Don Giovanni

Georg Solti, The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra & Italo Tajo - Georg Solti: Don Giovanni, Glyndebourne, 1954 (2017)

Georg Solti, The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra & Italo Tajo - Georg Solti: Don Giovanni, Glyndebourne, 1954 (2017)
MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 03:09:58 | 435 Mb
Classical | Label: Prima Voce

Solti conducted Don Giovanni in nine performances during the 1954 Glyndebourne season : on July 7, 9, 11, 14, 17, 21, 23, 25, 27. These performances of Don Giovanni were Georg Solti's only Glyndebourne appearances. This complete performance was broadcast live from the opera house on 17 July 1954. The source recording is part of the 'Itter Broadcast Collection' held by Lyrita Recorded Edition Trust.

Teodor Currentzis - Mozart: Don Giovanni, K. 527 (2016)  Music

Posted by delpotro at Dec. 5, 2018
Teodor Currentzis - Mozart: Don Giovanni, K. 527 (2016)

Teodor Currentzis - Mozart: Don Giovanni, K. 527 (2016)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) | 02:50:05 | 730 Mb
Classical, Opera | Label: Sony Classical

Sony’s Mozart cycle culminates with this tremendous production, one that witnesses Greek-Russian conductor Teodor Currentzis evoking fear, trembling, and desire from the great Don Giovanni. “Fin ch’han dal vino” is demonic, a fitting cherry on top of this controversial interpretation that forcefully demonstrates the extreme range of Mozart’s talent.
Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Ferenc Fricsay - Mozart: Don Giovanni (1958/2019) [Official Digital Download 24/192]

Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Ferenc Fricsay - Mozart: Don Giovanni (1958/2019)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time - 165:15 minutes | 6.14 GB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital Booklet

Recorded in 1958, this Don Giovanni’s prime attraction is Ferenc Fricsay’s crisp, forward-moving conducting. The tempos are swift, almost as though Fricsay can’t wait to damn the Don, a scene done with the requisite sense of fatal drama. It’s an approach that might have worked better with a cast more alive to the ambiguities of the text and music; this is, after all a “Dramma giocoso”. Balancing those two elements is always a challenge, but there’s precious little “giocoso” here.
John Eliot Gardiner, English Baroque Soloists - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni (1995)

John Eliot Gardiner, English Baroque Soloists - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni (1995)
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue & Log) ~ 717 Mb | Total time: 178:07 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Archiv Produktion | # 445 870-2 | Recorded: 1994

Gardiner's set has a great deal to commend it. The recitative is sung with exemplary care over pacing so that it sounds as it should, like heightened and vivid conversation, often to electrifying effect. Ensembles, the Act 1 quartet particularly, are also treated conversationally, as if one were overhearing four people giving their opinions on a situation in the street. The orchestra, perfectly balanced with the singers in a very immediate acoustic, supports them, as it were 'sings' with them.
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Mahler Chamber Orchestra - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni (2012)

Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Mahler Chamber Orchestra - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue & Log) ~ 743 Mb | Total time: 59:30+54:45+58:58 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Deutsche Grammophon | # 0289 477 9878 | Recorded: 2011

This live recording of Mozart's Don Giovanni inaugurates a series of Mozart operas to be recorded live at the Festspielhaus in Baden-Baden in southwestern Germany, featuring a galaxy of top operatic stars. The performance marks an impressive beginning indeed for the project. The incongruously named Mahler Chamber Orchestra under French Canadian conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin may seem tentative and underpowered to those used to, say, the Vienna Philharmonic, but Nézet-Séguin keeps the music very tightly connected to the singers. The opera stands or falls on the voice and attitude of the seducer Don himself, and the performance of the young Italian bass-baritone Ildebrando d'Arcangelo may come to be seen as a milestone in his career development. He has a low yet lively voice, and he's a completely persuasive Don Giovanni.
Roger Norrington, London Classical Players - Mozart: Don Giovanni [Prague Version] (2022)

Roger Norrington, London Classical Players - Mozart: Don Giovanni [Prague Version] (2022)
WEB FLAC | Tracks ~ 524 Mb | Total time: 2 h 23 min | Cover included
Classical | Label: Erato | Recorded: 1992

On the release date of our Sir Roger Norrington retrospective boxset, we also release his long-lost instrumental recordings of Brahms. Norrington approached this project after recording his Beethoven cycle, wondering if mid-19th-century would fit with his views on historically informed performance: “Tempos spacious but forthright; tempo modification, sensitive but simple; textures clear, as benefits such polyphonic writing; balance restored in favour of the winds…” A definitively original vision that gives these recordings a unique appeal.
Riccardo Muti, Wiener Philharmoniker - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - The Da Ponte Operas: Don Giovanni (2002)

Riccardo Muti, Wiener Philharmoniker - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - The Da Ponte Operas: Don Giovanni (2002)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 646 Mb | Total time: 64:28+58:39+48:11 | Scans included
Classical | Label: EMI Classics | # 5 75535 2 | Recorded: 1990

The central facts of this brilliant performance are the conductor's vision and energy, expressed through a virtuoso orchestra and a cast carefully selected for theatrical as well as musical skills. The feeling of unrelenting pressure in the music seems to be an externalization of Don Giovanni's compulsions, which are only thinly veiled by his aristocratic manner and Mozart's mellifluous but intensely dramatic music. Riccardo Muti's tempos are often fast, but not so fast as to interfere with the fine nuances of dramatic expression in the orchestra and the singers, and he makes the gritty realities underlying the often smooth surface of the words and music intensely clear at every point.
Quatuor Franz Joseph - Mozart: Don Giovanni (Arr. for String Quartet) (2009)

Quatuor Franz Joseph - Mozart: Don Giovanni (Arr. for String Quartet) (2009)
WEB | FLAC (tracks) - 737 MB | 02:08:58
Genre: Classical | Label: ATMA Classique

This transcription of Don Giovanni for string quartet by an anonymous arranger perfectly conveys the symbiosis of voice and instrument – a hallmark of Mozart’s genius. Throughout the opera, the deft arranger recreates the balance between the purely musical aspects of the work, without detracting from its theatrical qualities. In short, drama and buffoonery are both preserved.
Dimitri Mitropoulos, Wiener Philharmoniker - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni (1994)

Dimitri Mitropoulos, Wiener Philharmoniker - Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Don Giovanni (1994)
XLD | FLAC | Tracks (Cue & Log) ~ 422 Mb | Total time: 02:22:04 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Sony Classical | # BACD001 | Recorded: 1956

This is a review of the 'live' Mitropoulos recording from Salzburg. Although it is in mono sound the sense of perspective is actually better than in many stereo efforts. Yes sometimes voices recede further than is ideal but that is to be expected in the theatre. The audience is unobtrusive between numbers. The stage noise is generally very low frequency so does not obscure the music.
Rene Jacobs, Freiburger Barockorchester - Mozart: Don Giovanni [2007]

René Jacobs, Freiburger Barocorchester - Mozart: Don Giovanni [2007]
EAC (flac, image, cue, log) | TT: 170' | Covers | 740 Mb
Classical | Harmonia Mundi | # HMC 901964.66 | Rec: 2007

If there is one thing that marks out René Jacobs’s approach to Mozart, it is the way he constantly asks himself questions – and the specifically musical brilliance of the answers he comes up with. The success of his recent version of La clemenza di Tito is proof of that! After Così fan tutte and Le nozze di Figaro, his recording of this centrepiece of the Mozart/Da Ponte trilogy offers us the latest fruits of his reflections on Classical opera. Premiered at the 2006 Innsbruck Festival and recorded shortly afterwards, this production is nourished by his thoughts on Don Giovanni as taboo-breaker and on a ‘physiology of roles’ that respects Mozart’s intentions as nearly as possible. NB This set contains the arias of both versions created by Mozart (Prague 1787, Vienna 1788)