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Verdi: Otello
 
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Verdi: Otello

Vinay , Martinis , Schoffler , Furtwangler , Vienna Philharmonic Audio CD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Price: $13.46 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Formats

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MP3 Download, 34 Songs, 2006 $13.20  
Audio CD, 2005 $13.46  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         


Disc 1:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Verdi: Otello: Una vela! Un vesillo! - Chorus, Montano, Cassio, Iago, Roderigo 4:13$0.89 Buy Track
listen  2. Verdi: Otello: Esultate! - Otello, Chorus 2:19$0.89 Buy Track
listen  3. Verdi: Otello: Roderigo, ebben, che pensi? - Iago, Roderigo 2:14$0.89 Buy Track
listen  4. Verdi: Otello: Ruoco di gioia - Chorus 2:54$0.89 Buy Track
listen  5. Verdi: Otello: Roderigo, beviam! - Iago, Cassio, Chorus, Roderigo 1:28$0.89 Buy Track
listen  6. Verdi: Otello: Inaffia l'ugola! - Iago, Cassio, Chorus, Roderigo 4:07$0.89 Buy Track
listen  7. Verdi: Otello: Capitano, v'attende la fazione ai baluradi - Montano, Cassio, Iago, Roderigo, Chorus, Otello 4:10$0.89 Buy Track
listen  8. Verdi: Otello: Gia nella notte densa - Otello, Desdemona12:07Album Only
listen  9. Verdi: Otello: Non ti crucciar - Iago, Cassio 2:31$0.89 Buy Track
listen10. Verdi: Otello: Vanne; la tua meta gia vedo... Credo in un Dio crudel - Iago 5:07$0.89 Buy Track
listen11. Verdi: Otello: Eccola... Cassio... A te... - Iago 1:19$0.89 Buy Track
listen12. Verdi: Otello: Cio m'accora... Che perli? - Iago, Otello 5:28$0.89 Buy Track
listen13. Verdi: Otello: Dove guardi splendono - Chorus, Iago, Desdemona, Otello 4:13$0.89 Buy Track
listen14. Verdi: Otello: D'in uom che geme - Desdemona, Otello 2:14$0.89 Buy Track
listen15. Verdi: Otello: Se inconscia, contro te, sposo - Desdemona, Otello, Iago, Emilia 3:59$0.89 Buy Track
listen16. Verdi: Otello: Desdemona rea! - Otello, Iago0:47$0.89 Buy Track
listen17. Verdi: Otello: Non pensateci piu... Ora e per sempre - Iago, Otello 5:01$0.89 Buy Track
listen18. Verdi: Otello: Era la notte - Iago 2:47$0.89 Buy Track
listen19. Verdi: Otello: Oh! Mostruosa colpa! - Otello, Iago 1:44$0.89 Buy Track
listen20. Verdi: Otello: Si, pel ciel marmoreo giuro! - Otello, Iago 3:26$0.89 Buy Track


Disc 2:

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Verdi: Otello: La vedetta del porto ha segnalato - Herald, Otello, Iago 2:30$0.89 Buy Track
listen  2. Verdi: Otello: Dio ti giocondi, o sposo - Desdemona, Otello 5:19$0.89 Buy Track
listen  3. Verdi: Otello: Esterrefatta fisso - Desdemona, Otello 5:45$0.89 Buy Track
listen  4. Verdi: Otello: Dio! Mi potevi scagliar - Otello, Iago 4:27$0.89 Buy Track
listen  5. Verdi: Otello: Vieni, l'aula e desrta - Iago, Cassio, Otello 5:12$0.89 Buy Track
listen  6. Verdi: Otello: Bada! Quiest'e il segnale - Iago, Cassio, Otello, Chorus 2:09$0.89 Buy Track
listen  7. Verdi: Otello: Viva! Evviva! Viva il Leon di San Marco - Chorus, Lodovico, Otello, Desdemona, Emilia, Iago, Roderigo, Cassio 6:05$0.89 Buy Track
listen  8. Verdi: Otello: A terra! Si... Nel livido fango - Desdemona, Emilia, Cassio, Roderigo, Lodovico, Otello, Iago, Chorus10:15Album Only
listen  9. Verdi: Otello: Era pu calmo? - Emilia, Desdemona 4:17$0.89 Buy Track
listen10. Verdi: Otello: Mia madre aveva una povera ancella - Desdemona, Emilia 9:12$0.89 Buy Track
listen11. Verdi: Otello: Ave Maria - Desdemona 5:31$0.89 Buy Track
listen12. Verdi: Otello: Che e la? Otello? - Desdemona, Otello 3:06$0.89 Buy Track
listen13. Verdi: Otello: Diceste questa sera le vostre preci? - Otello, Desdemona, Emilia, Cassio, Iago, Lodovico, Montano 6:57$0.89 Buy Track
listen14. Verdi: Otello: Nium mi tema - Otello, Cassio, Lodovico, Montano 6:05$0.89 Buy Track


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 11, 2005)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Opera D'oro
  • ASIN: B000B9EY4S
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #315,220 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Editorial Reviews

"With Vinay as Otello and Furtwangler at the helm, this was bound to be something magical. Vinay is in towering form, a powerhouse of a man, and he makes the final scene unutterably painful...Furtwangler’s perception of the work’s architecture has a magisterial finality to it, making this performance a unique fusion of passion and intellect." – Rough Guide to Opera

Chilean singer Ramón Vinay is little remembered today because of the rarity of his recordings, but he is considered by many to be the greatest Otello of the 20th century. Historic 1951 recording from the Salzburg Festival.


 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A performance both moving and historically important, November 4, 2007
By 
boldsworthington (Washington, DC, United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Verdi: Otello (Audio CD)
First off, let no one be dissuaded from purchasing this set for fear that it may be a sonic disaster. While I have not heard the EMI edition about which several buyers have elsewhere expressed great disappointment, I can say that this edition is entirely listenable and certainly will tax the patience of no one experienced in listening to older recordings. This set has neither dropouts nor snap-crackle-and-pop obbligato. Is it the last word in 1951 recording technology? No, indeed. But from all I had read elsewhere, I was prepared for a throwback to the worst of the acoustic era. You can hear considerable orchestral detail, especially if you already know the work fairly well. Voices are well placed and captured with vibrant immediacy and ample timbral profile. The acoustic is not maximally spacious, but neither does it sound like something recorded in a closet. It's a comfortable listening space.

None of those considerations would matter if the performance itself were not so dramatically powerful and historically important (this was one of many Verdi performances around the world to honor the golden anniversary of the composer's death). Furtwängler's tempos are sometimes broader than those of other conductors, but as always, they pulse with an inner life that commands full attention.

Paul Schöffler is not my favorite Iago: he sounds in less than optimal voice, and the evil chameleonic guile of this great villain generally eludes him. To be convincing, Iago needs every insinuating vocal color imaginable to pull off his schemes. Schöffler unfortunately sings mainly in grays. Nor does he seem to revel in his own machinations as much as a good Iago should.

Dragica Martinis turns in a deeply affecting Desdemona. While not without vocal flaws, she is sincerely committed to what she's doing and powerful enough to ride clearly and confidently over the massed forces of the grand Act 3 ensemble. I can imagine that some will find certain of her histrionic gestures over the top. To me they seemed a logical part of her conception of the character.

In many ways, hers is the saddest "Willow Song"/"Ave Maria" I've ever heard (her crowning A-flat in the "Ave Maria" is quietly devastating; not even Tebaldi -- who in the 1954 Erede recording gives us the Desdemona of Desdemonas -- creates the sense of threatened innocence with which Martinis infuses that glorious note: she sings it with a subtly controlled flutter [I do *not* read it as a technical flaw: it is too evenly emitted to be anything but an interpretive choice] that captures all the precarious emotion of the situation). In part, the effect comes from Furtwängler's slightly slower-than-usual pacing. But mainly, it derives from Martinis's total identification with Desdemona's impossible situation, her ability to navigate this character's most intimate waters with an unerring inner compass, and her gift for voicing everything with exceptional delicacy (her dynamics are remarkable in range and organic logic). In no other performance of this scene -- whether in context or in an aria recital -- have I heard a comparable sense of final resignation or the clear sense that Otello's false charges have begun to wear her down. I've gone into some detail about Martinis because I have so often read disparaging remarks about her performance. Admittedly, she will not suit all tastes. Nevertheless, I suspect that she has rarely been credited for trying to offer a different take on this role. For me, at least, it has been a deeply rewarding experience.

Ramón Vinay's Otello is as commanding as one would expect from earlier renditions. Remarkably, we have Vinay performing this role, live, with four major conductors: Arturo Toscanini (Dec. 1947, NBC broadcasts & rehearsals), Fritz Busch (Dec. 1948, Metropolitan Opera), Wilhelm Furtwängler (Aug. 1951, Salzburg [this recording]), and Sir Thomas Beecham (1958; out of print, alas). The three available performances are eminently worth having -- essential, in fact.

In the last analysis, Vinay's occasional minor vocal blemishes just don't matter: Vinay more than any other singer in my experience simply *is* Otello (I've not heard Martinelli's famous 1938 recording but hope to do so very soon). No other Otello dies more convincingly or distinctively than he does: in each performance, Vinay dies with heart-wrenching differences, without a trace of routine. You can feel him constantly exploring the role, living each moment afresh and offering varied and well-gauged nuances each time. That is the hallmark of a great artist. How fortunate we are to have this recording and its two companions to show us what that laurel of a phrase can most richly mean.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars same performance, different version..., January 8, 2006
By 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Verdi: Otello (Audio CD)
I believe the excerpted review from "The Rough Guide" refers to the EMI edition, which is the one I have. If Opera d'Oro's sound at least matches that of EMI (which is close to that heard in the Toscanini broadcast on RCA, also with Vinay, from around the same time), this recording is well worth having -- especially at this price.

One simply must hear Vinay in this role, and this could be a supurb alternate to any modern recording you may own. Actually, you could well come to regard it as your first choice. Furtwangler shapes the opera as though it were a dark, luminous tone poem, and of all Verdi's work this surely comes the closest to the Wagnerian ideal of music drama: "Wort und Ton."
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Same Exact Mastering as the EMI Edition, March 3, 2009
This review is from: Verdi: Otello (Audio CD)
I purchased this edition based on a couple of previous reviews of the Opera d'Oro set. The other reviews made me believe that this one might have had a superior mastering to the EMI set of the same performance (which I already own). And, it was only about [...] bucks, so I figured I'd take the gamble and perhaps get a version that derived from better master tapes than the EMI version. I can assure you that the Opera d'Oro set is sourced from EXACTLY the same tapes that EMI compiled and has IDENTICAL sound.

In EMI's well-written liner notes, it is noted that the Salzburg Festival always taped their opera productions with pretty superb sound. Unfortunately, the Salzburg masters of Othello were lost and EMI compiled this version from home-tapers and other miscallaneous sources to paste together a complete performance. They did an admirable job and the opera is quite listenable, although comes nowhere near the fidelity of other EMI recordings of "Furtwangler at Salzburg" from the same era (such as Der Freischutz etc). However, if you want a riveting performance of Othello, the cheap Opera d'Oro or the more elegantly packaged EMI versions are excellent choices.
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