Italian Opera Arias


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This is a glorious debut recital by a tenor, from whom, if he sings the right roles and keeps way from jet-setting and too much singing, might just be the lyrico-spinto tenor we’ve been waiting for. He has the class of Carlo Bergonzi and a ringing tone which is somewhere between Domingo’s big, dark sound and Pavarotti’s brightness; he sings with a true mezza voce (not a falsetto); he always obeys the composer’s markings and delineates character. He seems incapable of vulgari… More >>

Italian Opera Arias

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  1. #1 by tom holt on May 25, 2010 - 11:07 pm

    Oh come now! Villazon is a perfectly okay, acceptable lyric tenor no better or worse than many another lyric tenor. He is NOT in any way, shape or form a “young Domingo” or “the fourth tenor” and to suggest so — while it may thrill his record company — is ludicrous. As for his alleged “whopping high c’s” all I can say is that I didn’t hear them. If you want to hear what a “whopping high c” really sounds like, listen to Mario del Monaco or Carlo Bergonzi singing “Che gelida manina” from “La boheme” and you’ll instantly hear the difference. Villazon’s high c is a bit strained and totally unimpressive to any discerning ear. Is it the voice all these people are crazy about, or the music. I believe Villazon’s obsessive fans, like Bocelli’s, tend to be newcomers to opera whose limited knowledge gives them little to compare him with. Sure, he’s a better opera singer than Andrea Bocelli — but “a young Domingo.” Surely these people jest!
    Rating: 2 / 5

  2. #2 by Anonymous on May 26, 2010 - 12:29 am

    It was a big shock to hear Yu Qiang Dai’s debut cd. He is, I think, the best lirico-spinto tenor nowadays. He has a lovely voice, which is very well produced. The center is wonderful, the lower notes are good, the high notes are shining and of fantastic quality… the singing through the passage is very well handled. He is an itelligent musical interpreter and singer, with an interesting and appealing line and sense of style. Very good dynamic changes. He offers some of the absolutely best renditions of some arias (nessun dorma and cielo e mar, for example) that I have heard in many years.

    He still has to work his Italian (specially the consonants) and his French. But there were great historical tenors with bigger idiomatical problems.

    Despite taking spinto repertoire, Yu never pushes, never tries to make the voice sound darker than it is, everything is always under control, and he takes the chance to give very stylish renditions (for example, of una furtiva lagrima), which is strange for tenors who “want to sing spinto”.

    The tenor is a fantastic discovery, one of the best ones around. Actually, all my criticism goes to EMI and the production of the CD: no choirs, no solists (for example, for the aria of Cavalleria, where the mother should sing her line), and the acoustic “atmosphere” has made some people to doubt if Yu’s voice is really as big as it seems (people who saw his Cavaradossi at Covent Garden say that it is very big, actually).

    Not a the best production job by the people of EMI, but five stars (ten if possible) for the singer. Simply wonderful.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. #3 by David H. Spence on May 26, 2010 - 12:38 am

    Rolando Villazon immediately made himself a name we should all watch out for, after his appearance on a NY City Opera telecast of Boheme, as Rodolfo. Since then he has become a regular artist in leading lyric roles at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, has sung two parts at the Met already, and obviously has much ahead for him. The voice itself has a number of virtues, evenness of tone across the different registers, and the ability to encompass long lines without taking unnecessary breaths and showing the control to taper many lines off softly. It has also taken on perhaps a prematurely dark quality, in contrast with what I remember of the La Boheme telecast.

    This recital of Italian opera arias presents Villazon near the alpha of his career (one appearance as the Steersman on the Barenboim Flying Dutchman before, for Teldec) and the conductor at his omega – the just deceased Marcello Viotti, at the age of 52, who suddenly replaced Sinopoli in Berlin for the second of two performances of Verdi’s Aida in 2001. Sinopoli had passed away at 54 the night of the first performance that weekend in Berlin.

    On first impression, Federico’s lament from Cilea’s L’Arlesiana is taken too slowly, and yet from repeated listening to this disc, it is one of nearly half a dozen selections that contribute the most to making this an interesting recital. The lachrymose manner and delivery here, though, sets a little too much of an overall tone for the rest of the recital, including its several or so lighter numbers. Said to also be a Caruso favorite, the aria from Donizetti’s Duca d’Alba is a real highlight as close to being Schubertian in feeling as some Verdi – as late into Verdi’s work as Forza and Don Carlo. Villazon’s singing here is as warmly ardent as you’ll find anywhere on this disc, and his personal identification with the character of Don Carlo, several tracks later, is as complete as that of its best interpreters of the recent past, Placido Domingo especially.

    The two Elisir d’amore selections are pleasant vocally, but too dark, especially the start to so many phrases of “Una furtiva.” The remorse felt during the opening aria of the Tomb Scene from Lucia, after a slightly uncertain start, is entirely felt. Oronte’s brief aria from Verdi’s Lombardi is handled with an easy, pleasant swagger from both Villazon and Viotti, leading one to expect similar lightness in selections that soon follow, and which is not entirely forthcoming; the beginning of the recitative to “Parmi veder” from Rigoletto shows a palpable anxiety in this peculiar moment for the Duke in which he finds himself. Intonation falters momentarily at the end of this aria. “Ah! la paterna mano”, after good recitative, gets pushed a little too forward, robbing the crest of several lines in it their full expressive potential. Contrast of expression between Alfredo’s aria and cabaletta from Traviata is so minimal, almost to have been erased altogether; Viotti here, so deft and highly musical an accompanist he is for most of the rest of this disc, is similarly disengaged. Connecting music between aria and cabaletta and repeat of the latter both get awkwardly cut.

    That leaves four verismo tracks for the remainder of this disc. Most distinctively sung is “E lucevan le stelle” from Tosca, but frequently quite close to sounding a copy of Domingo’s interpretation. The honeyed placement for the top of the staff, once the voice takes on the melodic line, could hardly remind you of anyone else. “Che gelida manina” is also given a fine performance here, but begins to lose all consonants on a couple of words right before the ascent to the high C in the aria. After hearing Dino Borgioli and Cesare Valletti as Fritz, each more of a benchmark than Pavarotti, it is hard to identify the villager Fritz, from how disinteresed Villazon sounds. A slight cut is taken between two portions of recitative before Fritz’s Act III aria. “Quando al soave anelito” from Mascagni’s Nerone, obviously a rarity, is one for which I can only find a Domingo recital before. Here, the singing is fine, but the youthful sense of wonderment for Nero, in his vision of Venus, as wordly-wise a fellow he is, gets understated. Accompaniments to these four arias are mostly as fine as the others, but all come to abrupt endings, the endings of Boheme and Amico Fritz which lose all their shimmer here.

    Much criticism here, but there is also much hope felt from listening to this disc, for a bright future for Mr. Villazon still. He is only seldom a conscientious and musical performer, but as opposed to what the liner notes might say, part of being musical in singing such selections or opera in general, is being specific for each character being portrayed here. Villazon should also take note that his singing is most interesting and also most easy to distinguish from his widely celebrated mentor, when he sings lightly. First impressions are strong – I first anticipated awarding this disc five stars – but unfortunately it just barely deserves four. Sound quality, if a bit heavily miked for climaxes and a bit recessed for the orchestra, especially at closings to arias, is warm and full.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  4. #4 by Pococat on May 26, 2010 - 2:46 am

    A very promising debut album with some excellent burnished tenor sound. To the reviewer who went on and on about Mr. Villazon only being in his 20’s — I hate to burst your bubble, but he was born in 1972, which makes him 33! And, by the way, the age of the singer is not a “huge” advantage; let us remember that some of our greatest singers didn’t come into their element until their 40’s (e.g., Flagstad, Milanov…)
    Rating: 4 / 5

  5. #5 by Knight Of The Night on May 26, 2010 - 5:19 am

    Love it!

    The only thing he needs is an publicist or agent like Paul Potts…? LOL
    Rating: 5 / 5