 DVD
	  Review
DVD
	  Review
	  Guiseppe VERDI (1813-1901)
	  AIDA opera in four acts (Recorded at La Scala, Milan in 1985)
	  
	  Aida
..Maria
	  Chiara
	  Radames
	  Luciano Pavarotti
	  Amneris
.
	  Ghena Dimitrova
	  Amonasro
.
	  Juan Pons
	  The King of Egypt
.. Paata
	  Burchuladze
	  Ramphis
	  Nicolai Ghiaurov
	  Chorus and Orchestra of the Teatro Alla Scala conducted by Lorin Maazel.
	   ARTHAUS MUSIK 100 058
 ARTHAUS MUSIK 100 058
	   [160 mins].
[160 mins].
	  
	  Crotchet
	  £21.95
	  
	   
	  
	  This 1985 La Scala performance of Aida is a triumph. The long-awaited performance
	  of Luciano Pavarotti as Radames - his first in Italy - was greeted with rapturous
	  applause by the audience, his first aria, the often-recorded 'Celeste Aida',
	  was feted with a full two-minute ovation. His singing ranges triumphantly
	  from his early passionate, patriotic arias, through to his torn and tormented
	  third 'Nile' Act duet in which he tries, in vain, to resist Aida's plea to
	  flee his country, through to his adamant, yet poignant resistance of Amneris
	  at the end of the opera.
	  
	  Maria Chiara is equally impressive in the title role she is passionate, loving,
	  self-confident yet torn by conflicting loyalties. Her Act III aria as she
	  sings of her love and fond remembrances of her homeland, with that tricky
	  high C, earned her a thunderous ovation and her last radiant duet with Radames
	  is heart-rending. Ghena Dimitrova's Amneris is totally convincing too; you
	  can readily sympathise with her jealousy, softened by her unshaking love
	  in risking her position as a royal princess to save Radames from a horrible
	  death (a pity about that headdress though). Juan Pons and Nicolai Ghiarov
	  both bring mighty voices to their roles. In fact the singing overall is of
	  an exemplary standard and difficult to flaw.
	  
	  The production is sumptuous. The whole of Act II is a feast for the eye and
	  ear. Commencing with the lilting love song "Chi mai fra gl'inni e i plausi"
	  sung by Amneris and her slaves as she dresses, and the exhilarating slave
	  boys dance; through to the grand spectacle which is the Triumphal March and
	  Ballet. Here the gigantic moving sets are stunning only a shaky carriage
	  drawing Amneris in her spectacular gold plumage costume tends to spoil the
	  illusion. Maazel delivers a majestic performance of Verdi's thrilling music.
	  The concluding fine ensemble singing of Aida, Radames, Amonasro, Amneris
	  and Ramfis in determining the fate of the captured slaves and the King's
	  joining of the reluctant Radames with Amneris thrills too.
	  
	  Heartily recommended
	  
	  Ian Lace 
	  
	   
	  
	  But Peter Grahame Woolf is not so sure 
	  
	  I am unable to enthuse about this, my first DVD. It is a 1986 Radiotelevisione
	  Italiana recording of a live performance at Teatro alla Scala, Milan, complete
	  with applause and bows after items and a prolonged enthusiastic response
	  at the end. The production is highly traditional and the settings grandiose
	  and costly. The spectacle would have been impressive in the opera house but
	  it doesn't work at home. There are dances, with tasteful swaying movements,
	  and the costumes are lavish and eye-catching (apart from the under-dressed
	  soldiers detailed to guard their prisoner, Radames). The acting is rudimentary
	  and bedevilled by close-up exposure, which destroys all illusion or even
	   a sense of theatre. The voices too are close up and Pavarotti,
	  a formidable figure indeed, sings forte most of the time. The final
	  scene is ludicrous; the fugitive Aida returns to share death in her full
	  regalia and the picture here [left]is of the
	  couple in their death throes, immured in the tomb and seen shortly before
	  expiring. It was hard to feel that lack of food or air would figure for a
	  very long time in the vast dungeon built on the Scala's stage. Amneris, in
	  her remorse for their fate, was shown high above in a postage-stamp size
	  insert.
a sense of theatre. The voices too are close up and Pavarotti,
	  a formidable figure indeed, sings forte most of the time. The final
	  scene is ludicrous; the fugitive Aida returns to share death in her full
	  regalia and the picture here [left]is of the
	  couple in their death throes, immured in the tomb and seen shortly before
	  expiring. It was hard to feel that lack of food or air would figure for a
	  very long time in the vast dungeon built on the Scala's stage. Amneris, in
	  her remorse for their fate, was shown high above in a postage-stamp size
	  insert.
	  
	  I was quite unable to raise any emotional response, even to the Nile Scene,
	  a long-time favourite. I returned afterwards to listen to some tracks from
	  Aida in 1924 recordings [Nimbus Prima Voce
	  NI
	  7903] by the distinguished soprano Elisabeth Rethberg, who was
	  described as having portrayed at Covent Garden 'a real, not an operatic
	  personality' - in a different class!
	  
	  Sound and picture quality are good but not especially remarkable. There are
	  no track ('chapter') timings. Very disappointing and certainly unrepresentative
	  of what DVD has to offer. No star rating attempted.
	  
	  Peter Grahame Woolf