Franco Faccio Amleto

Paolo Carignani, Wiener Symphoniker - Franco Faccio: Amleto (Hamlet) (2017) [BDRip]

Paolo Carignani, Wiener Symphoniker - Franco Faccio: Amleto (Hamlet) (2017) [BDRip]
BluRay-rip | AVC | MKV 1920x1080 / 6215 kbps / 29,97 fps | 145 min | 6,81 Gb
Audio: Italiano / AC3 / 5ch / 48.0 KHz / 448 Kbps
Classical | C Major | Sub: Italian, German, English, French, Korean

This production ''offers all an Italian-opera-lover could possibly desire'' wrote the FAZ after the revival of this ''forgotten gem'' at the Bregenz Festival. The festival continued its rediscovery series with ''Amleto/Hamlet'', an opera by Verdi contemporaries Franco Faccio and Arrigo Boito, based on Shakespeare's tragedy Hamlet. Premiered in 1865 in Genoa and restaged in 1871 at Milano's La Scala, ''Hamlet'' was only revived in 2014 concertante in the US before its ''triumphal rebirth'' at the Bregenz Festival, where the opera was also recorded for the first time ever. Faccio, who conducted the first performance of Verdi's Aida in Italy and the world premiere of Otello and Boito, Verdi's librettist of Otello and Falstaff, skillfully and effectively challenge the conventions of Italian opera, which they watned to revitalize by infusing it with the spirit of Shakespeare's drama.

Pavel Cernoch - Faccio Amleto (Live) (2019)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at Aug. 9, 2019
Pavel Cernoch - Faccio Amleto (Live) (2019)

Pavel Cernoch - Faccio Amleto (Live) (2019)
FLAC tracks +booklet | 02:14:34 | 517 Mb
Genre: Classical / Label: Naxos

First performed in 1865, Amleto (Hamlet) represented a radical new development in Italian opera, the nuovo melodramma. Composer Franco Faccio and his librettist Arrigo Boito sought a greater degree of musical unity in staged productions and a more equal relationship between text and music. In Hamlet, a play that many then considered un-operatic, they found the perfect medium through which to explore the works philosophical and dramatic power not least the great set-piece scenes: Amletos soliloquy Essere o non essere! (To be or not to be), Ofelias Mad Scene and the fight scenes in a way that strikingly prefigures the verismo operas yet to come.