GMG Classical Music Forum

The Music Room => Opera and Vocal => Topic started by: knight66 on April 08, 2007, 01:09:23 PM

Title: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on April 08, 2007, 01:09:23 PM
I notice this release in July on DVD.

Berlioz - LES TROYENS ~ Jessye Norman, Tatiana Troyanos, Placido Domingo, Allan Monk, Paul Plishka; Fabrizio Melano; James Levine, Metropolitan Opera 1983 (DG)

Is anyone familiar with this performance? There are extracts on YouTube of what is probably the performance that will be issued.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RtHh313CI4&mode=related&search=

it looks good to me, I do think Norman's voice fits Berlioz well. It is a pity that her studio recordings of the two main scenes from Faust have never been issued.

Did anyone see this production? At the moment it looks like one I will buy when it appears.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: PerfectWagnerite on April 08, 2007, 02:04:37 PM
Looks interesting.

What's the alternative as far as DVDs go out there? I can't imagine there being a while lot of choices.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on April 08, 2007, 02:15:08 PM
There are several, but I have not taken the plunge. The newish Gardiner one has been much praised, but I saw the second half on TV and somehow it did not meet the epic aspects of the work. I like Susan Graham, but thought her a penny plain Dido. Amazon show four DVD versions.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_ss_d_h_/026-2800580-8030813?url=search-alias%3Ddvd&field-keywords=troyans

Mike

Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Wendell_E on April 08, 2007, 03:18:53 PM
The Met DVD was previously available on Pioneer, though I'm sure the new DG release will be even better.  I kept meaning to get the Pioneer release, if only for sentimental reasons, since I saw that production of Troyens that season with the same cast as the DVD on my first trip to New York in 1983.  So I'll probably get the new DG release.

I do have the Gardiner DVD, and love it.  I really prefer the Paris production to the Met's.  Susan Grahm does strike me as more All-American Girl than Cartaginian Queen, especially at the beginning, but by the end I'm won over.  Troyanos is wonderful in the role on the Met DVD, as are both of the (very different) Cassandres (Norman and Antonacci).


Levine does used the standard text, which I prefer, while Gardiner goes back to Berlioz' original plan for the ending (but with some cuts).  Otherwise they're both uncut.

There is a third DVD out there, which I've never seen, from the Salzburg festival with Polaski as Cassandre and Didon.  I hear it does have some cuts, particularly in the ballet music, which might not be a bad thing for some people, though I'd hate to lose any of that music.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on April 08, 2007, 04:16:03 PM
Thanks for that...yes, as usual Gardiner went for a recovery of some music no one had used for a century, if ever, and I did feel that it did not improve at all the admittedly rather weak final minutes.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: T-C on April 09, 2007, 12:10:39 AM
The Met 1983 production is a typical Met production: heavy period sets and costumes (lots of men in skirts...). From this point of view I vastly prefer the Gardiner 2003 Chatelet production. As for the singing: Norman and Troyanos are wonderful. Domingo, a singer that I value a lot, is not especially successful as Eneas. This role is a bit high for him and he himself had doubts whether he should sing it. But he is very good in the great act 4 love duet. The other roles are generally sung adequately.

For my taste, the Gardiner is first choice for Les Troyens on DVD even though I agree that the finale he chose is less effective. Second choice is the Salzburg 2000 Wernicke's production with the very impressive Deborah Polaski as both Dido and Cassandra. The Met is third choice. Too bad the Met did not film their 2003 production with the late Lorraine Hunt as Dido.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on April 09, 2007, 01:11:05 AM
Quote from: T-C on April 09, 2007, 12:10:39 AM

Too bad the Met did not film their 2003 production with the late Lorraine Hunt as Dido.


Hi TC good to see you. Yes, an opportunity now lost altogether. Though strange things do surface. After being told for many years that the only Callas live stage performance ever filmed was Tosca Act 2 from Covent Garden, yesterday I happened across a chunk of Act 2 from Paris. Odd that it replicates what was known to be available and a pity in a way.

But going back to the Met Troyens....being a sucker for Norman and Troyanos, I will probably give it a whirl. I just hope it is not as dramatically dead as their Don Carlo with Domingo.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: karlhenning on April 09, 2007, 04:09:25 AM
Maybe this is just fostering rumor, Mike . . . but is that the production of the Static Staging?
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Todd on April 09, 2007, 05:25:58 AM
I'm almost interested in this new DVD set, but then I just don't know since Levine is at the helm.  The other set (the 2000 set appears to be listed twice) doesn't really interest me.  No, I think Gardiner is the way to go for the AV experience, for Antonacci alone.  If anyone tries the Levine, do report back; I haven't heard a new Troyens in a couple years, and I'm getting itchy.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on April 09, 2007, 07:31:10 AM
Static Staging....I don't know what the press was like for the Levine production, so it may be a stand and deliver..which might be preferable to the wax-work wander around in impossible stiff costumes and deliver that plagues the Don Carlo.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Hector on April 13, 2007, 03:31:54 AM
Quote from: PerfectWagnerite on April 08, 2007, 02:04:37 PM
Looks interesting.

What's the alternative as far as DVDs go out there? I can't imagine there being a while lot of choices.

J. E. Gardiner at Chatelet.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Anne on April 13, 2007, 08:07:58 AM
I like the '83 Met version with Troyanos and Norman.  Their voices are good and their clothing is natural; they actually look like they are living in the days of Dido and Aeneas!  What a revelation!  I also like the singing better than that in the Gardner version.

Just my opinion.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: karlhenning on April 13, 2007, 08:15:36 AM
What are your impressions of the staging, Anne?
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Anne on April 13, 2007, 09:01:47 AM
Quote from: karlhenning on April 13, 2007, 08:15:36 AM
What are your impressions of the staging, Anne?

I liked it.  The Trojan horse is on stage all the time in the first part.  It hovers ominously over all and, I think, provides support for the truth of Cassandra's (she who was condemned to always foretell the future but that no one would believe her) warning but at the same time illustrates the frustration and agony of her punishment.*

Throughout, the sets were helpful to the viewer, especially anyone unfamiliar with the original story of Aeneas, Dido and Cassandra.  Berlioz loved that type of setting, especially the classics.  The love scene looked like a love scene at night in that time frame (Dido reclines on a "sofa" with Aeneas standing/kneeling close beside her .  The music from that scene is so beautiful.  This was not a minimalist setting.  Money had definitely been spent to aid the viewer's comprehension.  I hope this was what you wanted.

*  I forget the details but she had offended Zeus or one of the gods prior to this story and her fortelling the future but no one believing it was her punishment.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: PerfectWagnerite on April 17, 2007, 08:06:52 AM
Back to CD versions of this opera: are there other recordings out there by big name labels other than Davis(twice) and Dutoit? Why are there so few CD versions of this work. I would think nowadays its length is not really an issue, afterall there must be at least a dozen recordings of Tristan or Walkuere out there and those operas are even longer.

As good as the two Davis versions are out there, it is missing some orchestral opulence. Only if we can get a more weighty orchestra like the VPO or Concertgebouw to record this piece, that emphasize very ff and color of the score...
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Wendell_E on April 18, 2007, 12:30:26 PM
Quote from: PerfectWagnerite on April 17, 2007, 08:06:52 AM
Back to CD versions of this opera: are there other recordings out there by big name labels other than Davis(twice) and Dutoit? Why are there so few CD versions of this work. I would think nowadays its length is not really an issue, afterall there must be at least a dozen recordings of Tristan or Walkuere out there and those operas are even longer.

Yeah, those are the only big-name-label recordings.  As for the lack of recordings, I think that's partially due to the lack of performances of the opera.  Operabase* only lists 10 upcoming performances at two theatres (Deutsche Oper am Rhein and Le Grand Théâtre de Genève).  In contrast, it lists 49 Walküres at 17 theatres and 53 Tristans at 12 theatres. 

It's a shame EMI just recorded a two-disc set of excerpts with Crespin and Prêtre, instead of the whole thing.  I know at one time I read that Barenboim was supposed to record the opera as part of his DG Berlioz cycle, but that never happened (that's probably less of a shame, though).

*I know a lot of performances apparently aren't on Operabase's radar, so I also checked at The Hector Berlioz Website (http://www.hberlioz.com/), which agrees, but also mentions the upcoming Boston Symphony Orchestra concert performances.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Todd on April 18, 2007, 12:43:00 PM
Quote from: PerfectWagnerite on April 17, 2007, 08:06:52 AMBack to CD versions of this opera: are there other recordings out there by big name labels other than Davis(twice) and Dutoit?


It's just not an especially popular opera, and given the large cast, it probably costs a lot to produce.  Of the three versions you mention, Davis I & II are superior to Dutout, though the sound of the Dutoit is superb.

If you can stand poor-ish sound, there's an Italian language, cut version with Rafael Kubelik conducting on Myto (and other labels) that has Mario del Monaco as Aeneas.  I'm hoping that the new Royal Opera series reissues Kubelik's earlier, English language recording as well.  There's also a Georges Pretre live set on a Opera d'Oro, and an old Beecham recording supposedly exists somewhere, too.  Perhaps a new recording will be forth-coming in the future, but I'll bet all will be DVDs.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: PerfectWagnerite on April 21, 2007, 11:11:39 AM
Thanks for your replies Todd and Wendell. As large a cast as Les Troyens requires, it doesn't SEEM to be terribly difficult to record. The principles do not sing together. Aside from the large chorus( which I guess is a big problem) it actually looks manageable.

One thing that amazes me about Les Troyens is that despite its length and size, it is actually for the most part very lightly scored. The duets between Cassandre and Chorebus, and Aeneus and Dido are so light instrumentally they practically sound like Mendelssohn. Even the loud passages are not nearly as loud as Wagner or late Verdi.

It is really ashamed, I don't think either of the Davis, or Dutoit is an ideal recording...
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: mjwal on October 08, 2007, 07:42:33 AM
There's also a Scherchen recording of Les Troyens à Carthage, but I've never heard it unfortunately. A pity Gielen's great performance - with a black Dido - at the Frankfurt opera in the 70s was not recorded.
Title: Re: Les Troyens
Post by: karlhenning on May 03, 2008, 07:02:18 AM
Were at Symphony Hall last night for Part II of Les Troyens.  A few quarrels with the singers notwithstanding, it was a marvelous performance and rich experience.

Jimmy done it again  8)
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Tsaraslondon on May 03, 2008, 11:39:39 AM
Quote from: PerfectWagnerite on April 17, 2007, 08:06:52 AM


As good as the two Davis versions are out there, it is missing some orchestral opulence. Only if we can get a more weighty orchestra like the VPO or Concertgebouw to record this piece, that emphasize very ff and color of the score...

... though I'm not sure if orchestral opulence is what I would want in this opera. We should remember that the opera was written in the 1850s, and, though very much a Romantic work, Berlioz was heavily influenced by the operas of Gluck, whom he admired enormously. I actually like the somewhat lean, spare textures that the Royal Opera Houes Orchestra and the LSO provide in Davis's two recordings. I'm sure that any lack of opulence was intentional on Davis's part. Certainly, the playing of the LSO, in particular is very impressive. Unfortunately, with the exception of Petra Lang, I would say the singers on the earlier performance are preferable to the ones on the latter, so both recordings are really essential listening.



Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on May 03, 2008, 11:47:30 AM
Yes, I agree with this. I have the Met DVD, the woodwind become submerged in the luxury of the strings. Berlioz wrote beautifully for the woodwind section. I have both Davis versions and an abridged version conducted by Pretre with Horne, Gedda and Verrett. I do like it, but Davis I feel has the superior recordings. I got rid of the Dutiot; it has a very disappointing Dido.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Tsaraslondon on May 03, 2008, 11:48:28 AM
Staying with recordings, didn't I read somewhere that Ponto were going to release a recording of one of the Scottish Opera performances with Janet Baker as Dido and Helga Dernesch as Cassandre? Though, sung in English, it's something I would love to get hold of. Dame Janet's recording of the final scene for EMI is one of the greatest Berlioz recordings of all times, and it is a continual cause for regret that she did not appear on the Philips recording, however good Veasey is. A complete performance from her would be treasure indeed.

Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on May 03, 2008, 11:58:17 AM
Yes, you read it from me. The co responded to an enquiry of mine and said it was in preparation. That was a year ago and nothing has materialised. I agree, it would make for a great issue. I saw the production and musically, it worked fantastically well.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Ciel_Rouge on June 28, 2009, 04:05:29 PM
I definitely like this one:

http://www.amazon.com/Berlioz-Cassettes-Performer-Elizabeth-Bainbridge/dp/B002BPXIYW/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&s=miscellaneous&qid=1246233583&sr=8-5

(http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51PS12F40HL._SL500_AA240_.jpg)

An interesting take on Dido/Aeneas by the way - having listened to Dido and Aeneas by Purcell :)
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: ritter on November 22, 2017, 09:42:09 AM
mega-bump  ;)

[asin]B0749LRN1C[/asin]

The new recording of Les Troyens under John Nelson (on Erato) gets a glowing 5-star review from Andrew Clements in The Guardian:

"Though it is one of the landmarks in 19th-century French music, and one of the grandest of all grand operas, new versions of Les Troyens, Berlioz's vast Virgilian epic, come along all too rarely. John Nelson's magnificent recording, based on a pair of concert performances he conducted in Strasbourg earlier this year, is the first complete version to appear on disc since Colin Davis's live recording with the London Symphony Orchestra in 2001.

Davis was a peerless Berlioz conductor, and his pioneering earlier recording of the opera, released by Philips in 1970, has been the benchmark for almost half a century. It's a measure of the achievement of Nelson and his carefully assembled cast that their performance easily stands comparison with that classic, and in some respects surpasses it. From the very opening of the four-hour work – with a thrilling first salvo by the combined choruses of the Strasbourg and Karlsruhe operas as well as the Strasbourg Philharmonic's own choir, answered by Marie-Nicole Lemieux's electrifying delivery of Cassandra's first warning – Nelson never allows the dramatic pace to slacken, which is no mean achievement in itself in a work that even its greatest admirers would admit has occasional longueurs.

If Lemieux's performance dominates the first two acts, The Siege of Troy, then it's Joyce DiDonato's Dido who hogs the spotlight for the rest of the opera – the three acts that make up The Trojans at Carthage. Some might find her singing mannered and over-stylised at times, but its dramatic commitment is undeniable, and Dido's final aria is a tremendous emotional tour de force.

She's well matched also to Michael Spyres' Aeneas, who never tries to be the larger-than-life hero that the great Jon Vickers presented in the earlier Davis recording but offers a much more human and humane figure, with singing that never loses its elegance and stylish flexibility.

The smaller roles – Stéphane Degout's Chorebus, Hanna Hipp's Anna, Marianne Crebassa's Ascanio, especially – are equally idiomatic, every one of them cast with immense care, and the Strasbourg orchestra plays wonderfully for Nelson, if not quite as incisively as the LSO does on Davis's two recordings. Overall, though, this is now unquestionably the version of Berlioz's masterpiece to have at home".


https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/nov/22/berlioz-les-troyens-cd-review-john-nelson-joyce-didonato
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: mc ukrneal on November 22, 2017, 09:53:43 AM
Quote from: ritter on November 22, 2017, 09:42:09 AM
mega-bump  ;)

[asin]B0749LRN1C[/asin]

The new recording of Les Troyens under John Nelson (on Erato) gets a glowing 5-star review from Andrew Clements in The Guardian:

"Though it is one of the landmarks in 19th-century French music, and one of the grandest of all grand operas, new versions of Les Troyens, Berlioz’s vast Virgilian epic, come along all too rarely. John Nelson’s magnificent recording, based on a pair of concert performances he conducted in Strasbourg earlier this year, is the first complete version to appear on disc since Colin Davis’s live recording with the London Symphony Orchestra in 2001.

Davis was a peerless Berlioz conductor, and his pioneering earlier recording of the opera, released by Philips in 1970, has been the benchmark for almost half a century. It’s a measure of the achievement of Nelson and his carefully assembled cast that their performance easily stands comparison with that classic, and in some respects surpasses it. From the very opening of the four-hour work – with a thrilling first salvo by the combined choruses of the Strasbourg and Karlsruhe operas as well as the Strasbourg Philharmonic’s own choir, answered by Marie-Nicole Lemieux’s electrifying delivery of Cassandra’s first warning – Nelson never allows the dramatic pace to slacken, which is no mean achievement in itself in a work that even its greatest admirers would admit has occasional longueurs.

If Lemieux’s performance dominates the first two acts, The Siege of Troy, then it’s Joyce DiDonato’s Dido who hogs the spotlight for the rest of the opera – the three acts that make up The Trojans at Carthage. Some might find her singing mannered and over-stylised at times, but its dramatic commitment is undeniable, and Dido’s final aria is a tremendous emotional tour de force.

She’s well matched also to Michael Spyres’ Aeneas, who never tries to be the larger-than-life hero that the great Jon Vickers presented in the earlier Davis recording but offers a much more human and humane figure, with singing that never loses its elegance and stylish flexibility.

The smaller roles – Stéphane Degout’s Chorebus, Hanna Hipp’s Anna, Marianne Crebassa’s Ascanio, especially – are equally idiomatic, every one of them cast with immense care, and the Strasbourg orchestra plays wonderfully for Nelson, if not quite as incisively as the LSO does on Davis’s two recordings. Overall, though, this is now unquestionably the version of Berlioz’s masterpiece to have at home".


https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/nov/22/berlioz-les-troyens-cd-review-john-nelson-joyce-didonato
oooh! Sounds promising!
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Todd on November 22, 2017, 10:05:30 AM
Quote from: ritter on November 22, 2017, 09:42:09 AMOverall, though, this is now unquestionably the version of Berlioz's masterpiece to have at home.


A bold statement.  I will have to listen for myself.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Tsaraslondon on November 22, 2017, 11:44:30 AM
Quote from: ritter on November 22, 2017, 09:42:09 AM
mega-bump  ;)

[asin]B0749LRN1C[/asin]

The new recording of Les Troyens under John Nelson (on Erato) gets a glowing 5-star review from Andrew Clements in The Guardian:

and the Strasbourg orchestra plays wonderfully for Nelson, if not quite as incisively as the LSO does on Davis's two recordings. Overall, though, this is now unquestionably the version of Berlioz's masterpiece to have at home".[/i][/color]

https://www.theguardian.com/music/2017/nov/22/berlioz-les-troyens-cd-review-john-nelson-joyce-didonato

I feel constrained to point out that the orchestra on the first of Davis's recordings of the opera (still my preference of the two, btw) is the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.

That said, I'm very interested to hear this version too. Les Troyens is one of my all time favourite operas.

Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: springrite on November 22, 2017, 07:29:31 PM
I saw the Levine METS production in the 80's and liked it very much, although it was not exactly perfect for Domingo. I do prefer historic staging and costumes for such opera. Interestingly, I am teaching The Iliad right now to high school students in China right now. Wish I have this DVD as the modern staging from the DVD I do have does not work for me!

PS: I also went to the LA Opera production with Lakes as Aeneas.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on November 24, 2017, 11:28:52 AM
I have had this set on pre-order for months. I got notification that it would arrive today, it did not. Humph.

I have now read four detailed reviews and there is nothng but praise for the set.

Mouth watering, fingers drumming.

Mike
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Spineur on November 24, 2017, 11:41:29 AM
Excellent review on forumopera

https://www.forumopera.com/les-troyens-o-gloire-des-troyens (https://www.forumopera.com/les-troyens-o-gloire-des-troyens)

Michael Spyres as Enée got praises from everywhere.  I said elswere that the french repertoire suited him like a velvet glove.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Tsaraslondon on November 25, 2017, 04:05:12 AM
Quote from: Spineur on November 24, 2017, 11:41:29 AM
Excellent review on forumopera

https://www.forumopera.com/les-troyens-o-gloire-des-troyens (https://www.forumopera.com/les-troyens-o-gloire-des-troyens)

Michael Spyres as Enée got praises from everywhere.  I said elswere that the french repertoire suited him like a velvet glove.

I heard him sing Berlioz's Faust at the proms this year under Gardiner, and he was very fine. I didn't immediately think of him as a natural for Aeneas, though. I would have thought the voce too light. Still very interested t hear the set though.

Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: mc ukrneal on November 25, 2017, 04:42:31 PM
I just came across this one. Intrigued by the singers (and generally positive reviews on Amazon), curious if anyone here is familiar with it?
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41N0kiNcfKL.jpg)
https://www.amazon.com/Berlioz-Les-Troyens-James-Levine-Celebrating-40-Years-at-the-Met/dp/B0064TEEBC/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_txt?ie=UTF8&coliid=I1EESHVYJIFN5S&colid=1KZWGAWHU2H1 (https://www.amazon.com/Berlioz-Les-Troyens-James-Levine-Celebrating-40-Years-at-the-Met/dp/B0064TEEBC/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_txt?ie=UTF8&coliid=I1EESHVYJIFN5S&colid=1KZWGAWHU2H1)
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Todd on November 25, 2017, 04:59:12 PM
Quote from: mc ukrneal on November 25, 2017, 04:42:31 PM
I just came across this one. Intrigued by the singers (and generally positive reviews on Amazon), curious if anyone here is familiar with it?


Yes.  All three main roles are well cast, and Lieberson is predictably excellent.  The Met plays well, tempi are generally just fine, and sound is good enough if not great.  I wouldn't pay $70 for a copy, though.
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: Tsaraslondon on November 26, 2017, 02:02:41 AM
Quote from: mc ukrneal on November 25, 2017, 04:42:31 PM
I just came across this one. Intrigued by the singers (and generally positive reviews on Amazon), curious if anyone here is familiar with it?
(https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/41N0kiNcfKL.jpg)
https://www.amazon.com/Berlioz-Les-Troyens-James-Levine-Celebrating-40-Years-at-the-Met/dp/B0064TEEBC/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_txt?ie=UTF8&coliid=I1EESHVYJIFN5S&colid=1KZWGAWHU2H1 (https://www.amazon.com/Berlioz-Les-Troyens-James-Levine-Celebrating-40-Years-at-the-Met/dp/B0064TEEBC/ref=cm_cr_dp_d_rvw_txt?ie=UTF8&coliid=I1EESHVYJIFN5S&colid=1KZWGAWHU2H1)


Oooh! No I didn't know this one, and I would love to hear Hunt Lieberson sing Didon. It doesn't appear to be available on the UK site and is pretty expensive on the US one.

Over my budget, unfortunately.


Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: mc ukrneal on November 26, 2017, 03:55:33 PM
Quote from: Tsaraslondon on November 26, 2017, 02:02:41 AM

Oooh! No I didn't know this one, and I would love to hear Hunt Lieberson sing Didon. It doesn't appear to be available on the UK site and is pretty expensive on the US one.

Over my budget, unfortunately.



I did find that it is in a Levine set for $100. So if some of the other operas are of interest, perhaps not a bad deal....
https://www.metoperashop.org/shop/james-levine-celebrating-40-years-at-the-met-cd-4113 (https://www.metoperashop.org/shop/james-levine-celebrating-40-years-at-the-met-cd-4113)
Title: Re: LES TROYENS
Post by: knight66 on November 27, 2017, 01:36:39 AM
At one point the set was available on its own. But the Met shop would not post it abroad. I was in NY two years ago and went to the Met shop, no, it was no longer stocked. When I have heard Levine in Berlioz the woodwind has been much too submerged into the textures, however, I was happy to accept that possibility to get hold of Hunt Lieberson as Dido. Perhaps at some time, eventually.

I am very much enjoying the new set. So far I have had time to listen and follow the libretto for the first two discs. I like the lighter voiced Aneas, I just have to get the voice of Vickers out of my head. I do think that Lemieux is pushed as Cassandra and the voice over vibrant as a result. However she is a huge improvement on Lindholm. I enjoy all that the conductor is offering and am looking forward to the second half of the set.

Mike