Deliver to EGYPT
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It was with Verdi that the leading tenor of our time, Jonas Kaufmann, made his international breakthrough in 2006 when he sang Alfredo Germont in La Traviata at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. And for Kaufmann, the Verdi bicentenary in 2013 will be dominated by performances of works by the great Italian opera composer, including his debut album for Sony Classical, The Verdi Album. Recorded with Pier Giorgio Morandi conducting the Orchestra dell'Opera di Parma, this new album features twelve of Verdi's greatest tenor hits, eleven of which are recorded for the first time by Kaufmann. His choice of arias demonstrates the remarkable breadth of Kaufmann's musical versatility and expression.
J**Z
Great Kaufmann
The Wagner-Decca album of Jonas Kaufmann has just won the Gramophone Award 2013, proposing a new standard of quality for lyrical recitals: the highest musical level, interpretive contribution and novelty, expressed therein in the original version of Lohengrin's farewell and in the "Wesendonck Lieder" cycle, singing as tenor on this occasion. The German artist now begins his career in a new record label, Sony, and chooses for it a tribute to Giuseppe Verdi, composer whose bicentennial is being celebrated and who lives at the core of the heart of opera fans.A magnificent composer who feels great, vibrant and uneven in titles such as "Nabucco" or "I Lombardi"; who reaches heights in "Rigoletto", "La Traviata", "Un ballo in maschera " and "Othello", and who even becomes intellectual and affected in "Falstaff". Baritone Leo Nucci, talking about the musician from Roncole, said in 1995 that "the day that Giuseppe Giacomini, Nicola Martinucci and Lando Bartolini no longer sing, this is over. I think that the Italian tradition with those voices is over, because Pavarotti sings everything, but he is not a singer, he is a character who is beyond the world of opera."To some extent, his dire prophesy has been fulfilled, to the point that La Scala opens on 7 December with a "Traviata" performed by a German soprano, Diama Damrau, and a Polish tenor, Piotr Beczala. Both are extraordinary, but are they Verdian? Beczala himself said in 2012: "Verdi's roles for tenors are complicated and musically complex. "Verdi's roles for babies', such as Alfredo or the Duke, which are the ones I sing, are the introduction to "adult" roles, such as Gustavo, Don Carlo, Manrico, Radames or, at the end of the line, ¡Othello!". Damrau, trained in Mozart and Handel, sang a great Gilda ("Rigoletto") and is an acclaimed Violetta Valery, but it is hard to think of her performing other great Verdian heroines.Jonas Kaufmann (1969), after a career that started in 1992 (his is not a last minute career, as some people think), became famous as Alfredo, in a "Traviata" production of the New York Metropolitan in 2006, with Angela Gheorghiu. "When I came out on stage to receive the applause, I realized that something had happened," he remembers. Since then, his journey has reached unforeseen heights with "Werther" (Massenet), "Fidelio" (Beethoven) and "Lohengrin" (Wagner), as also with other Verdis. Above all with "Don Carlo", acclaimed in Zurich, London, Munich and, recently, in Salzburg.This album, available from September 17, confirms the standard of the Wagner album and sheds light on the future of the great Verdian singing. Everything is taken care of, from the design and photographs to the choice of repertoire and the names on the cast: Kaufmann; expert Pier Giorgio Morandi conducting the Orchestra of the Parma Opera; the Piacenza Municipal Theatre Chorus, and baritone Franco Vassallo, intervening in "Don Carlo" and "Othello".The choice of "La donna è mobile" of the unscrupulous Duke of "Rigoletto", who opens fire, a role which the tenor sang with great success in Zurich with Leo Nucci in 2005, sounds like a farewell. But Kaufmann hopes this is not so because he is determined to continue alternating lighter roles like this one with others that require another density. "In middle of the functions of 'Trovatore' in Munich I had to replace the tenor scheduled to sing 'Lohengrin', and it gave me great pleasure to feel that my singing, coming from Verdi, seemed softer, more liquid and closer to the Italian characteristics that Wagner expected for his opera", he says. The record does not include Alfredo, but almost all the others are there: Riccardo, Manrico, Rodolfo, Gabriele, Carlo, Alvaro, Othello and even Macduff.Jonas Kaufmann sets out to introduce something different in each character, always mastering his "messa di voce", his "pianissimo" and a burning dark baritone color, which toughens interpretations that are never monochrome. On the contrary, in each one of his portrayals, the hero shows ardor and vulnerability, passion and despondency.He shines in the arias of "Un ballo in maschera" and Riccardo will surely be a great role in his career, because he has the lightness and charm for "Di' tu se fedele", and is a real smothered volcano in "Ma se m'è forza perderti". "Celeste Aida" is pure lyricism (with final sfumando) and desire after a vibrant "Se quel guerrier io fossi!", accordingly emphasized. His "Ah! si, ben mio" exudes sweetness and anticipates the coming sorrow, but then charges with the tenor's cabaletta par excellence, "Di quella pira", high C included! Rodolfo's aria, "Quando le sere al placido", from "Luisa Miller" could not be absent, anger leading to pain and then to angelic remembrance in "lo sguardo innamorato" and "t'amo, dicea". Fury fills "O inferno! Amelia qui", of "Simon Boccanegra", which precedes his lovely "Don Carlo", a title of which he should make a complete recording in French and Italian; Franco Vasallo is Rodrigo de Posa in the duet that sets aflame the theaters of the world, "Dio nell'alma infondere". "La Forza del Destino" became part of his repertoire in December and here is the scene and aria from the spinto Don Alvaro of Act III, "La vita è inferno all'infelice... O tu, che in seno agli angeli", of such a complex structure and jumping all over the staff. Another Carlo is added, quite unknown, that Kaufmann sang in 2005: the Carlo from "I Masnadieri", "rol di forza" which takes him from high to low notes in the demanding "Destatevi, o pietre! ... Giuri ognun questo canuto". "Othello" is to be staged in a couple of years; the previews are "Dio ! Mi potebi scagliar" --Kaufmann is "dolcissimo" in "l'anima acqueto" and wildly aristocratic in "Ah! Dannazione! Pria confessi il delitto e poscia muoia!"-- and "Niun mi tema", where right from the start the Moor seems out of the world, as if he were meditating on his tragedy: "Otello fu" is an ascertaining for himself, not for others. The de luxe album adds "Ah, la paterna mano" of "Macbeth" which after all the foregoing, seems child's play.It's no coincidence that on August 25 of this year, Plácido Domingo, when asked by The Telegraph who was going to be the next great tenor, replied: "Oh, it is already Jonas Kaufmann".
H**T
Another triumph from a one-of-a-kind tenor
Jonas Kaufmman is modeling his career as the all-purpose tenor in the mold of Placido Domingo. Those of us praying for a great Wagner tenor will have to share oxygen with equally desperate opera lovers who want a great Verdi tenor, verismo tenor, and French tenor. It's fascinating how well Kaufmann fits the bill. You wouldn't think at first listen that his dark, baritonal tone could ring out with Italianate squillo, for example, but it does. It seem like superfluous blessings that he is intelligent, highly musical, an accomplished stage actor - and thin.For his debut album on Sony, having jumped from Decca (perhaps with a guarantee of complete opera recordings?), the celebrated tenor, now in his mid-forties, gives us some very familiar Verdi arias from Rigoletto to Otello, with the exception of one rarity from I Masnadieri. The tag of "self-recommending" applies. Set against his superb verismo and Wagner recitals, however, this one is slightly inferior because of the ordinary conducting by Pier Giorgio Morandi, a routinier who at times pulls back the reins on his soloist. But even when the pacing becomes lackluster, Kaufmann throws himself into the music with controlled abandon - clearly he wants to establish his cred as a great Verdi singer, even though so far he has sung only seven roles on stage, mostly in Don Carlo and Traviata. This summer saw an excellent Trovatore in Munich.As heard at the Met, where every appearance has been a triumph, Kaufmann's voice isn't large on the order of Vickers or Del Monaco, but more in line with Domingo's. If he eventually sings Otello, he will succeed as much on artistry as on sheer volume - again like Domingo - and this season's Parsifal showed how intelligently Kaufmann already marshals his forces in a very taxing opera. He's not afraid to sing softly and wait for the big moments to ring out.All-purpose tenors always have decided strengths and relative weaknesses. For me, Kaufmann doesn't sound like the rakish Duke in 'La donna e mobile,' but the intrinsic soulfulness in his delivery makes him perfect for Don Carlo, Alvaro, Manrico, and Otello. If I had to choose, the very best thing here is the long aria from Forza del Destino with clarinet obligato, a wonderful display of Kaufmann's messa di voce, although the numbers from Trovatore are so secure and confident that they come as a breath of fresh air after the strained pushing from lyric tenors like Ramon Vargas and Marcelo Alvarez, who followed Carreras's example to boost themselves into bigger heroic Verdi roles.Kaufmann is the real thing, a robust, charismatic dramatic tenor who can live comfortably in Verdi's fervent melodramatic world of outsized passion and suffering. This natural fit, far more than any reservations about sounding "Italian" enough, is what makes him invaluable on the international opera scene. He's one of a kind, offering no quarter to the great tenors of the golden age.
F**C
excellent
great quality of recordings, came on time, and that voice is perfection
R**M
I Don't See How You Can't Love This Guy
For starters - anyone whose read my music reviews knows that I'm not a big fan of recital albums. So it's interesting to me that two of my recent favorites are recital albums by Jonas Kaufmann - his Wagner album and this one.I've read the negative reviews of this album that have been posted here, and I must conclude that either I'm missing something (always a possibility) or the negative reviews are just wrong. Is every aria perfect? No. Does he bring the same level of involvement to every track? No. But some are damn near perfect, and in some cases he's so invested in the character that it was as if I was hearing an aria for the first time. I found some early tracks from Rigoletto and Aïda a bit stiff - though well sung - but his Don Carlo and his Otello made me ache to hear him in the complete work. Those last two are the standouts from my point of view, but there are many others as well - such as Un Ballo in Maschera.I've heard Kaufmann sing so many different works of so many different types so magnificently that it seems to me that he can do no wrong. From my possibly biased perspective, this recording validates my view. Get it and you'll want to listen to it often. At least until he records a complete Don Carlo or Otello.
T**R
Outstanding - Past, Present and the Future
A fabulous start for Jonas Kaufmann in his association with Sony, not only does it include tracks of his current roles but also ones from his past and reputedly ones he is planning to sing in the near future.Starting with track one from his past repertoire - "La donna è mobile" which is sung with such power, control and beauty and towards the end we have the Otello which is one of his future roles and gives a glimpse of the extraordinary performances to come, this is the role meant for him, his use of drama and dark undertones as he fills the speakers with an interpretation of opera 'tragedy' that is beyond anyone else singing today (even Domingo IMHO)If you need any further proof of why Kaufmann is so loved by his fans then just listen to the dynamic range and control of his voice when singing `Celeste Aida', something most will be familiar with, but just listen to the last note....wow!We have had some superb releases this year from Kaufmann, Calleja and some not so good, Verdi - Netrebko (Anna what were you thinking) this recording reinforces Jonas Kaufmann's position as probably the greatest Tenor of his generation and one who has all the possibility of exceeding the stratospheric heights reached by Placido Domingo. We are very lucky that Joseph Calleja is just a few years behind and nipping at his heels.Amazon Cloud/Mp3 vs CD======================If you are thinking of buying this album on MP3 only then I would reconsider. By buying the CD you get a free MP3 version on your cloud player which you can download. However the difference is this, the Cloud player Mp3 version is 320kbs but the CD version is 1440kbs and of much higher quality. This is especially true when comparing playback from a HiFi via headphones. Buy the CD then rip it yourself at a higher bit rate than amazon provide.
C**A
A must after Parsifal!
After watching Jonas Kaufman in Parsifal which ran for many hours I am one of his biggest fans. I have come to Opera late in life and I am swept away by Verdi's music. The album starts with music from Rigoletto which is my favourite Verdi opera because it is so tragic....the idea that a loving father could be responsible (by mistake) for the death of his much adored daughter then continues with other amazing arias from Aida, Don Carlo and Otello. Highly recommended.
J**H
Jonas and Guiseppe - a powerful combination !
I have most of Jonas Kaufmann's CDs and love them all, though I think my favourite is still the 'Romantic Arias'. I re-ordered this CD, having already bought it when it first appeared, because I had inadvertently left the disc in a friend's player (as it turned out later !) and just couldn't live without it ! That gives you an idea of how much I appreciate Jonas - his voice has a quality rare in tenors, an incomparable ability to transmit emotion that reaches the depths of the human psyche. Not only that but an intelligence par excellence along with a stage presence that totally engages his audience. This selection of arias documents Jonas' talents at this stage in his career but is also an outstanding tribute to the composer's genius to mark the 200th anniversary of his birth.
B**S
Reviews not required
Just the number one tenor of the moment. Actually some of the stock numbers -- La Donna e Mobile -- are ordinary but the second half of the disc where Kaufman's dramatic baritonal voice takes over is thrilling.
C**E
A very special new tenor
Wonderful singer and marvellous pieces of music
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منذ أسبوعين
منذ شهرين