NEW YORK(AP)
Lay on Macduff _ and Banquo, too.
It was these two supporting characters who stood out Friday
night as the Metropolitan Opera assembled an entirely new cast for
the season's last three performances of Verdi's
"Macbeth."
As Banquo, Macbeth's comrade in arms who falls early victim
to his murderous rampage, the German bass Rene Pape dominated the
early scenes. His beautiful tone, seamless throughout his range but
especially impressive in its upper reaches, always commands
attention, as does his deep commitment to character. From his first
entrance, he makes Banquo's wariness of the witches'
prophesies _ and of Macbeth _ apparent, and his one aria,
"Come dal ciel precipita" grimly foreshadows his murder
at the hand of Macbeth's hired thugs.
In the second half of the evening, the nobleman Macduff, who
until this point has mostly been an observer, mourns the slaying of
his wife and children in a lyrical aria, "Ah, la paterna
mano." This solo provided a golden opportunity for Joseph
Calleja, a young tenor from Malta, to impress the audience with his
large, warm and well-focused voice. Calleja, whose previous Met
appearances have been as the Duke in Verdi's
"Rigoletto," drew the evening's biggest applause and
made one eager to hear him in more roles.
The leading roles of Macbeth and his Lady, meanwhile, were in
the hands of singers who discharged their duties honorably without
making a particularly vivid impression.
Hasmik Papian, an Armenian soprano, has potent high notes in her
favor (though her final D flat in the sleep-walking scene sounded
forced) and the technique to toss off her drinking song with elan.
But she is weak in the lower, chest register where so much of Lady
Macbeth's early music lies.
As her husband, Spanish baritone Carlos Alvarez is something of
a puzzle. His basic sound is attractive, if a size too small for an
ideal Verdi singer. But he never quite grabs hold of the role or
the audience.
With such an imbalance in the casting, the focus of much of the
evening fell on the superb work by the chorus, the grimly effective
_ and sometimes darkly amusing _ production by Adrian Noble and the
sympathetic conducting of James Levine in the pit.
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