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The Opera Gala: Live from Baden-Baden - Best Classical Music Performances for Opera Lovers | Perfect for Concerts, Gala Events & Home Entertainment
The Opera Gala: Live from Baden-Baden - Best Classical Music Performances for Opera Lovers | Perfect for Concerts, Gala Events & Home Entertainment

The Opera Gala: Live from Baden-Baden - Best Classical Music Performances for Opera Lovers | Perfect for Concerts, Gala Events & Home Entertainment

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Description

Product Description This glamorous live concert DVD features Anna Netrebko, Elina Garanca, Ramon Vargas, and Ludovic Tezier with Marco Armiliato conducting the SWR Sinfonie Orchester Baden-Baden und Freiburg in opera excerpts by Bellini, Donizetti, Verdi, Saint-Saens. Amazon.com The Festival Theatre at the German spa town of Baden-Baden is a spanking modern concert hall behind the façade of a handsome 19th-century railroad station. In July 2007, it hosted an evening of wonderful singing by a quartet of leading operatic stars in a program that could have been titled "Opera's Greatest Hits." After a brief orchestral piece from Bellini's Norma the fireworks begin with the duet Mira, o Norma featuring soprano Anna Netrebko and mezzo Elina Garanca, their voices blending beautifully. From then on, it's one familiar, well-loved operatic chestnut after another, all done with spirited fervor and admirable vocalism. Tenor Ramón Vargas is a positive presence, giving us the bel canto gem Una furtive lagrima from Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore in a flawlessly idiomatic interpretation that includes stunning diminuendos and a melting mezza-voce. Ludovic Tézier's rich baritone scores with a subtle rendition of Riccardo's death scene from Verdi's Don Carlo and, in yet another highlight in an evening full of them, joins Vargas in the great duet Dio, che nell'alma infondere from that opera. Garanca's Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix from Saint-Saën's Samson et Dalila is undersung but her showpiece aria from Rossini's La Cenerentola sparkles, with impressive coloratura fireworks. Netrebko is among the most brilliant stars of today's operatic firmament and while overparted in Norma's Casta Diva, she's effective elsewhere. She brings the house down with the first of the concert's many encores, a performance of Lehar's Meine Lippen from the operetta, Giuditta, that includes seductive singing and acting, sexual flirtations, and energetic dancing. Her enthusiasm is infectious, sparking her colleagues as well as the audience. All four singers join in the quartet from Rigoletto that ends the formal portion of the concert, and in the final encore, they trade verses in an arrangement of the Drinking Song from La Traviata. Conductor Marco Armiliato, whose supportive accompaniments help make the concert a rousing success, directs the capable orchestra. So this two-hour singfest provides joys for vocal buffs despite the hectic video direction that keeps the cameras moving endlessly, unnecessarily swooping around the auditorium, zooming from balconies to the stage and back, and otherwise distracting from the main event. --Dan Davis

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
This DVD is a perfect alternative if you're not in the mood to listen or to watch an entire opera, for it provides well-known arias the majority of opera funs are familiar with. The video is of excellent quality and so is the audio. The auditorium is miked- there are mikes dispersed in various positions in the house for sound recording- but not the individual singers; and that exposes weaknesses and strengths. Ramon Vargas is the weakest in the link. If I'm not mistaken, he replaced the ailing Villazon. What a pity! His voice is small and with limited projectiom to cut above the orchestra, and barely audible in ensemble singing. Netrebko completely outsang him at the end of the duet from La Boheme. Vargas never had a big voice and its color is rather limited. The arias he sang, like "Una furtiva lagrima," the staple of golden-voice tenors, like Gigli, Pavarotti, and even Villazon, lacked colorization and chatacter, and they were rather monochromatic.Tezier has a beautiful lyric baritonal voice of moderate size and his reading of "Per me giunto- lo morro" from Verdi's Don Carlo was admirable. On the other hand, a Verdi baritone needs a little more heft in the lower range which he's lacking; and that was more noticable in his "Toreador Song."The stars of this concert are Garanca and Netrebko. Garanca's reading of the aria "Mon coeur..." from Samson et Dalila was superb, full of passion, yearning, and surrender. And her coloratura, in La Cerenentola's aria, fires rapid-machine-gun trills to kill you!What more can be said about Natrebko. You wish she would never stop singing. Her rendition of "Casta Diva" maybe is not suited to everybody's taste, but the darkness of her voice brings something unique and totally her own. Her encore "Meine Lippen" from Lehar's Giuditta brought the house down, and showed the theater and stage animal in Anna's heart that burst all over the place: shoes kicking up and flowers throwing; twirling, dancing, and flirting! This DVD is fun, with high caliber artistic value. It deserves five stars and is highly recommended.Constantine A. PapasEl Paso, Texas