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Baritone Zeljko Lucic was every bit her match in the title role, with mellifluous, dark singing in the duets and a pained regal bearing. Yonghoon Lee, who made his Met debut last season when he took over from Roberto Alagna in the title role during the run of Verdi's "Don Carlo," was a winning Ismaele, displaying both a bright tenor and charm that also earned him big applause. Renee Tatum (Fenena), an up-and-coming singer in the Met development program, is a sweet-sounding mezzo-soprano with promise. Most problematic was bass Carlo Colombara as Zaccaria, the high priest of the Hebrews who persuades Nabucco to accept God. When the production was new, Samuel Ramey lent the part a great deal of gravitas. Colombara struggled through "D'Egitto la sui lidi (There upon the shores of Egypt)," barely able to be heard over the orchestra in his upper register and sounding gruff in his low notes. He improved as the night went on, though. Also disappointing was conductor Paolo Carignani, who fell short of the standard set by James Levine during both the original run and revivals in 2003 and 2005. There was no arc, leaving the scenes somewhat disjointed. Unlike Levine, he did not conduct an encore of "Va, pensiero." The Elijah Moshinsky production has a single set by Napier (of "Cats" fame) that represents Israel on one side and Babylon on the other. There are 11 more performances through Nov. 17, with some different singers rotating in during November.
[Associated
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