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Casting two of opera's fastest-rising stars in La Traviata is a surefire way to attract attention, and so the pairing of Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón in the leading roles proved to be the hottest ticket of the 2005 Salzburg Festival. It was an occasion tailor-made for live recording, and just a few months later, we're lucky to have the results already in hand. Both vocally and dramatically, it's an excellent effort; above all, it's worth hearing for Villazón's Alfredo. This is the tenor's first starring role in a complete opera recording, and it's everything you would expect from hearing his two recital CDs. On those albums, Villazón showed a real dramatic gift on the concentrated level of the single aria, while here he holds our attention with a similar command across the length of a full opera, his richly hued voice reaching a series of expressive crests as the romantic plot develops. Netrebko is just as successful, and while she may not displace Angela Gheorghiu as the leading Violetta of recent years, she does deliver a deeply persuasive performance, from the sparkling "Sempre libera" of Act I to the resigned "Addio del passato" in Act III, and especially in the impassioned dialogue of Act II with Alfredo's father. (Thomas Hampson is quite satisfactory in the latter role here, but it's not his most distinguished performance; there's a cool solemnity to his singing, though the voice does sound marvelous.) The ensembles and choruses in the party scenes are exceptionally well balanced for a live recording, a tribute both to DG's engineers and to conductor Carlo Rizzi. But the strongly charismatic lead performances are the main attraction here, and Netrebko and Villazón are sure to please their fans -- and make many new ones -- with this release. Scott Paulin, Barnes & Noble