In his lifetime, Austrian conductor
Karl Böhm was acknowledged to be one of the greatest living
Mozart conductors. This meant not only frequent appearances throughout the German-speaking world, but also frequent recordings of the standard orchestral and operatic works. In his career,
Böhm made two official recordings of Don Giovanni for Deutsche Grammophon: an earlier recording made in Prague with the Orchester des Nationaltheaters Prag featuring German baritone
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau in the title role and this later recording made at the 1977 Salzburg Festival with the
Wiener Philharmoniker featuring American baritone
Sherrill Milnes. Although this recording has its merits, principal among them the playing of the
Wiener Philharmoniker, it has two huge drawbacks: the singing and the conducting. The flaws in the singing start, but do not end, with
Milnes. A loud, blustery baritone who substitutes volume for conviction,
Milnes is a singularly unseductive Don. Almost equally awful are screechy sopranos Teresa Zylis-Gara as Donna Elvira and
Anna Tomowa-Sintow as Donna Anna. There are, thankfully, better singers on hand -- particularly the smooth
Peter Schreier as Don Ottavio, the hilarious
Walter Berry as Leporello, and the delightful
Edith Mathis as Zerlina -- but with
Milnes' shouting and stamping, it's hard to enjoy their performances. Unfortunately,
Böhm's conducting here is nowhere near in the same league as his earlier performance: attacks and releases are less precise, balances and textures are less clear, rhythms and tempos are less cogent, and even the sumptuous playing of the
Wiener Philharmoniker is less lovely than the playing of the Orchester des Nationaltheaters Prag. This is not to say that
Böhm's conducting is anywhere near as disagreeable as
Milnes' singing -- even at his weakest,
Böhm is by far the greater musician -- but it is to say that, given the choice of his two official recordings of Don Giovanni, the earlier is much to be preferred.