La Cieca must be brief as she is on jury duty (can you imagine, La Cieca being asked to pass judgment?) Anyway. Highlight of the Tucker Gala was definitely Marcello Giordani, who was in absolutely ideal voice for the “Improvviso,” and only slightly nervous for the “Vicino a te.” (He sharped on the very final note, noticeable of course since Aprile Millo‘s high B was so solid and gleaming.) Biggest surprise was Joseph Calleja, who sounds like a different singer in person: the voice is quite large and the fast “Schipa” vibrato, so intrusive on his Sirius broadcast, resolves into an energetic throb in the vast spaces of Avery Fisher Hall. La Cieca is still not 100% convinced of this singer’s insistence on pulling a diminuendo on every other high note, but he is a born artist, with geniunely aristocratic phrasing in the “Ah leve-toi soleil.”
And then there’s Jose Cura, beefy of voice and physique, and obviously of the opinion that he is always the life of the party. Honestly, Verdi is serious music and does not need all that showing off. His Desdemona was Pat Racette, who also sang “L’altra notte.” The voice is big enough for this rep but La Cieca thinks utterly wrong in color: it all sounds like Baby Doe. Racette wore the least flattering dress of the evening, a matronly beige and gold thing that clung to every bulge. And her hair was very flat. Best dress of the night: a tie between Elizabeth Futral‘s filmy black strapless and Sondra Radvanovsky‘s classic off-the shoulder aubergine silk.
Uncharacteristically, La Cieca was most interested in the low voices, especially Rene Pape, glamorous in Boris, and Sam Ramey, shedding a couple of decades for “Ecco il mondo.” Even James Morris was in good voice, particularly for a gorgeous aria from Rachmaniov’s Aleko.
The Roberto Benigni-style podium antics of Asher Fisch were not to La Cieca’s liking, but she couldn’t argue with the results: rich, vibrant playing from the orchestra and chorus, and sympathetic collaboration with the singers. For the first time in years, the Tucker concert really amounted to a gala; this was an evening worthy of the event’s namesake!