Dimitri Mitropoulos - Barber: Vanessa

Dimitri Mitropoulos - Barber: Vanessa
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Album Details

Title: Barber: Vanessa
Artist: Dimitri Mitropoulos
Release Date: 2006
Label: Orfeo
Duration: 125:54
Album Type(s): live, composition (work) description, Plot synopsis/story
UPCs: 675754963620, 4011790653228
Genre: Opera
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 2

Track Listings Disc 1

  1. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 1. Introduktion
  2. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 1. Must the winter come so soon?
  3. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 1. Do not utter a word, Anatol
  4. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 1. Who are you? Why did you come here?
  5. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. ...and then? - He made me drink too much wine
  6. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. No, you are not as good a skater
  7. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. Erika, I feel so happy
  8. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. Our arms entwined my hands
  9. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. Do you hear her?
  10. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. Anatol, I must speak to you
  11. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. Ah, what a meager offer yours is!
  12. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 2. In morninglight

Track Listings Disc 2

  1. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 3. Introduktion
  2. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 3. The count and the countess of Albany
  3. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 3. Here you are?
  4. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 3. At least I've found you
  5. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 3. Nothing to worry about
  6. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Why did no one warn me?
  7. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Why must the greatest sorrows come from those
  8. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. There, look a group of men! - Do you suppose
  9. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Grandmother! - Yes, Erika
  10. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Intermezzo
  11. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. By the time we arrive in Paris
  12. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Erika, sit down here next to me
  13. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. You must hurry if we want to reach the station
  14. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. To leave, to break, to find...
  15. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32
    - Act 4. Anatol! - No, I must never say the name again
  16. Discussion with Samuel Barber & Dmitri Mitropoulos

Album Review

Vanessa received its premiere at the Met on January 15, 1958, and RCA promptly made a recording of Dimitri Mitropoulos conducting the original cast. The Salzburg Festival presented the European premiere in August of the same year, with Mitropoulos and all of the principals from the original production, except for Ira Malaniuk replacing Regina Resnik as the Old Baroness. The RCA recording is a classic, and such an authoritative account of the opera that another version with the same cast might seem unnecessary. This version, though, comes close to surpassing the original -- it offers significant, fresh insights into the score, and the live recording has more of a visceral charge than RCA's studio version. The Salzburg performance should be of strong interest to anyone who loves the opera .

While Orfeo's set doesn't always have the polish of the studio recording, the principals have settled into their roles dramatically and the poignancy of the story is expressed even more deeply. Eleanor Steber seems more secure and vocally at ease in the title role, and also a little more unhinged and delusional. (In the photographs of the Salzburg production, she looks older and dowdier than in those from the Met, better explaining Vanessa's aversion to mirrors and making the spectacle of her falling all over Anatol all the more disturbing.) Nicolai Gedda embodies Anatol's transparently caddish behavior with an unctuousness and casual cruelty that he had not fully tapped into in the Met production. Ira Malaniuk brings to the Baroness a smoldering fury held tightly in check, no less incisively than Resnik. Giorgio Tozzi as the Doctor is generally very fine, particularly in his scene of inebriated confusion, but he gets "Under the Willow Tree," one of the best tunes in the opera , completely wrong, singing it in the parallel major, rather than the minor key in which it's written. The most revelatory performance is Rosalind Elias as Erika. Her melancholic temperament is immediately evident, and her awakened passion and subsequent decline into heartbreak and bitterness are especially vivid; the yawp of pain she lets out after she shouts out her rejection of Anatol's proposal is shockingly feral. Elias makes Erika the searingly intense center of the opera .

Mitropoulos offers a tauter reading than in the studio version, heightening the score's powerful contrasts. The ballroom scene, for instance, in which Vanessa's and Anatol's engagement is announced, turns into a drunken revel, making Erika's flight into the blizzard and the image of the Baroness calling out for her in the open doorway all the more stunningly dramatic. The mono sound is surprisingly clean, vivid, and well balanced for a live recording of the era. The musical and dramatic values of the recording highlight the psychological brilliance of Barber's score and Menotti's libretto, and serve as a reminder of Vanessa's significance as a landmark of twentieth century opera . ~ Stephen Eddins, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Alois PernerstorferVocals
Christoph SchammBooklet Editor
Dimitri MitropoulosConductor
Eleanor SteberVocals
Gian Carlo MenottiLibrettist
Giorgio TozziVocals
Gottfried KrausArt Supervisor, Liner Notes
Harald HuberDigital Remastering
Ira MalaniukVocals
Meinhard LeitichEngineer
Nicolai GeddaVocals
Norman FosterVocals
Othmar EichingerDigital Remastering
Otto SertlRecording Supervision
Rosalind EliasVocals
Sebastian StaussBooklet Editor
Stewart SpencerLiner Note Translation
Ton EichingerDigital Remastering
Vienna Philharmonic OrchestraOrchestra
Vienna State Opera ChorusChoir, Chorus