Verdi: Otello (CD)
“…it’s a wonderful recording and a wonderful testament of and to this tremendous opera and performance – it must have been great to be at the Barbican and thank God you can get it on CD” BBC Radio 3
Composer: Giuseppe Verdi
Conductor: Sir Colin Davis
Performers:
Simon O’Neill – Otello
Gerald Finley – Jago
Allan Clayton – Cassio
Ben Johnson – Roderigo
Alexander Tsymbalyuk – Lodovicio
Matthew Rose – Montano
Lukas Jakobski – A Herald
Anne Schwanewilms – Desdemona
Eufemia Tufano – Emilia
London Symphony Chorus
London Symphony Orchestra
Label: LSO Live
Release date: 25 October 2010
Recorded: live at the Barbican Centre on 3 and 6 December 2009. Click here for details, photos and fabulous reviews
Catalogue number: LSO0700
2 SACDs. A high density DSD (Direct Stream Digital) recording. Notes and synopsis in English/en français/auf Deutsch (includes complete libretto in Italian and English)
What the critics say
John Steane, Gramophone, November 2010
Gerald Finley proves a peerless lago and the LSO have much to be proud of Shakespeare’s lines about the Pontic and the Propontic come to mind. That juggernaut of a sentence, unstoppable as Othello says is his “compulsive course”, might be taken for the guiding principle behind this reading of the score – first two acts at least. It is as though the whole of the first act, from the big bang of inception to the resting-place of the Love Duet, is a mechanism of inexorable movement carried forward into the second act and reaching its appointed end in the disintegration of heroism and the strangling of innocence. Colin Davis (like Toscanini in this) follows Verdi without “retiring ebb” and keeps the opera headed “due on” till journey’s end in the dark and stillness of Desdemona’s chamber. It is done largely by the maintenance of a firm beat, rarely giving way, whether to accommodate singers, tradition or personal whim.
Having constructed that justification for it, I have to confess I don’t naturally warm to it. It would be a coarse reduction of finely balanced considerations to say that this is a performance of the head not of the heart, but equally, just as a matter of personal fact, I cannot say that I was moved. And this was not because of a felt lack of commitment on the part of any of the performers. Soloists, chorus and orchestra are well keyed up to let no detail slip and to make all tell in the re-creation of a supreme masterpiece.
Of the three main principals, it is tempting to say that the Iago (as so often in performances of the play) is the dominant figure. Gerald Finley gives a masterly account of the part, his voice seemingly transfigured by the Italian music and language. He is not transparently devilish in characterisation, but neither should he be, and his singing – firm and resonant – is scarcely to be bettered on record. Anne Schwanewilms is well cast, with head-notes in the German tradition. Only a few notes of doubtful intonation limit her complete success. The New Zealander Simon O’Neill is an unusual Otello in that he is so unequivocally a tenor, with no hint of the baritone in his timbre. His voice has a ring to it and his expressiveness, if not yet quite personal enough to be memorable, appears to be directed by feeling and understanding.
The LSO, producing on its own label, has much to be proud of. Its chorus is exceptionally precise and expressive; the playing is alert and sensitive to drama and text. The various elements (including special effects such as the off-stage trumpets in Act 3) are judiciously balanced. And a great conductor adds a great work to his discography. For myself, though, in the first two acts I’m too aware of him and his control. Shakespeare’s Othello would have done much better had his Pontic not kept “due on to the Propontic”; in Verdi’s Otello the “compulsive course” is mapped out with sufficient clarity as not to need quite such a determined fortification of bar-lines.
Rupert Christiansen, The Telegraph, 12 November 2010
Davis’s electrifying conducting keeps the temperature high throughout this gripping performance, recorded live at the Barbican in 2009. Simon O’Neill makes a powerful and confident debut in the title role, well matched against Gerald Finley’s subtle and sneaky Iago. Anne Schwanewilms is a quavering, un-Italianate Desdemona, but with the additional merits of Allan Clayton’s vivid Cassio, the splendid chorus and superb playing from the LSO, this is a front-runner in the field.
Fiona Maddocks, The Observer, 14 November 2010
Any Verdi fan will covet this budget-price LSO Live Otello, made additionally exciting by Simon O’Neill having stepped into his title-role debut at short notice (but trained in it by Domingo, which must help). Of the many high points the “fazzoletto” (handkerchief) scene, in which the Moor’s jealousy spills into madness, is especially forceful. Throughout, the turbulent orchestral writing is delivered with marvellous energy and flair. Some vocal ensembles momentarily succumb to heat-of-the-moment rough tuning, but this is a spellbinding account, thanks to O’Neill, Anne Schwanewilms’s Desdemona and Gerald Finley’s Jago, but above all to Colin Davis’s warm, urgent but never forced interpretation.
*****
“It must have been a great thing to be part of.”
“…you couldn’t have a better pairing than him [O'Neill] with Gerald Finley…”
“The whole thing is tremendous”
“…it’s a wonderful recording and a wonderful testament of and to this tremendous opera and performance – it must have been great to be at the Barbican and thank God you can get it on CD”