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Verdi: La Traviata
 
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Verdi: La Traviata

Verdi , Toscanini , NBC Audio CD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 4, 1991)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: RCA
  • ASIN: B000003EXX
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #222,068 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
2. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
3. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
4. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
5. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
6. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
7. LaTraviata: Act II, Scene 2
8. LaTraviata: Act III
9. LaTraviata: Act III
10. LaTraviata: Act III
See all 21 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. La Traviata: Act I
2. La Traviata: Act I
3. La Traviata: Act I
4. La Traviata: Act I
5. La Traviata: Act I
6. La Traviata: Act I
7. La Traviata: Act I
8. La Traviata: Act I
9. La Traviata: Act I
10. La Traviata: Act I
See all 19 tracks on this disc

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Traviata 'come e scritto' (as written), July 18, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Verdi: La Traviata (Audio CD)
The revolutionary impact of Toscanini's "purism" and exactism on the world of opera was even greater than his influence in symphonic concerts. Here we have a reminiscence of what Toscanini must have done at the Met, La Scala, or other great houses: no dragging or self-indulgence by the singers, no interpolated vocal improvisations, no lachrymose sentimentalizing. In 1910 this would have caused a near-riot; in 1946, when the two NBC broadcasts comprising this production, were given, the world was now adjusted to a 20th century view of Verdi. Igor Stravinsky, whom one does not think of as a particular admirer of the composer, was so anxious to have a copy of this broadcast that he obtained a set of acetate transcription disks of the concert (during the sixties, these were dubbed and issued to the "Toscanini underground".) Here, BMG engineers use similar high-fidelity lacquer disk transcriptions and painstakingly remove any trace of noise, while preserving the crispness of high frequencies and the accuracy of the Studio 8H acoustic. Some will find this too "clinical"; others who are used to the falsified old Victor Red Seal LP edition, will rejoice in the palpable realism and clarity.

Neither Peerce nor Albenese were at the peak of form, and sometimes the chorus and minor roles are dispatched rather efficiently, with less than the highest degree of subtlety; however, the orchestra (and Toscanini) are the true stars of this "restoration" of the score, executed with the chiseled precision of a scholar.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A "TRAVIATA" FOR HIGHLY INDIVIDUAL TASTES, December 22, 1999
By 
"lesismore26" (Chicago, Illinois USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Verdi: La Traviata (Audio CD)
This 1946 "Traviata" recording (actually a radio broadcast) was all the rage for several years after its release on RCA, and it has held its place in the catalogue, in spite of so many subsequent recorded versions. The performance stands today as a reference point ---- it preserves Toscanini's approach to the score, and it enshrines Albanese's unique and moving Violetta, certainly one of the major operatic interpretations of the time. Toscanini's "Traviata" is like no other. His interpretation is passionate, intense, and at times very moving. It is also very fast (owing to the possible time constraints of a radio broadcast?), at times so fast that one is amazed that the singers can keep up (a good example is the celebrated "Sempre Libera" in Act I, where Albanese, amazingly enough, doesn't skip a beat). This is an approach that pulls the opera together into a compact, yet emotionally overwhelming experience. Licia Albanese was an intense and moving Violetta. Her particular vocal color adds great poignancy to the music as well as to the character ----- like Maria Callas several years later, this is a Violetta who sounds sick when she makes her first appearance in Act I! Jan Peerce, with a full-throated and solid tenor, albeit a little too mature sounding for this role, sings a respectable Alfredo. The elder Germont probably would have profited from a more mature-sounding baritone than Robert Merrill had at this time (he was at the very beginning of his long career), but the role is sung beautifully, and both he and Albanese outdo themselves in the Act II duet. This is very much "the Toscanini" recording it has always been. I do not recommend this as the only recording of "Traviata" to own because there are so many other good ones available. Still, as a point of reference, and as a very unique and special interpretation of this opera, I find this set highly valuable. Digital remastering has improved the original sonics of this recording to the point where it is perfectly listenable. Should this be your sole "Traviata" recording? Probably not, but it definitely deserves to be heard. Others may well prefer a more expansive account of the opera, with more moderate tempi, but alongside one of these versions, this version can stand proudly as an alternative version.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars THE MOST TOUCHING PERFORMANCE OF THIS MASTERPIECE, November 1, 2002
This review is from: Verdi: La Traviata (Audio CD)
This performance is easily the most touching and heart-rending of this popular work, mainly due to the interpretation of Licia Albanese. Her identification with the role is complete, so much so that we are not hearing Violetta being interpreted but rather we are actually hearing Violetta live, love and die in the here and now, right before us. From first note to last we are presented with a real woman who actually expresses herself through music. Everything is genuinely felt, nothing applied or "worked-out". Listen to the asides after the Brindisi as Violetta looks at herself in the mirror and then the colloquy with Alfredo that follows. The colors she puts into such phrases as "oh qual pallor" "Ha forse alcuno cura di me?", which other sopranos just throw away, are vividly enacted and integrated into the scene. Her Act II builds from strength to strength. Examples are too numerous, but the near hysteria of "Non sapete?" the lightning-bolt of "Gran Dio!" when Germont points out that it is Alfredo who may eventually tire of her, the resignation of "cosi alla misera" the heart-break of her "Dite alla giovine" which, fascinatingly and uniquely has a slight hint of anger/sarcasm at the 'so pure daughter' that is robbing her of love and life, and most of all the farewell to Alfredo where one can actually hear the tears, the feigned smile, the mounting hysteria of a woamn who'se entire world is collapsing must be mentioned. The last act is an object lesson in the lost art of accento and parlando. The death scene overwhelming. No-one dies like Licia Albanese. Callas, though riveting and extraordinary in her many accounts, studio and live, lacks spontaniety and heart in comparison. Her interpretation is a little too "thought-out." Valid, essential listening, but still just missing that tug at the heart one feels here.
Peerece and Merrill are fine co-stars. All the standard cuts are observed. Which leads to Arturo Toscanini. He is the putative star of the proceedings, but I found his work of less interest than I had hoped. His is a tense, highly dramatic reading, right in line with his heroine's views. This unsentimental view is welcome. But the dry acoustics of the NBC studio make further evaluation difficult.
Of special note...The dress rehersal of this performance has been released and is a revelation. Toscanini and the cast are just that much more relaxed, especially in Act I, to make it sound like a completely different performance. The remaining acts are relatively similar with pros and cons in both performances. An ideal Traviata would be Act I from the dress rehersal and the rest from the broadcast. If you find this recording anywhere, get it!!
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