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James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala

James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala was a concert lasting (including intermissions) approximately eight hours, that the Metropolitan Opera staged in 1996 in honour of its then principal conductor and artistic director. Excerpts from the gala were released by Deutsche Grammophon on a 72-minute CD, a 161-minute VHS videocassette and a 161-minute double Laserdisc in 1996, and on a 293-minute double DVD in 2005.

James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala
Deutsche Grammophon DVD, B0004602-09
GenreOpera
Directed byBrian Large
StarringJames Levine
Country of originUnited States
Original languagesCzech, English, French, German, Italian and Russian
Production
ProducerLouisa Briccetti
Running time293 minutes
Original release
NetworkPBS
Release27 April 1996 (1996-04-27)

Background edit

James Levine made his début at the Metropolitan Opera at the age of twenty-seven. On 5 June 1971, he conducted a matinée performance of Tosca with Grace Bumbry in the title role, Franco Corelli as Cavaradossi and Peter Glossop – also making his Met début – as Scarpia. Levine was the longest serving conductor in the Met's history, becoming its principal conductor in 1973, its music director in 1976 and its inaugural artistic director in 1986. At the time of his gala, he had led the Met in 1,646 performances of sixty-eight operas, twenty-one of which he had introduced into the company's repertoire. He had also notably initiated the Met's series of television broadcasts with a production of La Bohème starring Luciano Pavarotti and Renata Scotto in 1977.[1][2]

The Met celebrated the silver anniversary of Levine's arrival there with a concert on 27 April 1996. Fifty-eight soloists contributed to a gala that lasted from 6 p.m. until 2 a.m. on the following morning. They performed on three sets: an Ezio Frigerio design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini, a gift of Mrs Donald D. Harrington; a Günther Schneider-Siemssen design for Act 2 of Arabella, a gift in part of Mrs Michael Falk; and a Schneider-Siemssen design for Act 2 of Tannhäuser, a gift of the Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation and of the Metropolitan Opera Guild. The gala as a whole was sponsored by Mrs Emily Fisher Landau. Its television broadcast was sponsored by Mrs Harrington, the Texaco Philanthropic Foundation, Inc., and the National Endowment For the Arts, in association with Deutsche Grammophon, the United Kingdom's BBC Worldwide Television, Japan's NHK, Holland's Nederlandse Programma Stichting, Denmark's Danmarks Radio, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Sweden's Sveriges Television.[2]

DVD chapter listing edit

Disc 1 edit

  • 1 (1:51) Opening credits

Set design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini by Ezio Frigerio (1930–2022)

Richard Wagner (1813–1883)

Rienzi, der letzte der Tribunen ("Rienzi, the last of the tribunes", WWV 49, Dresden, 1842), with a libretto by Wagner after Rienzi, the last of the Roman tribunes (1835) by Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803–1873)

  • 2 (12:46) Overture

Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg ("Tannhäuser and the Wartburg song contest", WWV 70, Dresden, 1845), with a libretto by Wagner after the German legends of Tannhäuser and the Wartburg Sängerkrieg (minstrels' contest)

Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901)

Don Carlo (Paris, 1867), with an Italian libretto by Achille de Lauzieres and Angelo Zanardini, translated from the French of Joseph Méry (1797–1866) and Camille du Locle (1832–1903), after the play Don Carlos, Infant von Spanien ("Don Carlos, Infante of Spain", Hamburg, 1787) by Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805)

Gustave Charpentier (1860–1956)

Louise (Paris, 1900), with a libretto by Charpentier and Saint-Pol-Roux (1861–1940)

  • 5 (6:28) "Depuis le jour où je me suis donnée", with Renée Fleming (Louise)

Pietro Mascagni (1863–1945)

L'amico Fritz ("Friend Fritz", Rome, 1891), with a libretto by Nicola Daspuro (1853–1941, writing as P. Suardon) and Giovanni Targioni-Tozzetti (1863–1934) after L'ami Fritz by Émile Erckmann (1822–1899) and Pierre-Alexandre Chatrian

Franz Lehár (1870–1948)

Giuditta (Vienna, 1934), with a libretto by Paul Knepler [de] (1879–1967) and Fritz Löhner-Beda (1883–1942)

  • 7 (5:20) "Ich weiß es selber nicht... Meine Lippen, sie küssen so heiß", with Ileana Cotrubas (Giuditta)

Giuseppe Verdi

Don Carlo

  • 8 (5:38) "Ah, più non vedrò... O don fatale", with Dolora Zajick (Eboli)

Set design for Act 2 of Arabella by Günther Schneider-Siemssen (1926–2015)

Georges Bizet (1838–1875)

Les pêcheurs de perles ("The pearl fishers", Paris, 1867), with a libretto by Eugène Cormon (1810–1903) and Michel Carré (1821–1872)

Charles Gounod (1818–1893)

Roméo et Juliette (Paris, 1867), with a libretto by Jules Barbier (1825–1901) and Michel Carré after Romeo and Juliet (circa 1593) by William Shakespeare (1564–1616)

Johann Strauss II (1825–1899)

Die Fledermaus ("The flittermouse", Vienna, 1874), with a libretto by Karl Haffner (1804–1876) and Richard Genée (1823–1895) after Le réveillon ("The supper party", Paris, 1872) by Henri Meilhac (1830–1897) and Ludovic Halévy (1834–1908), after Das Gefängnis ("The prison", Berlin, 1851) by Julius Roderich Benedix (1811–1873)

Richard Wagner

Tristan und Isolde (WWV 90, München, 1865), with a libretto by Wagner after Tristan by Gottfried von Strassburg (d. circa 1210)

  • 12 (11:06) "Wie lachend sie mir Lieder singen", with Waltraud Meier (Isolde)

Giuseppe Verdi

Luisa Miller (Naples, 1849), with a libretto by Salvadore Cammarano (1801–1852) after Kabale und Liebe ("Intrigue and love", Frankfurt am Main, 1784) by Friedrich Schiller

  • 13 (7:11) "Oh! Fede negar potessi agl'occhi miei!... Quando le sere al placido", with Carlo Bergonzi (Rodolfo)

Set design for Act 2 of Tannhäuser by Günther Schneider-Siemssen

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840–1893)

Eugene Onegin (Op. 24, Moscow, 1879), with a libretto by Tchaikovsky and Konstantin Shilovsky after Eugene Onegin (published serially, 1825–1832) by Alexander Pushkin (1799–1837)

Camille Saint-Saëns (1835–1921)

Samson et Dalila (Op. 47, Weimar, 1877), with a libretto by Ferdinand Lemaire (1832–1879) after the story of Samson and Delilah in Chapter 16 of the Book of Judges in the Old Testament

Jacques Offenbach (1819–1880)

La Périchole ("The Peruvienne", Paris, 1868), with a libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy after Le carrosse de Saint-Sacrement ("The Saint-Sacrement coach") by Prosper Mérimée (1803–1871)

Richard Strauss (1864–1949)

Der Rosenkavalier ("The knight of the rose", Op. 59, Dresden, 1911), with a libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal (1874–1929) after Les amours du chevalier de Faubles by Jean-Baptiste Louvet de Couvrai (1760–1797) and Monsieur de Pourceaugnac (1669) by Molière (1622–1673)

Charles Gounod

Faust (Paris, 1859), with a libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré from Carré's play Faust et Marguerite after Faust: Eine Tragödie ("Faust, a tragedy", 1808) by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)

Il dissoluto punito, ossia il Don Giovanni ("The rake punished, or Don Giovanni", K. 527, Prague, 1787), with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte (1749–1838) after El burlador de Seville y convivado de piedra ("The trickster of Seville and the stone guest", ?1616) by Tirso de Molina (1579–1648)

Disc 2 edit

  • 1 (1:06) Opening

Set design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini by Ezio Frigerio

John Corigliano (born 1938)

The ghosts of Versailles (New York, 1991), with a libretto by William M. Hoffman (1939–2017) after L'autre Tartuffe, ou La mère coupable ("The other Tartuffe, or The guilty mother", Paris, 1792) by Pierre Beaumarchais

Giuseppe Verdi

Un ballo in maschera (Rome, 1859), with a libretto by Antonio Somma (1809–1864) after that written by Eugène Scribe (1791–1861) for Gustave III, ou Le bal masqué by Daniel Auber (1782–1871)

Antonín Dvořák (1841–1904)

Rusalka ("The water spirit", Prague, 1901), with a libretto by Jaroslav Kvapil (1868–1950) after Undine (1811) by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué (1777–1843), Den lille havfreu ("The little mermaid", 1837) by Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875) and the north-west European folk tradition of Melusine

Richard Wagner

Die Walküre ("The Valkyrie", WWV 86B, Munich, 1870), with a libretto by Wagner

  • 5 (18:44) "Leb wohl, du kühnes, herrliches Kind!", with James Morris (Wotan)

Set design for Act 2 of Arabella by Günther Schneider-Siemssen

Giuseppe Verdi

Ernani (Venice, 1844), with a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave (1810–1876) after Hernani (1830) by Victor Hugo (1802–1885)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Le nozze di Figaro ("The marriage of Figaro", K. 492, Vienna, 1786), with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte after La folle journée, ou Le Mariage de Figaro ("The mad day, or The marriage of Figaro", 1784) by Pierre Beaumarchais (1732–1799)

  • 7 (5:42) "Giunse alfin il momento... Deh! Vieni, non tardar", with Dawn Upshaw (Susanna)

Umberto Giordano (1867–1948)

Andrea Chénier (Milan, 1896), with a libretto by Luigi Illica (1857–1919) based on the life of the poet André Chénier (1762–1794)

  • 8 (6:48) "Esito dunque?... Nemico della patria", with Sherrill Milnes (Gérard)

Gaetano Donizetti (1797–1848)

Don Pasquale (Paris, 1843), with a libretto by Donizetti and Giovanni Ruffini (1807–1881) after that written by Angelo Anelli (1761–1820) for Ser Marcantonio (Milan, 1810) by Stefano Pavesi (1779–1850)

  • 9 (9:18) "Don Pasquale?... Cheti, cheti, immantinente", with Mark Oswald (Malatesta) and Paul Plishka (Don Pasquale)

Jacques Offenbach

Les contes d'Hoffmann ("The tales of Hoffmann", Paris, 1881), with a libretto by Jules Barbier, after Les contes fantastiques d'Hoffmann ("The fantastic tales of Hofmann") by Jules Barbier and Michel Carré, after Der Sandmann ("The Sandman", 1816), Rath Krespel ("Councillor Krespel", 1818) and Das verlorene Spiegelbild ("The lost reflection", from Die Abenteuer der Sylvester-Nacht, ["The adventures of New Year's Eve", 1814]) by E. T. A. Hoffmann (1776–1822)

Set design for Act 2 of Tannhäuser by Günther Schneider-Siemssen

Giuseppe Verdi

I Lombardi alla prima crociata ("The Lombards in the first crusade", Milan, 1843), with a libretto by Temistocle Solera (1815–1878) after I Lombardi alla prima crociata (1826) by Tommaso Grossi (1791–1853)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Così fan tutte, ossia La scuola degli amanti ("Thus do all women, or The school for lovers", K. 588, Vienna, 1790), with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte

Giuseppe Verdi

Un ballo in maschera

  • 13 (5:34) "Morrò, ma prima in grazia", with Aprile Millo (Amelia)

Richard Wagner

Götterdämmerung ("Twilight of the gods", WWV 86D, Bayreuth, 1876), with a libretto by Wagner

  • 14 (20:05) "Starke Scheite schichtet mir dort", with Jane Eaglen (Brünnhilde)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Il dissoluto punito, ossia il Don Giovanni

  • 15 (7:00) "In quali eccessi, o numi... Mi tradì quell'alma ingrata", with Kiri Te Kanawa (Donna Elvira)

A tribute

Richard Wagner

Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg ("The mastersingers of Nuremberg", WWV 96, Munich, 1868), with a libretto by Wagner

  • 17 (11:47) "Wach auf!", with the Metropolitan Opera Chorus[2]

Laserdisc and VHS videocassette chapter listing edit

Laserdisc side 1 edit

Richard Wagner

Rienzi, der letzte der Tribunen

  • 1 (12:48) Overture

Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg

Giuseppe Verdi

Don Carlo

Gustave Charpentier

Louise

  • 4 (6:29) "Depuis le jour où je me suis donnée", with Renée Fleming (Louise)

Pietro Mascagni

L'amico Fritz

Franz Lehár

Giuditta

  • 6 (5:24) "Ich weiß es selber nicht... Meine Lippen, sie küssen so heiß", with Ileana Cotrubas (Giuditta)

Laserdisc side 2 edit

Giuseppe Verdi

Don Carlo

  • 7 (5:21) ""Ah, più non vedrò... O don fatale", with Dolora Zajick (Eboli)

Richard Wagner

Die Walküre

Georges Bizet

Les pêcheurs de perles

Charles Gounod

Roméo et Juliette

Johann Strauss II

Die Fledermaus

Richard Wagner

Tristan und Isolde

  • 12 (11:07) "Wie lachend sie mir Lieder singen", with Waltraud Meier (Isolde)

Giuseppe Verdi

Luisa Miller

  • 13 (7:15) "Oh! Fede negar potesse agl'occhi miei!... Quando le sere al placido", with Carlo Bergonzi (Rodolfo)

Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

Eugene Onegin

Laserdisc side 3 edit

Camille Saint-Saëns

Samson et Dalila

Jacques Offenbach

La Périchole

Richard Strauss

Der Rosenkavalier

Charles Gounod

Faust

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Il dissoluto punito, ossia il Don Giovanni

  • 19 (8:59) "Di molte faci il lume... Sola, sola, in buio loco", with Renée Fleming (Donna Anna), Kiri Te Kanawa (Donna Elvira), Hei-Kyung Hong (Zerlina), Jerry Hadley (Don Ottavio), Bryn Terfel (Leporello) and Julien Robbins (Masetto)

Tribute

  • 20 (3:51) Concluding encomium by Birgit Nilsson

Richard Wagner

Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

  • 21 (8:43) "Wach auf, es nahet gen den Tag!", with the Metropolitan Opera Chorus[3]

CD track listing edit

Georges Bizet

Les pêcheurs de perles

  • 1 (6:12) "Au fond du temple saint", with Roberto Alagna (Nadir) and Bryn Terfel (Zurga)

Gustave Charpentier

Louise

  • 2 (5:56) "Depuis le jour", with Renée Fleming (Louise)

Charles Gounod

Faust

  • 3 (10:01) "Mais ce Dieu, que peut-il pour moi?", with Plácido Domingo (Faust) and Samuel Ramey (Méphistophélès)

Franz Lehár

Giuditta

  • 4 (4:58) "Ich weiß es selber nicht... Mein Lippen, sie küssen so heiß", with Ileana Cotrubas (Giuditta)

Giuseppe Verdi

Don Carlo

  • 5 (5:00) "Ah, più non vedrò... O don fatale", with Dolora Zajick (Eboli)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Il dissoluto punito, ossia il Don Giovanni

  • 6 (8:28) "Di molte faci il lume... Sola, sola, in buio loco", with Renée Fleming (Donna Anna), Kiri Te Kanawa (Donna Elvira), Hei-Kyung Hong (Zerlina), Jerry Hadley (Don Ottavio), Bryn Terfel (Leporello) and Julien Robbins (Masetto)

Charles Gounod

Roméo et Juliette

  • 7 (4:11) "Je veux vivre dans ce rêve", with Ruth Ann Swenson (Juliette)

Johann Strauss II

Die Fledermaus

  • 8 (4:41) "Dieser Anstand, so manierlich", with Karita Mattila (Rosalinde) and Håkan Hagegård (Eisenstein)

Jules Massenet (1842–1912)

Werther (Geneva, 1892), with a libretto by Édouard Blau (1836–1906), Paul Milliet (1848–1924) and Georges Hartmann (1843–1900, writing as Henri Grémont) after Die Leiden des jungen Werthers ("The sorrows of young Werther", 1774) by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

  • 9 (2:49) "Pourquoi me réveiller", with Alfredo Kraus (Werther)

Camille Saint-Saëns

Samson et Dalila

  • 10 (5:57) "Mon cœur s'ouvre à ta voix", with Grace Bumbry (Dalila)

Richard Wagner

Tannhäuser und der Sängerkrieg auf Wartburg

  • 11 (3:22) "Dich, teure Halle", with Deborah Voigt (Elisabeth)

Jacques Offenbach

La Périchole

  • 12 (2:11) "Ah! Quel dîner je viens de faire", with Frederica von Stade (La Périchole)

Richard Strauss

Der Rosenkavalier

  • 13 (6:01) "Hab mir's gelobt", with Renée Fleming (Feldmarschallin), Anne Sofie von Otter (Octavian) and Heidi Grant Murphy (Sophie von Faninal)

A tribute

  • 14 (2:42) Concluding encomium by Birgit Nilsson[1]

Personnel edit

Artists edit

Metropolitan Opera personnel edit

  • Gil Wechsler, lighting designer
  • George Darden, musical preparation
  • Joan Dornemann, musical preparation
  • Dennis Giauque, musical preparation
  • Kemal Khan, musical preparation
  • Robert Morrison, musical preparation
  • Kevin Murphy, musical preparation
  • Richard Woitach, musical preparation
  • Phebe Berkowitz, stage director
  • David Kneuss, stage director
  • Robin Guarino, assistant stage director
  • Catherine Hazlehurst, assistant stage director
  • Peter McClintock, assistant stage director
  • Fabrizio Melano, assistant stage director
  • Paul Mills, assistant stage director
  • Stephen Pickover, assistant stage director
  • Sharon Thomas, assistant stage director
  • Jane Klaviter, prompter
  • Donna Racik, prompter
  • Susan Webb, prompter
  • Thomas H. Connell III, stage manager
  • Stephen A. Brown, stage manager
  • Gary Dietrich, stage manager
  • William McCourt, stage manager
  • Raymond Menard, stage manager
  • Scott Moon, stage manager
  • Stephen Diaz, master carpenter
  • George Green, master electrician
  • Edward McConway, properties master
  • Magda Szayer, wig and hair stylist
  • Victor Callegari, make-up artist
  • William Malloy, wardrobe supervisor
  • Lesley Weston, costume shop head
  • Ray Diffen, costume designer
  • Sylvia Nolan, costume designer[2]

Broadcast personnel edit

  • Brian Large (born 1939), director
  • Louise Briccetti, producer
  • Susan Erben, associate producer
  • Jay David Saks, audio producer
  • Jay Millard, associate director
  • Mark Schubin, engineer-in-charge
  • Ron Washburn, technical supervisor and camera operator
  • Greg Overton, technical director
  • Bill King, audio supervisor
  • Michael Shoskes, audio engineer
  • Mel Becker, audio engineer
  • Paul Cohen, audio engineer
  • Jim Jordan, audio engineer
  • Susan Noll, video engineer
  • Matty Randazzo, video engineer
  • Paul Ranieri, video engineer
  • William Steinberg, video engineer
  • Miguel Armstrong, camera operator
  • Juan Barrera, camera operator
  • Jim Covello, camera operator
  • John Feher, camera operator
  • Manny Gutierrez, camera operator
  • Jake Ostroff, camera operator
  • Manny Rodriguez, camera operator
  • Jim Scurti, camera operator
  • David Smith, camera operator
  • Shaun Harkins, remote camera technician
  • Alan Buchner, videotape engineer
  • Deborah Cavanaugh, electronic graphics
  • Terence Benson, television stage manager
  • Rose Riggins, television stage manager
  • Karen McLaughlin, score reader
  • Victoria Warivonchik, production associate
  • Joseph Sbarra, production secretary
  • Frances Egler, production assistant
  • Aileen Forbes, production assistant
  • Brian McCotter, production assistant
  • James Simpson, production assistant
  • Kevin Wilkin, production assistant
  • Laura Tolkow, title graphics
  • Jim Naughton, production facilities
  • Jim Will, production facilities
  • Unitel Mobile Video, production facilities
  • David Hewitt, remote recording services
  • Phil Gitomer, remote recording services[2]

DVD production personnel edit

  • Roland Ott, project manager
  • Burkhard Bartsch, project coordinator
  • Johannes Müller, producer, msm-Studios GmbH, Munich
  • Hermann Enkemeier, screen designer, msm-Studios
  • Christian Müller, video encoding and authoring, msm-Studios
  • Claudia Pohl, AMSI II mastering, Emil Berliner Studios
  • Udo Potratz, AMSI II mastering, Emil Berliner Studios
  • Sonya Friedman, subtitles
  • Eva Reisinger, booklet editor
  • Merle Kersten, booklet art director[2]

Critical reception edit

Mike Silverman reviewed the gala for the Associated Press on 28 April 1996. It was not until the early hours, he wrote, that the Met's audience heard Birgit Nilsson paying tribute to James Levine with a few bars of "Ho-jo-to-ho" from her signature role, Brünnhilde. Despite the absence of some singers, like Ben Heppner, due to scheduling clashes, and of others, like Cecilia Bartoli and Luciano Pavarotti, due to health issues, the concert was a "thrilling, if exhausting spectacle" replete with vocal talent. The gala's cast list ranged from veterans like the 71-year-old Carlo Bergonzi to newcomers like the 32-year-old Roberto Alagna.[4]

Alagna was more impressive than he had been in a recent La Bohème. His contributions to the Pearlfishers' Duet and the Cherry Duet from L'amico Fritz were both lovely. Two other young tenors – Jerry Hadley and Richard Leech – both sang well too, but no other representatives of their peer group put in an appearance: instead the Met heard the elderly Bergonzi and Alfredo Kraus and the 55-year-old Plácido Domingo, as suave as usual in a trio from Ernani and a duet from Faust.[4]

Bryn Terfel displayed his "ebullient" Leporello in addition to duetting with Alagna in Bizet, his "booming, mellifluous baritone and utter ease and gracefulness as a performer [marking] him as one in a million". He was "sure to be one of the superstars of the next generation".[4]

The best of the evening's female singers was Renée Fleming, "whose soprano voice is as beautiful as any in memory". She was luminous in Louise and Der Rosenkavalier, abetted in the latter by gorgeous singing from Heidi Grant Murphy and Anne Sofie von Otter. Her inclusion in a sextet from Don Giovanni made her the only soloist to be heard more than twice.[4]

Wagner enthusiasts would undoubtedly be encouraged by the Immolation Scene from Götterdämmerung delivered by Jane Eaglen, a British dramatic soprano whose recent success in Wagner in Chicago had evidently not been a flash in the pan. She was worthy to share a billing with Birgit Nilsson. On the last occasion on which Nilsson had appeared at the Met, in its 1983 Centennial Gala, she had sung Isolde's Narrative and Curse. In the Levine gala, that was the passage offered by Waltraud Meier. Her performance was "thrilling", but she was a mezzo-soprano venturing into soprano territory, and the stress evident in her highest notes made one anxious as to whether she was pursuing a path that was right for her.[4]

Dawn Upshaw was "typically simple, silvery and winning" in Mozart's "Deh! Vieni, non tardar". "The contrast could not have been more striking with the number that preceded it - a mannered, diva-ish rendition by Jessye Norman, with high notes that consistently went flat, of an aria from Berlioz's Damnation of Faust".[4]

Levine did not avail himself of the opportunity to make any speeches, but merely "conducted the Met's wonderful orchestra with love and enthusiasm".[4]

Tim Page reviewed the gala in The Washington Post on 29 April 1996. It was, he wrote, a "glorious, crazy, songful party". Not all the most distinguished opera singers were present: José Carreras had a previous commitment, Montserrat Caballé, Marilyn Horne and Teresa Stratas were ill and Kathleen Battle had been fired from the Met in 1994. But the concert still presented an astonishing constellation of some of opera's brightest stars.[5]

Dominated by Mozart, Verdi and Wagner, the gala's programme was typical of the repertoire of the Levine era but lacked any unifying theme otherwise. It was "a sort of melodious circus – a celestial vaudeville". There were consequently many awkward transitions. For example, Jane Eaglen's noble rendition of the immolation scene from Götterdämmerung was followed by the broad comedy of Frederica von Stade in the tipsy aria from La Périchole; the effect was to "dissipate the solemn afterglow of the one and make the other seem goofy and tasteless".[5]

Von Stade also supplied "one of the evening's true glories" in a performance of Cherubino's "Voi che sapete" [omitted from DG's DVD and CD]. "Opera has recently offered little more wonderful than von Stade's interpretation of that famous ardent, hormone-crazed pubescent boy". Also outstanding were Carlo Bergonzi and Alfredo Kraus, skillfully making the most of resources depleted by old age; Ileana Cotrubas, "ripely and irresistibly nostalgic" in Giuditta; Plácido Domingo, combining "magnificent vocalizing and the most acute artistic intelligence" in Ernani and Faust; Renée Fleming, "luscious and immaculate" in Louise, Don Giovanni and Der Rosenkavalier; Waltraud Meier, singing Isolde's curse with "thrilling ferocity"; and Ruth Ann Swenson, compensating for her technical deficiencies in a coloratura showpiece from Roméo et Juliette with character and intelligence.[5]

There were disappointments too. Håkan Hagegård and Karita Mattila were guilty of "campy snickering" in Die Fledermaus. Jerry Hadley perpetrated "vulgar Mario Lanza-isms" in The land of smiles [also omitted by DG]. Ghena Dimitrova, Franco Farina and Juan Pons were "third-rate" in Un ballo in maschera. And Sharon Sweet's mere appearance at the gala was "difficult to explain".[5]

Of especial interest were two prominent up and coming artists, Roberto Alagna and Angela Gheorghiu [appearing one day after their wedding[2]]. Alagna had "a light, sweet and supple voice of moderate size (some high notes that were both delicate and ringing) and a not inconsiderable dramatic ability", but it was far too soon to bracket him with Carreras, Domingo and Pavarotti. Gheorghiu was much more impressive, with "a voice of unusual and haunting timbre, a distinctive creative personality [and] attention to the sheer phonic sound of the words she sings".[5]

None of the soloists, though, could outshine the orchestra and their conductor. Thanks to Levine, the Met's pit was home to "one of the most responsive and virtuosic ensembles in the world", and it was remarkable that he could "preside so effortlessly and so idiomatically over such a range of musical styles, over so many hours".[5]

Martin Bernheimer reviewed the gala in The Los Angeles Times on 29 April 1996. It was, he wrote, a "mega-monster concert", a "shameless, shapeless, formless smorgasbord of arias and ensembles", "a parade of disparate singers striking poses in competitive evening attire" in which "the assembled women blew a crescendo of kisses to their beaming boss out front".[6]

The gala began with a somewhat lethargic treatment of the overture to Rienzi. Newlyweds Roberto Alagna and Angela Gheorghiu were clear, refined and sugary in the Cherry Duet from L'amico Fritz. Dolora Zajick sang with "full-throated bravura" in Eboli's "O don fatale". Waltraud Meier was incandescent in Isolde's Narrative and Curse. Carlo Bergonzi was touching and elegant in Luisa Miller. Alfredo Kraus amazed with his suavity and staying power as Werther and Hoffmann. Raymond Gniewek played an exquisite violin solo in I Lombardi. Catherine Malfitano and Dwayne Croft provided one of the evening's most successful passages of authentic music drama in a pyrexic scene from Eugene Onegin.[6]

Jane Eaglen, "a Wagnerian diva straight from a New Yorker cartoon", showed that it did not much matter what Brünnhilde looked like if she had a voice as overwhelming as a tsunami. Sharon Sweet was "strident" in La forza del destino. Frederica von Stade demonstrated that "charm conquers all" with "her still boyish Cherubino and irresistibly tipsy Périchole". Karita Mattila and Hakån Hagegård were almost as seductive in a flirtatious Watch Duet from Die Fledermaus. Birgit Nilsson provided the gala's most exhilarating tribute to Levine with a trumpet-like Valkyrie war-cry.[6]

Plácido Domingo and Samuel Ramey were comfortingly stellar in "Faust", Ramey for once being allowed to perform without baring his chest. Deborah Voigt, Bryn Terfel, Ruth Ann Swenson, Aprile Millo and Gabriela Beňačková were equally impressive in their celestial wattage.[6]

As far as clothing was concerned, the contributors most deserving of an award were Ileana Cotrubas for sporting a "gigantic Christmas bow", Mark Oswald for losing his tie and vest in Don Pasquale and "the various cleavage divas who lent new meaning to the concept of heaving bosoms".[6]

Jessye Norman perpetrated the evening's "most mannered" selection in a "crooned, roared and sighed" performance of "D'amour l'ardente flamme" that was so erratic in pitch as to present Berlioz as bitonal. Grace Bumbry was a wobbly old Dalila, and Gwyneth Jones an even wobblier Turandot. Dawn Upshaw's eloquent ornamentation in a "silver-bell" "Deh! Vieni, non tardar" was jarringly followed by the Jerry Hadley slathering on the schmalz in "Dein ist mein ganzes Herz". Maria Ewing "yowled" Gershwin's "My man's gone now" with her hands rather oddly thrust into her pockets. Kiri Te Kanawa's honeyed performance of an aria from Don Giovanni was accompanied by "comic-vamp routines". Ghena Dimitrova, Franco Farina and Juan Pons sang a trio from Un ballo in maschera as though working in some theatre in the provinces.[6]

Renée Fleming provided the most beautiful vocalism of the entire concert in her excerpts from Louise and Der Rosenkavalier. James Morris, on the other hand, raised concerns for the health of his voice by the way in which he delivered Wotan's Farewell in his "fraying basso". James Levine's guidance of his excellent orchestra was "sympathetic if sometimes loud and sometimes inflexible".[6]

Neil Crory reviewed the gala on Laserdisc in the Fall 1997 issue of Opera Canada. It was, he wrote, "the gala-to-end-all-galas". Its programme booklet's cancellation list alone deserved a mention in The Guinness Book of Records, with Cecilia Bartoli, Hildegard Behrens, Nicolai Ghiaurov, Marilyn Horne and Luciano Pavarotti all pleading illness.[7]

The gala had not been consistent in quality. There were "a few blazing performances", but also "many that merely smouldered and others that simply failed to ignite". Happily, some of the evening's better selections had been preserved on DG's video discs.[7]

Deborah Voigt was "radiant" in "Dich teure Halle". Renée Fleming was "stunning" in both Der Rosenkavalier and an "expressive, detailed" excerpt from Louise. Ruth Ann Swenson was "appropriately sun-filled" in the Waltz Song from Roméo et Juliette. Frederica von Stade – a perennial Met darling – was "hysterically funny" in the tipsy aria from La Périchole. And in a "forthright" "O don fatale", Dolora Zajick brought the house down.[7]

J. B. Steane reviewed the CD of the gala in Gramophone in December 1998. "Out come the stars," he wrote, "one by one or two by two and then six of them in a galaxy. Some have been in the firmament a long time, others are almost new. But all are there ... to pay tribute".[8]

There was no doubt that the gala must have been a delightful celebration, but the wisest rule for such events was to record them in one's memory rather than on tape. This was not to say that the CD was without merit. Renée Fleming sang really beautifully in "Depuis le jour" from the line "Au jardin de mon cœur" onwards, and Ruth Ann Swenson essayed a brave and fruitful soft passage halfway through Juliet's waltz. But the album's senior contributors sounded below their best, and even their younger colleagues never rose to real greatness.[8]

It was possible that this was partly to do with the disc's audio quality. Fleming's and Bryn Terfel's voices did not sound as attractive on the CD as they did when heard in person. Indeed, the playing of the Met orchestra was more enjoyable to listen to than any of the singers, and both were surpassed by the album's closing speech by Birgit Nilsson. After explaining how Swedes customarily behaved on such occasions, she said: "'But since I am a daughter of the Vikings, I will do it my way.' Then, with no more than a second's pause and no more than a semitone's adjustment of pitch, she gives vent to a mighty 'Hojotoho', and her top B-flat brings down the house".[8]

The gala was also discussed in Clyde T. McCants's American opera singers and their recordings.[9]

Broadcast and home media history edit

The gala was televised in a live transmission on PBS, and was also broadcast in Australia, Denmark, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom.[2]

In 1996, Deutsche Grammophon released versions of the gala in three formats. Thirteen excerpts were released on a 72-minute CD (catalogue number 449-177-2), accompanied by a 24-page insert booklet with an essay by Cory Ellison in English, French, German and Italian, and with production photographs of Alagna, Terfel, Fleming, Domingo, Ramey, Cotrubas, Zajick, Te Kanawa, Hong, Hadley, Robbins, Swenson, Mattila, Hagegård, Kraus, Bumbry, Voigt, von Stade, von Otter, Murphy, Nilsson and Levine.[1] Twenty excerpts were issued on a 161-minute pair of CLV (constant linear velocity) CX-encoded Laserdiscs (catalogue number 072-551-1) with 4:3 NTSC colour video and digital audio.[3] The same excerpts were issued on a VHS videocassette (catalogue number 072-451-3) with 4:3 PAL colour video and digital audio.[10]

In 2005, Deutsche Grammophon released thirty-three excerpts from the gala on a 293-minute pair of DVDs (catalogue number B0004602-09), with 4:3 NTSC colour video and audio in PCM stereo and an ersatz 5.1-channel surround sound upmix in both DTS and Dolby Digital. The DVDs include an interview with Levine, a picture gallery and trailers, and are accompanied by a 12-page insert booklet with an essay by Kenneth Chalmers in English only.[2] They omit the contributions made to the gala by Maria Ewing, Gwyneth Jones, Richard Leech, Jessye Norman and Sharon Sweet, as well as an excerpt from Werther sung by Alfredo Kraus that can be heard on Deutsche Grammophon's CD.[5][4][6]

Gallery of artists edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala, conducted by James Levine, Deutsche Grammophon CD, 449-177-2, 1996
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala, conducted by James Levine, Deutsche Grammophon DVD, B00004602-09, 2005
  3. ^ a b James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala, conducted by James Levine, Deutsche Grammophon LD, 072-551-1, 1996
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Silverman, Mike: "Met celebrates 25 years of James Levine with all-star gala", 28 April 1996". Associated Press.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Page, Tim: "At the Met, a career high note", 29 April 1996". The Washington Post.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h "Bernheimer, Martin: "Levine's silver jubilee: a marathon at the Met", 29 April 1996". The Los Angeles Times. 29 April 1996.
  7. ^ a b c "Crory, Neil: "James Levine 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala", Opera Canada, Vol. 38, No. 3, Fall 1997".[dead link]
  8. ^ a b c Steane, J. B.: Gramophone, December 1996, p. 154
  9. ^ McCants, Clyde T.: American opera singers and their recordings, McFarland & Company, 2004, p. 381
  10. ^ James Levine's 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala, conducted by James Levine, Deutsche Grammophon VHS, 072-451-3, 1996

james, levine, 25th, anniversary, metropolitan, opera, gala, concert, lasting, including, intermissions, approximately, eight, hours, that, metropolitan, opera, staged, 1996, honour, then, principal, conductor, artistic, director, excerpts, from, gala, were, r. James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala was a concert lasting including intermissions approximately eight hours that the Metropolitan Opera staged in 1996 in honour of its then principal conductor and artistic director Excerpts from the gala were released by Deutsche Grammophon on a 72 minute CD a 161 minute VHS videocassette and a 161 minute double Laserdisc in 1996 and on a 293 minute double DVD in 2005 James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera GalaDeutsche Grammophon DVD B0004602 09GenreOperaDirected byBrian LargeStarringJames LevineCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languagesCzech English French German Italian and RussianProductionProducerLouisa BriccettiRunning time293 minutesOriginal releaseNetworkPBSRelease27 April 1996 1996 04 27 Contents 1 Background 2 DVD chapter listing 2 1 Disc 1 2 2 Disc 2 3 Laserdisc and VHS videocassette chapter listing 3 1 Laserdisc side 1 3 2 Laserdisc side 2 3 3 Laserdisc side 3 4 CD track listing 5 Personnel 5 1 Artists 5 2 Metropolitan Opera personnel 5 3 Broadcast personnel 5 4 DVD production personnel 6 Critical reception 7 Broadcast and home media history 8 Gallery of artists 9 See also 10 ReferencesBackground editJames Levine made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera at the age of twenty seven On 5 June 1971 he conducted a matinee performance of Tosca with Grace Bumbry in the title role Franco Corelli as Cavaradossi and Peter Glossop also making his Met debut as Scarpia Levine was the longest serving conductor in the Met s history becoming its principal conductor in 1973 its music director in 1976 and its inaugural artistic director in 1986 At the time of his gala he had led the Met in 1 646 performances of sixty eight operas twenty one of which he had introduced into the company s repertoire He had also notably initiated the Met s series of television broadcasts with a production of La Boheme starring Luciano Pavarotti and Renata Scotto in 1977 1 2 The Met celebrated the silver anniversary of Levine s arrival there with a concert on 27 April 1996 Fifty eight soloists contributed to a gala that lasted from 6 p m until 2 a m on the following morning They performed on three sets an Ezio Frigerio design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini a gift of Mrs Donald D Harrington a Gunther Schneider Siemssen design for Act 2 of Arabella a gift in part of Mrs Michael Falk and a Schneider Siemssen design for Act 2 of Tannhauser a gift of the Fan Fox and Leslie R Samuels Foundation and of the Metropolitan Opera Guild The gala as a whole was sponsored by Mrs Emily Fisher Landau Its television broadcast was sponsored by Mrs Harrington the Texaco Philanthropic Foundation Inc and the National Endowment For the Arts in association with Deutsche Grammophon the United Kingdom s BBC Worldwide Television Japan s NHK Holland s Nederlandse Programma Stichting Denmark s Danmarks Radio the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Sweden s Sveriges Television 2 DVD chapter listing editDisc 1 edit 1 1 51 Opening credits Set design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini by Ezio Frigerio 1930 2022 Richard Wagner 1813 1883 Rienzi der letzte der Tribunen Rienzi the last of the tribunes WWV 49 Dresden 1842 with a libretto by Wagner after Rienzi the last of the Roman tribunes 1835 by Edward Bulwer Lytton 1803 1873 2 12 46 Overture Tannhauser und der Sangerkrieg auf Wartburg Tannhauser and the Wartburg song contest WWV 70 Dresden 1845 with a libretto by Wagner after the German legends of Tannhauser and the Wartburg Sangerkrieg minstrels contest 3 3 44 Dich teure Halle with Deborah Voigt Elisabeth Giuseppe Verdi 1813 1901 Don Carlo Paris 1867 with an Italian libretto by Achille de Lauzieres and Angelo Zanardini translated from the French of Joseph Mery 1797 1866 and Camille du Locle 1832 1903 after the play Don Carlos Infant von Spanien Don Carlos Infante of Spain Hamburg 1787 by Friedrich Schiller 1759 1805 4 12 16 Restate O Signor di Fiandra arrivo with Thomas Hampson Rodrigo and Roberto Scandiuzzi Filippo II Gustave Charpentier 1860 1956 Louise Paris 1900 with a libretto by Charpentier and Saint Pol Roux 1861 1940 5 6 28 Depuis le jour ou je me suis donnee with Renee Fleming Louise Pietro Mascagni 1863 1945 L amico Fritz Friend Fritz Rome 1891 with a libretto by Nicola Daspuro 1853 1941 writing as P Suardon and Giovanni Targioni Tozzetti 1863 1934 after L ami Fritz by Emile Erckmann 1822 1899 and Pierre Alexandre Chatrian 6 9 55 Suzel buon di with Angela Gheorghiu Suzel and Roberto Alagna Fritz Franz Lehar 1870 1948 Giuditta Vienna 1934 with a libretto by Paul Knepler de 1879 1967 and Fritz Lohner Beda 1883 1942 7 5 20 Ich weiss es selber nicht Meine Lippen sie kussen so heiss with Ileana Cotrubas Giuditta Giuseppe VerdiDon Carlo 8 5 38 Ah piu non vedro O don fatale with Dolora Zajick Eboli Set design for Act 2 of Arabella by Gunther Schneider Siemssen 1926 2015 Georges Bizet 1838 1875 Les pecheurs de perles The pearl fishers Paris 1867 with a libretto by Eugene Cormon 1810 1903 and Michel Carre 1821 1872 9 6 44 Au fond du temple saint with Roberto Alagna Nadir and Bryn Terfel Zurga Charles Gounod 1818 1893 Romeo et Juliette Paris 1867 with a libretto by Jules Barbier 1825 1901 and Michel Carre after Romeo and Juliet circa 1593 by William Shakespeare 1564 1616 10 4 36 Je veux vivre dans ce reve with Ruth Ann Swenson Juliette Johann Strauss II 1825 1899 Die Fledermaus The flittermouse Vienna 1874 with a libretto by Karl Haffner 1804 1876 and Richard Genee 1823 1895 after Le reveillon The supper party Paris 1872 by Henri Meilhac 1830 1897 and Ludovic Halevy 1834 1908 after Das Gefangnis The prison Berlin 1851 by Julius Roderich Benedix 1811 1873 11 5 03 Dieser Anstand so manierlich with Karita Mattila Rosalinde and Hakan Hagegard Eisenstein Richard WagnerTristan und Isolde WWV 90 Munchen 1865 with a libretto by Wagner after Tristan by Gottfried von Strassburg d circa 1210 12 11 06 Wie lachend sie mir Lieder singen with Waltraud Meier Isolde Giuseppe VerdiLuisa Miller Naples 1849 with a libretto by Salvadore Cammarano 1801 1852 after Kabale und Liebe Intrigue and love Frankfurt am Main 1784 by Friedrich Schiller 13 7 11 Oh Fede negar potessi agl occhi miei Quando le sere al placido with Carlo Bergonzi Rodolfo Set design for Act 2 of Tannhauser by Gunther Schneider SiemssenPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky 1840 1893 Eugene Onegin Op 24 Moscow 1879 with a libretto by Tchaikovsky and Konstantin Shilovsky after Eugene Onegin published serially 1825 1832 by Alexander Pushkin 1799 1837 14 14 56 O Kak mnye tyazhelo with Catherine Malfitano Tatyana and Dwayne Croft Eugene Onegin Camille Saint Saens 1835 1921 Samson et Dalila Op 47 Weimar 1877 with a libretto by Ferdinand Lemaire 1832 1879 after the story of Samson and Delilah in Chapter 16 of the Book of Judges in the Old Testament 15 6 25 Mon cœur s ouvre a ta voix with Grace Bumbry Dalila Jacques Offenbach 1819 1880 La Perichole The Peruvienne Paris 1868 with a libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halevy after Le carrosse de Saint Sacrement The Saint Sacrement coach by Prosper Merimee 1803 1871 16 2 38 Ah Quel diner je viens de faire with Frederica von Stade La Perichole Richard Strauss 1864 1949 Der Rosenkavalier The knight of the rose Op 59 Dresden 1911 with a libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal 1874 1929 after Les amours du chevalier de Faubles by Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvrai 1760 1797 and Monsieur de Pourceaugnac 1669 by Moliere 1622 1673 17 6 05 Hab mir s gelobt with Renee Fleming Feldmarschallin Anne Sofie von Otter Octavian and Heidi Grant Murphy Sophie von Faninal Charles GounodFaust Paris 1859 with a libretto by Jules Barbier and Michel Carre from Carre s play Faust et Marguerite after Faust Eine Tragodie Faust a tragedy 1808 by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 1749 1832 18 10 30 Mais ce Dieu que peut il pour moi with Placido Domingo Faust and Samuel Ramey Mephistopheles Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1756 1791 Il dissoluto punito ossia il Don Giovanni The rake punished or Don Giovanni K 527 Prague 1787 with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte 1749 1838 after El burlador de Seville y convivado de piedra The trickster of Seville and the stone guest 1616 by Tirso de Molina 1579 1648 19 8 57 Di molte faci il lume Sola sola in buio loco with Renee Fleming Donna Anna Kiri Te Kanawa Donne Elvira Hei Kyung Hong Zerlina Jerry Hadley Don Ottavio Bryn Terfel Leporello and Julien Robbins Masetto Disc 2 edit 1 1 06 Opening Set design for Act 1 of Francesca da Rimini by Ezio FrigerioJohn Corigliano born 1938 The ghosts of Versailles New York 1991 with a libretto by William M Hoffman 1939 2017 after L autre Tartuffe ou La mere coupable The other Tartuffe or The guilty mother Paris 1792 by Pierre Beaumarchais 2 9 18 Cherubino Now we go back in time with Hei Kyung Hong Rosina Wendy White Cherubino Christine Goerke Marie Antoinette and Hakan Hagegard Pierre Beaumarchais Giuseppe VerdiUn ballo in maschera Rome 1859 with a libretto by Antonio Somma 1809 1864 after that written by Eugene Scribe 1791 1861 for Gustave III ou Le bal masque by Daniel Auber 1782 1871 3 5 24 Ahime S appressa alcun with Ghena Dimitrova Amelia Franco Farina Riccardo and Juan Pons Renato Antonin Dvorak 1841 1904 Rusalka The water spirit Prague 1901 with a libretto by Jaroslav Kvapil 1868 1950 after Undine 1811 by Friedrich de la Motte Fouque 1777 1843 Den lille havfreu The little mermaid 1837 by Hans Christian Andersen 1805 1875 and the north west European folk tradition of Melusine 4 7 13 Song to the Moon Mesicku na nebi hlubokem with Gabriela Benackova Rusalka Richard WagnerDie Walkure The Valkyrie WWV 86B Munich 1870 with a libretto by Wagner 5 18 44 Leb wohl du kuhnes herrliches Kind with James Morris Wotan Set design for Act 2 of Arabella by Gunther Schneider SiemssenGiuseppe VerdiErnani Venice 1844 with a libretto by Francesco Maria Piave 1810 1876 after Hernani 1830 by Victor Hugo 1802 1885 6 13 01 Cessaro i suoni with Deborah Voigt Elvira Placido Domingo Ernani and Roberto Scandiuzzi Silva Wolfgang Amadeus MozartLe nozze di Figaro The marriage of Figaro K 492 Vienna 1786 with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte after La folle journee ou Le Mariage de Figaro The mad day or The marriage of Figaro 1784 by Pierre Beaumarchais 1732 1799 7 5 42 Giunse alfin il momento Deh Vieni non tardar with Dawn Upshaw Susanna Umberto Giordano 1867 1948 Andrea Chenier Milan 1896 with a libretto by Luigi Illica 1857 1919 based on the life of the poet Andre Chenier 1762 1794 8 6 48 Esito dunque Nemico della patria with Sherrill Milnes Gerard Gaetano Donizetti 1797 1848 Don Pasquale Paris 1843 with a libretto by Donizetti and Giovanni Ruffini 1807 1881 after that written by Angelo Anelli 1761 1820 for Ser Marcantonio Milan 1810 by Stefano Pavesi 1779 1850 9 9 18 Don Pasquale Cheti cheti immantinente with Mark Oswald Malatesta and Paul Plishka Don Pasquale Jacques OffenbachLes contes d Hoffmann The tales of Hoffmann Paris 1881 with a libretto by Jules Barbier after Les contes fantastiques d Hoffmann The fantastic tales of Hofmann by Jules Barbier and Michel Carre after Der Sandmann The Sandman 1816 Rath Krespel Councillor Krespel 1818 and Das verlorene Spiegelbild The lost reflection from Die Abenteuer der Sylvester Nacht The adventures of New Year s Eve 1814 by E T A Hoffmann 1776 1822 10 5 13 Helas mon cœur s egare encore with Florence Quivar Giulietta Rosalind Elias Niklausse Alfredo Kraus Hoffmann Charles Anthony Pitichinaccio James Courtney Schlemil Paul Plishka Dapertutto and the Metropolitan Opera Chorus Set design for Act 2 of Tannhauser by Gunther Schneider SiemssenGiuseppe VerdiI Lombardi alla prima crociata The Lombards in the first crusade Milan 1843 with a libretto by Temistocle Solera 1815 1878 after I Lombardi alla prima crociata 1826 by Tommaso Grossi 1791 1853 11 13 46 Qui posa il fianco Qual volutta trascorrere with June Anderson Giselda Carlo Bergonzi Oronte Ferruccio Furlanetto Pagano and Raymond Gniewek violin solo Wolfgang Amadeus MozartCosi fan tutte ossia La scuola degli amanti Thus do all women or The school for lovers K 588 Vienna 1790 with a libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte 12 5 35 Sorella cosa dici Prendero quel brunettino with Carol Vaness Fiordiligi and Susanne Mentzer Dorabella Giuseppe VerdiUn ballo in maschera 13 5 34 Morro ma prima in grazia with Aprile Millo Amelia Richard WagnerGotterdammerung Twilight of the gods WWV 86D Bayreuth 1876 with a libretto by Wagner 14 20 05 Starke Scheite schichtet mir dort with Jane Eaglen Brunnhilde Wolfgang Amadeus MozartIl dissoluto punito ossia il Don Giovanni 15 7 00 In quali eccessi o numi Mi tradi quell alma ingrata with Kiri Te Kanawa Donna Elvira A tribute 16 5 56 Concluding encomium by Birgit Nilsson Richard WagnerDie Meistersinger von Nurnberg The mastersingers of Nuremberg WWV 96 Munich 1868 with a libretto by Wagner 17 11 47 Wach auf with the Metropolitan Opera Chorus 2 Laserdisc and VHS videocassette chapter listing editLaserdisc side 1 edit Richard WagnerRienzi der letzte der Tribunen 1 12 48 Overture Tannhauser und der Sangerkrieg auf Wartburg 2 3 47 Dich teure Halle with Deborah Voigt Elisabeth Giuseppe VerdiDon Carlo 3 12 19 Restate O Signor di Fiandra arrivo with Thomas Hampson Rodrigo and Roberto Scandiuzzi Filippo II Gustave CharpentierLouise 4 6 29 Depuis le jour ou je me suis donnee with Renee Fleming Louise Pietro MascagniL amico Fritz 5 9 54 Suzel buon di with Angela Gheorghiu Suzel and Roberto Alagna Fritz Franz LeharGiuditta 6 5 24 Ich weiss es selber nicht Meine Lippen sie kussen so heiss with Ileana Cotrubas Giuditta Laserdisc side 2 edit Giuseppe VerdiDon Carlo 7 5 21 Ah piu non vedro O don fatale with Dolora Zajick Eboli Richard WagnerDie Walkure 8 5 27 Loge hor with James Morris Wotan Georges BizetLes pecheurs de perles 9 7 05 Au fond du temple saint with Roberto Alagna Nadir and Bryn Terfel Zurga Charles GounodRomeo et Juliette 10 4 37 Je veux vivre dans ce reve with Ruth Ann Swenson Juliet Johann Strauss IIDie Fledermaus 11 5 04 Dieser Anstand so manierlich with Karita Mattila Rosalinde and Hakan Hagegard Eisenstein Richard WagnerTristan und Isolde 12 11 07 Wie lachend sie mir Lieder singen with Waltraud Meier Isolde Giuseppe VerdiLuisa Miller 13 7 15 Oh Fede negar potesse agl occhi miei Quando le sere al placido with Carlo Bergonzi Rodolfo Pyotr Ilyich TchaikovskyEugene Onegin 14 15 35 O Kak mnye tyazhelo with Catherine Malfitano Tatyana and Dwayne Croft Eugene Onegin Laserdisc side 3 edit Camille Saint SaensSamson et Dalila 15 6 31 Mon cœur s ouvre a ta voix with Grace Bumbry Dalila Jacques OffenbachLa Perichole 16 2 33 Ah Quel diner je viens de faire with Frederica von Stade La Perichole Richard StraussDer Rosenkavalier 17 6 12 Hab mir s gelobt with Renee Fleming Feldmarschallin Anne Sofie von Otter Octavian and Heidi Grant Murphy Sophie von Faninal Charles GounodFaust 18 10 32 Mais ce Dieu que peut il pour moi with Placido Domingo Faust and Samuel Ramey Mephistopheles Wolfgang Amadeus MozartIl dissoluto punito ossia il Don Giovanni 19 8 59 Di molte faci il lume Sola sola in buio loco with Renee Fleming Donna Anna Kiri Te Kanawa Donna Elvira Hei Kyung Hong Zerlina Jerry Hadley Don Ottavio Bryn Terfel Leporello and Julien Robbins Masetto Tribute 20 3 51 Concluding encomium by Birgit Nilsson Richard WagnerDie Meistersinger von Nurnberg 21 8 43 Wach auf es nahet gen den Tag with the Metropolitan Opera Chorus 3 CD track listing editGeorges BizetLes pecheurs de perles 1 6 12 Au fond du temple saint with Roberto Alagna Nadir and Bryn Terfel Zurga Gustave CharpentierLouise 2 5 56 Depuis le jour with Renee Fleming Louise Charles GounodFaust 3 10 01 Mais ce Dieu que peut il pour moi with Placido Domingo Faust and Samuel Ramey Mephistopheles Franz LeharGiuditta 4 4 58 Ich weiss es selber nicht Mein Lippen sie kussen so heiss with Ileana Cotrubas Giuditta Giuseppe VerdiDon Carlo 5 5 00 Ah piu non vedro O don fatale with Dolora Zajick Eboli Wolfgang Amadeus MozartIl dissoluto punito ossia il Don Giovanni 6 8 28 Di molte faci il lume Sola sola in buio loco with Renee Fleming Donna Anna Kiri Te Kanawa Donna Elvira Hei Kyung Hong Zerlina Jerry Hadley Don Ottavio Bryn Terfel Leporello and Julien Robbins Masetto Charles GounodRomeo et Juliette 7 4 11 Je veux vivre dans ce reve with Ruth Ann Swenson Juliette Johann Strauss IIDie Fledermaus 8 4 41 Dieser Anstand so manierlich with Karita Mattila Rosalinde and Hakan Hagegard Eisenstein Jules Massenet 1842 1912 Werther Geneva 1892 with a libretto by Edouard Blau 1836 1906 Paul Milliet 1848 1924 and Georges Hartmann 1843 1900 writing as Henri Gremont after Die Leiden des jungen Werthers The sorrows of young Werther 1774 by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 9 2 49 Pourquoi me reveiller with Alfredo Kraus Werther Camille Saint SaensSamson et Dalila 10 5 57 Mon cœur s ouvre a ta voix with Grace Bumbry Dalila Richard WagnerTannhauser und der Sangerkrieg auf Wartburg 11 3 22 Dich teure Halle with Deborah Voigt Elisabeth Jacques OffenbachLa Perichole 12 2 11 Ah Quel diner je viens de faire with Frederica von Stade La Perichole Richard StraussDer Rosenkavalier 13 6 01 Hab mir s gelobt with Renee Fleming Feldmarschallin Anne Sofie von Otter Octavian and Heidi Grant Murphy Sophie von Faninal A tribute 14 2 42 Concluding encomium by Birgit Nilsson 1 Personnel editArtists edit Roberto Alagna born 1963 tenor June Anderson born 1952 soprano Charles Anthony 1929 2012 tenor Gabriela Benackova born 1947 soprano Carlo Bergonzi 1924 2014 tenor Grace Bumbry 1937 2023 mezzo soprano Ileana Cotrubas born 1939 soprano James Courtney bass baritone Dwayne Croft baritone Ghena Dimitrova 1941 2005 soprano Placido Domingo born 1941 tenor Jane Eaglen born 1960 soprano Rosalind Elias 1930 2020 mezzo soprano Franco Farina tenor Renee Fleming born 1959 soprano Ferruccio Furlanetto born 1949 bass Angela Gheorghiu born 1965 soprano Christine Goerke born 1969 soprano Jerry Hadley 1952 2007 tenor Hakan Hagegard born 1945 baritone Thomas Hampson born 1955 baritone Hei Kyung Hong born 1959 soprano Kiri Te Kanawa born 1944 soprano Alfredo Kraus 1927 1999 tenor Catherine Malfitano born 1948 soprano Karita Mattila born 1960 soprano Waltraud Meier born 1956 soprano Susanne Mentzer born 1957 mezzo soprano Aprile Millo born 1958 soprano Sherrill Milnes born 1935 baritone James Morris born 1947 bass baritone Heidi Grant Murphy born 1965 soprano Anne Sofie von Otter born 1955 mezzo soprano Mark Oswald baritone Paul Plishka born 1941 bass Juan Pons born 1946 baritone Florence Quivar born 1944 mezzo soprano Julien Robbins bass baritone Roberto Scandiuzzi born 1958 bass Frederica von Stade born 1945 mezzo soprano Ruth Ann Swenson born 1959 soprano Bryn Terfel born 1965 bass baritone Dawn Upshaw born 1960 soprano Carol Vaness born 1952 soprano Deborah Voigt born 1960 soprano Wendy White born 1953 mezzo soprano Dolora Zajick born 1952 mezzo soprano Raymond Gniewek 1931 2021 concertmaster Metropolitan Opera Orchestra Metropolitan Opera Chorus Raymond Hughes chorus master James Levine 1943 2021 conductor 2 Metropolitan Opera personnel edit Gil Wechsler lighting designer George Darden musical preparation Joan Dornemann musical preparation Dennis Giauque musical preparation Kemal Khan musical preparation Robert Morrison musical preparation Kevin Murphy musical preparation Richard Woitach musical preparation Phebe Berkowitz stage director David Kneuss stage director Robin Guarino assistant stage director Catherine Hazlehurst assistant stage director Peter McClintock assistant stage director Fabrizio Melano assistant stage director Paul Mills assistant stage director Stephen Pickover assistant stage director Sharon Thomas assistant stage director Jane Klaviter prompter Donna Racik prompter Susan Webb prompter Thomas H Connell III stage manager Stephen A Brown stage manager Gary Dietrich stage manager William McCourt stage manager Raymond Menard stage manager Scott Moon stage manager Stephen Diaz master carpenter George Green master electrician Edward McConway properties master Magda Szayer wig and hair stylist Victor Callegari make up artist William Malloy wardrobe supervisor Lesley Weston costume shop head Ray Diffen costume designer Sylvia Nolan costume designer 2 Broadcast personnel edit Brian Large born 1939 director Louise Briccetti producer Susan Erben associate producer Jay David Saks audio producer Jay Millard associate director Mark Schubin engineer in charge Ron Washburn technical supervisor and camera operator Greg Overton technical director Bill King audio supervisor Michael Shoskes audio engineer Mel Becker audio engineer Paul Cohen audio engineer Jim Jordan audio engineer Susan Noll video engineer Matty Randazzo video engineer Paul Ranieri video engineer William Steinberg video engineer Miguel Armstrong camera operator Juan Barrera camera operator Jim Covello camera operator John Feher camera operator Manny Gutierrez camera operator Jake Ostroff camera operator Manny Rodriguez camera operator Jim Scurti camera operator David Smith camera operator Shaun Harkins remote camera technician Alan Buchner videotape engineer Deborah Cavanaugh electronic graphics Terence Benson television stage manager Rose Riggins television stage manager Karen McLaughlin score reader Victoria Warivonchik production associate Joseph Sbarra production secretary Frances Egler production assistant Aileen Forbes production assistant Brian McCotter production assistant James Simpson production assistant Kevin Wilkin production assistant Laura Tolkow title graphics Jim Naughton production facilities Jim Will production facilities Unitel Mobile Video production facilities David Hewitt remote recording services Phil Gitomer remote recording services 2 DVD production personnel edit Roland Ott project manager Burkhard Bartsch project coordinator Johannes Muller producer msm Studios GmbH Munich Hermann Enkemeier screen designer msm Studios Christian Muller video encoding and authoring msm Studios Claudia Pohl AMSI II mastering Emil Berliner Studios Udo Potratz AMSI II mastering Emil Berliner Studios Sonya Friedman subtitles Eva Reisinger booklet editor Merle Kersten booklet art director 2 Critical reception editMike Silverman reviewed the gala for the Associated Press on 28 April 1996 It was not until the early hours he wrote that the Met s audience heard Birgit Nilsson paying tribute to James Levine with a few bars of Ho jo to ho from her signature role Brunnhilde Despite the absence of some singers like Ben Heppner due to scheduling clashes and of others like Cecilia Bartoli and Luciano Pavarotti due to health issues the concert was a thrilling if exhausting spectacle replete with vocal talent The gala s cast list ranged from veterans like the 71 year old Carlo Bergonzi to newcomers like the 32 year old Roberto Alagna 4 Alagna was more impressive than he had been in a recent La Boheme His contributions to the Pearlfishers Duet and the Cherry Duet from L amico Fritz were both lovely Two other young tenors Jerry Hadley and Richard Leech both sang well too but no other representatives of their peer group put in an appearance instead the Met heard the elderly Bergonzi and Alfredo Kraus and the 55 year old Placido Domingo as suave as usual in a trio from Ernani and a duet from Faust 4 Bryn Terfel displayed his ebullient Leporello in addition to duetting with Alagna in Bizet his booming mellifluous baritone and utter ease and gracefulness as a performer marking him as one in a million He was sure to be one of the superstars of the next generation 4 The best of the evening s female singers was Renee Fleming whose soprano voice is as beautiful as any in memory She was luminous in Louise and Der Rosenkavalier abetted in the latter by gorgeous singing from Heidi Grant Murphy and Anne Sofie von Otter Her inclusion in a sextet from Don Giovanni made her the only soloist to be heard more than twice 4 Wagner enthusiasts would undoubtedly be encouraged by the Immolation Scene from Gotterdammerung delivered by Jane Eaglen a British dramatic soprano whose recent success in Wagner in Chicago had evidently not been a flash in the pan She was worthy to share a billing with Birgit Nilsson On the last occasion on which Nilsson had appeared at the Met in its 1983 Centennial Gala she had sung Isolde s Narrative and Curse In the Levine gala that was the passage offered by Waltraud Meier Her performance was thrilling but she was a mezzo soprano venturing into soprano territory and the stress evident in her highest notes made one anxious as to whether she was pursuing a path that was right for her 4 Dawn Upshaw was typically simple silvery and winning in Mozart s Deh Vieni non tardar The contrast could not have been more striking with the number that preceded it a mannered diva ish rendition by Jessye Norman with high notes that consistently went flat of an aria from Berlioz s Damnation of Faust 4 Levine did not avail himself of the opportunity to make any speeches but merely conducted the Met s wonderful orchestra with love and enthusiasm 4 Tim Page reviewed the gala in The Washington Post on 29 April 1996 It was he wrote a glorious crazy songful party Not all the most distinguished opera singers were present Jose Carreras had a previous commitment Montserrat Caballe Marilyn Horne and Teresa Stratas were ill and Kathleen Battle had been fired from the Met in 1994 But the concert still presented an astonishing constellation of some of opera s brightest stars 5 Dominated by Mozart Verdi and Wagner the gala s programme was typical of the repertoire of the Levine era but lacked any unifying theme otherwise It was a sort of melodious circus a celestial vaudeville There were consequently many awkward transitions For example Jane Eaglen s noble rendition of the immolation scene from Gotterdammerung was followed by the broad comedy of Frederica von Stade in the tipsy aria from La Perichole the effect was to dissipate the solemn afterglow of the one and make the other seem goofy and tasteless 5 Von Stade also supplied one of the evening s true glories in a performance of Cherubino s Voi che sapete omitted from DG s DVD and CD Opera has recently offered little more wonderful than von Stade s interpretation of that famous ardent hormone crazed pubescent boy Also outstanding were Carlo Bergonzi and Alfredo Kraus skillfully making the most of resources depleted by old age Ileana Cotrubas ripely and irresistibly nostalgic in Giuditta Placido Domingo combining magnificent vocalizing and the most acute artistic intelligence in Ernani and Faust Renee Fleming luscious and immaculate in Louise Don Giovanni and Der Rosenkavalier Waltraud Meier singing Isolde s curse with thrilling ferocity and Ruth Ann Swenson compensating for her technical deficiencies in a coloratura showpiece from Romeo et Juliette with character and intelligence 5 There were disappointments too Hakan Hagegard and Karita Mattila were guilty of campy snickering in Die Fledermaus Jerry Hadley perpetrated vulgar Mario Lanza isms in The land of smiles also omitted by DG Ghena Dimitrova Franco Farina and Juan Pons were third rate in Un ballo in maschera And Sharon Sweet s mere appearance at the gala was difficult to explain 5 Of especial interest were two prominent up and coming artists Roberto Alagna and Angela Gheorghiu appearing one day after their wedding 2 Alagna had a light sweet and supple voice of moderate size some high notes that were both delicate and ringing and a not inconsiderable dramatic ability but it was far too soon to bracket him with Carreras Domingo and Pavarotti Gheorghiu was much more impressive with a voice of unusual and haunting timbre a distinctive creative personality and attention to the sheer phonic sound of the words she sings 5 None of the soloists though could outshine the orchestra and their conductor Thanks to Levine the Met s pit was home to one of the most responsive and virtuosic ensembles in the world and it was remarkable that he could preside so effortlessly and so idiomatically over such a range of musical styles over so many hours 5 Martin Bernheimer reviewed the gala in The Los Angeles Times on 29 April 1996 It was he wrote a mega monster concert a shameless shapeless formless smorgasbord of arias and ensembles a parade of disparate singers striking poses in competitive evening attire in which the assembled women blew a crescendo of kisses to their beaming boss out front 6 The gala began with a somewhat lethargic treatment of the overture to Rienzi Newlyweds Roberto Alagna and Angela Gheorghiu were clear refined and sugary in the Cherry Duet from L amico Fritz Dolora Zajick sang with full throated bravura in Eboli s O don fatale Waltraud Meier was incandescent in Isolde s Narrative and Curse Carlo Bergonzi was touching and elegant in Luisa Miller Alfredo Kraus amazed with his suavity and staying power as Werther and Hoffmann Raymond Gniewek played an exquisite violin solo in I Lombardi Catherine Malfitano and Dwayne Croft provided one of the evening s most successful passages of authentic music drama in a pyrexic scene from Eugene Onegin 6 Jane Eaglen a Wagnerian diva straight from a New Yorker cartoon showed that it did not much matter what Brunnhilde looked like if she had a voice as overwhelming as a tsunami Sharon Sweet was strident in La forza del destino Frederica von Stade demonstrated that charm conquers all with her still boyish Cherubino and irresistibly tipsy Perichole Karita Mattila and Hakan Hagegard were almost as seductive in a flirtatious Watch Duet from Die Fledermaus Birgit Nilsson provided the gala s most exhilarating tribute to Levine with a trumpet like Valkyrie war cry 6 Placido Domingo and Samuel Ramey were comfortingly stellar in Faust Ramey for once being allowed to perform without baring his chest Deborah Voigt Bryn Terfel Ruth Ann Swenson Aprile Millo and Gabriela Benackova were equally impressive in their celestial wattage 6 As far as clothing was concerned the contributors most deserving of an award were Ileana Cotrubas for sporting a gigantic Christmas bow Mark Oswald for losing his tie and vest in Don Pasquale and the various cleavage divas who lent new meaning to the concept of heaving bosoms 6 Jessye Norman perpetrated the evening s most mannered selection in a crooned roared and sighed performance of D amour l ardente flamme that was so erratic in pitch as to present Berlioz as bitonal Grace Bumbry was a wobbly old Dalila and Gwyneth Jones an even wobblier Turandot Dawn Upshaw s eloquent ornamentation in a silver bell Deh Vieni non tardar was jarringly followed by the Jerry Hadley slathering on the schmalz in Dein ist mein ganzes Herz Maria Ewing yowled Gershwin s My man s gone now with her hands rather oddly thrust into her pockets Kiri Te Kanawa s honeyed performance of an aria from Don Giovanni was accompanied by comic vamp routines Ghena Dimitrova Franco Farina and Juan Pons sang a trio from Un ballo in maschera as though working in some theatre in the provinces 6 Renee Fleming provided the most beautiful vocalism of the entire concert in her excerpts from Louise and Der Rosenkavalier James Morris on the other hand raised concerns for the health of his voice by the way in which he delivered Wotan s Farewell in his fraying basso James Levine s guidance of his excellent orchestra was sympathetic if sometimes loud and sometimes inflexible 6 Neil Crory reviewed the gala on Laserdisc in the Fall 1997 issue of Opera Canada It was he wrote the gala to end all galas Its programme booklet s cancellation list alone deserved a mention in The Guinness Book of Records with Cecilia Bartoli Hildegard Behrens Nicolai Ghiaurov Marilyn Horne and Luciano Pavarotti all pleading illness 7 The gala had not been consistent in quality There were a few blazing performances but also many that merely smouldered and others that simply failed to ignite Happily some of the evening s better selections had been preserved on DG s video discs 7 Deborah Voigt was radiant in Dich teure Halle Renee Fleming was stunning in both Der Rosenkavalier and an expressive detailed excerpt from Louise Ruth Ann Swenson was appropriately sun filled in the Waltz Song from Romeo et Juliette Frederica von Stade a perennial Met darling was hysterically funny in the tipsy aria from La Perichole And in a forthright O don fatale Dolora Zajick brought the house down 7 J B Steane reviewed the CD of the gala in Gramophone in December 1998 Out come the stars he wrote one by one or two by two and then six of them in a galaxy Some have been in the firmament a long time others are almost new But all are there to pay tribute 8 There was no doubt that the gala must have been a delightful celebration but the wisest rule for such events was to record them in one s memory rather than on tape This was not to say that the CD was without merit Renee Fleming sang really beautifully in Depuis le jour from the line Au jardin de mon cœur onwards and Ruth Ann Swenson essayed a brave and fruitful soft passage halfway through Juliet s waltz But the album s senior contributors sounded below their best and even their younger colleagues never rose to real greatness 8 It was possible that this was partly to do with the disc s audio quality Fleming s and Bryn Terfel s voices did not sound as attractive on the CD as they did when heard in person Indeed the playing of the Met orchestra was more enjoyable to listen to than any of the singers and both were surpassed by the album s closing speech by Birgit Nilsson After explaining how Swedes customarily behaved on such occasions she said But since I am a daughter of the Vikings I will do it my way Then with no more than a second s pause and no more than a semitone s adjustment of pitch she gives vent to a mighty Hojotoho and her top B flat brings down the house 8 The gala was also discussed in Clyde T McCants s American opera singers and their recordings 9 Broadcast and home media history editThe gala was televised in a live transmission on PBS and was also broadcast in Australia Denmark Japan the Netherlands Sweden and the United Kingdom 2 In 1996 Deutsche Grammophon released versions of the gala in three formats Thirteen excerpts were released on a 72 minute CD catalogue number 449 177 2 accompanied by a 24 page insert booklet with an essay by Cory Ellison in English French German and Italian and with production photographs of Alagna Terfel Fleming Domingo Ramey Cotrubas Zajick Te Kanawa Hong Hadley Robbins Swenson Mattila Hagegard Kraus Bumbry Voigt von Stade von Otter Murphy Nilsson and Levine 1 Twenty excerpts were issued on a 161 minute pair of CLV constant linear velocity CX encoded Laserdiscs catalogue number 072 551 1 with 4 3 NTSC colour video and digital audio 3 The same excerpts were issued on a VHS videocassette catalogue number 072 451 3 with 4 3 PAL colour video and digital audio 10 In 2005 Deutsche Grammophon released thirty three excerpts from the gala on a 293 minute pair of DVDs catalogue number B0004602 09 with 4 3 NTSC colour video and audio in PCM stereo and an ersatz 5 1 channel surround sound upmix in both DTS and Dolby Digital The DVDs include an interview with Levine a picture gallery and trailers and are accompanied by a 12 page insert booklet with an essay by Kenneth Chalmers in English only 2 They omit the contributions made to the gala by Maria Ewing Gwyneth Jones Richard Leech Jessye Norman and Sharon Sweet as well as an excerpt from Werther sung by Alfredo Kraus that can be heard on Deutsche Grammophon s CD 5 4 6 Gallery of artists edit nbsp Roberto Alagna nbsp Charles Anthony nbsp Gabriela Benackova nbsp Carlo Bergonzi nbsp Grace Bumbry nbsp Ghena Dimitrova nbsp Placido Domingo nbsp Renee Fleming nbsp Angela Gheorghiu nbsp Hakan Hagegard nbsp Thomas Hampson nbsp Kiri Te Kanawa nbsp Alfredo Kraus nbsp Catherine Malfitano nbsp Sherrill Milnes nbsp Birgit Nilsson nbsp Anne Sofie von Otter nbsp Juan Pons nbsp Frederica von Stade nbsp Bryn Terfel nbsp Carol Vaness nbsp Dolora Zajick nbsp James LevineSee also editThe Metropolitan Opera Centennial Gala The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991References edit a b c James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala conducted by James Levine Deutsche Grammophon CD 449 177 2 1996 a b c d e f g h i j James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala conducted by James Levine Deutsche Grammophon DVD B00004602 09 2005 a b James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala conducted by James Levine Deutsche Grammophon LD 072 551 1 1996 a b c d e f g h Silverman Mike Met celebrates 25 years of James Levine with all star gala 28 April 1996 Associated Press a b c d e f g Page Tim At the Met a career high note 29 April 1996 The Washington Post a b c d e f g h Bernheimer Martin Levine s silver jubilee a marathon at the Met 29 April 1996 The Los Angeles Times 29 April 1996 a b c Crory Neil James Levine 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala Opera Canada Vol 38 No 3 Fall 1997 dead link a b c Steane J B Gramophone December 1996 p 154 McCants Clyde T American opera singers and their recordings McFarland amp Company 2004 p 381 James Levine s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala conducted by James Levine Deutsche Grammophon VHS 072 451 3 1996 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James Levine 27s 25th Anniversary Metropolitan Opera Gala amp oldid 1201998595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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