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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A remarkable recording!
A neglected masterpiece "I Capuleti e I Montecchi" has much to offer and is not less important than Bellini's other operas. On this recording we have two wonderful singers Baltsa and Gruberova. Agni Baltsa as Romeo is heard in one of her best performances! She possesses one of the most beautiful mezzo voices and indicates a good understanding of the demanding role of...
Published on April 11, 2001 by Armindo

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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not excelent
I bought this because I like very much the Gruberova interpretations of Bel Canto Repertoire and I consider Balsa a great Mezzo. They don't disappoint here. Gruberova quite good and Balsa is a convincing Romeo.
I'm always septic about Muti. His obsession about the "come scrito" interpretation can be quite boring. Gruberavova's great high notes are missing...
Published on September 11, 2003 by Alberto Velez Grilo


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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A remarkable recording!, April 11, 2001
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
A neglected masterpiece "I Capuleti e I Montecchi" has much to offer and is not less important than Bellini's other operas. On this recording we have two wonderful singers Baltsa and Gruberova. Agni Baltsa as Romeo is heard in one of her best performances! She possesses one of the most beautiful mezzo voices and indicates a good understanding of the demanding role of Romeo (regarded as a difficult mezzo role). Edita Gruberova a moving, sweet Giulietta. She proves that she can be sublime in Strauss and Mozart as in Bel Canto. The less famous tenor Dano Raffanti is exceptional! The tenor role may not be so big but Raffanti is wonderful whenever heard. Last but certainly not least, Muti completes this historical performance.

I was taken aback, after having listened to many moments of the opera, when I read on the back cover that this is a live recording! I usually avoid them because of the sound quality but this DDD is really something. The audience is seldom heard and the applause is only in the end of each act. I therefore strongly recommend this recording to every opera collector.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best recording so far..., July 16, 2003
By 
Stephen (Melbourne, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
Initially I was a bit sceptical of this recording since I usually keep away from live recordings. I had listened to the Hong/Larmore recording (Teldec) numerous times but found it a bit lifeless. In my opinion Larmore doesn't cut it for Bellini.

So I finally decided to buy this mid-priced recording - NO REGRETS! There are only minimal flaws, such as microphone placing (the orchestra is a bit loud) and some audience noise. Aside from that, Baltsa and Gruberova give a most convincing performance. Giulietta's 'Eccomi in lieta vesta...Oh! quante volte' is totally sublime! Muti delivers a most Italianate interpretation. Highly recommended!!!

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A beautifully sung and energetically conducted performance., November 9, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
This is a totally successful and utterly beautiful performance of an under-appreciated and virtually unknown bel canto opera. The composer's melodic inventiveness and sublime arias and ensemles are woderfully realized by the central interpreters and the star conductor. A must-have for all lovers of the Bel Canto period in general and of Bellini's music in particular.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Almost unbearable beauty - Bellini sung to the point of ecstasy, March 12, 2006
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
This is a magical recording... From the opening to the heartbreaking end, one is caught, captivated, spellbound. In fact, "spellbinding" is so completely the word I must use that I have to fight not to repeat myself.

Edita Gruberova is, of course, one of the world's most superb bel canto singers. Her voice is a lyric dramatic coloratura - no hint of strain in her top notes, beautiful gleaming colour all the way down, with agile facility and a superb way of stringing her vocal line along the radiance of a rising sun.

Agnes Baltsa is so unbeatable as Romeo that it is a privilege to hear her. There is such an almost... ferocious quality in her voice... a ferocity that is strictly disciplined within a superb technique. In her duet work with Gruberova, oh!! Oh! It's the stuff of legends!

The rest of the cast is very good indeed.

There are other recordings of this gorgeous opera - but believe me, not ONE of them approaches even the outer limits of this unmatched recording. I am unable to listen to "O quante volto" as sung by Gruberova without feeling tears start. It's simply that beautiful.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful Bel Canto Romeo And Juliet, February 9, 2006
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
This is one of the few recordings of Bellini's bel canto opera I Capuleti E I Montechi (Capulets and Montagues) which has long been overshadowed by Gounod's Romeo Et Juliette, an opera still staged in opera houses, while this one has gone on the wayside. This one stars Edita Gruberova as Juliet and Agnes Baltsa as Romeo, with Piero Cappuccilli rounding out the cast. Ricardo Muti conducts. The strength of this recording is the fine digital remastered sound and the glorious voices. Edita Gruberova is a very sweet-voiced, coloratura goddess with all the right vocal make-up to essay the role of Juliet. She feminine, delicate but never acidic or thin in her voice. Hers is a rich, creamy voice, though not at all Italian since Miss Gruberova is East European. Agnes Baltsa goes above and beyond as Romeo. Her versatility as a mezzo soprano has given us fine Ebolis, Queen Elisabeth I in Maria Stuarda, Dalilahs, Venus from Tannhauser and on this recording the trouse role of Romeo. She is wholly convincing as a passionate man! Her voice is dark, rich but flexible and high-flying. She makes a far better Romeo than even Janet Baker in the EMI recording with Beverly Sills. Piero Cappuccilli is a phenomenal singer but bel canto is not really his thing. He sings with flair but he loses all sense of this particular musicality and for all we know could be singing Verdi instead of Bellini. Muti knows how to make the score alive with color and subtleties. But really, the only reason I even bought this recording was because Agnes Baltsa is such a terrific singer-actress. Her Romeo is unbeatable. You have to hear it yourself. I first heard it from a broadcast on the internet radio station Viva La Voce. Miss Baltsa is a mezzo-soprano whose likes we'll never see again.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good but not great performance of good but not great opera, December 29, 2009
By 
L. E. Cantrell (Vancouver, British Columbia Canada) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
SOURCE:
This recording is an assemblage of takes from live performances at London's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden during April 1984. Since there is very little stage noise and the audience makes its presence known only at the end of each act, I suspect that some material from rehearsals was also included in the final product.

The opera was released by EMI at full price in 1985. This particular version is the second issue, under the label EMI Classics and offered at a mid-range price in 1994. There is nothing in the accompanying documentation to suggest that the 1994 version was remastered or otherwise varied from the 1985 set.

SOUND:
The sound on this set seems to elicit different reactions from reviewer to reviewer. The Good, Grey Gramophone Magazine opined that "The sound retains a theatre balance, with the orchestra kept in its proper place," while an Amazon reviewer grumbled that the singers could not be heard over the orchestra. My own reaction was that this was a slightly strange-sounding opera recording. Stereo separation is not particularly emphasized and the recording is not as resonant as one might expect. It took me some time to realize that this set sounded much more like a real performance in a real opera house than it sounds like a recording. As a matter of purely personal taste, I prefer the old, up-front, in-your-face sound for the soloists that was characteristic of the 1950s and 60s. That is not to be found here. On the other hand, following along first with the libretto and then with the vocal score, it didn't strike me that the soloists less clear than they would sound in a real performance in a real opera house.

CAST:
Giulietta (Shakespeare's Juliet), daughter of Capellio, betrothed to Tebaldo, but in love with Romeo - Edita Gruberova (soprano)
Romeo (here pronounced "Ro-MAY-o, of course), newly returned from exile forced upon him for having killed Capellio's son and now appointed ambassador of the Ghibbellines to their despised enemies, the Guelphs, a hothead much given to loud threats of war and bloodshed - Agnes Baltsa (mezzo-soprano)
Tebaldo (a peculiar hybrid of Shakespeare's Tybalt and Paris), an equally hotheaded upholder of the Guelph cause who dearly loves Giulietta - Dano Raffanti (tenor)
Capellio (Shakespeare's Old Capulet), the local head of the Guelph faction who hates all Ghibbellines in general and Romeo in particular - Gwynne Howell (bass)
Lorenzo (a combination of Shakespeare's Friar Lawrence and the Apothecary), a secular physician and member of the household of the Capuleti who initially, at least, attempts to be the voice of peace and reason - John Tomlinson (bass)

CONDUCTOR:
Ricardo Muti with the Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.

TEXT:
Felice Romani, the librettist of this opera, insisted that he had not based his work on Shakespeare, but rather on Shakespeare's 16th Century sources. Hector Berlioz, in critic mode, was, to say the very least, not a fan of Romani's work. "No Shakespeare, nothing--a wasted opportunity," he called it.

For the historically minded, William Shakespeare wrote his "Romeo and Juliet" in the 1590s, during the early days of his career. As was usual for him, he based his play on older materials. The first literary mention of the Montagues and the Capulets is in Dante's "Purgatorio," vi, lines 106-108. The Montagues lived in Verona and the Capulets in Cremona. They were used by Dante as examples of warring factions that had been exterminated. About 1530, Luigi da Porto mistakenly assumed that the Montagues and the Capulets had both resided in Verona and had feuded with one another. He worked up a tale that involved two young members of his warring clans, Giulietta and Romeo. In 1554, Matteo Bandello published a novella called "Romeo e Giulietta" which proved to be an international hit. A French version was adapted from Bandello by Pierre Boaistuau in 1559. This, in turn, was translated into English in 1562 by Arthur Brooke as a "tragical history" in verse form called "Romeus and Juliet," later to be pounced on by Will Shakespeare in search of a popular hit. The only major changes that Shakespeare made in Brooke's plot were to compress the time frame and to introduce Tybalt into the story at an earlier point in order to build him up as a worthy adversary for Romeo. And, oh, yes, he created an array of living characters such as had never been conceived before.

A number of commentators have taken note of the much simplified plot of "I Capuleti e i Montecchi," which among other things reduces the more than twenty characters found in Shakespeare's play to five in the opera. They have accounted for it by declaring that Shakespeare's version was not yet well-known in the world, so Romani must have based his work on earlier versions of the story, by which I presume they mean Bandello or da Porto. I don't buy that explanation. By 1830, the cult of Bardolatry was firmly established. The standard German translations (that many Germans to this day hold to be superior to the English originals) were well along. Two generations earlier, the tourist industry of Stratford Upon Avon had been given a kick start by the great actor, Garrick (in a bicentennial celebration conceived by David Garrick, written by David Garrick, produced by David Garrick, directed by David Garrick and starring David Garrick--additional dialogue by W. Shakespeare.) Just seventeen years later, Verdi would write his "Macbeth" and make sketches for a "King Lear," that greatest of all operatic might-have-beens. One of the twenty or so books that Verdi kept close to himself until the day he died was an Italian translation of the works of Shakespeare.

No, I do not think that Romani dealt with any obscure 16th Century originals. I think that he had heard or read a short summary of Shakespeare's play, ignored or forgot most of it and then attempted to reproduce it while in a frame of mind that regarded the exaggerated posturing of "Ernani" and its ilk to be great art. Berlioz was perfectly correct about this libretto. In both the literal and the figurative senses of the word, it is a travesty.

DOCUMENTATION:
This 1994 edition comes with a 63-page booklet that comes with a 1984 essay by John McMurray on the opera and its history that is not as fatuous as is usual for these things, and actually contains a couple of interesting comments.There is a libretto in Italian and English. The track list is conveniently keyed to the libretto. Six photographs of the singers performing in the opera are provided, as well as a handsome sketch of the young Bellini.

COMMENTARY:
This recording is based on a highly popular revival of the opera mounted at Covent Garden in 1984. As something of a British success, it has been awarded gushing accolades from the Good Grey and very British Gramophone Magazine in each of its three appearances in the marketplace.

I am not quite as enthusiastic as the Gramophone. Simply as an opera, "I Capuleti e i Montecchi" presents a problem: it's a pretty good piece of work, but it is not a great opera. Bellini was not yet the tragic melodic genius that he became for his big three works, "La sonnambula," "Norma" and "I Puritani." In fact, because the composer was working to a strict six-week deadline, much of "I Capuleti e i Montecchi" consists of re-cycled musical material from Bellini's "Zaira," which had been a resounding flop in the year before. The work is workmanlike and sound enough, but lacking in that indefinable ping of greatness. It certainly lacks the hit tunes that force themselves into one's memory so effectively in the Big Three.

The five principal singers are certainly sound and workmanlike. The two women, Gruberova and Baltsa, are the best of the lot, singing with dramatic skill and passion that cannot be faulted but which, nevertheless, strikes me as not quite all that might be drawn out of this Giulietta and Romeo. The men are OK, and in the case of tenor Raffanti a bit better than OK, but still completely forgettable.

Muti's single-minded dedication to the score as it appears on paper is always problematic. Here he presents an operatic steak that is unquestionably well-prepared. The problem is that I prefer my steaks with a little more sizzle. This is why I am less enthusiastic about the performances of Gruberova and Baltsa than I might otherwise be. There are times when I simply want to hear the prima donnas off the leash.

This is a good but not great performance of a good but not great opera. I think it deserves four stars.

LEC/Am/12-09
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not excelent, September 11, 2003
By 
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
I bought this because I like very much the Gruberova interpretations of Bel Canto Repertoire and I consider Balsa a great Mezzo. They don't disappoint here. Gruberova quite good and Balsa is a convincing Romeo.
I'm always septic about Muti. His obsession about the "come scrito" interpretation can be quite boring. Gruberavova's great high notes are missing here.
Sometimes during the interpretation it seems this is a studio record. This can be good and bad, good because of the sound quality and bad because we don't fill the public emotion (applauses only in the end of the acts).
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0 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bellini a plagiarizer!!!, January 16, 2004
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi (Audio CD)
The harp-accompanied section of Giulietta's aria, "O quante volte, quante", sounds suspiciously like Desdemona's harp-accompanied Willow Song from "Otello". Even the introductory harp notes of the Bellini aria resemble the introductory harp notes of Rossini's aria! Shame on Bellini for copying Rossini!
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Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi
Vincenzo Bellini: I Capuleti e i Montecchi by Vincenzo Bellini (Audio CD - 1994)
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