Comparative versions: 
              Maria Callas - Verdi Arias vol.1 EMI CDC 
              7 47730 2 
              Maria Callas - Verdi Arias vol 2 EMI CDC 
              7 47943 2 
              Gwyneth Jones MDC 461 5912 
              If you’re ‘discovering’ 
                Verdi opera for the first time and want 
                a collection of soprano sweetmeats, 
                as it were, then you are unlikely to 
                find this distasteful. However, if, 
                like me, you delve deeper into each 
                aria and want more than mere surface 
                pleasure, any disc of this kind has 
                its work cut out. 
              
 
              
In general terms von 
                Benza’s voice is attractive, powerful 
                with an edgy tone in forte, and capable 
                of hushed sensitivity in piano. The 
                range is useful (over two octaves), 
                the attack on note for the most part 
                accurate. The booklet note recounts, 
                a little pretentiously perhaps, the 
                main points of her career to date – 
                from training in Kiev and Budapest via 
                competition successes in Vienna and 
                Salzburg to houses around Europe and 
                the Far East. So we are faced with an 
                experienced stage performer. 
              
 
              
That brings me to my 
                first reservation about the disc in 
                general: it has too little sense of 
                the stage about it. Listening to Ben 
                io t’invenni, I wondered who was 
                following who? The voice seemed almost 
                self-conscious in its cautiously floated 
                line and de Prosperis did not keep up 
                the dynamic to the extent one would 
                hope for. Elsewhere (Ritorna vincitor, 
                for example) promise of dynamism is 
                shown but lost or dashed later in the 
                performance, which demonstrates that 
                the conductor has little of individuality 
                to say. The same, sadly, can be said 
                of his brief booklet synopses of the 
                arias. The orchestra is averagely recorded, 
                perhaps too thinly in the violins. Solo 
                lines from woodwind are present, though 
                somewhat lacking in character for the 
                most part. 
              
 
              
That leaves von Benza 
                to carry the show, which she does not 
                manage to do: attention to detail ultimately 
                lets her down. 
              
 
              
In Tacea la notte 
                placida, the opening track, von 
                Benza’s voice does not really catch 
                the ear until the word ‘placida’ – by 
                which time it is obvious that the words 
                might not always get the care they deserve. 
                Of course, it’s tough on singers these 
                days having to sing in maybe four or 
                more languages and be understood in 
                them. In a live performance one is more 
                willing to let it pass, but a recording 
                is forever – and the competition substantial. 
              
 
              
Ecco l’orrido campo, 
                like much else here, will in the minds 
                of many collectors be associated with 
                the interpretation set down by Maria 
                Callas in Paris under Nicola Rescigno. 
                Where Callas gets between the notes 
                to the core of the drama, despite all 
                her vocal ‘problems’, von Benza tries 
                but never is a real rival. Yes there 
                is a nice lower chest voice, but throughout 
                the range she fails to cut convincingly 
                to the chase. Where’s the shock, the 
                horror, the urgency? 
              
 
              
The two Callas CDs 
                of Verdi arias cover much the same ground, 
                and also take in arias from Aroldo, 
                Il Corsaro, Ernarni, Macbeth, I vespri 
                siciliani and I Lombardi along the way. 
                Plus they attack all with greater insight 
                and dramatic conviction. Alternatively, 
                take Gwyneth Jones, in her youth a fine 
                Verdian, indeed had Wagner not dominated 
                her career no doubt her Verdian prowess 
                would be better known. Even early on 
                hers was an unruly instrument, but the 
                reading she offers of Tu che le vanitá, 
                like Callas, shows how much is left 
                wanting in von Benza’s assumption. So 
                to does Jones’ Ave Maria, and 
                it’s the most sensitive on disc that 
                I know. 
              
 
              
Of course, Callas assumed 
                Violetta, and for many her Covent Garden 
                reading from 1958 remains unsurpassed. 
                There are others of note: Cotrubas or 
                Gheorghiu, would head my list. All offer 
                more than von Benza. There are signs 
                though that her voice is already too 
                heavy for the music. 
              
 
              
Although von Benza 
                turns in generally decent performances, 
                go for more incisive alternatives. 
              
Evan Dickerson