All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
Production - John Cox Video Director - Brian Large Set Designer - Robin Wagner Costume Designer - Patricia Zipprodt Lighting Designer - Gil Wechsler The stellar cast of this popular opera includes superb singers as well as excellent actors like Kathleen Battle, Leo Nucci, Rockwell Blake, Ferruccio Furlanetto and Enza Dara Critical praise for this production: “One of [the Met’s] most ingenious stagings in recent years…made to order for a great Rossini ensemble” (New York Times ) – and for this ensemble: “Battle’s coloratura flowed with astonishing ease and grace, beautifully varied in color” (New York Times). “Alongside Battle’s stunning Rosina, the cast is close to ideal…Blake’s Almaviva is extraordinary…Nucci is a remarkable Figaro…Furlanetto makes a formidable Basilio, Dara an irresistible Bartolo” (Répertoire ) “A typical grand Met occasion, every singer a star with huge elaborate sets...the line-up of males ensures an evening of rapturous applause.” BBC Music Magazine, Christmas 2010 **** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
Juan Diego Florez (Count Almaviva), Joyce DiDonato (Rosina), Pietro Spagnoli (Figaro), Alessandro Corbelli (Doctor Bartolo), Ferruccio Furlanetto (Don Basilio), Jennifer Rhys-Davies (Berta), Changhan Lim (Fiorello), Bryan Secombe (Ambrogio), Christoper Lackner (Officer), Andrew Macnair (Notary) Orchestra & Chorus of The Royal Opera House, Antonio Pappano This DVD is in fact the "break a leg" version which sees Joyce DiDonato perform her role in a wheelchair - a story which has occupied international headlines last year - and definitely a DVD which will stand out. The DVD will include bonus features like an interview with Joyce on her stage accident and subsequent wheelchair performances. Captured at London’s Royal Opera House with an unbeatable cast in a sparkling, colourful production, this Barbiere offers a unique dramatic twist: Joyce DiDonato, who had broken her leg on the first night of the run, insisted on performing. As she said : ”Being trapped in the wheelchair was a quite literal way of demonstrating Rosina's huge desire to break free.” “The Royal Opera's cheerful and colourful new production of Rossini's most popular work is a copper- bottomed hit.” The Daily Telegraph With its unbeatable line-up of singers and conductor, last summer’s Il barbiere di Siviglia at London’s Royal Opera House was always going to hit the musical headlines ... but it ended up making news around the world when the leading lady, Joyce DiDonato, broke her leg on the first night. Undaunted, and still singing with her usual brilliance, DiDonato heroically completed the performance. She then went on to appear in the entire run, wearing a bright pink plaster cast on her leg and whizzing around the stage in a wheelchair. Virgin Classics, already scheduled to record the production for DVD, thus captured a Barbiere unlike any other. This was how The Guardian reported the story: “There is a moment … when Rosina complains that she has cramp in her foot – and the line has never seemed more appropriate than this week at Covent Garden. Joyce DiDonato … would have achieved wonderful reviews for her voice alone: luscious and clear, with a freshness that filled the theatre. It was as good a performance as anyone could remember … but the event that made it extraordinary occurred during the first act on the opening night. DiDonato slipped, hurting her ankle, and sang for the next three hours supported by a crutch. It turned out to be a fracture, but rather than withdrawing from the show she pressed on, singing and acting largely from a wheelchair. “Whirling about the stage, with a bright pink plaster cast on her leg, her predicament seemed fitting for her character, who is supposed to be imprisoned at home by her guardian … DiDonato wrote that ‘being trapped in the wheelchair was a quite literal way of demonstrating Rosina's frustration and huge desire to break free’ … The rest of the cast was spectacular, too …. If, when the production is revived, Rosina appears on the stage without a wheelchair decorated with a big ribbon, it will seem as if something has gone wrong.” The Independent made clear that, for all DiDonato’s verve and virtuosity in the face of adversity, this was no one-woman show: “Rossini's Barbiere is packed with showstoppers; but when did we last see it cast at such strength, sung with such tongue- and vocal cord-twisting relish, and conducted with such panache that every number did just that – stopped the show? Answer: the current revival of Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier's wild and wacky staging at the Royal Opera House. They must have added a quarter of an hour to the running time in applause.” Juan Diego Flórez lived up to his reputation as the world’s star bel canto tenor: “Flórez is in amazing form: his runs brilliantly etched, his tone glinting, his top notes seemingly effortless. He held his brilliant final B flat without a quiver of insecurity for what seemed like half a minute,” (The Times), while as the eponymous energetic barber, Pietro Spagnoli delivered Figaro’s numbers “with panache and impressively meaty tone” (The Times). The villains of the piece were not to be outdone: “the expert Alessandro Corbelli showed how much comic fun can be had with crusty old Doctor Bartolo, and Ferruccio Furlanetto, booming like a rumbling thunderclap of doom and gloom, made a wicked caricature out of Don Basilio.” (Financial Times) As for the all-important contribution of the Royal Opera House’s Music Director: “Musically … it was bliss … There is thoughtfulness as well as brilliance in Antonio Pappano's conducting, which gives us greater emotional resonance than usual in this work without diluting its abrasive comedy,” said The Guardian. The DVD also includes a bonus interview with Juan Diego Flórez, Antonio Pappano, Moshe Leiser and Patrice Caurier and Joyce DiDonato, talking about her role as Rosina and about her career. She has received the highest praise for her recent Virgin Classics recital of Rossini, ‘Colbran, the Muse’: “DiDonato's trills are flawless, her Italian is always precise, and her theatrical sense is magnificent. Musically and dramatically, the disc is perfection.” (Opera News) “Antonio Pappano's conducting brings back the genuine Italian frisson of sprung rhythms, banda-like colour and prominence of wind and brass, and real tension (but lack of fake hurry) in crescendos. The singing here, and its ornamentation, operates on a high level indeed, much aided in naturalness by the conducting...All in all, the evening is a musical triumph.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2010 “Juan Diego Florez is the Almaviva of one's dreams, vocally and musically impeccable...and an actor of enormous charm and intelligence, whilst in the title role Pietro Spagnoli offers warmth and personality to spare...Patrice Caurier and Moshe Leiser's production, a blend of ancient and modern visuals, matches the music-making perfectly.” BBC Music Magazine, August 2010 ***** BBC Music Magazine
DVD Choice - August 2010 |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
The mid-price collection presents some of the most important and admired recordings of the EMI Classics and Virgin Classics catalogue which make EMI 'The Home of Opera'. This performance of Il barbiere di Siviglia was recorded in 1957 at the Kingsway Hall, London. “Callas remains supreme as a minx-like Rosina, summing up the character superbly in Una Voce poco fa. The sound comes up very acceptably in this fine new transfer, clarified, fuller and more atmospheric, presenting a uniquely characterful performance with new freshness and immediacy.” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
“Levine's 1975 Barber offers a coloratura soprano Rosina instead of the mezzo Rossini intended. Sills is on the brittle side, Milnes's Figaro is crass and Gedda's off form.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2008 *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
“Here's a Barbiere light of heart and light of touch, graceful in style, with fresh, youngsounding voices (where appropriate), well schooled so as to make those forbiddingly difficult vocal flights sound like flights of fancy, quick as thought and natural as intuition. It's a concert performance and carries with it a real sense of enjoyment. The Overture moves with relish as from one good thing to another, and movement is the motto for most of the first act. Fiorello and the chorus are no clod-hoppers and the Count is no show-off. 'Ecco ridente' has the assurance of a young aristocrat who has practised his scales and scorns the use of aspirates. Figaro likewise wears his skills and his energy lightly, the brag and bounce of his introductory solo kept within civilised limits. Their duet is a ball-game of high velocity neatly played in time to an inexhaustible supply of rhythm and melody. The Rosina is Elina Garanca who is not very liberal with her smiles. The possibility of fun is admitted with 'farò giocar' but the keynote is determination ('vincerò'). Later the characterisation warms, but right from the start we have been won by the beauty of her tone and the accomplishment of her florid work, never going hard or shrill at the top and keeping the voice whole and even throughout its range. Her guardian, Doctor Bartolo, in this version is a lightweight buffo baritone rather than the usual bumbling fatty, and it's left to the Basilio to play the traditional tricks. At times during this First Act, one may wish for a moment here and there to linger over phrases or merely to savour the sound of a fine voice. In compensation, the conductor offers a clear view in which everything has its place. In Act 2 he makes room for more expansion. In both, the clarity of ensemble is a delight, as is the elegant playing of the Munich orchestra.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “…a version light of heart and light of touch, graceful in style, with fresh, young-sounding voices (where appropriate), well schooled so as to make those forbiddingly difficult vocal flights sound like flights of fancy, quick as thought and natural as intuition. ...the clarity of ensemble is a delight, as is the elegant playing the Munich orchestra.” Gramophone Magazine, October 2006 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di SivigliaStage Director: Coline Serreau
Joyce DiDonato (Rosina), Roberto Saccá (Il Conte d'Almaviva), Dalibor Jenis (Figaro), Carlos Chausson (Bartolo), Kristinn Sigmundsson (Basilio), Nicholas Garrett (Fiorillo), Jeannette Fischer (Berta), Denis Aubry (Un Ufficiale) Orchestre et Chœurs de l'Opéra National de Paris, Bruno Campanella, Coline Serreau (dir.) Recorded Opéra National de Paris, April 2002 “Serreau knows how to use her mostly young cast to get a laugh without being silly and it was the right theatrical touch for this delicious masterpiece. With singing that ranged from good to great, it made for an appealing evening.” MusicWeb International | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
(First-time release on DVD) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
Victoria de los Angeles (Rosina), Nicola Monti (Il Conte Almaviva), Gino Bechi (Figaro), Nicola Rossi-Lemeni (Basilio), Melchiorre Luise (Bartolo), Anna-Maria Canali (Berta), Erminio Benatti (Fiorello) Milan Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Tullio Serafin | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Il barbiere di Siviglia
| | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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