L'incoronazione di Poppea discography explained

These lists show the audio and visual recordings of L'incoronazione di Poppea by Claudio Monteverdi. The opera was premiered in Venice in 1642-43, but after a 1651 revival in Naples it remained unperformed for 250 years. It began to enter the general opera repertory in the 1960s, and thereafter was increasingly performed in leading opera houses and festivals.

Summary of recording history

The first recording of L'incoronazione, with Walter Goehr conducting the Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich in a live stage performance, was issued in 1954. This LP version, which won a Grand Prix du Disque in 1954,[1] is the only recording of the opera that predates the revival of the piece that began with the 1962 Glyndebourne Festival production. In 1963 Herbert von Karajan and the Vienna Staatsoper issued a version described by The Gramophone as "far from authentic",[2] while the following year John Pritchard and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra recorded an abridged version using Leppard's Glyndebourne orchestration. Leppard conducted a Sadler's Wells production, which was broadcast by the BBC and recorded on 27 November 1971. This is the only recording of the opera in English.

Nikolaus Harnoncourt's 1974 version, the first recording without cuts, used period instruments in an effort to achieve a more authentic sound, although Denis Arnold has criticised Harnoncourt's "over-ornamentation" of the score, particularly his use of oboe and trumpet flourishes.[3] Arnold showed more enthusiasm for Alan Curtis's 1980 recording, live from La Fenice in Venice. Curtis uses a small band of strings, recorders and continuo, with trumpets reserved for the final coronation scene.[4] Subsequent recordings have tended to follow the path of authenticity, with versions from baroque specialists including Richard Hickox and the City of London Baroque Sinfonia (1988), René Jacobs and Concerto Vocale (1990), and John Eliot Gardiner with the English Baroque Soloists.

In more recent years, videotape and DVD versions have proliferated. The first was in 1979, a version directed by Harnoncourt with the Zürich Opera and chorus. Leppard's second Glyndebourne production, that of 1984, was released in DVD form in 2004.[5] Since then, productions directed by Jacobs, Christophe Rousset and Marc Minkowski have all been released on DVD, along with Emmanuelle Haïm's 2008 Glyndebourne production in which the Festival finally rejects Leppard's big-band version in favour of Haim's own small orchestra setting.

List of recordings

The lists below refer to complete performances; excerpts and highlights are excluded. The year given is the year of the recording.

Audio

YearCast
Poppea, Nerone,
Ottavia, Ottone, Seneca
Conductor
Opera house/Orchestra
Label[6]
1952Sylvia Gähwiller,
,
Maria Helbing,
Mabelle Ott-Penetto,
Franz Kelch
Walter Goehr
Tonhalle Orchestra, Zurich
LP: Concert Hall,
Cat: CHS1184
1963Sena Jurinac,
Gerhard Stolze,
Margarita Lilowa,
Otto Wiener,
Carlo Cava
Herbert von Karajan,
Vienna Staatsoper
Audio CD: Deutsche Grammophon,
Cat: 457 674-2
1963Ursula Buckel,
Hans-Ulrich Mlelsch,
Eugenia Zareska,
Grayston Burgess,
,
Santini Chamber Orchestra
LP: Vox,
Cat: OPBX113
1964Magda László,
Richard Lewis,
Frances Bible,
Walter Alberti,
Carlo Cava
John Pritchard,
Glyndebourne Chorus
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
LP: HMV,
Cat: SLS 908
1966,
Mirto Picchi,
Mirella Parutto,
Renato Cesari,
Boris Christoff
,
Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
CD: Opera d'oro,
Cat: OPD1243
1966Carol Bogard,
Charles Bressler,
Sharon Hayes,
John Thomas,
Herbert Beattie
Alan Curtis,
Oakland Symphony Orchestra
University of California chorus
LP: Cambridge,
Cat: CRM 8901
1971Janet Baker,
Robert Ferguson,
Katherine Pring,
Tom McDonnell,
Clifford Grant
Raymond Leppard,
Sadlers Wells Opera
(Sung in English; BBC broadcast 21 November 1971
Oriel Music Society,
Cat: OMS 046/3
1974Helen Donath,
Elisabeth Söderström,
Cathy Berberian,
Paul Esswood,
Giancarlo Luccardi
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Concentus Musicus Wien
Teldec
Cat: 2292-42547-2
1980Carmen Balthrop,
Carolyn Watkinson,
Andrea Bierbaum,
Henri Ledroit,
Ulrik Cold
Alan Curtis
Il Complesso Barocco
LP: Aperta
Cat: LMA3008
1988Daniela Dessì,
Josella Ligi,
Adelisa Tabiadon,
Susanna Anselmi,
Armando Caforio,
Kumiko Yoshii
Alberto Zedda
Bassano Pro Arte Orchestra
LP & CD: Nuova Era
Cat: J6737/9
1988Arleen Auger,
Della Jones,
Linda Hirst,
James Bowman,
Gregory Reinhart
Richard Hickox
City of London Baroque Sinfonia
Virgin Classics
Cat: 90775-2
1990Danielle Borst,
Guillemette Laurens,
Jennifer Larmore,
Axel Köhler,
Michael Schopper
René Jacobs
Concerto Vocale
Harmonia Mundi
Cat: 901330/2
1996Sylvia McNair,
Dana Hanchard,
Anne Sofie von Otter,
Michael Chance,
Francesco Ellero d'Artegna
John Eliot Gardiner,
English Baroque Soloists
Archiv
Cat: 447 088-2
1997Anna Caterina Antonacci,
David Daniels,
Nadja Michael,
Axel Köhler,
Kurt Moll
Ivor Bolton,
Members of Bavarian State Orchestra
Farao Classics,
Cat: B108 020
2000Guillemette Laurens,
Flavio Oliver,
Gloria Banditelli,
Fabian Schofrin,
Ivan Garcia
Gabriel Garrido,
Ensemble Elyma
K617,
Cat: K617110
2005Patrizia Biccirè,
Liliana Rugiero,
Angela Bucci
William Matteuzzi,
Raffaele Costantini
Sergio Vartolo,
Capella Musicale di San Petronio
Brillant,
Cat: BLC 92752
2010Emanuela Galli,
Roberta Mameli,
Xenia Meijer,
José María Lo Monaco,
Raffaele Costantini
Claudio Cavina,
La Venexiana
Glossa,
Cat: GCD 920916
2020Oksana Maltseva,
Shin Yoowon,
Susanna Rigacci,
Choi Seoyeon
Federico BardazziBongiovanni

Video

YearCast
Poppea, Nerone, Ottavia, Ottone, Seneca
Conductor,
Opera house/Orchestra
Label
1979Rachel Yakar,
Eric Tappy,
Trudeliese Schmidt,
Paul Esswood,
Matti Salminen
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Zurich Opera and Chorus
Stage director: Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
DVD: Deutsche Grammophon,
Cat. No.0734174
1984Maria Ewing,
Dennis Bailey,
Cynthia Clarey,
Dale Duesing,
Robert Lloyd
Raymond Leppard,
London Philharmonic Orchestra and Glyndebourne Festival chorus
Glyndebourne Festival, 1984
Director: Peter Hall
DVD: Kultur,
Cat. No.PC47368
1993Patricia Schumann,
Richard Croft,
Kathleen Kuhlmann,
Jeffrey Gall,
Harry Peters
René Jacobs,
Concerto Köln
Schwetzingen Festival, 1993
DVD: Arthaus,
Cat: 100 108
1994Cynthia Hayman,
Brigitte Balleys,
Ning Liang,
Michael Chance,
Harry van der Kamp
Christophe Rousset,
Les Talens Lyriques
Muziektheater Amsterdam
Director: Pierre Audi
DVD: Kultur,
Cat:
2000Mireille Delunsch,
Anne Sofie von Otter,
Sylvie Brunet,
Charlotte Hellekant,
Denis Sedov
Marc Minkowski,
Les Musiciens du Louvre
Festival d'Aix en Provence, 2000
DVD: Bel Air,
Cat:
2008Danielle de Niese,
Alice Coote,
Tamara Mumford,
Iestyn Davies,
Paolo Battaglia
Emmanuelle Haïm,
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
Glyndebourne Festival, 2008
Stage direction: Robert Carsen
DVD: Decca,
Cat: 0743339
2009Miah Persson,
Sarah Connolly,
Maite Beaumont,
Jordi Domènech,
Franz-Josef Selig
Harry Bicket,
Baroque Orchestra of the Gran Teatre del Liceu
Recorded live February 2009
Director: David Alden
Blu-ray: Opus Arte,
Cat: BD7105[7]
2010Danielle de Niese,
Philippe Jaroussky,
Anna Bonitatibus,
Max Emanuel Cencic,
Antonio Abete
William Christie,
Les Arts Florissants
Recorded live, May 2010, Teatro Real, Madrid
Director: Pier Luigi Pizzi
DVD: EMI/Virgin Classics[8]
2010Birgitte Christensen,
Jacek Laszczkowski,
Patricia Bardon,
Tim Mead,
Giovanni Battista Parodi
Alessandro De Marchi,
Orchestra of the Norwegian National Opera
Stage director: Ole Anders Tandberg
Blu-ray: EuroArts
Cat: 205 8924[9]
2012Sonya Yoncheva,
Max Emanuel Cenčić,
Ann Hallenberg,
Tim Mead,
Paul Whelan
Emmanuelle Haïm,
Le Concert d'Astrée
Recorded live, March 2012, Opéra de Lille
Stage director: Jean-François Sivadier
DVD: Virgin Classics
Cat: 928991-9[10]
2017Hana Blažíková,
Kagnmin Justin Kim,
Marianna Pizzolato,
Carlo Vistoli,
Gianluca Buratto
John Eliot Gardiner,
English Baroque Soloists and Monteverdi Choir
Semi-staged, recorded June 2017, Teatro La Fenice
Blu-ray: Opus Arte[11]
2018Sonya Yoncheva,
Kate Lindsey,
Stéphanie d’Oustrac,
Carlo Vistoli,
Renato Dolcini
William Christie,
Les Arts Florissants
Salzburg Festival, 2018
Stage director: Jan Lauwers
Streaming video:
Carnegie Hall+[12]
DVD/CD: Harmonia Mundi,
Cat: HAF890262224[13]
2020Oksana Maltseva,
Shin Yoowon,
Susanna Rigacci,
Choi Seoyeon
Federico BardazziBongiovanni

References

Notes
Sources

Notes and References

  1. Trade News. Gramophone. 95. Haymarket. London. November 1954. 8 November 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20120303183726/http://www.gramophone.net/Issue/Page/November%201954/95/752800/TRADE+NEWS. 3 March 2012. dead.
  2. Gundula Janowitz features in a far from authentic Poppea. Gramophone. 94. Haymarket. London. July 1998. 8 November 2009.
  3. Arnold. Denis. Monteverdi:L'incoronazione di Poppea complete. Gramophone. 101. Haymarket. London. March 1975. 8 November 2009.
  4. Arnold. Denis. Monteverdi:L'incoronazione di Poppea ed. Curtis. Gramophone. 88. Haymarket. London. April 1982. 8 November 2009.
  5. Lawrence. Richard. Monteverdi:L'incoronazione di Poppea . Gramophone. 76. Haymarket. London. September 2004. 8 November 2009.
  6. http://www.operadis-opera-discography.org.uk/CLMOINCO.HTM#31 Recordings of L' incoronazione di Poppea on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  7. Mike Ashman, Review of 2009 video of the Gran Teatre del Liceu, Gramophone, September 2012, p. 84: "Harry Bicket’s orchestra, their performance a reminder of how much progress has been made in the realisation of early Venetian opera in the last half-century. The hand-picked European cast is in fine fettle, Connolly’s Nero outstanding; picture and sound appear to serve the production. This is, of course, not the only way to do Poppea but even the strongest DVD rivals to this set (Haïm/Carsen on Decca and Christie/Pizzi on Virgin) seem a little over-egged in comparison."
  8. 2010 Teatro Real, Madrid, DVD, 2012 .
  9. Richard Lawrence, "Tandberg’s bloodbath Incoronazione in Oslo", Gramophone, June 2012, p. 87: "How best to depict these grotesques for a 21st-century audience? Ole Anders Tandberg’s solution is to put them in modern dress and to have them indulge in what the booklet-note calls ‘frequent lashings of blood and sex’. ... The stage is littered with as many bodies as in a Jacobean tragedy. You are hardly going to buy this for the singing but, for what it’s worth, the best is from Tim Mead and Patricia Bardon. Monteverdi’s scoring has been enhanced, not too offensively. The filming – often from above – is excellent.".
  10. David Vickers, "Sivadier’s 2012 Incoronazione on screen from the Lille Opera", Gramophone, August 2013, pp. 76–77: "A stark black and grey set inhabited by the entire company in modern dress (Prologue) gradually evolves into a boldly colourful ‘Roman’ world (lots of red, orange and gold) in which people act and look approximately like ancient Romans – but with small splashes of modern‑day props for some sort of ironic effect. ... Sonya Yoncheva [is] a cynically seductive Poppea. Max Emanuel Cencic has the range to bash out Nerone’s highest notes, and the occasional histrionic high passages and over‑the‑top delivery suit Nerone’s brattish character. Ann Hallenberg’s jilted Ottavia and Tim Mead’s Ottone (each by turns jealous, desperate and broken) are vocally and dramatically outstanding. Paul Whelan’s husky singing is well suited to the doomed Seneca. ... I am less satisfied by Haïm’s musical direction. ... Those averse to early music purism might admire Haïm’s ostentatiously upholstered textures and anachronistic methods but in truth this musical aesthetic is a post‑1970s modern construct, just like Sivadier’s stage action."
  11. 2017 Teatro La Fenice, Blu-ray, 2022, .
  12. https://www.amazon.com/gp/video/detail/B0C4W63KVX/ref=atv_dp_share_cu_r Amazon Prime Video product page
  13. David Vickers, Review of the Salzburg 2018 video, Gramophone, October 2019, p. 99: "The lucidity of the drama is smudged by over-activity on stage from experimental dancers doing an inordinate amount of experimental dancing, often in various states of undress, and always with one of them at centre stage whirling in perpetual circular motion until the next dancer on the rota gives them a cuddle and relieves them. Characters with no business being on stage lurk persistently without purpose and contradict theatrical sense. Ottone does not disguise himself in Drusilla’s clothes for the attempt on Poppea’s life, rendering the rest of Act 3 inexplicable. Some of the numerous cuts are obtrusive."