I'm not familiar with that producer but $43 certainly sounds like a good price for an acknowledged good Barolo from a good year.
There are, or have been in the last several decades, 2 distinct schools of Barolo making. Call them Old School (OS) and New School (NS). Traditional OS Barolo takes a very long time to come around and then lives for a very long time afterward. The NS guys set out to embrace more modern high-tech methods which would produce a more approachable, more quickly drinkable wine. They succeeded. Some of these, e.g. Ceretto, made some splendid wines in the great 80s vintages. I have seen it alleged that these NS style wines have not aged well, but I have never drunk an old one.
The OS wines, exemplified in my mind by Giacomo Conterno, really can't be touched for many years. But the Conterno Monfortino is, for me, the absolute be all and end all of Barolo.
I believe that the pendulum swung very much toward NS wines for at least a couple of decades and may now be swinging back a bit. Needless to say, market forces would push producers in the NS direction.
I'm not at all in close touch with current trends, so I defer to any of your pals from the tasting on any of these issues. These are only my subjective impressions.
I drank a '96 Parusso on Passover and it was clearly in its absolute infancy. It had been decanted and open for many hours, so there was some pleasure in it, but I regretted having opened it overall.
I had a tasting of '74s (an OK but not great year) around 1998 and they were all in fine, firm shape. Just to give you an idea of the Barolo life-span.
I have not been drinking as much Barolo as I would like since the dollar has been weak, so my impressions are largely based on 70s and 80s vintages. Of these some of the most luscious have been from Vietti, Giacosa, Prunotto (Barolo/Barbaresco), Gaja (Barbaresco), Produttori del Barbaresco, Renato Ratti, Marcarini, Sandrone, Scavino, Among others. I cannot speak to ownership or stylistic changes that may have occurred since then.
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