It
                    has been a good year for recordings of La clemenza di
                    Tito with the reappearance of a classic 1960s account
                    and a brand new one in the past few months. With the field
                    of alternative versions gradually massing it is good news
                    if one wants several options to choose from, but not so good
                    for the record company concerned should their new contender
                    not fully make the grade.
                
                 
                
                
                Before
                    considering this version, perhaps it is as well to be acquainted
                    with the main alternatives:                
                    •  Kertész leading the Vienna State Opera on Decca
                with Werner Krenn, Berganza, Lucia Popp and Brigitte Fassbaender
                at mid-price (see review)                 
                •  Böhm on DG with Peter Schreier, Berganza (again) and Julia Varady                                 
                
                •  Mackerras with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and
                Rainer Trost, Magdalena Kožená,
                    Hillevi Martinpelto, Lisa Milne, Christine Rice and John
                    Relyea (see review) 
                
                 
                
                
                My
                    colleague Göran Forsling - in his review of the Mackerras
                    set - was right to draw attention to versions conducted by
                    Hogwood, Harnoncourt, Gardiner and Colin Davis amongst others,
                    but in each case their sets are flawed by serious cases of
                    mis-casting or less than ideal recorded sound. Were I asked
                    for a recommendation before the appearance of this latest
                    set, I would have suggested Kertész for an old-style, but
                    idiomatic account, and Mackerras the best of the recent bunch.
                    He maintains the use of modern instruments but adds informed
                    awareness of the freshness often found in period instrument
                    performances through brisk tempi, a keen ear for sonority
                    and slight use of vibrato in the playing.
                
                 
                
                The
                    present set comes courtesy of a live Bavarian radio recording,
                    made on 26 February 2006. With no editing to be done one
                    can understand why RCA have entered the Tito fray so soon
                    after the event. The sound itself is fine, with orchestral
                    balance seemingly well handled. The overture displays full
                    string tone with weight to the bass which is nice, the brass
                    and timpani all make themselves heard, as do the winds. But… -
                    oh dear, the ‘buts’ start already - Steinberg’s pacing is
                    a touch prosaic when heard against Mackerras’. The recitatives
                    also can fall into routine just a bit too often for my liking – and
                    on repeat hearings I appreciated the fact that the recitatives
                    are separately tracked from the arias that follow them. But
                    that should not be the case. Mozart’s inventiveness is just
                    as much in the recitatives as in the arias, and the two belong
                    together in the listening experience, not separately. To
                    back up my inventiveness argument I could ask for now finer
                    evidence than Mackerras or Kertész provide and if one wants
                    arias only, one buys a highlights disc in preference to a
                    complete recording.
                
                 
                
                It
                    is clear then that the singing on this set is going to play
                    a crucial role in securing any recommendation.  Bulgarian
                    mezzo Vesselina Kasarova, cast as Sesto, is the soloist this
                    set is built around. Her image adorns the sets cover and
                    none of the other singers get a look in, though they deserve
                    to as there are some reasonable artists among them. 
                
                 
                
                At
                    least a decade ago I heard Kasarova in Munich and noted then
                    the vocal freshness and agility that first launched her into
                    an international career. Having heard her last year in London,
                    much of these qualities seemed absent. Voices age and develop
                    with time like no other instrument; some fare well, others
                    less so. Part of the skill in singing, it could be said,
                    is how the artist acknowledges and works with the aging process
                    to produce music that’s still acceptable before the public.
                    Many might be tempted to call the state of her voice as heard
                    on this recording ‘mannered’ (indeed, I have done so myself – see review),
                    but I am having increased reservations about the use of the
                    word in music criticism and what exactly its use is intended
                    to imply. Yes, Kasarova has a voice that projects well and
                    produces adequate tone even if done with a little effort
                    at the extremes of her range. As I commented in that review
                    of that live performance, the chest voice remains in good
                    shape and she can float the voice, though she does so with
                    care. She conveys a sense of drama in her singing and, notwithstanding
                    the factors just mentioned, has a good sense of Mozartian
                    line. Whether that is sufficiently to one’s taste is something
                    that only an individual can judge, though her reading of
                    big moments such a Parto, parto, ma tub en mio are
                    certainly individual. She does command, though with an ever
                    present slight vibrato in the voice. Alright does not impress
                    as readily here as Berganza does, but few singers have made
                    the aria as completely their property as Berganza did. Listen
                    to Kasarova in the recitativo accompagnato that follows
                    soon after, however, and you become aware that in the heat
                    of the moment can cause her to forego vocal security, where
                    a studio recording would maintain it.
                
                 
                
                
                Véronique
                    Gens’ Vitellia is flexible of voice and clear of tone. She
                    sings naturally and catches a nice medium between control
                    and impetus for real warmth of conviction in her reading.
                    Much of the text though seems skated over in faster passages
                    in her haste to propel notes into the air. Castronovo’s tenor
                    is a substantial instrument, though he employs it with intelligence,
                    scaling down where he can. This is of considerable benefit
                    as recitative passages constitute the bulk of the role. 
                
                 
                
                If
                    only the same could be consistently said for Michelle Breedt’s
                    Annio. A firm mezzo, she displays a tendency to make her
                    recitatives into more than they should be. If they are large-scale,
                    what chance is there for arias to make their full impact?
                    Much better by far is Alexia Voulgaridou’s reading of Servilia.
                    Having welcomed her aria recital on Arte Nova (see review)
                    it’s good to hear her in some Mozart. Much sensitivity towards
                    the music is in evidence. Paolo Battaglia makes what he can
                    of the opera’s only bass role and proves imposing in the
                    process.
                
                 
                
                
                Good
                    though it is in parts, overall this release does not displace
                    either Mackerras or Kertész as my recommendation for a complete
                    recording. Mackerras keeps me constantly surprised with the
                    amount of nuance he finds in the score, and his cast is consistently
                    finer, displaying inventive originality in their singing
                    too. Kertész is his own recommendation and presents no less
                    valid a view of the work. The fact that this RCA set only
                    comes with libretto in PDF format (on CD1) is perhaps a final
                    factor against it – it seems parsimonious at full price to
                    ask the listener to additionally cover the printing cost
                    for some 25 A4 pages when Mackerras’s set comes with full
                    printed libretto and good notes to boot.
                
                 
                
                    Evan Dickerson
                
                     
                
                
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