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Verdi: La Traviata (complete opera live 1955) with Maria Callas, Giuseppe di Stefano, Carlo Maria Giulini, Orchestra & Chorus of La Scala, Milan(more) »rank: 6836by: Giuseppe Verdi, Orchestra e coro del Teatro alla Scala, Carlo Maria Giulini, Maria Callas, Giuseppe di Stefano, Ettore Bastianini, Silvio Maionica, Luisa Mandelli, Arturo La Porta
: essential recording:This live recording of the 1955 Visconti production at La Scala is the best of the available Maria Callas Traviatas. Aside from a minor pitch problem or two, she's in great voice, coloring phrases to reveal character and investing the coloratura with variety and passion. Her 'Addio del passato' is heart-breaking. She fully captures Violetta's pride and vulnerability in the scene with Germont, though her partner, Ettore Bastianini, sings insensitively, if beautifully. Giuseppe Di Stefano is all one could ask for as Alfredo. Carlo Giulini conducts a performance that delivers all the lyricism and drama of the score. The recorded sound ... |
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Verdi: Rigoletto (Complete Opera); Maria Callas; Tito Gobbi; Giuseppe di Stefano(more) »rank: 36881by: Giuseppe di Stefano, Nicola Zaccaria, Adriana Lazzarini, Giuse Gerbino, Tullio Serafin, Chorus & Orchestra of the La Scala Theatre - Milan
: :Nobody steals the spotlight when Maria Callas is onstage, but Tito Gobbi never lets us forget that this show is called Rigoletto, not Gilda. Neither singer has one of the century's prettiest voices; both have dramatic presence, impact, and subtlety--based as much on their control of verbal nuance as on musicianship--that make their characters three-dimensional, the story meaningful, the emotions real, varied, and intense. His role is bigger and more complex than hers is. He is almost constantly onstage, and his music runs the whole gamut from fatherly tenderness, to regret at a life gone wrong, to explosive rage. Sparks fly when they ... |
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Maria Callas Live(more) »rank: 15984from: EMI Classics
: :Nobody steals the spotlight when Maria Callas is onstage, but Tito Gobbi never lets us forget that this show is called Rigoletto, not Gilda. Neither singer has one of the century's prettiest voices; both have dramatic presence, impact, and subtlety--based as much on their control of verbal nuance as on musicianship--that make their characters three-dimensional, the story meaningful, the emotions real, varied, and intense. His role is bigger and more complex than hers is. He is almost constantly onstage, and his music runs the whole gamut from fatherly tenderness, to regret at a life gone wrong, to explosive rage. Sparks fly when they ... |
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The Very Best of Tito Gobbi(more) »rank: 218487from: EMI Classics
: :Nobody steals the spotlight when Maria Callas is onstage, but Tito Gobbi never lets us forget that this show is called Rigoletto, not Gilda. Neither singer has one of the century's prettiest voices; both have dramatic presence, impact, and subtlety--based as much on their control of verbal nuance as on musicianship--that make their characters three-dimensional, the story meaningful, the emotions real, varied, and intense. His role is bigger and more complex than hers is. He is almost constantly onstage, and his music runs the whole gamut from fatherly tenderness, to regret at a life gone wrong, to explosive rage. Sparks fly when they ... |
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Verdi - La Traviata / Maria Callas · di Stefano · Bastianini · Giulini(more) »rank: 328357by: Giuseppe Verdi, Carlo Maria Giulini, Maria Callas, Giuseppe di Stefano, Ettore Bastianini, Silvio Maionica, Luisa Mandelli, Franco Ricciardi, Arturo LaPorta, Giuseppe Zampieri, Silvana Zanolli, Antonio Zerbini
: :Meet Violetta Valéry, a woman who goes from one wealthy lover to the next, who lives in physical luxury and with a growing distress of spirit at the slow advance of a deadly illness. Then love enters her life unexpectedly. A young admirer at one of her lavish, meaningless parties pours out his soul to her, and she begins to hope that what remains of her empty life may be transfigured by love. It happens for a painfully short while; then her happiness is destroyed, first by the mandates of bourgeois morality (what the politicians now call 'family values') and then by death. ... |
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Donizetti: L'Elisir d'Amore(more) »rank: 351740from: Polygram Records
: :Meet Violetta Valéry, a woman who goes from one wealthy lover to the next, who lives in physical luxury and with a growing distress of spirit at the slow advance of a deadly illness. Then love enters her life unexpectedly. A young admirer at one of her lavish, meaningless parties pours out his soul to her, and she begins to hope that what remains of her empty life may be transfigured by love. It happens for a painfully short while; then her happiness is destroyed, first by the mandates of bourgeois morality (what the politicians now call 'family values') and then by death. ... |
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Verdi: La Traviata(more) »rank: 452411from: Myto Records Italy
: :Meet Violetta Valéry, a woman who goes from one wealthy lover to the next, who lives in physical luxury and with a growing distress of spirit at the slow advance of a deadly illness. Then love enters her life unexpectedly. A young admirer at one of her lavish, meaningless parties pours out his soul to her, and she begins to hope that what remains of her empty life may be transfigured by love. It happens for a painfully short while; then her happiness is destroyed, first by the mandates of bourgeois morality (what the politicians now call 'family values') and then by death. ... |
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Verdi: La Traviata(more) »rank: 403559from: Testament UK
: :Meet Violetta Valéry, a woman who goes from one wealthy lover to the next, who lives in physical luxury and with a growing distress of spirit at the slow advance of a deadly illness. Then love enters her life unexpectedly. A young admirer at one of her lavish, meaningless parties pours out his soul to her, and she begins to hope that what remains of her empty life may be transfigured by love. It happens for a painfully short while; then her happiness is destroyed, first by the mandates of bourgeois morality (what the politicians now call 'family values') and then by death. ... |
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Verdi: Rigoletto(more) »rank: 616800by: Elvira Galassi, Vittorio Tatozzi, Luisa Mandelli
: :Opera in 3 acts~~Libretto: Francesco Maria Piave~~~~CD1) Act 1~~CD2) Act 2~~~~Gilda - Maria Callas~~~Rigoletto - Tito Gobbi~~~Il Ducia Di Mantua - Giuseppe Di Stefano~~~Sparafucile - Nicola Zaccaria~~~Maddalena - Adriana Lazzarini~~~Giovanna - Giuse Gerbino~~~Il Conte Di Monterone - Plinio Clabassi~~~Marullo - William Dickie~~~Borsa - Renato Ercolani~~~Il Conte Di Ceprano - Carlo Forti~~~La Contessa Di Ceprano - Elvira Galassi~~~Un Usciere - Vittorio Tatozzi~~~Un Paggio - Luisa Mandelli |
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Respighi: La fiamma(more) »rank: 324144from: Opera D'oro
:Album Description:Respighi composed several operas, of which La Fiamma is generally considered the most successful. Enchanted by the Byzantine-era mosaics in Ravenna churches, Respighi had long wanted to write an opera in such a setting but no libretto suggested itself. When the composer’s regular librettist, Claudio Guastalla, suggested an opera adapted from the stage play Anna Pedersdotter, the Witch, by Norwegian dramatist Hans Wiers Jenssen, Respighi felt it could be recast in early medieval Ravenna. The result was La Fiamma, which had a well-received premiere at the Royal Opera House in Rome in January 23, 1934 with the composer conducting. Although it has ... |

Critics and audiences didn't seem too happy with Back to the Future, Part II, the inventive, perhaps too clever sequel. Director Zemeckis and cast bent over backwards to add layers of time-travel complication, and while it surely exercises the brain it isn't necessarily funny in the same way that its predecessor was. It's well worth a visit, though, just to appreciate the imagination that went into it, particularly in a finale that has Marty watching his own actions from the first film. --Tom Keogh
Shot back-to-back with the second chapter in the trilogy, Back to the Future, Part III is less hectic than that film and has the same sweet spirit of the first, albeit in a whole new setting. This time, Marty ends up in the Old West of 1885, trying to prevent the death of mad scientist Christopher Lloyd at the hands of gunman Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson, who had a recurring role as the bully Biff). Director Zemeckis successfully blends exciting special effects with the traditions of a Western and comes up with something original and fun. --Tom Keogh


