X

Piazzolla: Maria de Buenos Aires (Tango Operita)

Product ID : 17157278


Galleon Product ID 17157278
Model
Manufacturer
Shipping Dimension Unknown Dimensions
I think this is wrong?
-
5,300

*Price and Stocks may change without prior notice
*Packaging of actual item may differ from photo shown

Pay with

About Piazzolla: Maria De Buenos Aires

Product description In addition to reinventing the tango, the late Astor Piazzolla is also credited with introducing the passionate art form to worldwide concert audiences. Among his greatest accomplishments is Maria de Buenos Aires, his only opera. After several less-than-ideal recordings, Maria de Buenos Aires is now available in a definitive, lavishly packaged, state-of-the-art version by violinist Gidon Kremer and a cast of Argentinean musicians - experts on Piazzolla's unique art. Amazon.com City gives birth to girl. City loses girl to shadowy underworld. City reunites with girl's spirit. That is the story of María de Buenos Aires, a 30-year-old Spanish-language operetta composed by Astor Piazzolla, the foremost proponent of modern tango. This recording was encouraged by violinist Gidon Kremer, resulting in an elegant new arrangement (down from the original eleven musicians to eight, including the late Piazzolla's beloved bandoneon) and the appearance of Horacio Ferrer, who wrote the libretto, to perform the role of Goblin (or El Duende), the narrator. Ferrer's textured spoken baritone brings a weary romance to the work, contrasting with Julia Zenko's robust María, who can enunciate pizzicato syllable-for-syllable runs without losing the meaning of her phrases, and who trills her r's with an emphasis equal parts street-wise and regal. For much of the operetta, María is actually the shadow spirit of María, cursed to wander the city; if Zenko's ethereal María seems more passionate than most mortals do, one must assume that Ferrer approves of the interpretation. The ensemble is exceptional, with particular emphasis given to Vadim Sakharov's jazzy piano and Kremer's elegiac violin. The production shows a tremendous amount of emotional restraint, in contrast with the María on Milan Records. At times, Ferrer's phantasmagoric poetry proves hysterically surreal. Who else, besides perhaps Woody Allen, could have composed an "Aria of the Anyalysts" in which María confronts her memories. --Marc Weidenbaum Review Unlike most operas, it's not written in a continuous blanket of music, but mostly in a series of tango songs--a ballad opera, in other words. Though it's not really operatic, it's pretty dramatic stuff. The quality of the music is extremely high--some of Piazzolla's most ambitious and complex ever.... -- USA Today