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Tito Gobbi - The Very Best of Tito Gobbi (2003)

Tito Gobbi - The Very Best of Tito Gobbi (2003)

BAND/ARTIST: Tito Gobbi

  • Title: The Very Best of Tito Gobbi
  • Year Of Release: 2003
  • Label: Warner Classics
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 2:27:28
  • Total Size: 469 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Pagliacci, Prologue: "Si può? Si può?" (Tonio)
02. Le nozze di Figaro, K. 492, Act 1 Scene 8: No. 9, Aria, "Non più andrai, farfallone amoroso" (Figaro)
03. Il barbiere di Siviglia, Act 1: "Largo al factotum" (Figaro)
04. Il barbiere di Siviglia, Act 1 Scene 4: No. 8, Duetto, "All'idea di quel metallo" (Figaro, Conte)
05. Guillaume Tell, Act 3 Scene 3: "Resta immobile" (Guglielmo)
06. L'elisir d'amore, Act 1 Scene 2: Cavatina marziale, "Come Paride vezzoso" (Belcore, Adina, Giannetta, Nemorino, Chorus)
07. L'elisir d'amore, Act 2 Scene 3: No. 7, Scena, "La donna è originale - Venti scudi" (Nemorino, Belcore)
08. Lucia di Lammermoor, Act 1 Scene 2: Cantabile, "Cruda, funesta smania" (Enrico, Normanno, Raimondo)
09. Lucia di Lammermoor, Act 1 Scene 3: "La pietade in suo favore" (Enrico, Normanno, Raimondo, Chorus)
10. Zazà, Act 2: "Buona Zazà del mio buon tempo" (Cascart)
11. Zazà, Act 4: "Zazà, piccola zingara" (Cascart)
12. L'arlesiana, Act 1 Scene 1: "Come due tizzi accesi" (Baldassare)
13. Adriana Lecouvreur, Act 1 Scene 8: "Ecco il monologo" (Michonnet)
14. Fedora, Act 2 Scene 6: "La donna russa è femmina due volte" (De Siriex)
15. Andrea Chénier, Act 3: "Nemico della Patria?!" (Gérard, L'Incredibile)
16. I gioielli della Madonna, Act 2: Serenade, "Aprila, bella, la fenestrella" (Rafaele)
17. Tosca, Act 2 Scene 1: "Tosca è un buon falco!" (Scarpia, Sciarrone)
18. La fanciulla del West, Act 1: "Minnie, dalla mia casa son partito" (Rance)
19. Tosca, Act 1 Scene 9: "Tre sbirri, una carrozza" (Scarpia, Spoletta, Chorus)
20. La traviata, Act 2 Scene 8: "Di Provenza il mar, il suol" (Germont)
21. Rigoletto, Act 1 Scene 8: No. 4a, Scena, "Pari siamo! - io la lingua, egli ha il pugnale" (Rigoletto)
22. Rigoletto, Act 2 Scene 3: No. 9a, Scena, "Povero Rigoletto! … Ei vien!" (Marullo, Rigoletto, Ceprano, Borsa, Un paggio, Chorus)
23. Nabucco, Act 4 Scene 1: "Ah! prigioniero io sono - Dio di Giuda" (Nabucco)
24. Macbeth, Act 4 Scene 5: Scena ed Aria, "Perfidi! All'anglo contro me v'unite! … Pietà, rispetto, amore" (Macbeth)
25. Un ballo in maschera, Act 1 Tableau 1: "Alla vita che t'arride" (Renato)
26. Un ballo in maschera, Act 3 Tableau 1: No. 10, Scena ed Aria, "Alzati! là tuo figlio … Eri tu che macchiavi quell'anima" (Renato)
27. La forza del destino, Act 3 Scene 5: Aria, "Urna fatale del mio destino" (Don Carlo)
28. Otello, Act 2 Scene 5: "Era la notte, Cassio dormìa" (Jago)
29. Simon Boccanegra, Act 1 Scene 7: "Dinne, alcun là non vedesti? - Figlia! A tal nome palpito" (Doge, Amelia)
30. Simon Boccanegra, Act 1 Scene 12: "Plebe! Patrizi! Popolo dalla feroce storia!" (Doge)
31. Don Carlo, Act 1 Scene 1: "Questo arcano - Dio, che nell'alma infondere" (Rodrigo, Don Carlo) (1884 Milan Four-Act Version)
32. Don Carlo, Act 3 Scene 2: "Per me giunto è il dì supremo" (Rodrigo) (1884 Milan Four-Act Version)
33. Don Carlo, Act 3 Scene 2: "O Carlo, ascolta - La madre t'aspetta" (Rodrigo) (1884 Milan Four-Act Version)
34. Otello, Act 2 Scene 2: "Vanne, la tua meta già vedo … Credo in un dio crudel che m'ha creato" (Jago)
35. Falstaff, Act 2 Scene 2: "Quand'ero paggio del duca di Norfolk" (Falstaff)
36. Falstaff, Act 1 Scene 1: "L'onore! Ladri!" (Falstaff)

Tito Gobbi was an admired operatic baritone. He originally studied at Padua University for a career in law, but he eventually gave that up in favor of pursuing voice lessons in Rome with Giulio Crimi. He made his operatic debut in the town of Gubbio in 1935, as Count Rodolfo in Bellini's La sonnambula. He was hired at Milan's La Scala for the 1935-1936 season as an understudy; his first appearance there was as the Herald in Ildebrando Pizzetti's Oreseolo.

He won the international singing competition in Vienna in 1936. As a result he began getting improved billing; he sang the role of Germont in La traviata at the Teatro Reale in Rome in 1937. In the same year he sang Lelio in Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari's Le donne curiose, and continued singing secondary roles through 1939 there. He was promoted to primary roles and in 1941 sang Ford in Verdi's Falstaff during a visit by the company to Berlin in 1941. Meanwhile, in a guest appearance at Rieti he first sang the role of Scarpia in Puccini's Tosca in 1940. This was to become his best-known part.

Gobbi made his La Scala debut in a major role in 1942 as Belcore in L'Elisir d'Amore. However, the performance that made him famous was as Wozzeck in the first Italian performance of Alban Berg's opera in Rome in November, 1942. Fighting raged throughout Italy following the Allied invasions there in 1943, interrupting his career. After the war he began to include international appearances. He first appeared in Stockholm in 1947 as Rigoletto; in 1948 he went to Covent Garden in concerts and to San Francisco to debut as Figaro in Rossini's Barber of Seville. His London operatic debut was at Covent Garden as Belcore when the La Scala Company toured there. He appeared in Chicago in 1954 as Rossini's Figaro, and debuted at the Metropolitan Opera Company as Scarpia, January 13, 1956. He sang Don Giovanni in Salzburg in 1952 under von Karajan's direction.

He took up producing as well, often at Chicago, where he made regular appearances, and producing opera became an ever more important part of his career after 1965, which is when he produced a performance starring himself in the title role of Verdi's Simon Boccanegra in London.

Although he was particularly well known for his portrayal of Verdi's baritone roles (including Posa in Don Carlos), and of Puccini's (Scarpia, Jack Rance, Gianni Schicchi), he had a very large repertory of well over 100 roles, including such rare operas as Malipiero's Ecuba (as Ulysses), Teprulov in Rocca's Monte Ivnor, the Count of Albaforita in Persico's La locandiera, and operas by Lualdi, Napoli, and Ghedini. He was an excellent actor, had a high degree of musicianship and intelligence, had a flexible, rich, but not large baritone voice, and was at home in a wide variety of parts. He also appeared in 26 movies. He was the brother-in-law of another eminent singer, Boris Christoff. Gobbi retired from the operatic stage in 1979. He published an autobiography (Tito Gobbi: My Life, 1979) and Tito Gobbi and His World of Italian Opera (1984). He left a significant legacy of recorded performances, mainly made in the 1950s and 1960s. ~ Joseph Stevenson


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