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V erdi's opera, which would probably be more suitable for Leoncavallo's piece, to reassess Verdi's masterpiece, but rather complement it, like a drum-roll would complement a high-wire act. There are a lot of things that make the audience freeze; there also are parts that allow the viewers to remain quite calm. Everything else is about free acting, good singing and creating the form and balance of the orchestra, the choir and the soloists in order to please the audience that have already been taken care of.
This part of Verdi's "Rigoletto", which truly is the most important one, was not impeccable at the premiere at the Bolshoi. Sometimes the choir failed to negotiate corners of the music pattern, and the quality of the orchestra sound was not stable from measure to measure. It was not the first time that the extraordinary baritone Dimitris Tiliakos appeared at the Bolshoi, but this was another one of those parts that do not suit him one hundred percent. For instance, Chernyakov's "Don Giovanni" was staged not with this particular singer in mind, but T iliakos at least demonstrated a decent performance of that part.
Verdi's jester clown in Carsen's interpretation is not an ideal part for this baritone: he has a sonorous and beautiful mezzo-voce with rich overtones, but his cantilena is not very consistent, and keeping up with Verdi's style is more about using dramatic tools, but not vocal ones. At the same time Tiliakos is not only an interesting singer, but also a great actor; without any doubt, the tragic character he created was very convincing. One would expect to see similar acting and vocal freedom in Gilda; Kristina Mkhitaryan performed this part in the premiere cast.
But the soloist of the Bolshoi Y oung Artists Opera Program did not go beyond the image of her father's obedient daughter; she preferred to focus on articulating the phrases and fulfilling the director's tasks precisely, rather than to find musical and dramatic nuances in her part. Sergey Romanovsky's performance the Duke could have been considered great but for the fact that his voice was husky on the top notes.