Jonas Kaufmann is the reigning operatic tenor of the day; his fans will lap this album up, and it is indeed notable that even in this all-Italian program (there are three
Verdi pieces in French), there probably is not an Italian singer who could manage similar commercial impact at this point. His rageful work in "Tu? Indietro! Fuggi!" is probably worth the price of admission by itself here.
Ludovic Tezier is not a household name in the same way, but he is undoubtedly a top baritone presence in the operas of
Verdi and can consistently deliver high-quality performances. So
Insieme ("Together") achieves the high baseline one would expect, but it also exceeds them and has something to offer besides star quality. The tenor-baritone duet by singers who perform together often and know each other well was a common format during opera's 20th century golden age; one thinks of
Placido Domingo and
Sherrill Milnes. Yet such recordings are not so common these days, and
Kaufmann and
Tezier revive it in fine style with this program of mostly
Verdi, a strong suit for both singers, and one piece each by
Puccini (from
La boheme) and
Ponchielli (from
La Gioconda). The program begins with these, and that was probably a mistake;
Kaufmann and
Tezier wouldn't be first picks for the youthful friends in the
Puccini, but when the pair tears into
Verdi, things quickly get very exciting. Sample the tension in "Le voila! C'est l'enfant!" from Act Two of
Don Carlo; one almost wants to see the characters leap onto the stage (and they have, often, in the past). The pair achieve the feeling of spontaneity throughout, which is the key to this kind of project.
Antonio Pappano and the
Orchestra of the Accademia di Santa Cecilia are a key cog in this entertainment machine, leaving the singers room to do their thing but contributing expressivity of their own. This will be a major holiday gift item for opera lovers in 2022 and beyond. ~ James Manheim