco Guidarini, the Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia has some awkward moments with the string sections (sour notes), and one feels that the pace could be picked up here and there.
The recorded sound is quite good for a live recording, with little intrusion from audience except between numbers, and with consistent sound level. An Italian-English libretto and and essay are included in the accompanying booklet. However, one wishes Dynamic had provided us with a complete side-by-side list of the revisions (as Opera Rara has done in the past), but one can't have everything.
All reservations aside, this is definitely a recording worth owning if one already has a more standard recording of the opera. It is a learning experience and not and unenjoyable performance in its own right.
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