Verdi - Otello - James McCracken, Gwyneth Jones, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Ambrosian Opera Chorus. New Philharmonia Orchestra, conducted by Sir John Barbirolli.

by Giuseppe Verdi

Other authorsGwyneth Jones (Soprano), John McCarthy (Chorus Master), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Baritone), John Barbirolli (Conductor), James McCracken (Tenor), Leonardo Monreale (Bass), The Ambrosian Opera Chorus (Chorus), Alfredo Giacomotti (Bass), Piero de Palma (Tenor), The New Philharmonia Orchestra (Orchestra), Anna di Stasio (Mezzo-Soprano)5 more, Glynne Thomas (Tenor), Florindo Barbirolli Andreolli, John (Tenor), Bruno Pizzi (Assistant Chorus Master), Children's Chorus from Upton House School & Hammersmith County School (Childrens' Chorus), Jean Povey (Choral Trainer)
Phono record sound recording, 1969

Status

Available

Call number

R782.1 VER OT 1969

DDC/MDS

R782.1 VER OT 1969

Genres

Collection

Publication

New York, NY: Angel Records - SCL 3742. [1969]

Description

Otello: The Background -- Otello: Drama and Music -- Verdi, Shakespeare and the Italian audience -- Thematic Guide -- Otello: Libretto -- Act 1 -- Act 2 -- Act 3 -- Act 4 -- The Paris Revision -- Discography -- Bibliography Winton Dean relates how Otello came into being as much because of the persistence of Verdi's publisher as of the composer's lifelong passion for Shakespeare, and the collaboration of the brilliant poet Arrigo Boito. Benedict Sarnaker argues that this magnificent large-scale opera rivals Shakespeare in intensity and profundity. William Weaver's lively review of Shakespeare on the Italian stage in the last century enables us to make a wholly fresh appraisal of Verdi's stature as a dramatist. The libretto itself is a masterpiece, and Andrew Porter has also translated the third-act revision which Verdi came to prefer and which has not been performed outside France before the 1981 ENO production… (more)

Language

Similar in this library

Page: 0.5156 seconds