It seems Italian soprano Renata Scotto has been taking risks all her life. At age 12, she matter-of-factly declared that she would become an opera singer. At 18, she debuted in the treacherous lead role in Verdi's La Traviata.
Scotto has never looked back. Although retired from singing, she's still busy in the opera world teaching young singers and directing opera productions, even designing costumes.
The 77-year-old soprano is being honored by the Metropolitan Opera Guild Feb. 27, with a special "Met Legends" evening celebrating her career. To mark the event, I asked her to pick a few of her favorite opera recordings for an informal session of listening and conversation.
Read more about Renata Scotto and hear her picks after the jump.
After decades of performing with the greatest singers — from Maria Callas to Luciano Pavarotti — Scotto's giddy enthusiasm for the music is undiminished. She's like a teenager falling in love with opera for the first time, passionate about today's singers — such as coloratura soprano Natalie Dessay and tenor Jonas Kaufmann — and devoted to greats of the past, like tenor Jussi Bjorling.
She's also candid about her own career, saying that she never let her sound overtake her interpretation. Scotto learned her craft from some of the very best. She witnessed the immense dedication it takes by interacting with Callas, and her vocal coach on her famous Madama Butterfly recording worked with Puccini himself.
"My career has always been as a risk-taker," Scotto says. "This is the way I am, I don't know how to explain."
Actually, she explains it rather well. Take a listen to an opera legend still on fire for her art.
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Renata Scotto Guest DJ: Opera, Risks, And Keeping It Real
Bellini's Norma: 'Deh! Non volerli vittime'
By Maria Callas
Puccini's La Boheme: Mimi's Death Scene (excerpt)
By Renata Scotto
Wagner's Die Meistersinger: Prize Song
By Jonas Kaufmann
Verdi's La Traviata: 'Addio del passato'
By Renata Scotto
Thomas' Hamlet: Mad Scene (excerpt)
By Natalie Dessay
Puccini's Madama Butterfly: 'Tu piccolo iddio'
By Renata Scotto
Puccini's Manon Lescaut: 'Donna non vidi mai'
By Jussi Björling
Puccini's Manon Lescaut: 'Sola perdutta, abbandonata'
By Renata Scotto