Verdi - Falstaff

NBC Symphony Orchestra / Arturo Toscanini

RCA Gold Seal mono 74321 72372-2 Buy now

(117’ · ADD · T/t)

Giuseppe Valdengo bar Falstaff; Frank Guarrera bar Ford; Herva Nelli sop Alice Ford; Teresa Stich-Randall sop Nannetta; Antonio Madasi ten Fenton; Cloe Elmo contr Mistress Quickly; Nan Merriman mez Meg Page; Gabor Carelli ten Dr Caius; John Carmen Rossi ten Bardolph; Norman Scott bass Pistol; Robert Shaw Chorale

Recorded live 1950.

This Falstaff remains, as it always has been, one of the half a dozen greatest opera sets ever recorded. It’s a miracle in every respect. How Toscanini loved Verdi and how he strained every sinew to fulfil this amazing score’s variety in line, feeling and colour. Whether it’s the clarity and discipline of the ensembles, the extraordinary care taken over orchestral detail or the alert control of dynamics, Toscanini is supreme, yet nothing is done for effect’s sake; everything seems natural, inevitable, unforced, as though the score were being created anew before us with chamber-music finesse – and the atmosphere of a live performance adds to the feeling of immediacy. Nobody dares, or seems to want, to interrupt the magic being laid before him. Toscanini in his old age is matching the subtlety and vitality of the composer’s own Indian summer – or one might be tempted to say spring, so delicate and effervescent does the scoring sound. 

If, vocally, the main glory is the wonderful sense of ensemble gained through hours of hard rehearsals, individual contributions are almost all rewarding. Indeed, Valdengo’s Falstaff, under Toscanini’s tutelage, has not been surpassed on disc even by Gobbi. Flexibility, charm, exactness, refinement inform his beautifully and wisely sung portrayal. He’s no less pointed and subtle in his encounter with Frank Guarrera’s imposing Ford. Another great joy of the set is the women’s ensemble, their contribution the very epitome of smiling chatter. The Alice, Meg and Nannetta (Stich-Randall – none better), all sound, as they were, fresh and youthful. Herva Nelli is a lively and delightful Alice and Cloe Elmo’s Quickly is as rich and ripe of voice and diction as any on disc, though a trifle coarse at times. The Fenton is sweet and Italianate in tone, but not as stylish as others. The smaller roles are all very much part of the team. 

This set should certainly be a source of delightful revelation to a new generation of collectors who may have a wrong-headed view of what Toscanini was about. The remastering gives it clearer, more immediate sound than ever heard before from the originals.