Bellini: La Sonnambula - Scotto, Burrows, Robinson, Gomez, Begg; Cillario. London, 1971

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Renata Scotto was one of the sopranos to run with the Bel Canto revival of the 50s and 60s.  Here she brings her talents to La Sonnambula.  She sings the part with assurance and musical sensitivity.   She is joined by the English tenor Stuart Burrows as Elivino.  Carlo Felice Cillario leads the performance.

OD 10156-2

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3.3 Based on 3 Reviews
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DR
01/14/2025
David R.
United States

Excellent Performance in Excellent Sound!

La Sonnambula had not been performed often at the Royal Opera when this performance was recorded. Sutherland had made a big impact a decade earlier, but Scotto (although known for the role of Amina) had yet to sing it for the Royal Opera. She is sensational. Her ability to fuse the bel canto line with a heightened interpretation of the text are second to none and I'm including Callas in that. Other singers may make a prettier sound or have more ringing high notes, but Scotto's supremacy in bel canto is displayed in every scene here. Her colleagues are dependable. Welsh tenor Burrows had a solid top up to at least high C and he sings handsomely without the tremolo that began to invade his tone a few years later. I would've preferred him to sing the top lines in the duets as the composer wrote them, but that might've made the role too high for him. Robinson always sang well and here with excellent diction he makes something of a role that often goes for nothing. Gomez is a good Lisa (she gets a verse of her often cut aria in the last act) and Begg brings some backbone to Teresa. Cillario makes fewer cuts than usual. The audience remains silent after Scotto's heartbreaking "Ah, non credea", but explodes at the end of the opera. Excellent broadcast sound makes this a winning set for everyone. All Scotto fans should have this.

M
05/12/2023
Mark

shoddy documentation

Not even for a well-known opera in Italian are track names provided, just "Track 01" etc. So there is no good way to navigate to specific arias. This is so frustrating and time-consuming, having to add my own track names via iTunes.

R
01/24/2014
Robert

Robert

Stewart Burrows was a wonderful lyric tenor, but he was no more English than for instance Pavarotti or Melchior.He was WELSH and I trust still is, though his great days of singing are I fear well into the past tense.