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              CD: MDT 
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            Giuseppe VERDI 
              (1813-1901)  
              Rigoletto - Operatic melodrama in three acts (1851) 
              [110:43]  
                
              Duke of Mantua - Richard Tucker (tenor); Rigoletto, his jester - 
              Robert Merrill (baritone); Gilda, Rigoletto’s daughter - Roberta 
              Peters (soprano); Sparafucile, a villain available for hire as an 
              assassin - Bonaldo Giaiotti (bass); Maddalena, his sister - Mignon 
              Dunn (mezzo); Giovanna, Gilda’s Duenna - Carlotta Ordassy 
              (contralto); Count Monterone - John Macurdy (bass); Marullo, a courtier 
              - Calvin Marsh (baritone); Matteo Borsa, a courtier - Arthur Graham 
              (tenor); Count Ceprano - Robert Patterson (baritone); Contessa Ceprano 
              - Joy Clements Galassi (soprano) 
              Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Orchestra/Fausto Cleva  
              rec. September 1955, Teatro alla Scala, Milan, live radio broadcast, 
              22 February 1964. ADD, mono.  
                
              SONY CLASSICAL 88697 91005 2 [52:26 + 58:17]   
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                  I try to avoid being too picky and a little voice tells me that 
                  I should be more grateful for this recording than I feel. That 
                  said, this is in many ways standard fare from the Metropolitan 
                  Opera of the 1960s. If we had no other souvenir of Robert Merrill 
                  in one of his best roles it would be more treasurable but he 
                  made two fine studio recordings with Perlea in 1956 and Solti 
                  in 1964. His interpretation here barely differs in any respect 
                  from either of them. He is musically utterly dependable and 
                  wholly secure of voice, moving both in his solos and when duetting 
                  with Gilda, if never displaying the nuances or variety of vocal 
                  colour that Gobbi or Taddei find in the role. It is a noble, 
                  beautiful voice in all three of the recordings I compared but 
                  to hear him at his most expressive and refulgent the 1963 set 
                  under Solti is the pick, especially as that is in excellent 
                  stereo and generates more excitement than Cleva’s competent 
                  but routine direction achieves.  
                     
                  There are other advantages to the Solti set, not least Anna 
                  Moffo’s vulnerable, gorgeously vocalised Gilda. Roberta 
                  Peters had Gilda in her repertoire for thirty years, recording 
                  it first with Merrill, to whom she had been briefly married, 
                  in the Perlea set for RCA. It was also her farewell role at 
                  the Met in 1985. Her fans will find her in freshest voice in 
                  that earlier recording with Merrill and Björling but for 
                  me there was too much of the soubrette in her tone. I find that 
                  as early as 1964 her voice sounds rather piercing and shrill 
                  and I do not much enjoy her excursions in alt to hit D flat 
                  and even E flat at the conclusions of “Bella figlia” 
                  and Act 2 respectively. She is an affecting actress despite 
                  the monochromatic tendency of her voice and the chemistry between 
                  her and Merrill, especially in that heart-breaking concluding 
                  duet, is palpable.  
                     
                  It is good to have a souvenir of Richard Tucker as the Duke: 
                  ebullient and in clarion voice, he sounds rather mature but 
                  his lovely legato and exemplary diction make him a credible 
                  libertine, even if he’s no young Pavarotti or Björling. 
                  Although I am not always a fan of Alfredo Kraus, his Duke for 
                  Solti is possibly his best recorded role and his elegant tones 
                  are certainly more apt for the part. Tucker doesn’t take 
                  the optional B flat on “agli angeli” at the end 
                  of “Parmi veder le lagrime” and his cabaletta “Possente 
                  amor” is cut, as was standard practice at that time. The 
                  only other cut is the first appearance of “Ah! veglia, 
                  o donna”; Rigoletto and Gilda sing only the duet, not 
                  their initial verse each.  
                     
                  Unless you particularly want Tucker as the Duke or Peters as 
                  Gilda, the Solti recording remains sonically and interpretatively 
                  superior to this mono radio broadcast. The sound here is perfectly 
                  acceptable but for that stupendous Third Act to make its impact, 
                  you really want Solti’s drive and atmospheric sound. Both 
                  Perlea and Cleva are rather stodgy by comparison; I also rate 
                  highly Bonynge’s work in the much-maligned 1971 recording 
                  which to me does not by any means deserve the criticism which 
                  has been directed towards it over the forty years since its 
                  appearance. The LSO is hugely energised under him and his remains 
                  one of my four favourite recordings alongside the Solti, the 
                  Gobbi/Callas set under Serafin and the old Cetra set with Taddei 
                  and Tagliavini. Serafin is not as high-powered as Solti or Bonynge 
                  but still sustains terrific tension in that last scene. Peters’ 
                  sustained squeal as she enters Sparafucile’s den is hammy 
                  and melodramatic; she does the same in the Perlea recording 
                  to no advantage.  
                     
                  Giaiotti is a splendidly saturnine Sparafucile with the low 
                  notes required and Mignon Dunn is an appropriately luscious-voiced 
                  Maddalena who sounds genuinely appalled by her brother’s 
                  plan to murder her lover - not that it stops her suggesting 
                  an equally reprehensible Plan B.  
                     
                  In short, this is a wholly creditable souvenir of a good night 
                  at the Met but for repeated listening you really want more resplendent 
                  sound and more inspired conducting.  
                     
                  Ralph Moore  
                   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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