Search - Verdi, Tebaldi, Prandelli :: La Traviata

La Traviata
Verdi, Tebaldi, Prandelli
La Traviata
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (21) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (18) - Disc #2


     
?

Larger Image

CD Details

All Artists: Verdi, Tebaldi, Prandelli, Orlandini, Giulini
Title: La Traviata
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Idi [Ital Disc Inst]
Original Release Date: 1/1/1952
Re-Release Date: 3/26/2002
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Style: Opera & Classical Vocal
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPCs: 675754493325, 8021945000728
 

CD Reviews

A BIG SURPRISE AND A REAPPRAISAL
L. Mitnick | Chicago, Illinois United States | 10/07/2005
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I purchased this same performance on Opera d'Oro (which is considerably less expensive than this one) about two years ago, and wrote an Amazon review which was not terribly positive. Well, after hearing THIS edition of the same performance, I find that I have completely changed my opinion. To begin with, the sound is much better on this version than on the Opera d'Oro version --- obviously the source is different. That said, I must reverse my opinion of Tebaldi's Violetta, a role she actually performed close to one hundred times prior to 1957, afterwhich time she dropped it from her repertoire (her voice became much heavier and somewhat ungainly to cope with the first act). She is in fabulous voice here, and even her first act is sung with a degree of florid mastery (Tebaldi transposes the first act aria down a full tone, but who cares?) never duplicated later. Her London studio performance of this aria is heavy going indeed, and from that point on, the role just simply became too difficult for her. In 1952, however, the role was prominent in her career, and she certainly sang it beautifully, and moreover reached powerful emotional heights in the final act. No - this is not an emotional performance that scales Mount Callas, but it works very, very well with that all enveloping beauty of voice Tebaldi had at her command at the time. I find Giacinto Prandelli's Alfredo much better than I felt it to be on the Opera d'Oro issue. The improved sound opens out his voice, and the difference is marked.

Guilini paces the work well, and only the chorus sounds deficient. The 1954 Tebaldi studio version is now unavailable, but it was never all that great to begin with. There IS another live Tebaldi Traviata on Archipel (conducted by Tullio Serafin), and it is very, very good - but it has two very serious blemishes ---- a bad tape drop-out near the end of the Act I aria, and a total collapse of sound 90 seconds before the very end of the opera. If you want to experience Tebaldi's richly sung Violetta in the prime years of her voice, this version is the one to acquire."