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Norma, opera Casta Diva
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Va, crudele
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Oh, rimembranza!
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera No, non tremare, o perfido!
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Perfido!...or basti!
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Mira, o Norma
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Cedi...deh cedi!...Si, fino all'ore estreme
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Guerra! guerra!
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera In mia man alfin tu sei
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Norma! deh Norma! scolpati!
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
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Norma, opera Deh! Non volerli vittime
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
Performed by La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus
with Christa Ludwig, Nicola [singer] Zaccaria, Franco Corelli, Maria Callas
Conducted by Tullio Serafin
Bellini: Norma (Highlights),Vincenzo Bellini,Tullio Serafin,La Scala Theater Orchestra & Chorus,Maria Callas,Franco Corelli,Christa Ludwig,Nicola Zaccaria [singer],Angel Records,Classical,Classical Composers,Classical Music,Italian Romantic Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio
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Romance of the Violin
Claude Debussy , Fryderyk Chopin , Camille Saint-Saens , Franz Schubert , Vincenzo Bellini , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Christoph Willibald Gluck , Alexander Borodin , Antonin Dvorak , Claudio Monteverdi , Jules Massenet , Robert Schumann , Michael Stern , Craig Ogden , Gregory Knowles , John Constable , Jacob Heringman , and Stephen Orton Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000DG06L Release Date: 2003-10-28 |
Tracks:
- O mio babbino caro (from 'Gianni Schicchi')
- The Girl With Flaxen Hair (from Preludes, Book I; La fille aux cheveux delin: Prelude for Piano L 117/8)
- Nocturne in C sharp minor (Op Post)
- The Swan (from Carnival of the Animals)
- Serenade (from 'Schwanengesang' song cycle for voice and piano, D 957
- Casta Diva (from 'Norma')
- Andante from Piano Concerto No. 21 in C Major K. 467
- Nocturne from Quartet for Strings No. 2 in D Major: 3rd movement
- Dance of the Blessed Spirits (from 'Orfeo ed Euridice')
- Songs My Mother Taught Me, song for voice and piano B104/4 Op 55/4
- Pur ti Miro (from 'L'incoronazione di Poppea')
- Elegie (Elegie 'O doux printemps d'autrefois' for voice and piano)
- Traumerei ('Kinderszenen' for piano, Op 15, No. 7 'Dreaming')
Amazon.com
Every track on this CD contains a beautiful melody, many of them easily recognizable, all of them exuding tranquility. "O mio babbino caro" from Puccini's Gianni Schicchi opens the disc, with Bell delicately accompanied by a harp and spinning the long melody with great sensitivity. Bellini's "Casta diva" from Norma lives up to its reputation as the epitome of bel canto in Bell's hands; his violin sings. The middle movement of Mozart's 21st Piano Concerto takes well to the violin, and Debussy's "The Girl with the Flaxen Hair" is played with great warmth and sensuality. It would be easy to turn a recital like this into treacle, but Bell is wise enough to realize that the music is already sweet enough and he plays with great reserve and a minimum of sentimental slides. The light accompaniments always support, with woodwinds prominent but used with grace. This CD, in short, is a beauty: a fine gift, a lovely mood setter. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Romance of the Violin.......2007-07-16
End of the Day.......2007-06-08
He is inspiring, and she is right. This album is beautiful.
Wonderful!.......2007-05-30
Over and over and over...........2007-05-17
Non-standard CD format.......2007-04-22
A friend's PC was able to read the CD and make a copy in standard format that can be read on any player, including my Mac. The story had a happy ending, but I can not comprehend why the publisher chose the oddball CD specification.
The music is excellent and worth the trouble of making a copy, but the publisher really shouldn't make you go to that effort just to listen to a CD that you paid for.
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The Very Best Of Maria Callas
Maria Callas Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005Y1YQ Release Date: 2002-02-12 |
Tracks:
- Carmen: L'Amour Est Un Oiseau Rebelle
- Gianni Schicchi: O Mio Babbino Caro
- La Wally: Ebben? Ne Andro Lontana
- Samson Et Dalila: Mon Coeur S'ouvre A Ta Voix
- Tosca: Vissi D'arte, Vissi D'amore
- Andrea Chenier: La Mamma Morta
- Le Nozze Di Figaro: Porgi Amor
- Orphee Et Eurydice: J'ai Perdu Mon Eurydice
- Aida: Ritorna Vincitor!
- Adriana Lecouvreur: Respiro Appena... Lo So L'Umile Ancella
- Madama Butterfly: Un Bel Di Vedremo
- Norma: Casta Diva
- Turandot: Signore, Ascolta!
- Louise: Depuis Le Jour
- La Boheme: Si. Mi Chiamano Mimi
- La Gioconda: Suicidio
- La Forza Del Destino: Pace, Pace Mio Dio!
Customer Reviews:
Audio beauty and magnificence, Maria Callas.......2007-03-31
Ms. Callas' voice goes beyond the normal concept of beauty.
sublime.......2007-02-14
Good "Best Of".......2007-02-09
The Very Best of Maria Callas.......2006-08-20
Classic Callas.......2006-07-11
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The Very Best of Franco Corelli
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00008V5VV Release Date: 2003-04-22 |
Tracks:
- A Te, O Cara
- Meco All' Altar Di Venere... Me Protegge, Me Difende
- Ah Si, Ben mio...De Quella Pira
- Se Quel Guerrier Io Fossi!...Celeste Aida
- Pur Ti Riveggo, Mia Dolce Aida
- Intanto Amici... Viva Il Vino Spumeggiante
- Mamma, Quel Vino E Generoso
- Recitar!... Vesti La Giubba
- No, Pagliaccio Non Son
- Colpito Qui M'avete...Un Di All'azzuro Spazio
- Credo A Una Possanza Arcana
- Legray!... Andrea Chenier!...Si, Fui Soldato
- Come Un Bel Di Di Maggio
- Vicino A Te
Tracks:
- Donna Non Vidi Mai
- Recondita Armonia
- E Lucevan Le Stelle
- Non Piangere, Liu... Ah! Per L'ultima Volta!
- Nessun Dorma
- Favorita Del Re!... Spirto Gentil
- Cielo E Mar
- L'anima Ho Stanca
- Non Lunge Della Torre... Bianca Al Par Di Neve Alpina
- Ange Adorable
- L'amour, L'amour.. Ah! Leve-Toi, Soleil!
- O Nuit Divine!
- C'est La! Salut! Tombeau!
- Fronde Tenere... Ombra Mai Fu
- Ave Maria
- Domine Deus
- Core 'Ngrato
- Torna A Surriento
Customer Reviews:
If you love beautiful voices..........2007-04-30
If you want to know Corelli's art, this is the right CD.......2007-03-10
But Corelli was a wonder of nature! Some samples: "Ah si, ben mio. . .Di quella pira." If there were an aria made for Corelli, this would be it. His big, rich, powerful voice fits this cut nicely. Not much subtlety here. In "Di quella pira," he hits the high notes in a stentorian manner. There are those mannerisms, but they are so easily forgiven, taking into account that rich, lustrous voice.
"Celeste Aida" is another representative cut. This is a powerful version. Also, note how he goes from forte to piano at the end of this aria. A powerful effect indeed.
Then, there are the twin arias from "Tosca." In "Recondita armonia," his rich voice is well manifest. He exhibits a smooth line in his singing. This is a powerful version of this well known aria. "E lucevan le stele" displays again that rich voice. At one point, he goes from forte to piano in a mesmerizing manner (Who'd have thought it?). His final "la vita" grabs one's attention.
Finally, "Nessun dorma." Well, smoothly, and powerfully sung. The final "vincero" is powerfully rendered, leaving goose bumps on the spine.
This is the very best of Franco Corelli. Those who want to get a sense of the vocal prowess of one of the most powerful tenors of the 20th century should attend to this double CD set.
excellent gift.......2007-02-09
Greatest Tenor of This Century!.......2007-02-03
Ah... Franco :}.......2007-01-10
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Renée Fleming
Giacomo Puccini , Jules Massenet , Georges Bizet , Alfredo Catalani , Ruggero Leoncavallo , Francesco Cilea , Charles Gounod , Giuseppe Verdi , Vincenzo Bellini , London Philharmonic Orchestra , Sir Charles Mackerras , Renée Fleming , and London Voices Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004YLU5 Release Date: 2000-09-26 |
Tracks:
- Puccini: O mio babbino caro - Gianni Schicchi
- Puccini: Un bel di vedremo - Madame Butterfly
- Puccini: Quando men vo - Musetta's waltz - La Boheme
- Puccini compl. Alfano: Signore, ascolta - Turandot
- Leoncavallo: Stridono lassu - I Pagliacci
- Cilea: Io son l'umile ancella - Adriana Lecouvreur
- Catalani: Ebben? Ne adnro lontana - La Wally
- Massenet: Je suis encore etourdie - Manon
- Massenet: Adieu notre petite table - Manon
- Bizet: Micaela's aria - Carmen
- Gounod: Je veux vivre - Romeo & Juliette
- Verdi: come in quest'ora bruna - Simon Boccanegra
- Bellini: Casta Diva - Norma
- Verdi: Bolero - Les Vepres Siciliennes
Amazon.com essential recording
Surely, Renée Fleming has one of the most beautiful voices to be heard anywhere today. It combines velvety warmth, creamy richness, soaring radiance, and flawless purity, and seems to flow out without effort, every tone impeccably centered and in tune, capable of almost too much variety of color and nuance. Fleming's breath control is incredible; she can spin out long, arching phrases and build up climaxes with thrilling intensity. The program of this recital displays Fleming's vocal and dramatic gifts to full advantage, and includes both familiar and lesser-known arias from Italian and French operas. Although some of these are not in her repertoire, she clearly feels close to them. The three opening Puccini favorites from Gianni Schicchi, Madama Butterfly, and La Bohème are a bit fussy and over-inflected, hardly suited to the characters' simplicity; but, from then on, Fleming seems completely at one with both her tragic and her lighthearted heroines. She captures their warm inwardness, rapture, passion, ecstasy, and desperation; darkening and lightening her voice at will. Her top notes soar gloriously, her trills laugh. The orchestra is splendid, supporting her all the way and sounding wonderful. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
Glorious Renee.......2007-03-28
The more that I listen to Renee's music or see her in recitals, the more I adore the lady. The standouts on this disc are "Casta diva", "Lo son l'umile ancella", "Je suis encor tout etourdie", and "Ah! Je veux vivre", "Signore ascolta", etc.
One of Miss Fleming's absolute bests!.......2006-05-09
An amazing cd and a great introduction into the world of opera.......2006-04-20
The New La Divina.......2005-11-22
Gorgeous.......2005-09-30
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Renee Fleming: By Request
Vincenzo Bellini , Alfredo Catalani , Antonin Dvorak , George Gershwin , Erich Wolfgang Korngold , Jules Massenet , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Giacomo Puccini , Sergey Rachmaninov , Richard Rodgers , Richard Strauss , Giuseppe Verdi , Heitor Villa-Lobos , Georg Solti , James Levine , Jeffrey Tate , Patrick Summers , Sir Charles Mackerras , Lee Ritenour , Chamber Orchestra of Europe , and Renee Fleming Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000C3ICO Release Date: 2003-09-16 |
Tracks:
- O Mio Babbino Caro
- Ebben? ... Ne Andro Lontana
- Porgi, Amor
- Come Scoglio
- Casta Diva
- E Strano...Ah Fors E Lui...Sempre Libera
- Un Bel Di Vedremo
- Je Marche Sur Tous Les Chemins...Gavotte
- Mesicku Na Nebi Hlubokem (O Silver Moon)
- Vocalise
- Cacilie
- Marietta's Lied
- Summertime
- Bachianas Brasileiras No.5: Aria (Cantilena)
- You'll Never Walk Alone
Amazon.com
This is a compilation--plus three previously unreleased selections--of some of the glorious Renée Fleming's finest work, 15 selections covering 13 composers. The rose-in-full-bloom quality of the voice is staggeringly beautiful: Her rendition of Rusalka's "Song to the Moon" is justly famous and is, alone, worth the price of this CD. Other highlights are Marietta's Lied from Korngold's Die tote stadt, an odd arrangement of the aria from Villa-Lobos's Bachianas Brasilerias No. 5, Manon's Gavotte, and a knock-down-gorgeous reading of Gershwin's "Summertime." The three new recordings are of Violetta's big first-act scene from La traviata, which features one of the most perfect trills heard since Joan Sutherland, a thrilling Cäcilie (R. Strauss), and a version of "You'll Never Walk Alone" which is so over the-top that it might make you look away in embarrassment. On the basis of this CD, one would have to acknowledge that Fleming is more interested in--and more successful at--pure singing than she is at character delineation (Butterfly sounds oddly like Wally who sounds too much like Norma), but it's not hard to tell why she's a superstar. Her voice and technique are one in a million. --Robert LevineAlbum Details
"by Request" is a Collection of Fleming's Greatest and Most Popular Recordings Including Works by Mozart, Bellini, Pucchini, Verdi and Dvorak. Featuring Recordings from Renee Fleming's Outstanding Decca Discography Together with Two Glorious Tracks Strauss "Cacilie" and Verdi's "la Traviata" a Role Fleming Performed to Critical Aclaim Earlier in 2003.Customer Reviews:
Not all the arias were her best.......2005-01-15
DIDN'T QUITE FULFIL MY REQUEST.......2004-11-22
Fair Enough .......2004-10-01
Fleming's High Points Well Covered in Compilation CD.......2004-09-06
Fleming also has a good sense of the characters she is portraying, for instance, on the "La traviata" aria, "È stano...Ah, fors'è lui...Sempre libera", one gets a strong sense of Violetta's conflict between the attractions of true love versus the free life of a courtesan. She also gets some sturdy help from tenor Joseph Calleja as Alfredo in this piece. But even in this number, the effect of her daunting runs and trills can be a bit overwhelming. She does keep this in check with the slower-paced tracks like "Casta diva" from Bellini's "Norma", which uses a choir in the background to great effect, and Rachmaninov's lovely "Vocalise". The well-worn "Summertime" from Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess" is nicely covered here, and it certainly invites comparisons to even Leontyne Price's definitive version. Fleming ends the disc with a rousing version of Rodgers & Hammerstein's "You'll Never Walk Alone" from "Carousel" that grows a bit too bombastic for listening comfort. Regardless, this disc provides a nice sampling of what this truly great singer has done over the past decade. A treat for her fans and highly recommended for anyone who wants an ideal introduction to her range of talent.
Beautiful indeed!.......2004-07-19
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Maria Callas - La Divina
Giacomo Puccini , Vincenzo Bellini , Georges Bizet , Gioachino Rossini , Alfredo Catalani , Camille Saint-Saëns , Giuseppe Verdi , Charles Gounod , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Pietro Mascagni , Amilcare Ponchielli , Tullio Serafin , Georges Prêtre , Nicola Rescigno , Franco Ghione , Antonino Votto , Maria Callas , Alfredo Kraus , Ebe Ticozzi , Giuseppe di Stefano , London Philharmonia Orchestra , Orchestra e Coro del Teatro alla Scala , Orchestre National de la R.D.F. , Conservatory Concert Society Orchestra , and Lisbon Orquesta Sinfonica del Teatro Nacional de San Carlos Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002RT6 Release Date: 1993-09-14 |
Tracks:
- Madama Butterfly: Un bel di, vedremo (Atto ll)
- Carmen: L'amour est un oiseau rebelle (Habanera) (Acte l)
- La Wally: Ebben? ne andro lontana (Atto l)
- Il Barbiere di Siviglia: Una voce poco fa (Atto l)
- Norma: Casta Diva (Atto l)
- Samson et Dalila: Mon coeur s'ouvre a ta voix (Acte ll)
- Rigoletto: Caro nome (Atto l)
- La Traviata: Sempre libera (Atto l)
- Romeo et Juliette: Je veux vivre dans ce reve (Acte l)
- La Boheme: Si, mi chiamano Mimi (Atto l)
- Don Giovanni: Mi tradi quell'alma ingrata (Atto ll)
- Cavalleria Rusticana: Voi lo sapete, o mamma
- La Gioconda: Suicidio! (Atto lV)
- Gianni Schicchi1: O mio babbino caro
- Turandot: In questa reggia (Atto ll)
- TOSCA: Vissi d'arte, vissi d'amore (Atto ll)
Amazon.com
If you want to know the reason behind all the fuss about Maria Callas, buy this CD. Callas's great gift was not purity of tone or emission, reliability, or sheer loveliness; it was, rather, her ability to change her vocal color and style to suit not only particular periods of opera but to get under the skin of the individual characters she portrayed. Here you will hear the 18-year-old Butterfly imagining the return of her beloved; the sultry, adult Carmen seducing all around her; the youthful Wally telling her cruel father that she will go off into the cold wilderness rather than give up her boyfriend; the sly Rosina planning to outfox her guardian; the priestess Norma performing a sacred rite; Dalila wrapping Samson around her little finger and more; Gioconda contemplating suicide when all hope is gone; Gilda recalling the name of the boy she's just fallen for; and the icy princess Turandot reliving the rape of her ancestor and swearing that no man will possess her. And you'll believe them all. At times Callas's vocalism is a bit wiry (Juliette sounds stressed, for instance); but, in all, this is like a visit with 16 women, all of them interesting, and all of them great singers! --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Wonderful i recommend it.......2007-08-01
Landmark Soprano. An essential work for opera listeners........2007-05-26
Terrific introduction to the art of Callas.......2007-04-24
"Un bel di" from Puccini's "Madama Butterfly" is very well done. She displays a rich voice and a passionate rendering of this aria. At greater volume, her voice remains under control and attractive sounding (something that does not always occur as her career developed further).
The "Habanera" from Bizet's "Carmen" is normally a mezzo soprano work. However, Callas features a good lower tone, and it works pretty well here. She shows nice breath control, too. The orchestral backing is exceptional.
"Sempre libera," from Verdi's "La Traviata," is a soprano's dream. Here, though, Callas' voice is not as attractive as in other cuts. There is some harshness with higher notes. Alfredo Kraus' singing, by the way, is most attractive. There is some unpleasantness with Callas technique in this work, although there is a nice characterization as well (this is the price you pay for Callas). She shows off some nice runs, but zero in the way of trills (some other sopranos display nice trills in this piece).
Finally, a very well done version of "Si, mi chiamano Mimi" from Puccini's "La Boheme." Sweet sounds at the outset. She seems to capture the character well. Smooth singing, done well.
Thus, a good introduction to the art of Maria Callas. There are cuts here that feature some of the wondrous nature of her work. There are other cuts where one hears some unattractive aspects of her singing and one wonders about her technique. But, in the end, this is a good representation of the work of Callas.
Callas was the greatest.......2007-02-06
The Callas bashers will always be with us, but thankfully they will always be in the tiny minority. True connossiers of opera know there never has been and never will be as great a singer as La Divina.
Great starter CD.......2005-11-24
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Bellini - Norma / Maria Callas, Ludwig, Corelli, Zaccaria, Teatro alla Scala, Serafin
Vincenzo Bellini , Tullio Serafin , Maria Callas , Christa Ludwig , Franco Corelli , Nicola Zaccaria , and Piero de Palma Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000630R Release Date: 1998-03-17 |
Tracks:
- Norma: Sinfonia
- Norma: Act One - Scene One : Ite sul colle...Dell'aura tua profetica (Oroveso)
- Norma: Svanir le voci! (Pollione)
- Norma: Meco all'altar di Venere (Pollione)
- Norma: Odi?.. I suoi riti a compiere (Flavio, Coro, Pollione)
- Norma: Me protegge, me difende (Pollione)
- Norma: Norma viene
- Norma: Sediziose voci
- Norma: Casta Diva
- Norma: Fine al rito, e il sacro bosco
- Norma: Ah! bello a me ritorna (Norma, Oroveso)
- Norma: Sgombra e la sacra selva (Adalgisa)
- Norma: Eccola - va, mi lascia
- Norma: Va, crudele
- Norma: Vieni in Roma (Pollione, Adalgisa)
Tracks:
- Norma: Act One - Scene Two : Vanne, e li cela entrambi (Norma)
- Norma: Adalgisa!.. Alma, costanza
- Norma: Oh, rimembranza!
- Norma: Ah si, fa core, abbracciami (Norma, Adalgisa)
- Norma: Ma di'... l'amato giovine
- Norma: Oh, di qual sei tu vittima
- Norma: Perfido! ... Or basti! (Norma, Adalgisa, Pollione)
- Norma: Vanne, si, mi lascia, indegno (Norma, Pollione, Adalgisa, Coro)
Tracks:
- Norma: Act Two - Scene One : Introduzione
- Norma: Dormono entrambi! (Norma)
- Norma: Ola! Clotilde (Norma, Clotilde)
- Norma: Mi chiami, o Norma?
- Norma: Deh, con te, con te li prendi
- Norma: Mira, o Norma
- Norma: Cedi ... deh cedi!
- Norma: Si, fino all'ore estreme (Adalgisa, Norma)
- Norma: Acto Two - Scene Two : Non parti? (Coro)
- Norma: Guerrieri! a voi venirne
- Norma: Ah!, del Tebro al giogo indegno (Oroveso)
- Norma: Acto Two - Scene Three : Ei tornera, Si! (Norma)
- Norma: Squilla il bronzo del Dio! (Oroveso, Norma)
- Norma: Guerra! guerra!
- Norma: Ne compi li rito, o Norma? (Oroveso, Norma, Pollione)
- Norma: In mia man alfin ti sei
- Norma: Gia mi pasco ne' tuoi sguardi (Norma, Pollione)
- Norma: Dammi quel ferro!
- Norma: Qual cor tradisti
- Norma: Norma! deh! Norrma, scolpati!
- Norma: Deh! Non volerli vittime (Norma, Pollione, Oroveso)
Customer Reviews:
all-star cast.......2007-06-13
Owners of the Schirmer piano score, watch out for cuts from page 44 to 48, 76 to 80, and 106 to 107. The endings of bth acts are also different.
2 Callas Normas. Which to get........2006-11-12
Greater Depth or Neccessary Caution?.......2006-10-13
I'm glad I have the recording and the current edition is warmer than the original CD release. This was the only opportunity for Callas, Corelli and Ludwig to make a commercial recording together, and Corelli and Ludwig are wonderful, although too bad EMI was unable to get Simionatto. But if you're familiar with the earlier recording (which by the way is only available at the moment in an awful GROTC edition) and the live performances, you might miss the broad strokes, I do, but it is still a worthy listening experience. When is Callas not? Never as far as I'm concerned.
I would have loved to have rated this 5 stars, but 4 seems more appropriate. It's a fine but not a great recording.
CALLAS' ASTONISHING NORMA.......2006-08-15
Although I very rarely sit down to write a review at Amazon, after having read so much on Mme Callas, I feel it is my responsibility as a fan of this great art named opera to make the following points:
a)Maria Callas was not an interpreter. She was a creator herself to be placed at the same rank as Donizzeti, Bellini and Verdi. Had it not been for her I doubt that opera would exist today and if it did it would be a sad, boring musuem exhibit. She recreated the whole of Italian Opera -not just bel canto- and modernised it in a way that will make it last for another 100 years aftet her death. I remind you that opera in the 50's meant German Opera. Italian opera before Mme Callas was something of a joke. Terribly abused by singers and a bad tradition of horrendus vocalising, the music of Italian composers had lost its drama, its sense, its meaning.
b)why do people spend so much time judging the voice of this great artist? Why can they not just relax and enjoy this great artistry? No-one says that there no other great singers! But no matter how great, they are unfortunately just that:"singers". Caballe, Sutherland, Sills, Price, Fleming, Dessay all have amazing voices and great carreers. But, comparing them with a phenomenon that was for the opera what Mozart was for classical music simply does not do them justice.
c)Whether we like it or not Norma is a dramatic soprano role! A very difficult one as well and it should be treated with some respect. Caballe and Sutherland, because they had these amazing voices, did manage to sing it and they sang it well. But, as they were not dramatic sopranos they conveyed a lyricism in their interpretation that simply does not suit the role and Bellini's intentions. Other attempts however (Sills and -alas- Gruberova recently)should really remain as textbook examples of how inflated egos can ridicule both theselves and a work of art. I repeat that Norma is a dramatic soprano role. In this sense the only singers that approached the Callas perfection are Elena Suliotis (Decca for reason of expediency or stupidity is not reissuing her marvellous 1968 recording with Del Monaco) and Jane Eaglen in the Sony Muti recording. The only singer that seems to have been taught by the Callas Legacy in Bel Canto is Mme Renata Scotto but she was as well inadequate as Norma and wasted much of her talent singing (for commercial reasons, I suppose) Puccini.
d)Callas has been very unlucky as far as supporting cast is concerned. The 1960 Norma recording is the only exception. It features the amazing Franco Corelli. What a voice this man had! Pefect voice, perfect dramatic conviction, beautiful and clear italian diction. Can we imagine a Callas -Corelli partnership in Aida, Pirata, Manon Lescaut?
e)Callas did not lose her voice even though she overworked it in the 50s. The 1964 Tosca recording is the best proof of that. But she did lose her confidence and emotional stability. This fact led her quit her carreer in 1965 and that is the real tragedy of opera. Had she managed to work as hard in the 60-68 period when all her worry was Ar. Onassis we would have been left with at least 10 amazing stereo recordings. And I say 68 because someone like Callas simply would refuse to play young soprano roles after the age of 45. She believed that opera singers are like ballet dansers or athletes (and they are!), they should retire early. Mme Sutherland had a voice till the age of 60. And so? Is it not ridiculous singing La Sonnambula at the age of 59? If Callas did that she would not be the legend she is!
This is all I wanted to note on a woman that achieved a fame in the world of opera (and beyond!!!) in a way that noone else had before and I am afraid no one else will do so in the future. People had to sleep on pavements for three days and three nights to get a ticket for this lady!
CALLAS MESMERIZING AS NORMA.......2006-07-14
No singer classical or popular has been without vocal problems, and it is important to remember that Maria began her stage career at the age of 17 with the Athens Opera as a professional opera singer. Her last stage performances were in 1965 in Tosca and Norma . . . a stage and recording career of almost 25 years! No small achievement, and she performed her great roles, Violetta, Lucia, Medea, and of course Norma . . . all over the world "live" for over a decade, Norma for almost 15 years.
It would be difficult to say of such an artist that "one" role was her best, since her vast repertory ranged from Wagner and Beethoven to Bellini, Puccini, Bizet and so many other composers.
She single handedly with the help of her great vocal and musical mentor Tullio Serafin, resurrected the great belcanto works of Donizetti and Bellini and transformed them in integrated vocal and dramatic experiences . . . fortunately for us, there are quite a few studio and live recordings available of this repertoire which she loved so much.
Personally, I never found Bellini's Norma to be a very interesting opera until I heard the 1960 recording with Maria. All previous recordings were lovely, with various singers singing 'Casta Diva' beautifully, but disengaged from the dramatic impact of the words and this complex woman, this figure out of a Greek tragedy!
Maria's 1960 performance I feel remains a rare experience, in which all the artists seem riveted by the dramatic power of her by then mesmerizing interpretation of Norma. Every subtlety of this conflicted woman's story is expresssed, even down to just single words.
Like many of her recordings and her career in general, I feel this recording is for the ages . . . unforgettable and deeply, deeply moving.
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Maria Callas, the Voice of the Century
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000631B Release Date: 1998-03-17 |
Tracks:
- Norma: Casta Diva (Atto I): Norma
- La Sonnambula: Compagne, teneri amici...Come per me sereno (Atto I): La Sonnambula
- Il Barbieri Di Siviglia: Una Voce poco fa (Atto I): Il barbiere di Siviglia
- Lucia di Lammermoor: Regnava nel silenzio...Quando, rapito in estasi (Atto I): Lucia di Siviglia
- Rigoletto: Gualtier Mald...Caro Nome (Atto I): Rigoletto
- La Traviata: E Strano!...Ah, Fors'e lui...Sempre libera (Atto I): La traviata
- La Boheme: Si, Mi chiamo Mimi (Atto I): La boheme
- La Boheme: Donde Lieta Usci (Atto III) (Mimi's Farewell): La boheme
- Madama Butterfly: Un Bel di Vedremo (Atto II): Madama Butterfly
- TOSCA: Vissi D'arte (Atto II): tosca
- Turandot: In questa reggia (Atto II): Turandot
- La Wally: Ebben? ne andro lontana (Atto I): La Wally
- Andrea Chenier: La mamma morta (Atto III): Andrea Chenier
Tracks:
- Orphee et Eurydice: J'ai perdu mon Eurydice (Acte V)
- Alceste: Divinites du Styx (Acte I)
- Dinorah: Ombra leggiera (Atto II) (Shadow Song)
- Romeo et Juliette: Ah! Je veux vivre (Acte I) (Waltz Song)
- Faust: Les grand seigneurs...Ah! je ris (Acte III)
- Lakme: Dov'e l'indiana bruna? (Atto II) (Bell Song)
- Samson et Dalila: Printemps qui commence (Acte I)
- Samson et Dalila: Mon coeur s'ouvre a ta voix (Acte II)
- Les Pecheurs De Perles: Me voila seule...Comme autrefois (Acte II)
- Carmen: L'amour est un oiseau rebelle (Habanera)(Acte I)
- Carmen: Les tringles des sistre tintaient (Acte II)
- Le Cid: De cet affreux combat...Pleurez mes yeux! (Acte III)
- Manon: Je ne suis que faiblesse...Adieu, notre petite table (Acte II)
- Louise: Depuis le jour (Acte III)
Customer Reviews:
Beautiful Collection of Songs.......2006-07-15
A Legend in all.....La Callas........2005-04-24
'...her voice is of unparalleled beauty, having an inimitable, completely own timbre of sopranos and altos...a performance of superior musical quality..a phenomenon amongst contemporary singers'
' ...One of the most spectacular Verdi arias, of Elizabeth from Don Carlo, and one, In Germany tottaly unknown, terrific scene from Bellini's opera Il Pirata were enough to enchant huge numers of television viewers, who can say at her next performance: 'we have seen La Callas''(Hamburg concert 1959)
'- from the contra-alt-f to the f - thats Callas' voice range, spanning over 37 half-tones. Callas herself has drawn the range of her voice. In her concert repertoire the contra-alt-f can be found in e.g. the aria from I Vespri Siciliani. In an aria from Rossini's opera Armida she reaches the 'F'. five half-tones above the high C. Normal voices couldnt possibly even whistle this high F. Though there are other singers, whose voices contain these three octaves - Erna Sack with her coloratura soprano, the lyrical singer Ema Berger and the dramatical singer Zinka Milanov from the New York Metropolitan Opera - simple fact is that the phenomenon Meneghini-Callas lies in her fabulous vocal versatility. She is a coloratura singer, drama-player and lyrist in one person - and an exceptionally talented ac-tress at that.'
Excuse from a journalist of the German Newspaper for the Diva :
Article Title : 'I am sorry!'
'I owe Maria Callas an apology. She is a unique vocal talent, a great artist. She is a primadonna. And she has her moods. Moods for which i ask her to forgive me. Because i misunderstood them - and many others too. That much i gathered from her latest television concert. Even in the flickering of the screen this woman's nervousness and enormous effort were visible.
La Callas is a fragile, rather shy person. Her moods are fear of failure. The moloch audience expects her to always go to any lenght, show the brilliance others just dont have. She is not allowed to get weak. Decent country singers are not decapitated for a false note. La Callas, on the other hand, is the identifying mark of the extraordinary. Even the slightest hint of a mistake would cost her her uniqueness, her stardom....a perverse triumph for all bathtube singers.
That explains her inhibitation to perform when she isnt well, her cancellations when she is not in the right mood. I understand them now. If she werent moody, she wouldnt be a primadonna, would not be La Callas.
Stars like her do not fit in our world of standards and programmed data. They pay dearly for their moods, have to put up fights and, undoubtedly, shed many a tear. So one more, my apologies, Maria Callas'
(Hans im Bild)
That's all folks!:D
Excellent compilation of La Divina's arias.......2005-03-21
Holly Mathews doesn't know how to appreciate art. Kathleen Battle and Renee Fleming themselves have admitted to the supremacy of Callas' singing over theirs, even if their voices seem more beautiful than La Divina. Why else would Callas be a legend and they wouldn't? They are equally good in their own right, but none of them would surpass the accuracy of La Divina's singing and phrasing. Holly Mathews' left side of the brain must be made of clay or foam, dead material that couldn't absorb any beauty.
Some people have no business reviewing this.......2005-01-25
Anyway, this is an excellent compilation of SOME of Maria Callas' greatest arias. Although I do wish some arias like Pace Pace Mio Dio were included here, I do think it is a very good compilation all in all. Although she has many detractors, they still have to admit that Callas is the sheer embodiment of singing and drama. She was an actress...a panther on the stage. Listen to her La Mamma Morta and her Suicidio...those brought chills to my spine when I listened to them. Maria is the only singer in the history of opera besides the great Caruso-tenor Franco Corelli who touched me, moved me even. This is probably the reason why I love Maria Callas' music so much. If you want to hear Medea's anger and Norma's anguish and Butterfly's hopeful blindness, listen to Maria Callas. If you just want a golden voice, then go to Renata Tebaldi or Joan Sutherland. And don't even compare her with Charlotte Church or Hayley Westenra! The distaste of some people!
BELLA BELLA BELLA!.......2004-11-23
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Liszt: Piano Works
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005ND3L Release Date: 2001-10-09 |
Tracks:
- Hungarian Rhapsody No. 12 In C-Sharp Minor
- Liebestraum No.3
- Mephisto Waltz No.1
- Funerailles (No.7 Of Harmonies Poetiques Et Religieuses)
- Rigoletto: Conc Paraphrase
- La Campanella
Tracks:
- Die Forelle
- Der Muller Und Der Bach
- Wohin?
- Lebe Wohl!
- Das Wandern
- Der Lindenbaum
- Horch, Horch, Die Lerch
- Auf Dem Wasser Zu Singen
- Die Post
- Aufenthalt
- Lob Der Tranen
- Erlkonig
- I. Allegro Con Fuoco
- II. Adagio
- III. Presto
- IV. Allegro
Tracks:
- Lento Assai - Allegro Energico -
- Andante Sostenuto
- Allegro Energico - Andante Sostenuto - Lento Assai
- Valse Impromptu
- I. 'Hohe Liebe' In A flat
- II. 'Selinger Tod' In E Flat
- III. 'O Lieb' In A Flat
- Grand Galop Chromatique
Tracks:
- I. Sposalizio
- II Penseroso
- III. Canzonetta Del Salvator Rosa
- IV. Sonetto 47 Del Petrarca
- V. Sonetto 104 Del Patrarca
- VI. Sonetto 123: Del Petrarca
- VII. Apres Une Lecture De Dance (Fant Quasi Son)
Tracks:
- I. La Chapelle De Guillaume Tell
- II. Au Lac De Wallenstadt
- III. Pastorale
- IV. Au Bord D'une Source
- V. Orage
- VI. Vallee D'Obermann
- VII. Eglogue (Hirtengesang)
- VIII. Le Mal Du Pays
- IX. Les Cloches De Geneve
Tracks:
- I Gondoliera
- II. Canzone
- III. Tarantella
- Les Jeux D'eau A La Villa D'Este (No.4 Of Annees De Pelerinage, Troisieme Annee)
- Benediction De Dieu Dans La Solitude: (No.3 Of Harmonies Poetiques Et Religieuses)
- Ballade No.2 In B
Tracks:
- I. Preludio: Presto
- II. Molto Vivace
- III. Paysage: Poco Adagio
- IV. Mazeppa: Allegro
- V. Feux Follets: Allegretto
- VI. Vision: Lento
- VII. Eroica: Allegro
- VIII. Wilde Jagd: Presto Furioso
- IX. Ricordanza: Andantino
- X. Allegro Agitato Molto
- XI. Harmonies Du Soir: Andantino
- XII. Chasse-Neige: Andante Con Moto
Tracks:
- Zwei Konzertetuden: I. Waldesrauschen
- Zwei Konzertetuden: II. Gnomenreigen
- I. Il Lamento
- II. La Leggierezza
- III. Un Sospiro
- I. Andante Con Moto
- II. Un Poco Piu Mosso
- III. Lento Placido
- IV. Quasi Adagio
- V. Andantino
- VI. Allegretto Sempre Cantabile
- Reminiscences De Don Juan
Tracks:
- Reminiscences De Norma
- Totentanz (Danse Macabre)
- Malediction
- Fant On Hungarian Folk Themes
Customer Reviews:
Ethereal LIszt in Superb Sound.......2006-09-29
A great collection of Liszt treasures.......2004-01-12
Bolet won a Gramophone Award for his 1st book of Années de Pelerinage, which is not strange when listening to the recordings. This is a portrait of a man who's entirely on his own, looking for his soul while wandering trough the beautiful Switzerland - I can't say it better than B. Johnson already did. It's Romantic nonsense, of course, but in Liszt's days it was a common idea, and it can still sweep me away. Bolet's superior tonal colouring - beautiful, but not too far-driven, for the risk it would almost be too intimidating - and his peaceful nature lift this music to the greatest heights. My only complaint would be the `Orage' piece: Bolet's technique can't quite handle it, and its aggressive nature is much less overwhelming as a result. Nevertheless, the rest of the pieces show him at his very best. So does the second year of the Années (that is oddly placed in the set before the first year by Decca). The Dante Sonata, one of Liszt's greatest pieces, fares very well under Bolet's hands.
Equally excellent were the Schubert Song Transcriptions. The transcriptions aren't very different from the original songs, but they are definitely interesting. Especially when someone like Bolet takes them under his hands! All songs are terrifically played, with real standouts like `Auf dem Wasser zu singen', `Der Mueller und der Bach' and `Erlkoenig'. Bolet's romantic touch (he may have been the last of his kind) lets the music unendingly flow. Brilliant!
These comments also apply to Liszt's Consolations, which are placed on another disc. Liszt shows here how much he's in debt to Schubert, and wrote music of a disarmingly lyrical nature. Bolet gives almost naively innocent readings of these pieces. Talking about singing music, why not include the Liebesträume, `Venezia e Napoli' and many, many other pieces as well. Although some people still regard Liszt as a bombastic composer, he was in fact much more active on the spiritual and lyrical area. It is largely this nature of Liszt that is put into the spotlights by Bolet. He is really terrific whenever music ought to sound peaceful and meditative.
But Liszt was also a stunning virtuoso. People may eschew him for that, but that's often without any good ground. The B minor Sonata and the Transcendental Etudes, to give some names, are not only pianistically but also musically amazing works. It takes to be both a good technician and a musician to play them well, and this is where Bolet occasionally fails. He was over 65 when he made these recordings, and I can't help but say that his technique was not anymore what it used to be. In many pieces you can hear him struggle.
In what may be the most difficult music Liszt wrote, the Transcendental Etudes, Bolet takes tempi that are almost too easy (e.g. no.10 should be `Allegro molto agitato' but Bolet plays it very moderately), perhaps because his technique was by then too limited to give the pieces a really impressive treatment. Even then, I do feel a ertain nobility in Bolet's slow approach that gives every study a dignified stature (and that's something you won't find with Kissin or Cziffra!). The sonata is similarly noble and yet tremendously powerful in its scope, even though Bolet may lack some technial control at isolated spots.
Anoter treacherous piece is the `Reminiscences de Don Juan', which is a transcription of no less an opera than -of course- Don Giovanni! Bolet plays this 20-minute piece with a lot of humour and swing: it's a great way to clean up your mind! Also recommendable are the Etudes de Concert (e.g. Waldesrauschen), whose light spirit is very well captured.
A treasure trove set overall, I can recommend it without any limitations. There's no other composer that suited Bolet as well as Liszt, and the vice versa may be true as well. But the pianist also has his weaker points, particularly regarding his technique, that wasn't what it used to be. Oh, and the piano sound is not always equally convincing: the instrument sounds a little shrill at times. But there's an amazing amount of colour in the instrument, and it allows Bolet to reachfor the deepest, darkest sonorities you've heard. This collection is therefore not just THE best Liszt: there are many more pianists who made supreme recordings of him (e.g. Arrau, Brendel, Richter) and I definitely recommend searching them out as well. After you've heard this!
An excellent collection of Liszt interpretations........2003-12-03
Liszt for the ages........2001-12-05
It doesn't get any better than this.
After I heard throughout the seventies about this "unknown" great of the romantic repertoire, I was fortunate enough to see him for the first time about a month after he recorded the first issue of this now legendary Liszt series. While his technique may not have exactly been what it used to be before (e.g. Orage in Suisse of Les Annees), all the performances benefit from the wisdom of many, many years. While all the performances are of a uniform Olympic level, two issue stand out in my mind.
First, there is the cd of Schubert Liszt transcriptions. Bolet really sets the standards for "singing" on the piano. His version of "Der Muller und der Bach" has to be believed to be heard.
Most importantly though, there is "Suisse" the first year of Liszt's years of pilgrimage. I own this disc from the day it appeared on the shelves and still listen to it every month. Surely, there are more technically brilliant versions. For the true "Liszt Nuts", I would certainly advise Leslie Howard's version of "L'Album d'un voyageur", that contains the first version of many of the "Suisse" pieces, and some additional pieces that Frenz (for reasons that escape me completely) excluded from the later Suisse. Yet, nobody, not even Brendel or Berman, have come close to Bolet on delivering on the central theme of Suisse, man finding himself back in an exploration of nature.
While they stem from the earlier days of digital recording the recordings are still more than respectable and benefit greatly from Bolet's attention for color, aided by his favorite Bechstein.
Many of these recordings have not been available for a while. Get them before they're history!
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The #1 Soprano Album
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000060OHV Release Date: 2002-04-09 |
Tracks:
- Puccini: Gianni Schicchi: O Mio Babbino Caro
- Delibes: Lakme: Flower Duet
- Catalani: La Wally: Ebben?...Ne Andro Lontana
- Strauss: Die Fledermaus: Mein Herr Marquis
- Canteloube: Chants D'Auvergne: Bailero
- Bellini: Norma: Casta Diva
- Mozart: The Marriage Of Figaro: Che Soave Zeffiretto
- Mozart: The Magic Flute: Der Holle Rache Kocht In Meinem Herzen
- Mozart: The Abduction From The Seraglio: Welche Wonne
- Verdi: The Sicilian Vespers: Merce, Dilette, Amiche
- Verdi: Rigoletto: Caro Nome
- Puccini: Tosca: Vissi D'Arte
- Puccini: Madama Butterfly: Un Bel Di Vedremi
- Puccini: La Rondine: Chi il Bel Sogno Di Doretta
- Puccini: La Boheme: Quando M'en Vo'
- Puccini: La Boheme: Si, Mi Chiamano Mimi
- Schubert: Ave Maria
Tracks:
- Bizet: Carmen: L'Amour Est Un Oiseau Rebelle
- Offenbach: The Tales Of Hoffman: Belle Nuit, O Nuit D'Amour
- Rossini: The Barber Of Seville: Una Voce Poca Fa
- Verdi: La Traviata: E Strano.Ah Fors'e Lui.Sempre Libera
- Mozart: The Marriage Of Figaro: Giunse Alfin Il Momento.Deh Vieni Non
- Mozart: Don Giovanni: In quali Eccessi.
- Villa-Lobos: Aria from Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5
- Bach/Gounod: Ave Maria
- Handel: Rinaldo: Lascia/Ch'io Pianga
- Handel: Samson: Let The Bright Seraphim
- Giordano: Andrea Chenier: La Mamma Morta
- Flotow: Martha: Last Rose Of Summer
- Puccini: Manon Lescaut: In Quelle Trine Morbide
- Wagner: Tristan Und Isolde: Mild Und Leise
- Orff: Carmina Burana: Cour D'Amours: In Trutina
- Shenandoah
Customer Reviews:
Gruberova's Extraordinary "Mein Herr Marquis", Sumi Jo's winning "Der hölle Rache".......2007-06-30
Another track is, alone, worth buying the CD: Königin der Nacht's "Der hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen" by Sumi Jo. Lucia Popp despite her quite deserved immense reputation for this, is beaten (IMO) by Cheryl Studer (purer and more subtle - at least when with Neville Marriner), who is in turn by Sumi Jo: Jo brings the incredible energy and speed and emotion yet chirurgical precision required by that piece full of terrible wrath and grudge (I once attended the Flute where Königin was on her balcony, pointing her finger at her daughter, far away in the court, giving full life to the ultra-powerful music and lyrics "The hellish revenge burns in my heart! Death and destitution to the traitor I hate! Strike him with this deadly weapon! Or you are not my daughter! never more and forever! Go away, ungrateful! Ungrateful! Everything is broken between us until he gives back his villain soul!"), she sings with perfect pitch, tempo and power even up to the 4-repeated highest note (F), with score in hand you find exceptionally little and small flaws, and only in secondary passages. And she sings with "no emotion added" (or removed!), I mean, she is quite accurate emotionally - not everyone is, particularly when singing perfectly such a masterpiece.
There are several more very good tracks (Casta Diva/Sutherland, Welche Wonne welche Lust/Kathleen Battle, O mio babbino caro/Fleming, Dôme épais le jasmin/Sutherland, Schubert's Ave Maria/Leontyne Price), each worth buying the disc, but I agree with previous reviewers that globally the selection is uneven.
Versailles, Sun 1 Jul 2007 01:55:40 +0200
Beautiful collection, even though not perfect.......2006-05-17
It starts out very strong with beautiful pieces of, and then some singers repeat OFTEN. Not that they are bad choices, it's just that a greater variety would have been nice. More importantly it would have been great to have the "definitive" version/singer of a given aria. Just one example, Sumi Jo's Der Holle Rache is just everywhere as a previous reviewer mentioned -- let's not forget that there is a pristine-perfect-beyond-comparison of Lucia Popp's Queen of the Night also out there somewhere...just NOT on this particular CD...
As far as aria choices are concerned, that is a bit strange to me, too. Of all of Mozart's arias, why those and leave out the magnificent soprano aria from Zaide, "Ruhe sanft"? Hmm...But anyway, the CDs are much better than any other compilation I have of the same type. Highly recommendable after all.
Breathtaking performances of standard literature.......2005-06-09
Finally, a 2-disc soprano collection from Decca.......2004-01-09
The grandeur of the Opera.......2003-11-27
This album includes some of the best female voices in history, such as:
Joan Sutherland
Monserrat Caballé
Birgit Nilsson
Renée Fleming
Leontyne Price
Sumi Jo
Kiri Te Kanawa
singing excerpts from Gianni Schicchi, Madama Butterfly, La Bohéme, The Magic Flute, Carmen, Les contes du Hoffman, among many others.
Higlights:
O mio babbino caro/ Fleming
Dome epais le jasmin/ Sutherland & Berbié
Der hölle rache kocht in meinem herzen/ Jo
Un bel di vedremi/ Crespin
Let the bright seraphim/ Sutherland
La mamma morta/ Caballé
Mild und leise/Nilsson
among others.
This album is, in fact, a very good choice for the people who enjoys classical music. For the people that is not familiarized
with opera, this is a great oportunity to approach bel canto with some of the most beautiful voices in opera history.
Note: This compilation it's probably not complete (we miss many arias and some names as Flagstad and Callas) but it's a very good opera selection. Enjoy.
Meditation Music:
- Berlioz: Les Troyens
- Best of Doug Smith
- Bizet: Ivan IV: Opera in 5 Acts and 6 Tableaux
- Childhood and Memory
- Circadian Symphony
- Club Trini
- Columbus & the Age of Discovery [Soundtrack]
- Cymbiosis: Jazz Sampler, Vol. 2, No. 1
- Deep Heart
- Deja Views
Meditation Music
Chamber Music of Viktor Suslin
Bach: The Well Tempered Piano 2, Part 2
Music: Opry Star Spolight on...
Emotion 2 / Bootilicious [Enhanced] [Import] [CD-single]
Choice: a Collection of Classics [Import]
Bridge Over Troubled Water [Box set]