La Traviata stands or falls on its lead singers and in Norah Amsellem and Rolando Villazon this 2005 Salzburg Festival performance has a pair whose electric interactions and brilliant singin... Read allLa Traviata stands or falls on its lead singers and in Norah Amsellem and Rolando Villazon this 2005 Salzburg Festival performance has a pair whose electric interactions and brilliant singing are irresistible. If Amsellem can't quite provide the vocal bloom of the great Violettas... Read allLa Traviata stands or falls on its lead singers and in Norah Amsellem and Rolando Villazon this 2005 Salzburg Festival performance has a pair whose electric interactions and brilliant singing are irresistible. If Amsellem can't quite provide the vocal bloom of the great Violettas of the past, hers is a lovely voice used with intelligence and dramatic intensity and she... Read all
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La Traviata is an opera in three acts by Giuseppe Verdi. It is set to an Italian libretto by Francesco Maria Piave. It is based on "La Dame aux camélias," which is a play by Alexandre Dumas, of which he adapted from his own 1848 novel. The opera was originally titled "Violetta," after the main character.
I am not a great fan of either modern or minimalist. It did work out well for "Wagner: Der Ring des Nibelungen - Complete Ring Cycle (Levine / Metropolitan Opera)."
This 7 August 2005 Großes Festspielhaus, Salzburg, Austria Festival performance version is not quite as impressive yet still holds your attention and the music is well presented. I used the English subtitles as I only understood about 10% of the words. The subtitle even though in pail yellow still washed out in much of the background.
Anna Netrebko as Violetta Valéry could challenge anyone for the part.
Ever since the first time I heard Villazon on the radio one became aware of a major tenor talent on the horizon. Everything one hears him sing is imbued with the ability to excite (not necessarily move).The voice and technique are used to stir one's sensibilities into a state of unreason. It is not a gentle response. If you can cope with this ravaging, you will love this man's singing. (he is savagely wonderful as Werther, for example, a sturm and drang hero for whom reason must be banned in favour of self-torment). It is unfortunate that he looks like a Latin version of British comic ikon MR. BEAN. But once he opens his mouth, forget Rowan Atkinson....
Anna Netrebko I think is just generally overrated. In the marketing of this DVD, she is touted as the be-all and end-all of the show, instead of the more deserving Villazon. But, one has to admit, in this production she is perfect. Beautiful as this particular Violetta. Passionate singing and acting in every scene.
Thomas Hampson, an amazing singer and actor, also makes a wonderful job of his role, especially in his Act 2 confrontation with Alfredo (an exhilarating and uneasy marriage between paternal love and the monstrous male need to control someone weaker). The only thing that mars the casting of Hampson as the older Germont is his physical incompatibility with Villazon.
Traditionalists will lament the minimalist sets, the idea of old-man Time and the all invasive Dali-esquire clock, and the chorus of party-goers all frocked in black. But oh how it works!
The emptiness of the stage is the emptiness of Violetta Valery's life. When it is full of people there is only chaos in the activity. This all contributes to how we are made to focus on the bare essentials - the true emotions expressed by the three main characters.
This is my very favourite Traviata film, preferred even over the Stratas/Domingo or Anna Moffo's B&W classic.
What I love about La Traviata chiefly are the strongly defined characters, Violetta is a lead character that you will never forget, the heartfelt story and the magnificent music, although people will know Parigi O Cara, Brindisi, the act 1 & 3 prologues, Di Provenza and Sempre Libera, my favourites are Addio Del Passato and especially Ditta Alle Giuvine, and I love the finale to act 2 as well.
This Traviata is very good but not outstanding. I had no problem whatsoever with the more modernised costuming, Netrebko's red dress is stunning and she in it, and while the sets(of a sofa, chair and clock) are limited and not as sumptuous as I have known other Traviatas to be they are decent enough.
The orchestra are superb, playing with real musicality and pathos in the prologues, Ditta Alla Giuvine and Addio Del Passato and Brindisi and Sempre Libera are enough to raise the spirits. Carlo Rizzi's conducting is mostly solid, but the tempo of the final scene plods a little too much for my liking making Violetta's death not as moving as it could have been.
The chorus are very well balanced and animated, the sound is of good quality and the photography is great and serves the singers well particularly Netrebko whose looks show she was made to stand there in front of the camera. The support cast are fine, Flora especially is delightful.
The leads are superb. I am not a fan of Anna Netrebko or Rolando Villazon, though I have nothing really against them, but I do like Thomas Hampson quite a bit.
Anna Netrebko is much better than expected as Violetta. She is a stunningly beautiful woman, she is a good actress and she has a great voice, however her diction is less than perfect and I have had reservations about her colouratura before having never liked her high E flats, finding they sound almost a semitone too flat. However, her colouratura here is a little more secure, and she sings very musically and movingly.
I was also impressed with Rolando Villazon. Here he shys away from his manic Mr Bean-like persona and shows an Alfredo that is dashing, poignant and somewhat bitter too. He certainly looks the part, he does have an appealing tenor voice and his chemistry with Netrebko and his reaction to Violetta's death are genuine. He also sings Lunge Da Lei very well.
Thomas Hampson's Germont is sympathetic, stern, distinguished and even overbearing. His chemistry with Netrebko and Villazon is notable, he is a gifted actor, his Di Provenza is intelligently phrased and Ditta Alla Giuvine is for me one of this Traviata's highlights.
In conclusion, I really liked this Traviata but I wanted to love it more than I did. 8/10 Bethany Cox
However, now that I can see and appreciate director Willi Decker's spare, modernist staging at the 2005 Salzburg Festival on this 2006 Deluxe Edition DVD package, the opera becomes a more emotionally transcendent experience. He takes the passing of time as his primary leitmotif in the form of a gigantic clock with Death taking an ever-present human form. The costuming is stylishly modern-dress, while the few color-coordinated set pieces would look appropriate in an Upper West Side art gallery. Based on Alexandre Dumas's play, "The Lady of the Camellias", the opera's tragic love story is the same in this adaptation, but the overall attitude reflects a greater sense of liberation with the period melodrama mostly excised. Purists will be offended, especially those married to the Callas or more recent Angela Gheorghiu versions.
As the passionate Violetta Valéry, Russian soprano Anna Netrebko is an inarguably stunning woman made for the camera. Less the courtesan of the classic version and more a hedonistic party girl (like a more melancholy Holly Golightly), parading in her deep red cocktail dress, she convincingly performs the role with alternating waves of gusto and poignancy. Vocally, Netrebko complements her fiery presence with an impressive performance that gives way to equal parts great passion and deep love once she discovers renewed life with her lover Alfredo. Offering shimmering roulades, she nails her much anticipated Act I climax and maximizes her lower register in her burnished handling of the final aria. Her less-than-perfect Italianate diction is not as problematic here as it is on CD when we are robbed of her beauty.
Given the dominance of Violetta, Mexican tenor Rolando Villazón more than holds his own with Netrebko as the smitten Alfredo. In fact, he is a better actor than she in displaying his character's tentative nature at the beginning, followed in turn by his swooning romanticism, seething anger and broken-hearted resignation. Displaying an exceptionally agile voice and an almost improvisational-sounding style in his phrasing and inflections, he brings his arsenal of skills together most effectively in his Act II opening. In this scene, Alfredo and Violetta prance around in persistent afterglow in their floral bathrobes on a matching floral sofa.
In fact, there is a great deal of physicality in the production to make the sexual tension reverberate, and the party-loving, black-suited chorus is equally as animated. All the while, Netrebko and Villazón generate true chemistry while blending seamlessly in their duets. American baritone Thomas Hampson comes across much better on the DVD than the CD, where he is recognizably the weak link. Looking more engaged onstage, he brings the appropriate emotional fervor to his confrontation scenes with Violetta and sounds effectively resolute in his ending aria in Act II. The death scene still seems too elongated for the drama preceding it, and Rizzi does not help with his lugubrious pacing at this juncture.
The entire opera is on the first disc of the 2006 two-DVD set, and it is blessedly captured with clarity both visually and aurally. The second disc contains a number of extras, the most important being a 45-minute behind-the-scenes featurette chronicling the painstaking preparation of the production. Netrebko and an especially precocious Villazón are interviewed throughout. Villazón also does a three-minute introduction of the opera in German, obviously done for its TV airing. There is an automatic slide show of photos from the production set to the "Brindisi", a Netrebko discography, and lastly, a ten-minute highlights segment of Netrebko's rather self-aggrandizing video collection, "The Woman...The Voice".
Did you know
- TriviaCarlo Rizzi stepped in for the late Marcello Viotti who was supposed to conduct this opera, but passed away a few months earlier.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Revealed: Anna Netrebko (2010)
Details
- Runtime2 hours 30 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1