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             Renata Tebaldi sings Puccini and Verdi Favourites   
              Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924) 
               
              In quelle trine morbide (Manon Lescaut) (1893) [1:15]  
              Sola, perduta, abbandonata (Manon Lescaut) (1893) [4:07] 
               
              Si, mi chiamano Mimi (La Bohème) (1896) [5:30]  
              with Carlo Bergonzi (tenor)  
              Donde lieta usci (La Bohème) (1896) [3:28]  
              Signore, ascolta! (Turandot) (1924) [2:39]  
              Tu che di gel sei cinta (Turandot) (1924) [2:55]  
              Un bel di vedremo (Madama Butterfly) (1904) [4:49]  
              Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (Madama Butterfly) (1904) [5:12]  
              Vissi d'arte (Tosca) (1900) [3:16]  
              Che tua madre dovrà prenderti in braccio (Madama Butterfly) 
              (1904) [4:55]  
              with Enzo Sardelli (baritone)  
              Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) 
               
              Son giunta … Madre, pietosa Vergine (La Forza del Destino) 
              (1862) [6:22]  
              Pace, pace mio Dio! (La forza del destino) (1862) [5:52] 
               
              Ritorna vincitor! (Aida) (1871) [7:13]  
              D'amor sull'ali rosee (Il Trovatore) (1853) [3:36]  
                
              Renata Tebaldi (soprano)  
              rec. 1954-1959, stereo  
                
              ALTO ALC 1133  [67:46]   
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                  Recitals like this, so long after the event, can perhaps allow 
                  us to question some of the assumptions that were held so dear 
                  at the time. Renata Tebaldi and Maria Callas were frequently 
                  compared and contrasted. With the passing years Callas has become 
                  a cult icon with her image famous throughout the world. Tebaldi 
                  is far less well known to the common man or woman than Callas 
                  and this has been the case since the 1950s and 1960s – especially 
                  when Callas’s private life with Aristotle Onassis made headlines 
                  across the globe. However, Tebaldi’s achievements should not 
                  be underrated.  
                   
                  Tebaldi had a fresh, vibrant and smooth voice which had an unusual 
                  carrying power – fans reminisce about how large her voice sounded 
                  in the opera house. One can sense that in 'Signore Ascolta' 
                  when the tone grows on the last phrases up to the high note. 
                  She was, in this regard, a step ahead of Maria Callas who, for 
                  all her insight and determination, was not born with a naturally 
                  beautiful voice except perhaps in the middle registers. Tebaldi’s 
                  time as a premier soprano was a bit longer than that of Callas. 
                  Tebaldi’s great breakthrough was in 1946 at the reopening of 
                  La Scala; Callas was Gioconda at Verona in 1947. Although Callas 
                  continued to make recordings until the late 1960s and enjoyed 
                  a worldwide tour in the early 1970s her voice was rather threadbare 
                  and troublesome for most of the 1960s onwards. Tebaldi’s vocal 
                  prime was also quite short but her decline was not quite so 
                  great and she continued performing in opera until the 1970s. 
                  Looking back at their 1950s/1960s heydays it is no wonder that 
                  people found it difficult to be objective about their achievements. 
                   
                   
                  It almost goes without saying that Tebaldi had one of the most 
                  naturally beautiful voices on record. The best example here 
                  is probably 'Si mi chiamino Mimi' or 'Vissi d'arte'. Her big 
                  break came when Toscanini chose her for the reopening of La 
                  Scala in 1946. Many of these records are from over a decade 
                  later in the late 1950s when she was at the peak of her fame. 
                  They date from before the voice became darker and more steely 
                  – especially after the mid-1960s when she changed her technique 
                  and found success in roles like Gioconda and Fanciulla 
                  Del West which demand a great strong sound in the middle 
                  registers of the voice. The voice was initially quite lyrical 
                  and flexible; she performed many roles in this time which she 
                  abandoned for the more standard fare included here as well as 
                  other Verismo works by Giordano and Catalani.  
                   
                  Callas was a very different performer from Tebaldi. Her voice 
                  was dark and steely and used with virtuosity – especially in 
                  the bel canto operas of Bellini and Donizetti. This was foreign 
                  to Tebaldi. However, Tebaldi was not eclipsed. She could ‘float’ 
                  high notes with a facility missing in Callas’s work. She employed 
                  a vibrant and ringing voice in Verismo repertoire with class 
                  and a deal of style. She could be in touch with the listener 
                  without resorting to too much sentimentality. Try 'Tu che di 
                  gel sei cinta' from Turandot (Track 11). Her art was 
                  perhaps more ‘straightforward’ than that of Callas. Her gifts 
                  could be enjoyed for the beauty of her tone and the confidence 
                  of her technique. You did not wonder if the next high note would 
                  hit its mark except during the very final stages of her career. 
                   
                   
                  Tebaldi wisely avoided the heaviest Verdi/Puccini roles on stage 
                  - Abigaille (Nabucco), Lady Macbeth and Turandot - but 
                  she proved well suited to a wide variety of Puccini and Verdi 
                  roles. Included here are extracts from Tebaldi's stereo recordings 
                  of Tosca, Aida and Madama Butterfly. The 
                  earlier mono versions from 1951-1952 may have caught her in 
                  fresher/more lyrical voice but there are a significant improvement 
                  in terms of recorded sound. Only the extracts from Manon 
                  Lescaut shows signs of a little distortion - they are the 
                  earliest of the recordings included here.  
                   
                  The arias from La Forza del Destino are especially successful. 
                  The voice is strong and focused while the phrasing is smooth 
                  and even. The sound is very good here and allows the voice to 
                  ‘bloom’. Although Tebaldi belonged to a tradition of Italian 
                  sopranos such as Maria Caniglia and performed this role and 
                  other verismo roles she is not as vivid an actress as her predecessor. 
                  Caniglia did not have the smoothness or beauty of Tebaldi but 
                  she inhabited the role to a greater extent. Caniglia’s fierce 
                  ‘Maledizione!’ at the end of 'Pace mio dio' is not pretty but 
                  the drama is very exciting. Tebaldi tried a different course 
                  – she excites through singing with a really big, powerful tone 
                  but without going beyond the scope of her voice. She phrases 
                  grandly such as at 'Deh, non m'abbandonar' in 'Madre, pietosa 
                  vergine'. She is still more successful here than Zinka Milanov 
                  who sounds matronly on the 1957 studio recording. In the next 
                  decade Leontyne Price arrived on the scene and perhaps eclipsed 
                  Tebaldi with a more luscious tone and vibrancy. This was allied 
                  to a dramatic sensibility - without the excesses of her late 
                  performances in the 1980s when she really chewed up the scenery 
                  - which Tebaldi does not command here except perhaps in the 
                  Aida selection 'Ritorna Vincitor!'; for that you need 
                  to try one of her live recordings. Tebaldi was more idiomatic 
                  than Price being a native Italian speaker and that marks out 
                  her strengths especially in Madama Butterfly.  
                   
                  In the Gramophone review quoted on the CD cover they describe 
                  Tebaldi as ''surely [standing] head and shoulders above the 
                  present generation [of Italian sopranos].'' This is generally 
                  true in terms of consistency but if we are going solely by studio 
                  recordings I suggest that, from the next generation, Renata 
                  Scotto, Mirella Freni and Maria Chiara could also be extraordinary. 
                  Also there was the rise in non-Italian sopranos such as Leontyne 
                  Price, Margaret Price, Montserrat Caballé, Martina Arroyo, Régine 
                  Crespin, Victoria De Los Angeles and Anna Moffo. Rather like 
                  Luciano Pavarotti, it is the consistency of her recordings which 
                  is so remarkable. The technical demands of the heavy aria 'D'amore 
                  sull'ali rosee' are handled as confidently as the famous aria 
                  from Act 1 of La Boheme. However, unlike Pavarotti, Tebaldi's 
                  best form was not always caught in the studio. The voice rarely 
                  floats as it does caught live in the theatre, and only occasionally 
                  is her dramatic talent shown off. Her complete Tosca recording 
                  is a rare example which is actually very good irrespective of 
                  the competition.  
                   
                  I suggest that Tebaldi’s achievement – although perhaps less 
                  startling than Callas’s resurrection of forgotten repertoire 
                  – was considerable. Her recordings included finely schooled 
                  performances of Verdi and Puccini that in terms of the marriage 
                  of tone, diction and style are very consistent. If Tebaldi’s 
                  live recordings were afforded the same level of interest as 
                  those of Callas I’m sure that the portion of Tebaldi’s art which 
                  was sometimes missing in the studio – namely charm or at times 
                  a dramatic declamatory presence – would be better appreciated. 
                   
                   
                  This CD, in excellent sound, is another fine recording from 
                  Alto who put to shame some of the bigger companies releasing 
                  vintage recordings. There is an interesting essay in the booklet 
                  and the track details seem accurate. Really excellent.  
                   
                  David Bennett  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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