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L'Amore Dei Fre Re
Montemezzi, Moffo, Domingo
L'Amore Dei Fre Re
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (12) - Disc #2


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Montemezzi, Moffo, Domingo, Santi, Lso
Title: L'Amore Dei Fre Re
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: RCA
Release Date: 8/25/1998
Genre: Classical
Styles: Opera & Classical Vocal, Historical Periods, Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 743215016625
 

CD Reviews

Pelleas and Tristan in a blender - in Italian
Julian Grant | London, Beijing, New York | 03/09/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Though Italian opera was very much in decline by 1914, when this opera was premiered, this work has a compelling and individual flavour, robust and decadent all at once, that is certainly worth experiencing. The story, set in 10th century Italy, concerns Fiora (Anna Moffo) , who is having an affair with the neighbouring Prince Avito (Domingo) under the eyes of her suspicious but blind father-in-law (Cesare Siepi) who is anxious for the honour of his son, Manfredo (Pablo Elvira) who is unaware that his wife is misbehaving. The musical characterization is compelling, Archibaldo has a simple but stumbling motif that portrays his groping attempts to shadow Fiora and catch her out, and the music given to the lovers (like "Tristan und Isolde", the second act is given over to an extended love-duet) is ecstatic, very sensuous and gorgeously scored. Montemezzi writes symphonically and very fluently, far more assured and inspired than his contemporaries Mascagni and Leoncavallo. The work is let down by a rather perfunctory conclusion to the last act, but this performance has such pace, superior orchestral playing and exciting singing as to minimize this. Anna Moffo is in sumptuous voice and really points the text, her first word "ritorniamo" (let us return) upon exiting her bedroom to escort her lover off the premises, leaves no doubt as to what went on behind those drapes. Siepi, as blind King Archibaldo, possibly his last recording, gives a powerhouse performance that leaps out of the speakers. Domingo sings with customary burnished tone and Pablo Elvira makes the most of the rather bemused and weakly Manfredo. Highly recommended. Can someone tell me why this opera is called "The Love of Three Kings" when there is only one king and two princes involved?"
Love and Honor
John Cardenas | Ontario, CA United States | 03/10/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I would agree with most of the review below with the following exception: Anna Moffo is well past her prime. Her voice sounds worn and her high notes are thin; still, she's idiomatic and dramatically effective in the generic way common to opera singers. The role of Fiora calls for the vocal plushness of Caballe and the imagination of Callas. Moffo commands neither. Otherwise, the men are uniformly strong, particularly Domingo and Siepi. Elvira is somewhat handicapped by the dramatic limitations inherent in the role of Manfredo. Still, with all its shortcomings, including the dissatisfyingly truncated third act, this is a compelling twentieth-century work, ripe with decadence, fragrant with eros, and with a sophisticated, rich score rife with haunting leitmotifs and subtle orchestral coloring. It's a shame it's not a frequently encountered work in opera house's today.In answer to the previous reviewer's query, the love of three kings is eros and honor. Manfredo and Avito represent eros; Archibaldo is obviously acting out of a sense of familial honor, a heavy influence in Latin culture."
As good as it gets
Kevin Hagen | Albuquerque, NM United States | 03/02/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This is a (mostly) terrific recording of a (mostly) terrific opera. Yes, the ending is anti-climactic but there is some absolutely dynamite material through the first two acts. I agree with the first review -- despite Moffo's vocal shortcomings, the exchange with Domingo's Prince Avito reeks of what has gone on offstage. Siepi is everything that Rydl is not in the Koch/Schwann recording (avoid this one at all costs!)-- dignified, powerful, frightening, and vocally solid as can be. If this is his last recording, it is a magnificent exit.The opera is a fascinating document of the time of its composition, and of the attempts of the generation that included Montemezzi, Martucci, and others to marry Italian lyricism with Germanic orchestral writing. One wishes that there were other recorded works of Montemezzi to see what other solutions he devised to these problems. This was, to me, clearly a very talented composer with a distinctive voice that is not available to be heard except in this one work. Too bad!"