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| Super Audio CD - SACD Hybrid | $18.99 |
Anna Netrebko's debut CD sent critics scrambling for superlatives to describe that impressive solo effort from opera's brightest new star, and Sempre Libera, the Russian soprano's follow-up showcase for her heart-meltingly lovely voice, should be just as enthusiastically received. It includes excerpts from two Verdi operas, Otello and La Traviata, but the greater focus is on the bel canto repertoire that is such a natural fit with the singer's light-lyric timbre and that has encouraged comparison with legends like Callas and Sutherland. Scenes drawn from Bellini's La Sonnambula and I Puritani and Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor (operas, save for I Puritani, that she has performed onstage) display the fresh, liquid tone that is her greatest gift, coupled with sure coloratura and a natural sense of phrase. The Mad Scene from Lucia also boasts the glass harmonica that Donizetti originally intended, a part usually covered by flute. With Verdi, Netrebko delves into the composer's more sharply etched characters with more of an eye for drama. In Violetta's first-act scene from Traviata (again, music that fortunate opera-goers have seen Netbreko perform), a relatively relaxed "Forse lui" gives way to a somewhat hard-driven "Sempre libera," underscoring Violetta's firm strength of character. Netrebko crowns the scene with a luminous high E-flat, one of several glowing top notes on the disc. And in Desdemona's last-act scene from Otello, she delivers the delicate "Willow" Song and "Ave Maria" with a tender beauty that is deeply affecting. The encore, Puccini's familiar "O mio babbino caro," is another crowd pleaser in the vein of Musetta's Waltz, which brought Netrebko's debut disc to an upbeat close. Claudio Abbado and the Chamber Orchestra of Europe are the accompanists of a singer's dreams. EJ Johnson, Barnes & Noble