La Clemenza di Tito: Act 1: Recitativo: Ma che? sempre l'tesso - Vitella, Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: Duetto: Come ti piace imponi - Fan mille affetti inseime - Sesto, Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Amico, il passo afretta - Annio, Vitellia, Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 2 Aria : Deh , se piacer mi vuoi - Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Amico, ecco il momento - Annio, Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 3 Duettino: Deh, Prendi un dolce amplesso - Annio, Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 4 Marcia
La Clemenza di Tito: N.5 Coro: Sebate, oh Dei custodi
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Te della patria il Padre - Publio, Annio, Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 5 Coro: Serbate, oh Dei custodi
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Adesso, oh Sesto, parla per me - Annio, Sesto, Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: N.6 Aria: Del piu sublime soglio - Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Non ci pentiam - Annio, Servilia
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 7 Duetto : Ah perdona al primo affecto - Annio, Servilia
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Servilia!, Servilia! - Tito, Servilia
La Clemenza di Tito: N.8 Aria: Ah, se fosse intorno al trono - Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Felice me! - Ancor mi schernisce? - Vitellia , Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 9 Aria: Parto, ma tu ben mio - Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Verdrai, Tito, verdrai - Vitellia, Publio, Annio
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 10 Terzetto: Vengo....aspettate...Sesto! - Vitellia, Annio, Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: N.11 Recitativo accompagnato: Oh dei, che smania e questa - Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 12 Quintetto con Coro: Deh, conversate, oh dei - Sesto, Annio, Servillia, Publio, Vitellia
Track Listings (20) - Disc #2
La Clemenza di Tito: Act 2: Recitativo: Sesto, come tu credi - Annio, Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 13 Aria: Tornia di Tito a lato - Annio
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Partir deggio, o restar? - Sesto, Vitellia - Sesto! - Che chiedi? - Publio, Sesto, Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 14 Terzetto: Se al volto mai ti senti - Sesto, Vitellia, Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: N.15 Coro: Ah, grazie si rendano - Recitativo: E tutto cola d' un intorno - Tito, Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 16 Aria : Tardi s' avverde d 'un Tradimento - Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: No, cosi scellertato - Cesare, nol diss'io - Publio, Tito, Annio
La Clemenza di Tito: N.17 Aria: Tu fosti tradito - Annio
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo accompagnato: Che orror! che tradimento - Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: N.18 Terzetto: Quello di Tito e il volto! - Recitativo: Odimi, oh sesto - Tito, Sesto,Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 19 Rondo: Deh , per questo istante solo - Sesto
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Ove s'intese mai piu contumace infeldelta? - Recitativo: Publio - Cesare - Tito, Publio
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 20 Aria: Se all'impero, amici Dei - Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Ah, Vitellia! - Servillia, Annio, Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 21 Aria: S'altro che lacrime per lui non tenti - Servillia
La Clemenza di Tito: N.22 Recitativo accompagnato: Ecco il punto, oh Vitellia - Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 23 Rondo: Non piu di fiori vaghe catene - Vitellia
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 24 Coro: Che del ciel, che dlgi Dei
La Clemenza di Tito: Recitativo: Sesto, de Tuoi delitti - Tito, Vitellia, Sesto, Servillia, Annio, Publio - N.25 Recitativo accompagnato: ma che giorno e mai questo? - Tito
La Clemenza di Tito: N. 26 Sestetto con Coro: Tu e ver, m'assolvi, Augusto - Sesto, Tito, Vitellia, Servillia, Annio, Publio
"Mozart's last opera seria has never had the recognition it deserves. Sure the plot looks dated after Figaro or Cosi, but still it's Mozart, and no one ever composed finer music. I think all recordings of La Clemenza di Tito are excellent, especially the old Kertesz and Bohm recordings with the incomparable Teresa Berganza, but this new Gardiner offering has period instruments to its advantage and the English Baroque Soloists are admirable indeed. Anthony Rolfe-Johnson gives one of his finest performances on disc after his vocal crisis of the 1980's. It's good to hear his ever suave tone in such nice condition. As expected Anne Sofie von Otter is outstanding in every respect, she certainly joins Berganza, Troyanos and Bartoli as one of the best Sestos ever. But the real star of the show is Julia Varady. I tell you: THIS WOMAN HAS TO BE HEARD TO BE BELIEVED! The fiendishly difficult role of Vitellia ia a vocal nightmare, the tessitura is all over the place, and Varady sings it with such ease and abandon that for one minute or two she could be mistaken for Maria Callas. No greater praise than that. Whatever you do, get this recording!"
Gardiner & cast deliver a thrilling TITO!
Amy B. Hutchison | Chicago, IL USA | 12/21/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Gardiner's powerful conducting reveals the intense dramatic current in Mozart's oft-overlooked opera seria. Without prissy "period" restraint, Gardiner and his vibrant cast have unlocked the passion of Mozart's triumverate of heroes with spectacular singing and dramatic complexity. The recitatives are even exciting! Varady's Vitellia is an absolute triumph! She is the only Vitellia recorded whose ferocious musical beauty properly conveys the seething power and edgy instability of this sexy & dangerous character. Likewise, Anne Sofie Von Otter's gorgeous Sesto is sublime: a beautifully sung, lovingly-sculpted, sumptuous interpretation, not to be missed. Anthony Rolf Johnson sings Tito with strength and sweetness. He delivers all the dignity and pure beauty befitting the role. Also notable is Sylvia McNair's lovely Servilia. A knockout cast led by a conductor who really GETS what Mozart was driving at - and reveals why Constanze Mozart considered TITO her husband's finest opera. Hear this recording to understand how right she was!"
Glorious
Basso Profondo | Texas | 05/02/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This, the next to last of Mozart's operas, is lovely in every way. It is filled with lovely melodies, duets and trios, Glorious choral passages, and one of the most moving Finales there is. And this recording does them true justice. Rolfe-Johnson lends his lovely lyric voice to the role of Tito, displaying wonderful control in his arias. Von Otter sings an incomparable Sesto. I don't know how to explain it really, but her voice just has an..."Aristocratic" sound to it. Take that for what it's worth. McNair has one of the purest, sweetest voices on God's earth, and even though she doesn't get much chance to shine here, she does give a most moving rendition of "S'altro che lagrime", and she is quite lovely in the ensembles. Varady's role is perhaps the hardest in the opera, with a range from High D to Low G. But it doesn't pose a threat to her! Her high D and repeated High B's shine brilliantly. I can't brag too much on Hauptmann, though. To me he has kind of a weak, nasally sound. Robbin handles the small role of Annio well. All in all, this is a delectable "Tito", and would be worth your money."
Good live version of Mozart's opera seria from 1990
L. E. Cantrell | Vancouver, British Columbia Canada | 11/09/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"SOURCE: Live recording of a concert performance presented at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, The South Bank Centre, London in June 1990.
SOUND: Perfectly acceptable early 1990s, live, digital stereo. It should be noted that this is a performance utilizing period instruments that dates from early in the period instrument revolution. Those who have an inclination to get huffy in such matters may find reason to criticize instruments, players and techniques as not entirely conforming to the most up-to-date research and/or fads in such matters.
CAST: Tito Vespasiano (Titus, son of Vespasian), Emperor of Rome - Anthony Rolfe Johnson (tenor); Vitellia, daughter of a former Emperor, Vitellius and habitual conspirator - Julia Varady (soprano); Sesto, friend of Titus and would-be lover of Vitellia - Anne Sofie von Otter (mezzo-soprano); Servillia, sister of Sesto, in love with Annio - Sylvia McNair (soprano); Annio, friend of Sesto and would-be husband of Servillia - Catherine Robbin (mezzo-soprano/contralto); Publio, Prefect of the Praetorian Guards and friend of Titus - Cornelius Hauptmann (bass-baritone).
CONDUCTOR: John Elliot Gardiner with the Monteverdi Choir and the English Baroque Soloists.
DOCUMENTATION: Libretto in Italian and English. A short but (for once) excellent and informative essay on the opera and its background by Hans Günther Klein. Summary of the plot by act and scene. Track list that identifies singers and provides timings.
TEXT: Mozart, as usual, found himself in a time bind while composing this opera. He delegated the secco recitatives to his assistant and general dogsbody, Franz Xaver Sussmayer, the very same man who posthumously completed (or botched) Mozart's Requiem. In preparation for this recording, Conductor Gardiner obviously regarded Sussmayer as an uninspired drudge--with considerable justification--and ruthlessly shortened or pruned away his contributions.
COMMENTARY: In 1790, W. A. Mozart, a consummate commercial hack, wangled a commission of 200 ducats to set an old piece of tripe by Metastasio to music as part of the festivities surrounding new Holy Roman Emperor's coronation as King of Bohemia. In 1790, W. A. Mozart, a consummate musical genius, reworked a moldy, old-fashioned libretto into a minor masterpiece, creating the only thing of real significance attached to the name of Emperor Leopold II (who died early in 1792, a year-and-a-half before his sister, Marie Antoinette, sometime Queen of France.)
Metastasio's libretto for "La clemenza di Tito" was already half a century old and had been set many times, once even by Gluck. As an improbable fantasy about a ruler who fit all the 18th Century standards for nobility and virtue, it was a sure-fire hit whenever wealthy rulers wanted to congratulate themselves during a celebration.
Unfortunately, the old libretto was also a stately and formal opera seria, just the sort of thing that the creator of "Figaro" and "Don Giovanni" had relegated to the dust heap. A hack of the literary sort, Caterino Mazzolà, was called in. In place of Metastasio's three acts, a succession of arias succeeded by secco recitative succeeded by arias, etc., Mozart demanded two zippy acts in which only seven of the original twenty-five arias would be retained. In their place would be duets, trios and big finales for each of the two acts. Mazzolà, though hardly another Lorenzo da Ponte, was a satisfactorily reliable hack. He gave Mozart what he wanted, although neither of them could overcome the intrinsic lifelessness of Metastasio's book without junking everything and starting over from scratch.
The opera opened to the mild approval of the bigwigs on September 6, 1791. It experienced considerably more success when, a few days later, it was opened for the people of Prague. On September 30th of that year, Mozart was back in Vienna to conduct the premiere of "Die Zauberflöte."
This particular performance of "La Clemenza" was well regarded when it was first published in 1991 and remains so to the present day, although some purists may cavil at Gardiner's high-handed way with the text. The cast is strong, except for the fuzzy and unfocused gargling of Cornelius Hauptmann in what is fortunately a lesser role. Von Otter and Varady are unusually good. I am not a fan of McNair, but she certainly has many of them and they would, I am sure, place her equally with von Otter and Varady--at the very least. Johnson sings Tito's very difficult music with style and assurance although, purely as a matter of personal taste, I find him lacking in star quality.
This is a good, solid performance of the fifth of Mozart's six mature operas. It was composed jointly with his sixth, "The Magic Flute," and it often sounds like it. "La clemenza di Tito's" opera seria roots, like those of his earlier "Idomeneo," sad to say, undermine it and hold it back from achieving the true greatness of his big four operas. "La clemenza's" strait-laced, paper-thin, opera seria characters gave Mozart no opportunity to provide the life that so fills and inhabits the earlier Cherubino, Leporello, Despina and the Papageno who would follow so soon.
Five slightly fusty stars."
A REFERENCIAL VERSION
Hugo | Spain | 08/31/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Julia Varady, Anne Sophie Von Otter and Sylvia McNair sing the besters Vitelia, Sestus and Servilia of the world.
Anthony Rolfe-Jonhson sing a normal Titus.
Gardiner do a personal reading of the best Mozart`s opera
The sound it`s very very good
This is one of the best versions of the moment."