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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2006/07/27/2003320683 Classical DVD Reviews By Bradley WintertonCONTRIBUTING REPORTER Thursday, Jul 27, 2006, Page 14
Verdi's Simon Boccanegra doesn't feature among many people's favorite operas. There's only one important female character, the plot is impossibly complex (25 years pass between the Prologue and Act One, but few of the many events that have taken place during that time are clearly explained), and the music only catches fire here and there. But there is a strong Council Chamber scene, the Prologue ˇX which Verdi went to the trouble of reworking in his late style ˇX is musically wonderful, and Boccanegra's reunion with his long-lost daughter has its admirers. Given a strong cast, this opera can be made to work reasonably well. The new Florence version appears to have several key points in its favor. The conductor is Claudio Abbado, in his youth responsible for the famous CD version with Cappuccilli, Freni, Ghiaurov, Carreras and van Dam that effectively put the opera back into the international repertory (DGM 449 752-2). Boccanegra's daughter Maria is sung by Karita Mattila, who was Eva in the incomparable Metropolitan Opera DVD version of Wagner's Meistersinger (DGM 00440 073 0949, reviewed in Taipei Times February 17, 2005). And the stage direction is by Peter Stein, celebrated for his many innovative opera and theater productions.
This is all in all an excellent Figaro. It was filmed in 2003, and it's good to hear, on the evidence of so recent a production, that playing Mozart over-fast appears to be going out of fashion. But you could always count on conductor Zubin Mehta not to throw away fine music in headlong acceleration. Mozart needs to be stylish, but not to the exclusion of his extraordinary humanity. This production achieves the balance in exemplary fashion. Giorgio Surian's Figaro matches his Susanna well, and the difficult relationship between the Count and Contessa (Eteri Gvazava) is well-handled. It's hard to understand why the latter receives only routine applause in the curtain calls. It's interesting, as well, to hear resident singers in different roles. Lucio Gallo, for instance, is here a youthful Count Almaviva, while in Boccanegra he plays the darker figure of Paolo Albiani. Patrizia Ciofi, the Susanna here, sings a modern Violetta complete with sunglasses in another fine release from Jingo, La Traviata conducted by Lorin Maazel from La Fenice, Venice (2004). The main feature recommending the live outdoor concert filmed in Dresden in 1999, Dresden Classical Night, is the presence of the fine Bulgarian-born soprano Anna Tomowa-Sintow. Predictably, she gives a superb performance. But there are six soloists in all, so none of them gets that much screen time. They end up singing the Brindisi from La Traviata together, a bizarre event indeed. The other soloists are Deborah Sasson, Vincenzo La Scola (who sings Gabriele Adorno in the Boccanegra reviewed above), Neil Shicoff, Volker Bengl and Roland Seiffarth. Lastly, a film that's not new but deserves a few words of praise nonetheless. Entitled Hans Werner Henze: Memoirs of an Outsider, it's a highly atmospheric survey of the life and work of the man it describes as Germany's most distinguished composer. Born in Westphalia in 1926, Henze is seen in his home of 40 years, just outside Rome. Early on you hear Simon Rattle describing his work and position in 20th century music generally. ˇ§Essentially he is always going to be an outsider ˇX as a gay man, as a liberal growing up in the Third Reich, as a person who seems to be somehow, not a refugee, but always somewhere else.ˇ¨
Henze is a composer who was heavily criticized, along with Shostakovich and Britten, by the serialists in the post-1945 era for not being sufficiently austere. These days this has become an asset, though his wanting to have all instruments playing all of the time can be a problem. Even so, this is a truly fascinating DVD, and highly recommended.
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