This album is included in the following sets:
This set contains the following albums:
- Producer's Note
- Full Cast Listing
- Cover Art
Toscanini's classic 1947 Otello newly restored & remastered
Possibly the best recording of Otello ever made - now in stunning XR sound
This recording, taken from two specially-lengthened broadcasts on 6th
and 13th December, 1947, is widely regarded as perhaps the greatest
ever made of Verdi's masterpiece, Otello. As NBC announcer Ben Grauer
notes in his introduction to the first broadcast, it has a special link
to Toscanini, who as a young cellist had played in the world première of
the piece, under Verdi's baton, in La Scala, Milan on 5th February,
1887, some 60 years earlier.
Verdi is regarded by many as
especially important to Toscanini, and this is among his greatest
recordings - Mortimer Frank writes: "Of all the composers in Toscanini's
repertory, Verdi was probably closest to him... what NBC preserved...
if not necessarily representative of his staged performances or of his
best work, is often compelling. Given limitations such as occasionally
weak casting, they are uneven. Bet when everything more or less fell
into place, as in the complete Otello, a performance of towering merit
resulted."
Meanwhile we see in the notes on this work at
Wikipedia: "most music-guide reviewers contend that a recording made of a
1947 radio broadcast of the opera, conducted with thrilling verve and
precision by Arturo Toscanini and featuring such solid singers as Herva
Nelli, Ramón Vinay and Giuseppe Valdengo, is musically (if not in terms
of sound quality) the best of these versions".
For the
restoration and remastering engineer tackling this recording today it is
the phrase in paratheses above which is in sore need of justified
removal. One discography of Toscanini lists sux separate releases of
this recording, and I'm reasonably confident that there are actually
more than this. Yet when I visited ardent Toscanini fan and collector
Christophe Pizzutti earlier this year to take temporary charge of a
large number of rare recordings for transfer and restoration, it was
this recording he repeatedly pressed me to work upon, convinced that my
XR remastering technique could finally reveal the full sonic
magnificence of this immortal performance.
And so, with sources
provided both by Christophe and by other collectors, I've endeavoured to
assemble the very best quality material from which to assemble what I
hope can be seen as a definitive recording of the two broadcasts (note
that some recordings switch between live and rehearsal material, others
include sections of severly reduced fidelity, none has had the benefit
of XR re-equalisation and the latest remastering techniques associated
with it).
The recording was made in the very end of the pre-tape
era, and would have been preserved over a number of acetate discs.
Fortunately these have been remarkably well-preserved in various
incarnations, and the results of careful selections of the best possible
sources and the magic of both XR remastering and Ambient Stereo
processing (direct mono is of course also available) makes a huge impact
on the final overall sound quality of the recording. This is one of
Toscanini's greatest masterpieces, and it's never sounded better.
Andrew Rose
-
VERDI - Otello
Ramón Vinay (Otello)
Herva Nelli (Desdemona)
Giuseppe Valdengo (Iago)
Virginio Assandri (Cassio)
Leslie Chabay (Roderigo)
Nicola Moscona (Lodovico)
Arthur Newman (Montàno)
Nan Merriman (Emilia)
The NBC Symphony Orchestra and Choruses
conducted by Arturo Toscanini
MusicWeb International Review - Recording of the Month
This is a performance which every lover of the opera has to have
This was one - or, more accurately, two - of the all-time
classic nights in American opera. Toscanini famously played the
cello
in the La Scala orchestra at the world
premiere of Otello and his authority in this work has to be acknowledged,
even by those who might not prefer his style. The merits of this performance
hardly need rehearsing: it has been reviewed many times before on this site.
Suffice it to say that Vinay’s Otello remains one of the great interpretations
of the role, heroic yet vulnerable, while Nelli’s Desdemona manages to
combine beauty, strength and vulnerability in miraculous fashion. I’ve
never been as convinced by Valdengo’s Iago, not least for his mistimed
entries in Acts 1 and 2 - can you imagine what Toscanini must have said to him
at the end - but he certainly has character to spare.
The real interest here is in the remastering. Pristine Audio has been doing fantastic
work recently breathing new life into agèd recordings that are well loved.
Their website is
well worth a look and they also offer downloads of fabulous quality. Andrew Rose
has managed to
achieve astonishing clarity with this issue. Yes, there are still occasional
hisses and crackles, but how could there not be in a recording of this age? He
has managed to, as it were, strip away the varnish that has accumulated in other
issues and there are plenty of things that are freshly audible here which may
well have passed the listener by before, such as the clarity of the big tuttis
in the storm scene, or the bubbling woodwinds at the third verse of Iago’s
drinking song. Nelli’s top notes are captured without a hint of strain
or interference, yet the passage at the beginning of Act 4 flows with openness
and not a hint of congestion. Rose has used “a number of sources from various
avid Toscanini collectors” - how mysterious! His aim was to find the best
recording of each section of the opera and then edit them together to produce
the finest possible version of the performance. Without doubt he has succeeded
mightily. To my ears at any rate it was impossible to hear the joins and the
whole performance flowed beautifully from one moment to the next. He finished
his note by saying “I am convinced that this release has succeeded in making
great sonic advances over all previous issues, both on LP and CD.” I certainly
haven’t heard any other version to make me disagree. As a fun little extra
we’re also given the original radio commentary and audience applause.
This is a performance which every lover of the opera has to have. Love him or
hate him, Toscanini has an unending ability to surprise: listen to the way he broadens
out the tempo for the climax of the storm yet speeds up for the conclusion
of the love duet, and the way he plays around with the textures of the Willow
Song is quite remarkable. Extraordinary, maybe: perverse, arguably: but effective?
Certainly. This, to my mind, is the clearest version of this performance that
you’re likely to find, so if you’re choosing between versions then
you can pick this one with confidence.
Simon Thompson