2017-18 Live Broadcasts

Dec
11
Tue
2018
MANON
Dec 11 @ 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM

MANON:Massenet
Original Air Date: 03/03/2001
Rudel; Swenson, Sabbatini, de Candia
MOD Audio SID.18500208

I’m not sure if anyone has conducted Manon more than Julius Rudel, the opera having been a mainstay during his NYCO stewardship. This is an OK performance, but wish we could hear the 1959 DeLosAngeles Gedda Manon under Jean Morel as well., I’m not sure if anyone has conducted Manon more than Julius Rudel, the opera having been a mainstay during his NYCO stewardship. This is an OK performance, but wish we could hear the 1959 De Los Angeles/Gedda Manon under Jean Morel as well. This opera is available on MOoD to listen to anytime. 1/29/11 – This is uncommon casting, but maybe one way to start preparing for the new production of Manon. I would be happier if someone would dig deeper into the archives for the single De Los Angeles/Gedda broadcast under Jean Morel from 1959.

IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA
Dec 11 @ 6:00 AM – 9:00 AM

IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA:Rossini
Original Air Date: 02/29/1992
Weikert; Hampson, von Stade, Olsen, Quilico, Ramey
MOD Audio SID.18500209

Louis Quilico is not my ideal Bartolo. Von Stade’s first Rosina broadcast from 1976 with Stilwell, Corena, and Morris has been on Sirius, but not 1983 which features Pablo Elvira, Sesto Bruscantini (as Bartolo) and Paolo Montarsolo as Basilio. This 1992 performance is her last Met performance as Rosina. I love the opera, but they overwork it almost as much as Boheme.

Review of Desmond Shawe-Taylor in the New Yorker:  Except for the Almaviva (Luigi Alva) and the Dr. Bartolo (Fernando Corena), all the principals of the Metropolitan Opera’s Christmas Day revival of Rossini’s “Il Barbiere di Siviglia” were new to their roles in the house; and, considering the minimal rehearsal time that is available when standard works are added to a large repertory, the performance went pretty well. The orchestra was in good form but for a little trouble in the horn department; and John Pritchard’s direction had a lilt and grace that were just right for the delightful score.

The most important of the newcomers onstage was Frederica von Stade as Rosina. Already well known for her Cherubino and numerous smaller roles, this musical and intelligent mezzo charmed the audience with her modest, engaging demeanor and clear, agile singing. She looks markedly un-Spanish, and might be one of the more lively heroines of Victorian fiction; but soon after she had started on “Una voce” a sudden, and loving piano inflection on the first “Lindoro” (her suitor’s assumed name) showed her to be thoroughly inside the part. I also greatly enjoyed the Figaro of Dominic Cossa, a tall and supple fellow who might well prove (to cite Beaumarchais, quoted in the program) “the terror of husbands, the darling of wives,” and who had no need to resort to falsetto when he had to imitate the tenor’s sentimental high A in the last-act trio. Mr. Alva is not quite Beaumarchais’s “young Spanish lord … vital and passionate,” and a sweeter, fuller tone is certainly wanted for the love songs; but he is a master of absurd disguise and comic routine, and therefore able to carry off the later scenes with telling glee. Mr. Corena, who felt vocally out of sorts and omitted his aria, made nonetheless a very funny and resourceful Dr. Bartolo, in contrast to Ezio Flagello who sounded fuzzy as Don Basilio, and whose notions of comedy did not get far beyond red football stockings and bare knees under a greasy soutane. Cynthia Munzer made a good deal of the aria di sorbetto that is Berta’s solo opportunity, with a wild and somewhat distraught look that suggested an incipient Azucena.

Photograph of Frederica von Stade as Rosina in Il Barbiere di Siviglia by James Heffernan/Metropolitan Opera.

SIMON BOCCANEGRA
Dec 11 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

SIMON BOCCANEGRA Verdi
Original Air Date: 12/29/1984
Levine; Milnes, Tomowa-Sintow, Moldoveanu, Plishka, Clark
SID.18500210

The main attraction here is Tomowa-Sintow who has only 7 Met broadcasts. This performance is also available on DVD. This performance lacks a certain spark, but the singing is very solid.

TOSCA
Dec 11 @ 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM

TOSCA Puccini
Original Air Date: 04/11/1959
Adler; Steber, Bergonzi, London
SID.18500211

This is Steber’s last Tosca in the house (the next 3 are on tour), and only her third with the Met. She is not Tebaldi (whose Tosca I consider the absolute standard, and lucky for the Met to have captured it in full flight). Steber, however, is no shrinking violet, and she was on quite a roll during this period opening 1959 with the second season of Vanessa, a distinguished Donna Anna broadcast (on Met Player with London and Bohm in the pit), the Met premiere of Wozzeck, and wrapping up with a pair of Toscas, this one strongly cast with Bergonzi and London. Luckily in addition to Sirius this week, it’s on Met Player.

COSÌ FAN TUTTE
Dec 11 @ 3:00 PM – 6:00 PM

COSI FAN TUTTE Mozart
Original Air Date: 12/20/1975
Kord; Carson, Di Giuseppe, Tourangeau, Carlson, Boky, Corena
SID.18500212

LOHENGRIN
Dec 11 @ 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM


LOHENGRIN:Wagner
Original Air Date: 02/16/1985
Levine; Domingo, Tomowa-Sintow, Marton, McIntyre, Macurdy
SID.18500213

This performance is also available in MOoD. Domingo sings very well, but for me the special excitement of this performance comes from the two ladies. Marton had not yet started her heavy round of Elektra performances, and her singing is commanding without ever being less than very feminine. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best efforts, and here’s the cast for it. The ladies are simply splendid, among the best exponents of their roles in the last 3 decades. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best Wagner efforts.

LOHENGRIN
Dec 11 @ 9:00 PM – 12:00 AM


LOHENGRIN:Wagner
Original Air Date: 02/16/1985
Levine; Domingo, Tomowa-Sintow, Marton, McIntyre, Macurdy
SID.18500214

This performance is also available in MOoD. Domingo sings very well, but for me the special excitement of this performance comes from the two ladies. Marton had not yet started her heavy round of Elektra performances, and her singing is commanding without ever being less than very feminine. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best efforts, and here’s the cast for it. The ladies are simply splendid, among the best exponents of their roles in the last 3 decades. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best Wagner efforts.

Dec
12
Wed
2018
LA GIOCONDA
Dec 12 @ 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM

LA GIOCONDA Ponchielli
Original Air Date: 04/02/1955
Cleva; Milanov, Baum, Warren, Rankin, Tozzi
SID.18500315

This is a pretty representative Gioconda cast for the 1950s. It should catch Tozzi in his prime condition coming a month after his debut and Rankin was well suited to Laura, an awkward part for many. Warren should also be at his best. That leaves Milanov and Baum in two giant roles. There is no question of Milanov’s legendary status and in this role in particular. She can also be a maddeningly uneven singer, sometimes within the same performance or even section of music. I love Gioconda, but it is a challenging sing. Callas has a fine studio recording made after her firing from the Met that is still very good, but I don’t have any Callas annals handy, but don’t think she has many/any after 1952. Tebaldi saved it till late in her career, and the part didn’t work for Farrell. I enjoyed both Bumbry and Marton, but the part was well beyond Scotto, and recent efforts by Voigt and Urmana are down another rung. Milanov’s melodramatics are solid.
 
*** August 13, 2013 FIRST TIME on SIRIUS Thanks to a fellow lister, I can confirm this. I don’t see it on my listings post 2010, but he sent me a note last night (he checks up on the Met postings as well). The Met annals DO say it has been on Sirius before, but i’ll leave the settlement of this doctrinal dispute to others.
 
 
 

 

ADRIANA LECOUVREUR
Dec 12 @ 6:00 AM – 9:00 AM

ADRIANA LECOUVREUR:Cilea
Original Air Date: 04/19/1969
Cleva; Tebaldi, Corelli, Dalis, Colzani
SID.18500316

Tebaldi loved the part of Adriana, but this broadcast finds her in rather frayed voice (after more than 30 Giocondas the previous two seasons). Corelli, Dalis, and Colzani are strong support.

LA GIOCONDA
Dec 12 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

LA GIOCONDA Ponchielli
Original Air Date: 04/02/1955
Cleva; Milanov, Baum, Warren, Rankin, Tozzi
SID.18500317

This is a pretty representative Gioconda cast for the 1950s. It should catch Tozzi in his prime condition coming a month after his debut and Rankin was well suited to Laura, an awkward part for many. Warren should also be at his best. That leaves Milanov and Baum in two giant roles. There is no question of Milanov’s legendary status and in this role in particular. She can also be a maddeningly uneven singer, sometimes within the same performance or even section of music. I love Gioconda, but it is a challenging sing. Callas has a fine studio recording made after her firing from the Met that is still very good, but I don’t have any Callas annals handy, but don’t think she has many/any after 1952. Tebaldi saved it till late in her career, and the part didn’t work for Farrell. I enjoyed both Bumbry and Marton, but the part was well beyond Scotto, and recent efforts by Voigt and Urmana are down another rung. Milanov’s melodramatics are solid.
 
*** August 13, 2013 FIRST TIME on SIRIUS Thanks to a fellow lister, I can confirm this. I don’t see it on my listings post 2010, but he sent me a note last night (he checks up on the Met postings as well). The Met annals DO say it has been on Sirius before, but i’ll leave the settlement of this doctrinal dispute to others.
 
 
 

 

DER FREISCHÜTZ
Dec 12 @ 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM

DER FREISCHUTZ:Weber
Original Air Date: 04/15/1972
Ludwig; Kónya, Lorengar, Feldhoff, Mathis
MOD Audio SID.18500318

This is the only Met broadcast of Freischutz, and despite some good work from the treble/tenor clef, Ludwig’s conducting does not give it the sparkle it needs. Feldhoff is more adequate than commanding. One cannot blame the Met entirely, this work simply is not as much a part of the “standard” opera house repertoire as it was 50 years ago.

KÁT’A KABANOVÁ
Dec 12 @ 3:00 PM – 6:00 PM

KÁT’A KABANOVÁ :Janácek
Original Air Date: 12/25/2004
Belohlávek; Mattila, Forst, Silvasti, Ognovenko, Very, Kozená
SID.18500319

“An excellent cast, but I just don’t warm as much to this work as to Jenufa. For these infrequent works, it is important they make their way to MOoD.”

NABUCCO
Dec 12 @ 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

NABUCCO Verdi
Original Air Date: 02/26/2005
Levine; Putilin, Guleghina, Buchuladze, Hughes Jones
SID.18500 103
NYTIMES  ” Most of all, the production turns its singers loose. Verdi has written them big-bore, high-explosive parts, and conducted from the pit by James Levine, Monday’s cast went out and took its chances.

Maria Guleghina’s Abigaille is the big moment among many big moments, and she threw her powerful soprano ardently, sometimes recklessly into the opera. Her first extended sequence (Part II, Scene 1) was impressively done. If there were bumps in Part I’s opening, they may be due to Verdi’s habit of writing first acts with dangerously sudden soprano parts. Like Violetta in “La Traviata,” Abigaille has no settling-in period; the part pounces on her from nowhere.

There was not much vocal subtlety asked for on Monday, and not much given. Nikolai Putilin in the title role was all straightforwardness and muscle. Paata Burchuladze’s Zaccaria managed more vocal shine in an equally punishing part. Gwyn Hughes Jones as Ismaele offered a step up in refinement, but he, too, seemed to be enjoying the communal loudness. Wendy White’s Fenena, singing on the scaffold near the final curtain, offered the evening’s moment of tender, cultured musicianship.

“Nabucco” is also a chorus opera, and the Met singers were strong and touching. “Va, pensiero” made its usual impact. Others in the cast were Julien Robbins, Claudia Waite and Eduardo Valdes.

PETER GRIMES
Dec 12 @ 9:00 PM – 12:00 AM

PETER GRIMES:Britten
Original Air Date: 03/24/1973
Ehrling; Vickers, Amara, Gramm, Kraft, Chookasian
SID.18500321

This is the third of Vickers’ 4 Met Grimes broadcasts. Luckily all have been on Sirius. I find the Colin Davis outings (the first two) sharper in profile, but Vickers’ portrayal is one of the great assumptions. Britten purists are not always so taken, but JV really pushed this opera into the general repertoire in the U.S.

Dec
13
Thu
2018
NORMA
Dec 13 @ 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM

NORMA:Bellini
Original Air Date: 12/19/1970
Bonynge; Sutherland, Horne, Tagliavini, Plishka
SID.18500422

This is Sutherland/Horne in their second season of Norma (but same calendar year) with the men instead of Bergonzi and Siepi. I prefer the excitement of the first season, but the ladies remain the gold standard in both.

LOHENGRIN
Dec 13 @ 6:00 AM – 9:00 AM


LOHENGRIN:Wagner
Original Air Date: 02/16/1985
Levine; Domingo, Tomowa-Sintow, Marton, McIntyre, Macurdy
SID.18500423

This performance is also available in MOoD. Domingo sings very well, but for me the special excitement of this performance comes from the two ladies. Marton had not yet started her heavy round of Elektra performances, and her singing is commanding without ever being less than very feminine. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best efforts, and here’s the cast for it. The ladies are simply splendid, among the best exponents of their roles in the last 3 decades. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best Wagner efforts.

LOHENGRIN
Dec 13 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM


LOHENGRIN:Wagner
Original Air Date: 02/16/1985
Levine; Domingo, Tomowa-Sintow, Marton, McIntyre, Macurdy
SID.18500424

This performance is also available in MOoD. Domingo sings very well, but for me the special excitement of this performance comes from the two ladies. Marton had not yet started her heavy round of Elektra performances, and her singing is commanding without ever being less than very feminine. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best efforts, and here’s the cast for it. The ladies are simply splendid, among the best exponents of their roles in the last 3 decades. Lohengrin is one of Levine’s best Wagner efforts.

MANON
Dec 13 @ 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM

MANON:Massenet
Original Air Date: 03/03/2001
Rudel; Swenson, Sabbatini, de Candia
MOD Audio SID.18500425

I’m not sure if anyone has conducted Manon more than Julius Rudel, the opera having been a mainstay during his NYCO stewardship. This is an OK performance, but wish we could hear the 1959 DeLosAngeles Gedda Manon under Jean Morel as well., I’m not sure if anyone has conducted Manon more than Julius Rudel, the opera having been a mainstay during his NYCO stewardship. This is an OK performance, but wish we could hear the 1959 De Los Angeles/Gedda Manon under Jean Morel as well. This opera is available on MOoD to listen to anytime. 1/29/11 – This is uncommon casting, but maybe one way to start preparing for the new production of Manon. I would be happier if someone would dig deeper into the archives for the single De Los Angeles/Gedda broadcast under Jean Morel from 1959.

IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA
Dec 13 @ 3:00 PM – 6:00 PM

IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA:Rossini
Original Air Date: 02/29/1992
Weikert; Hampson, von Stade, Olsen, Quilico, Ramey
MOD Audio SID.18500426

Louis Quilico is not my ideal Bartolo. Von Stade’s first Rosina broadcast from 1976 with Stilwell, Corena, and Morris has been on Sirius, but not 1983 which features Pablo Elvira, Sesto Bruscantini (as Bartolo) and Paolo Montarsolo as Basilio. This 1992 performance is her last Met performance as Rosina. I love the opera, but they overwork it almost as much as Boheme.

Review of Desmond Shawe-Taylor in the New Yorker:  Except for the Almaviva (Luigi Alva) and the Dr. Bartolo (Fernando Corena), all the principals of the Metropolitan Opera’s Christmas Day revival of Rossini’s “Il Barbiere di Siviglia” were new to their roles in the house; and, considering the minimal rehearsal time that is available when standard works are added to a large repertory, the performance went pretty well. The orchestra was in good form but for a little trouble in the horn department; and John Pritchard’s direction had a lilt and grace that were just right for the delightful score.

The most important of the newcomers onstage was Frederica von Stade as Rosina. Already well known for her Cherubino and numerous smaller roles, this musical and intelligent mezzo charmed the audience with her modest, engaging demeanor and clear, agile singing. She looks markedly un-Spanish, and might be one of the more lively heroines of Victorian fiction; but soon after she had started on “Una voce” a sudden, and loving piano inflection on the first “Lindoro” (her suitor’s assumed name) showed her to be thoroughly inside the part. I also greatly enjoyed the Figaro of Dominic Cossa, a tall and supple fellow who might well prove (to cite Beaumarchais, quoted in the program) “the terror of husbands, the darling of wives,” and who had no need to resort to falsetto when he had to imitate the tenor’s sentimental high A in the last-act trio. Mr. Alva is not quite Beaumarchais’s “young Spanish lord … vital and passionate,” and a sweeter, fuller tone is certainly wanted for the love songs; but he is a master of absurd disguise and comic routine, and therefore able to carry off the later scenes with telling glee. Mr. Corena, who felt vocally out of sorts and omitted his aria, made nonetheless a very funny and resourceful Dr. Bartolo, in contrast to Ezio Flagello who sounded fuzzy as Don Basilio, and whose notions of comedy did not get far beyond red football stockings and bare knees under a greasy soutane. Cynthia Munzer made a good deal of the aria di sorbetto that is Berta’s solo opportunity, with a wild and somewhat distraught look that suggested an incipient Azucena.

Photograph of Frederica von Stade as Rosina in Il Barbiere di Siviglia by James Heffernan/Metropolitan Opera.

TOSCA
Dec 13 @ 6:00 PM – 9:00 PM

TOSCA Puccini
Original Air Date: 04/11/1959
Adler; Steber, Bergonzi, London
SID.18500427

This is Steber’s last Tosca in the house (the next 3 are on tour), and only her third with the Met. She is not Tebaldi (whose Tosca I consider the absolute standard, and lucky for the Met to have captured it in full flight). Steber, however, is no shrinking violet, and she was on quite a roll during this period opening 1959 with the second season of Vanessa, a distinguished Donna Anna broadcast (on Met Player with London and Bohm in the pit), the Met premiere of Wozzeck, and wrapping up with a pair of Toscas, this one strongly cast with Bergonzi and London. Luckily in addition to Sirius this week, it’s on Met Player.

LA GIOCONDA
Dec 13 @ 9:00 PM – 11:45 PM

LA GIOCONDA Ponchielli
Original Air Date: 04/02/1955
Cleva; Milanov, Baum, Warren, Rankin, Tozzi
SID.18500428

This is a pretty representative Gioconda cast for the 1950s. It should catch Tozzi in his prime condition coming a month after his debut and Rankin was well suited to Laura, an awkward part for many. Warren should also be at his best. That leaves Milanov and Baum in two giant roles. There is no question of Milanov’s legendary status and in this role in particular. She can also be a maddeningly uneven singer, sometimes within the same performance or even section of music. I love Gioconda, but it is a challenging sing. Callas has a fine studio recording made after her firing from the Met that is still very good, but I don’t have any Callas annals handy, but don’t think she has many/any after 1952. Tebaldi saved it till late in her career, and the part didn’t work for Farrell. I enjoyed both Bumbry and Marton, but the part was well beyond Scotto, and recent efforts by Voigt and Urmana are down another rung. Milanov’s melodramatics are solid.
 
*** August 13, 2013 FIRST TIME on SIRIUS Thanks to a fellow lister, I can confirm this. I don’t see it on my listings post 2010, but he sent me a note last night (he checks up on the Met postings as well). The Met annals DO say it has been on Sirius before, but i’ll leave the settlement of this doctrinal dispute to others.
 
 
 

 

Dec
14
Fri
2018
SIMON BOCCANEGRA
Dec 14 @ 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM

SIMON BOCCANEGRA Verdi
Original Air Date: 12/29/1984
Levine; Milnes, Tomowa-Sintow, Moldoveanu, Plishka, Clark
SID.18500529

The main attraction here is Tomowa-Sintow who has only 7 Met broadcasts. This performance is also available on DVD. This performance lacks a certain spark, but the singing is very solid.

TOSCA
Dec 14 @ 6:00 AM – 9:00 AM

TOSCA Puccini
Original Air Date: 04/11/1959
Adler; Steber, Bergonzi, London
SID.18500530

This is Steber’s last Tosca in the house (the next 3 are on tour), and only her third with the Met. She is not Tebaldi (whose Tosca I consider the absolute standard, and lucky for the Met to have captured it in full flight). Steber, however, is no shrinking violet, and she was on quite a roll during this period opening 1959 with the second season of Vanessa, a distinguished Donna Anna broadcast (on Met Player with London and Bohm in the pit), the Met premiere of Wozzeck, and wrapping up with a pair of Toscas, this one strongly cast with Bergonzi and London. Luckily in addition to Sirius this week, it’s on Met Player.

COSÌ FAN TUTTE
Dec 14 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

COSI FAN TUTTE Mozart
Original Air Date: 12/20/1975
Kord; Carson, Di Giuseppe, Tourangeau, Carlson, Boky, Corena
SID.18500531

This is most notable for Corena’s only Don Alfonso broadcast. The opera was out of the Met repertory from 1928 until 1951, when Steber, Thebom, and Tucker premiered the hugely successful Alfred Lunt production in English (a Columbia studio recording of this production was made, and holds upeven against Italian language originals). The opera remained in English until 1971, when John Pritchard premiered a fall cast which included Corena, but no broadcast.

LA SONNAMBULA
Dec 14 @ 12:00 PM – 3:00 PM

LA SONNAMBULA:Bellini
Original Air Date: 03/30/1963
Varviso; Sutherland, Gedda, Flagello, Scovotti
SID.18500532

This is stellar singing from one and all, and is available along with her second Met Sonnambula broadcast from 1968 in MOoD. I was lucky to see Sutherland from her very first USA appearance in Alcina (Dallas,1960) and lucky was I to enjoy such stellar performing for more than a quarter century. Other singers may have a more introspective approach to Sonnambula, but La Stupenda offers something different, and nowhere to be found in opera houses today.

ADRIANA LECOUVREUR
Dec 14 @ 3:00 PM – 6:00 PM

ADRIANA LECOUVREUR:Cilea
Original Air Date: 04/19/1969
Cleva; Tebaldi, Corelli, Dalis, Colzani
SID.18500533

Tebaldi loved the part of Adriana, but this broadcast finds her in rather frayed voice (after more than 30 Giocondas the previous two seasons). Corelli, Dalis, and Colzani are strong support.

Various
Dec 14 @ 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM


Various 
Original Air Date: 01/01/9999
Various Artists
SID.18500534

Dec
15
Sat
2018
KÁT’A KABANOVÁ
Dec 15 @ 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM

KÁT’A KABANOVÁ :Janácek
Original Air Date: 12/25/2004
Belohlávek; Mattila, Forst, Silvasti, Ognovenko, Very, Kozená
SID.18500636

“An excellent cast, but I just don’t warm as much to this work as to Jenufa. For these infrequent works, it is important they make their way to MOoD.”

PETER GRIMES
Dec 15 @ 6:00 AM – 9:00 AM

PETER GRIMES:Britten
Original Air Date: 03/24/1973
Ehrling; Vickers, Amara, Gramm, Kraft, Chookasian
SID.18500637

This is the third of Vickers’ 4 Met Grimes broadcasts. Luckily all have been on Sirius. I find the Colin Davis outings (the first two) sharper in profile, but Vickers’ portrayal is one of the great assumptions. Britten purists are not always so taken, but JV really pushed this opera into the general repertoire in the U.S.

NORMA
Dec 15 @ 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

NORMA:Bellini
Original Air Date: 12/19/1970
Bonynge; Sutherland, Horne, Tagliavini, Plishka
SID.18500638

This is Sutherland/Horne in their second season of Norma (but same calendar year) with the men instead of Bergonzi and Siepi. I prefer the excitement of the first season, but the ladies remain the gold standard in both.