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             Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
               
              Don Giovanni  
                
              Don Giovanni - Nicolai Ghiaurov (bass), Leporello - Sesto Bruscantini 
              (baritone), Don Ottavio - Alfredo Kraus (tenor), Masetto - Walter 
              Monachesi (baritone), Donna Anna - Gundula Janowitz (soprano), Donna 
              Elvira - Sena Jurinac (soprano), Zerlina - Olivera Miliakovic (soprano), 
              Commendatore - Dmitri Petkov (bass).  
              RAI Symphony Orchestra and Chorus of Rome/Carlo Maria Giulini.  
              rec. live, Rome, 12 May 1970  
                
              OPERA D’ORO GRAND TIER OPD 7080 [3 CDs: 63:15 + 67:53 + 35:45] 
                
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                There are two live recorded performances of “Don Giovanni” 
                  from 1970 made within a couple of months of each other. Each 
                  has Nicolai Ghiaurov, commanding in the lead role, Gundula Janowitz 
                  thrilling as Donna Anna and the lesser-known Olivera Miliakovic 
                  competent but bland as Zerlina and occasionally out of tune. 
                  One is this broadcast by the RAI Symphony Orchestra and Chorus 
                  of Rome under Giulini before a quiet studio audience and the 
                  other is a Salzburg Festival performance under Karajan. As such, 
                  they cry out to be compared, featuring two major conductors 
                  and two celebrated singers in favourite roles.  
                   
                  First, the sonics: both are very listenable but the sound in 
                  the RAI broadcast is much sharper and more wiry, with a fair 
                  amount of blare and distortion in concerted passages; the Salzburg 
                  recording is somewhat duller and more distant but easier on 
                  the ear.  
                   
                  The casts and forces assembled are both admirable: the Vienna 
                  Symphony Orchestra is undoubtedly smoother, keeps in tune better 
                  and is more refined than the intermittently untidy Italian orchestra 
                  but the latter is lithe and responsive under Giulini and remains 
                  very acceptable. Karajan is more animated than Giulini and better 
                  at generating tension at key dramatic moments. Although at times 
                  Giulini achieves a grandeur closer to Klemperer, ultimately 
                  the performance remains a little earth-bound.  
                   
                  Ghiaurov sings virtually identically in both: a big, smooth, 
                  rich bass, properly flexible and seductive if occasionally a 
                  little monotonous; not much wit or humour just a massive, testosterone-pumped 
                  confidence. Bruscantini has rather too neat, light and refined 
                  a baritone for the earthy Leporello and he sounds rather more 
                  like the Don’s uncle, but he delivers the Italian text with 
                  relish. Having said that, Geraint Evans’, bluffer, broader more 
                  blustery manner is more apt for depicting the aristocratic philanderer’s 
                  put-upon side-kick and Evans’ coarser way with the comedy isn’t 
                  necessarily out of place. To my ears, Stuart Burrows’ mellifluous 
                  yet powerful tenor for Karajan is far preferable to that of 
                  Alfredo Kraus, who, contrary to expectation, is rather acidulous 
                  of tone, snatching and yelping at some notes and unable to take 
                  “cercate a consolar” in one breath in “Il mio tesoro”. As much 
                  as I am a huge admirer of Sena Jurinac, I suggest that she isn’t 
                  quite comfortable or at her best as Elvira here; Giulini tries 
                  to ease her round the sharp corners of her arias but she is 
                  gusty at this stage of her career. Teresa Zylis-Gara for Karajan 
                  is finer, purer and more flexible. Giulini’s Commendatore is 
                  Slavic, weak and wobbly; Victor von Halem, by contrast for Karajan, 
                  is everything he should be: firm, brazen, huge-voiced and chilling. 
                  Janowitz is simply divine in both recordings, dominating the 
                  ensembles, agile and soaring in her solos. I love her fluty 
                  tone. Its rather virginal, disembodied character is perfect 
                  for the prim and proper Donna Anna.  
                   
                  The Karajan account emerges as the clear winner. However, if 
                  you want Giulini at his best, his famous, earlier EMI studio 
                  recording remains the first choice; it is tauter, more characterful 
                  and by and large better sung than this later performance.  
                   
                  This de luxe Opera d’Oro “Grand Tier” version offers a full 
                  libretto, synopsis, notes, photos and biographies. It is also 
                  available in the standard bargain issue with nothing but the 
                  briefest of synopses and cues.  
                    
                  
                  Ralph Moore 
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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