Maria Callas "Casta Diva" | Vicenzo Bellini - Norma, 1957 video free download


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Duration: 05:46
Uploaded: 2013/08/28

Vicenzo Bellini - "Casta Diva",

Vicenzo Bellini (1801-1835) Norma, Opera, 1831.

Maria Callas (1923-1977), Gabriele Santini, conductor (1886-1964)

Rai Orchestra Rome, 1957.

Legendary Performances: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcb6XxvEogs&list=PLF2ayhcb2yRV_HJnMhR98Qr-QuovmuWL5&index=1

Bellini followed up the success of his tender comedy La Sonnambula with this grand and exotic tale. In its keen characterization and its dramatic conflict between love and patriotic duty it anticipates the major themes of several Verdi operas. The conflict in the opera is between the native Druids of Britain and the Roman soldiers who are occupying the country. The Druid leaders are Oroveso (the High Priest) and Norma (the High Priestess), and the main Romans are the Proconsul Pollione and his centurion Flavio. Norma was Vincenzo Bellini's eighth opera and the one that completely secured his fame and fortune as a composer. Although, according to some contemporary reviews, the audience responded coolly to some aspects of Norma at its first performance at Milan's La Scala opera house on December 26, 1831, the public soon warmed to it and made it a popular success. In the nineteenth century, musicians as diverse as Richard Wagner, Giuseppe Verdi, Johannes Brahms, and Gustav Mahler, regarded Norma as a pivotal work. Today Norma is accepted as Bellini's most successful tragic opera.

Felice Romani based the libretto on Alexandre Soumet's play of the same name, which had premiered in Paris in April 1831 to great critical acclaim. In 1998, David Kimbell noted that, despite this immediate literary source, the opera's plot and the nature of its title character have an earlier source in the Greek myth of Medea. Kimbell has also noted the distinct similarities between Romani's Norma and his text for Giovanni Pacini's opera La sacerdotessa d'Irminsul (1820).

The music of Norma is laden with all of the conventions of Italian opera in the first half of the nineteenth century, including solo vocal arias and duets, some of which follow the prototypical Rossinian crescendo into full-fledged end-of-act choruses. After the introduction, Pollione's cavatina ("Meco all'altar di Venere") foreshadows the events of the opera. Its form is essentially ternary, with the C minor tonality, nervous violin tremolo, and rhythmically active lower strings of the B section contrasting with the C major tonality of the A section. But Bellini avoids a complete reprise of the A section, returning ultimately to the disturbing minor-mode inflections and nervous instrumental texture of the B material. Pollione's cavatina is paired with a cabaletta ("Me protegge, mi defende"), in which he sings of the protective power of love, in the heroic key of E flat major and triumphant dotted rhythms. Norma's famed cavatina, "Casta diva," a prayer to the moon goddess, is introduced by a silvery flute solo over undulating violin arpeggios. Rather than independently, as previously in "Va crudele, al Dio spietato"/"E tu pure, ah! tu non sai!," Pollione and Adalgisa together in their duet "Vieni in Roma"/"Ciel! Così parlar l'ascolto sempre" complete musical phrases: once Adalgisa agrees to go to Rome with Pollione, she is under his musical control. A similar concept governs the Act II duet between Adalgisa and Norma ("Mira, o Norma"/"Ah! perchè la mia costanza"), in which Norma's weakening resolve to allow Adalgisa to beg for Pollione's return is mirrored in her willingness to adopt Adalgisa's musical language. The finale of Act I consists of a trio in which Norma is musically pitted against Pollione and Adalgisa, and in that of Act II, Oroveso and the chorus of druids punctuate Norma's central aria ("Deh! Non voleri vittime") as she ascends her funeral pyre.

Comments

5 years ago

stefano norberti

insuperabile.

5 years ago

Miss Alexia

She’s a real diva I just listened to other singers coming out and talking about tragic operas and laughing about them like it was some kind of joke callas felt the role and was a serious artist not some silly modern day singer who just wants to “make opera modern”

5 years ago

Miguel Antonio Faúndez Rojas

Uno podría morir en este éxtasis, y sería feliz.

6 years ago

Valentina Sergio

Raffinata ed magica

6 years ago

MrGer2295

Beautiful singing ! Brava MARIA CALLAS :)

6 years ago

Kisulkin Shopard

Слушаю уже 1000 раз и нахожу постоянно что то новое!!!.... Мария Каллас

6 years ago

alean9034

Magnífica la Callas. Nunca habrá nadie como ella con una voz potente y matizes únicos. Q voz.

6 years ago

Luciano Bezerra

1957 - the top of the strength of her voice...an unforgettable rendition of Casta Dia !

6 years ago

3LP DISPATCH

greattt!!!

6 years ago

Alastair Ashford

Exquisite!

6 years ago

Chiara Catalfamo

Bellini, un dio italiano

6 years ago

Alastair Ashford

Exquisite!

6 years ago

Jonathan Colorado

Yooooo this is kinda dope .. she has such and enchanting voice lmao

6 years ago

Vislow Maychen

There is something about Maria’s authenticity that touches me like no other, the pain in her voice, it’s so real

6 years ago

владимир гуреев

великая певица!

6 years ago

Benjamin Huerta-Cruz

wonderful just she drives me to heaven

6 years ago

Dr. M London/Simla

Intriguing record! these days one has to take potlock with Netrebko and other russian charwomen.

6 years ago

Agamemnon Varonos

Well I agree she's exceptional on this one, until you compare it with the 1949 version, before her weight loss. The 1949 Casta Diva brings you along with her spirit, wherever it now is. Search for it, or just buy it!

6 years ago

Bernd Engel

Ich liebe dieses Stück und immer wenn ich es richtig genießen will lande ich bei der Sängerin mit der größten Ausstrahlung und dieser bis heute einzigartigen Stimme.

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