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Smile UK Store - Puccini: Turandot

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List Price: £22.99
Our Price: £13.97
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Manufacturer: Decca
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0028941427427 Format: Box set Label: Decca Manufacturer: Decca Number Of Discs: 2 Publisher: Decca Release Date: 1985-02-07 Running Time: 117 Studio: Decca
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: As good as it gets Comment: Read all the other reviews for soloist analysis etc. What I wish to add is do not be put off by the age of this recording. This was recorded by Decca in their glory days.The dynamic range, frequency range, soundstaging, capture of the hall sound, can (and does) put many a modern recording to shame. The breathing sounds and creaking stage boards only cement the performance. If you want to know how good your system is, can you hear the tube trains passing underneath and the birds outside.
For many including myself this is and will always be a definitive/landmark recording/performance.
Customer Rating:      Summary: The best recording of Turandot in my experience Comment: The first time that I heard "Turandot" was at a performance in the Arena de Verona some years ago and it was a life-changing event for me: the opera and its performance was simply sublime, indescribable in its intensity to convey a host of emotions. At the end of the first act, less than half an hour's worth, I turned to my wife and said "I'm happy to die now!" or words to that effect: extreme it may sound, but I still hold it true. The beauty of the music and the splendour of the performance in that fantastic arena, in front of nearly 20,000 people that, like me, went wild with excitement at the end of the act, delivered sensations and emotions that can only be expressed as divine.
Since that introduction some seven years ago I have seen live and heard on CD and DVD a large number of different productions of the opera.
On CD, my favourite version is Decca's 1972 recording with a young Luciano Pavarotti as Calaf. This is a studio recording, which I prefer for opera if listening on CD - if you can't have the theatre then you have to make up by having the best sound possible and studio wins over live recordings every time. For instance, I much prefer this recording over the Carreras/Marton/Maazel recording recorded live at the Vienna State Opera that some hold as the finest recording of the opera: Carreras neither has the power nor beauty of the young Pavarotti and Maazel's conducting is ponderous.
Pavarotti's is a brilliant performance - in 1972 he still had the power to go with the gorgeous silky timbre of his voice. Calaf's role needs the power to make the end of Act 1 the thrilling piece of music and theatre that it can be - it works wonderfully well here. The first act of Turandot really is a stunning piece of music: enjoyed best if you have seen at least one production and can replay it in your mind's eye but I suspect that it could nevertheless be very appealing to any listener.
Joan Sutherland does well in the very tricky role of Turandot: this part is pitched so high that the wrong singer can sound too shrill but Sutherland's timbre is easy to listen to even when reaching the highest notes.
The remainder of the cast is also top class. Montserrat Caballe as Liu ekes out all the sympathy the role has to offer and Nicolai Ghiaurov as Timur also delivers a fine performance; the singing at Liu's death in particular is achingly beautiful. The trio of difficult roles, particularly so in the theatre, Tom Krause, Pier Francesco Poli and Piero de Palma as Ping, Pang and Pong deliver a gorgeous rendition of Act 2 Scene 1, so much so that not only can you hear the fabulous musicality of the score, but the comedy in the scene also shines through from their vocal rendition alone - a real plus for this recording.
After all of these superlatives, it should be no surprise for you to learn that I think that Zubin Mehta's conducting of the London Philharmonic orchestra is first class: the tempo is up and he manages to deliver every subtle nuance of colour from the orchestra throughout the recording.
It's a stunning recording of a brilliant opera that I have enjoyed listening to many times over and hope to again and again...if you are going to own only one recording of Turandot then make it this one!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Turandot - Zubin Mehta and the LPO Comment: This is a brilliant and, so far, unsurpassed recording of Turandot. No other version comes close despite the fact it is over 30 years old. All the principals are ideally cast and the LPO plays superbly. All the nuances of Puccini's complex score are realised to perfection through an excellent recording: just note, for example, the subtle and delicate accompaniment to Caballe's Liu in the "Tanto amore segreto" aria of Act3. You have no need to consider alternative versions of Turandot, this is outstanding.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Excellent Comment: This is the best recording of this opera. Sutherland and Pavarotti prove more human, easier to relate to than the OTT performances on some other sets. Sutherland, for example, is less icy and forceful than Birgit Nilsson singing Turandot, and for this we can see her as a person, a deeply hurt person, rather than a block of ice. Her singing proves her to be just as dramtic a Turandot as Nilsson.Pavarotti has a light voice for Calaf, and you sometimes wish for a deeper voice, but his high notes are magical and he creates a strong characterisation nevertheless. The tenor who sings Calaf to Nilssons Turandot on the Molinari-Pradelli set is Franco Corelli. He is a different Calaf from Pavarotti. More baritonal, with equally powerful high notes, he is more powerful and proves to have a nearly superhuman voice. Sometimes he lacks warmth, however, and is less intigrated than Pavarotti, sounding somewhat aloof, grand. The supporting cast on the Mehta set proves stronger than the EMI set. Renata Scotto sings well as Liu, but Caballe is more radiant and beautiful with Mehta. The sound in this set is truly brilliant. The scale of the stereo is magical, increadibly clear. The playing of the LPO, and the voices of the singers are both caught well in the recording. Mehta proves very strong, the score has never sounded so good.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Magic Comment: This opera is one of my favourite recordings, now even cheaper than when I bought my copy. Pavarotti is heroic and, I feel, preferable to Franco Corelli with Francesco Molinari-Pradelli on EMI. Equally Sutherland is a more 'human' Turandot than Birgit Nilsson. The sound on the DECCA recording is fuller and more vibrant than the EMI. I have the feeling that the EMI set may be more 'accurate' than the DECCA set, Corelli and Nilsson may be more like the singers Puccini intended to fill the roles, starker, less beautiful, more forceful than Sutherland and Pavarotti. However, because Nilsson's Turandot and Corelli's Calaf are, I feel a little too grand, I prefer the Mehta set overall. Renata Scotto is lovely as Liu, with gorgeous tone, but Caballe has a more radiant voice. The rest of the casting proves stronger on the DECCA set also. Mehta with the LPO is stronger than Molinari-Pradelli with the Orchestra dell'Opera di Roma, with lots more character and more presence. The set was already good value but now the Pavarotti/Sutherland Turandot is really excellent value for money, well cast, well recorded and gradually reaching mid-price.
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