Rossini - Guglielmo Tell

Ambrosian Opera Chorus; National Philharmonic Orchestra / Riccardo Chailly

Decca 475 7723DOR4 Buy now

(3h 55’ · ADD · T/t)

Sherrill Milnes bar Guglielmo Tell; Luciano Pavarotti ten Arnoldo; Mirella Freni sop Matilde; Della Jones mez Jemmy; Elizabeth Connell mez Edwige; Ferrucio Mazzoli bass Gessler; Nicolai Ghiaurov bass Gualtiero; John Tomlinson bass Melchthal Cesar; Antonio Suarez ten Un Pescatore; Piero De Palma ten Rodolfo; Richard Van Allan bass Leutoldo 

If ever there was a case for armchair opera, it’s Rossini’s Guglielmo Tell. The very limitations which have made it, so far, a non-repertory work give space for the imagination to redress the balance: the short, Rousseau-esque scenes of life by Lake Lucerne, the distant entrances and exits of shepherds and huntsmen, the leisurely but perfectly balanced side-vignettes of fisherman, hunter, child.

Thanks to the clarity and liveliness of the recording itself and, above all, the shrewd casting, this set creates a vivid charivari of fathers, sons, lovers and patriots, all played out against some of Rossini’s most delicately painted pastoral cameos. Chailly keeps up the undercurrent of tension between private love and public loyalty, as well as working hard the rustic jollity of the score. Tell himself could hardly have a 
better advocate than Sherrill Milnes. Arnoldo and Matilde, too, are cleverly cast. Pavarotti contains the coarse, direct impulsiveness of Arnoldo’s shepherd stock with the tenderness of love, in his characteristic charcoal cantabile and the numbness of his remorse. 

Mirella Freni, singing opposite Pavarotti as the forbidden Princess Matilde, phrases with aristocratic poise, folding into every fragment of embryonic bel canto the fragile ardour of a young girl’s love. The vocal chemistry between them in their Act 2 declaration of love is a lively incarnation of their roles. A similarly interesting patterning of vocal timbres is produced by the casting of Elizabeth Connell as Edwige, Tell’s wife, and of Della Jones as Jemmy, their son. Their last-act trio with Matilde is matched by the contrasting colours of the basses of Ghiaurov, Tomlinson and Van Allan: their roles may be small but their characters are vividly stamped on an excellent ensemble performance.