Tutto Verdi Highlights

TUTTO VERDI – this edition to mark the Verdi bicentenary sets standards by which all similar projects will be judged. It includes all twenty-six operas by the greatest Italian stage composer, together with his immortal Requiem, all of them in definitive performances.

“This is how Verdi should be played” – Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung on TUTTO VERDI

Belcanto D´Amore (Aida, La Traviata, Madama Butterfly, Rigoletto, Turandot)

AIDA

Iano Tamar, Iain Paterson,

Tatiana Serjan, Rubens

Pellizzari

Vienna Symphonic Orchestra

Carlo Rizzi

Staged by Graham Vick

MADAMA BUTTERFLY

Raffaela Angeletti

Nino Batatunashvili

Annunziato Vestri

Fondatione Orchestra

Regionale Delle Marche

Daniele Callegari

Staged by Pier Luigi Pizzi

TURANDOT

Maria Guleghina, Marco Berti,

Javier Agulló

Orquestra de la Comunitat

Valenciana

Zubin Metha

Staged by Chen Kaige

LA TRAVIATA

Svetla Vassileva, Massimo

Giordano, Valdimir Stoyanov

Orchestra e Coro del Teatro

Regio di Parma

Yuri Temirkanov

Staged by Karl-Ernst & Ursel

Herrmann

RIGOLETTO

Francesco Demuro, Leo Nucci

Nino Machaidze, Marco Spotti

Orchestra e Coro del Teatro

Regio di Parma

Massimo Zanetti

Staged by Stefano Vizioli

Great Arias

This on-going series of ten-minute programmes introduces some of opera’s finest

moments, performed and presented by some of the greatest singers of our day, Dame Joan

Sutherland, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Eva Marton, Marilyn Home, Anne Sofie von Otter, Roberto Alagna,

Philip Langridge, René Kollo and Yuri Marusin among them. Their performances are drawn from

recent live recordings of acclaimed productions of key works in the operatic repertoire and

include such high-spots as Vissi d’arte from Puccini’s Tosca, the Mad Scene from Donizetti’s

Lucia di Lammermoor, Elektra’s murderous confrontation with her mother in Strauss’s Elektra, and

Leonora’s D’amor sull’ali rosee from the final act of Puccini’s Tosca.

Orlando furioso

Certainly more than just the composer of the Four Seasons, Vivaldi also wrote hundreds of largely famous instrumental works, and his glorious church music is well known; but it wasn’t until recent decades that his operas – of which he is said to have written more than fifty – were resurrected. Orlando furioso occupies a central and very significant place among Vivaldi’s works. Not only does the whole score of this opera demonstrate its composer’s full, creative maturity, but its outstanding features are also an extraordinary musical beauty, an attractive recitative line, and a balance thus created between the various parts of the dramatic and musical whole. This exceptional musical achievement was no doubt partly due to the famous theme of the original story, as well as the literary and dramatic qualities of a first-rate libretto. Pier Luigi Pizzi’s 1979 production of Orlando furioso in Verona marked the beginning of contemporary international interest in Antonio Vivaldi’s operas. Ten years later the same director once more produced this work at the San Francisco Opera. A Californian public greeted the baroque magnificence of this production with great enthusiasm, and both the daily and specialist press outdid each other in eulogies of praise for the director, his new staging, the vocal casting of all the roles and the musical quality of the whole opera.