ORFEO International – Catalogue

CDs

C 698 072 I

Giuseppe Verdi

Otello

Orfeo • 2 CD • 2h 20min

Order No.: C 698 072 I

Choc
Gramophone Recommended

Composers/Works:

G. Verdi: Otello

Artists:

Plácido Domingo (Otello - Tenor)
Renato Bruson (Jago - Bariton)
Kaludi Kaludov (Cassio - Tenor)
Wilfried Gahmlich (Rodrigo - Tenor)
Kurt Rydl (Lodovico - Baß)
Goran Simic (Montano - Baß)
Peter Koves (Herold - Baß)
Anna Tomowa-Sintow (Desdemona - Sopran)
Margaritha Lilowa (Emilia - Mezzosopran)
Chor der Wiener Staatsoper (Chor)
Orchester der Wiener Staatsoper (Orchester)
Zubin Mehta (Dirigent)

Plácido Domingo

Orfeo’s ORFEO CD C 698 072 I
ORFEO CD C 698 072 I
newly released complete recording of Otello documents a brilliant first night from 1987. Plácido Domingo is heard here at the very height of his powers in one of his most famous roles: supple, impulsive, volatile and moving in his expression. Even without a visual element to his performance, Domingo is able to convey a credible picture of the mental and physical collapse of an outsider who is taken apart in the most devilish way so soon after his greatest triumph. Anna Tomowa-Sintow is the victim of his jealousy, a woman who loves him unconditionally, her interpretation of the part of Desdemona more dramatic than was her wont, for all that her great scene in Act Four lacks nothing in inwardness. The third main character is Renato Bruson as a sharply delineated Iago without the exaggerations and superficial effects of which so many of his baritone colleagues are guilty. Plácido Domingo as Otello
Plácido Domingo as Otello
Foto: Wiener Staatsoper/Axel Zeininger
The comprimario roles are all cast from strength as is only fitting for an internationally acclaimed house like the Vienna State Opera. They include Margarita Lilowa as Emilia, Kaludi Kaludow – later to be in demand as the protagonist in many an Italian opera – as Cassio and Kurt Rydl, who was something of an institution as a Viennese bass, as Lodovico. Zubin Mehta, finally, confirms his reputation as an outstanding Verdi conductor, bringing verve and tension to the performance, firing chorus and orchestra from the very first bar of the opening storm scene and maintaining that sense of excitement to the very end.


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