-
Faust, opera
Composed by Charles Gounod
Performed by French Army Choir, Toulouse Orchestra & Chorus
with Robert Gonnella, Cheryl Studer, Martine Mahe, Richard Leech, Nadibne Dednzie, Thomas Hampson, Marc Barrard
Conducted by Alain Lanceron, Patrick-Marie Aubert, Michel Plasson
Gounod - Faust / Studer · Leech · van Dam · Hampson · Mahé · Denize · Barrard · Capitole de Toulouse · Plasson,Charles Gounod,Michel Plasson,Cheryl Studer,Richard Leech,Choeur et Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse,Choeur de l'Armée Française,José van Dam,Thomas Hampson,Nadine Denize,Martine Mahé,Marc Barrard,Capitol,Classical,Classical Music,French Romantic Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio,Opera/Operetta
Average customer rating:
|
Gounod - Faust / Studer · Leech · van Dam · Hampson · Mahé · Denize · Barrard · Capitole de Toulouse · Plasson
Charles Gounod , Michel Plasson , Cheryl Studer , Richard Leech , Choeur et Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse , Choeur de l'Armée Française , José van Dam , Thomas Hampson , Martine Mahé , and Marc Barrard Nadine Denize Manufacturer: Angel Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002RX9 Release Date: 2001-10-02 |
Tracks:
- Intro - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Act I, Scene 1: Rien! En Vain J'interroge... - Richard Leech
- Act I, Scene 1: Ah! Paresseuse Fille... - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Richard Leech
- Act I, Scene 1: Mais, Ce Dieu Que Peut-il Pour Moi? - Richard Leech
- Act I, Scene 2: Me Voici! - Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act I, Scene 2: A Moi Les Plaisirs... - Richard Leech/Jose Van Dam
- Act II, Scene 1: Vin Ou Biere - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Marc Barrard
- Act II, Scene 2: O Sainte Medaille - Thomas Hampson/Marc Barrard/Martine Mahe/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du...
- Act II, Scene 2: Avant De Quitter Ces Lieux - Thomas Hampson
- Act II, Scene 3: Allons Amis - Marc Barrard/Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse...
- Act II, Scene 3: Le Veau D'or - Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino
- Act II, Scene 3: Merci De Ta Chanson! - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Marc Barrard...
- Act II, Scene 3: De L'enfer Qui Vient Emousser Nos Armes - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Thomas Hampson
- Act II, Scene 4: Nous Nous Retrouverons, Mes Amis - Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act II, Scene 5: Ainsi Que La Brise Legere - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Jose Van Dam...
- Act II, Scene 5: Ne Permettrez-Vous Pas Ma Belle Demoiselle - Richard Leech/Cheryl Studer/Martine Mahe/Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier...
- Act III, Scene 1: Intro - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Act III, Scene 1: Faites-lui Mes Aveux - Martine Mahe
- Act III, Scene 2: C'est Ici? - Richard Leech/Jose Van Dam/Martine Mahe
- Act III, Scene 3: Attendez-moi La, Cher Docteur! - Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act III, Scene 4: Quel Trouble Inconnu Me Penetre!... Salut! Demeure Chaste Et Pure... - Richard Leech
- Act III, Scene 5: Alerte! La Voila! - Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act III, Scene 6: Je Voudrais Bien Savoir... Il Etait Un Roi De Thule - Cheryl Studer
- Act III, Scene 6: Un Bouquet!... O Dieu! Que De Bijoux! - Cheryl Studer
Tracks:
- Act III, Scene 7: Seigneur Dieu, Que Vois-je! - Nadine Denize/Cheryl Studer
- Act III, Scene 8: Dame Marthe Schwerlein, S'il Vous Plait? - Jose Van Dam/Nadine Denize/Cheryl Studer/Richard Leech
- Act III, Scene 8: Prenez Mon Bras Un Moment! - Richard Leech/Cheryl Studer/Jose Van Dam/Nadine Denize
- Act III, Scene 8: Il Etait Temps! - Jose Van Dam
- Act III, Scene 8: Il Se Fait Tard! - Cheryl Studer/Richard Leech
- Act III, Scene 8: Marguerite!... Ah! Partez - Richard Leech/Cheryl Studer
- Act III, Scene 8: Tenez! Elle Ouvre Sa Fenetre!... Il M'aime! - Jose Van Dam/Cheryl Studer/Richard Leech
- Act IV, Scene 1: Intro - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Act IV, Scene 1: Elles Ne Sont Plus La!... Il Ne Revient Pas - Cheryl Studer/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino
- Act IV, Scene 1: Marguerite!... Siebel! - Martine Mahe/Cheryl Studer
- Act IV, Scene 1: Si Le Bonheur... - Martine Mahe/Cheryl Studer
- Act IV, Scene 2: Seigneur, Daignez Permettre... - Cheryl Studer/Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse...
- Act IV, Scene 3: Deposons Les Armes! - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino/Thomas Hampson...
- Act IV, Scene 3: Gloire Immortelle De Nos Aieux - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino
- Act IV, Scene 4: Allons, Siebel! - Thomas Hampson/Martine Mahe/Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act IV, Scene 5: Vous Qui Faites L'endormie - Jose Van Dam
- Act IV, Scene 6: Que Voulez-vous, Messieurs? - Thomas Hampson/Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act IV, Scene 7: Par Ici, Par Ici, Mes Amis! - Nadine Denize/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino...
- Act IV, Scene 7: Ecoute-moi Bien, Marguerite - Thomas Hampson/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino...
Tracks:
- Act V, Scene 1: Dans Les Bruyeres - Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino
- Act V, Scene 1: Arrete! - Richard Leech/Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse...
- Act V, Scene 1: Jusqu'aux Premiers Feux Du Matin - Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse/Jose Aquino...
- Act V, Scene 1: Doux Nectar - Richard Leech/Jose Van Dam/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du Capitole De Toulouse...
- Act V, Scene 1: Que Ton Ivresse, O Volupte - Jose Van Dam/Richard Leech
- Act V, Scene 1: Intermezzo - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Act V, Scene 2: Va-t'en! - Richard Leech/Jose Van Dam
- Act V, Scene 2: Mon Coeur Est Penetre... - Richard Leech
- Act V, Scene 2: Ah! C'est La Voix Du Bien-aime!...Qui, C'est Moi, Je T'aime! - Cheryl Studer/Richard Leech
- Act V, Scene 2: Alerte, Alerte... Anges Purs... Christ Est Ressuscite - Jose Van Dam/Cheryl Studer/Richard Leech/Chor De L'Armee Francaise/Yves Parmentier/Chor Du...
- Appendices. Trio: A L'etude, O Mon Maitre - Richard Leech/Martine Mahe/Marc Barrard
- Appendices. Duo: Adieu, Mon Bon Frere! - Cheryl Studer/Thomas Hampson
- Appendices. Chanson: Maitre Scarabee, Ayant Fait Fortune... - Jose Van Dam
- Appendices. Scene: Du Courage... Je Veux Tout Lui DIre - Martine Mahe/Nadine Denize/Jose Van Dam
- Ballet Music: Les Nubiennes (Allegretto: Mouvement De Valse) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Adagio - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Danse Antique (Alegretto) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Vars De Cleopatre (Moderato Maestoso) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Les Troyens (Moderato Con Moto) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Vars Du Miroir (Allegretto) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
- Ballet Music: Danse De Phryne (Allegro Vivo) - Orch Du Capitole De Toulouse/Michel Plasson
Customer Reviews:
A very good standby Faust.......2007-02-19
This set under Michel Plasson and his Toulouse Opera forces is a decent contender, thoroughly French in style--even if none of the lead roles are taken by French singers (Van Dam is Belgian)--and dramatically convincing. But it's far from ideal. To begin with, Faust is a very long, very uneven work, and only the best conducting, or a good deal of cutting, enables a listener to hold interest over the long haul. Beecham prfers the cuts, Davis tries for extended drama. Plasson is merely good, rating higher than his Teldec rival, Carlo Rizzi, but not as high as Cluytens, much less Davis. Also, it's fairly obvious that his orchestra and chorus aren't first-rate. The final, fatal flaw is Plasson's preference for slow, loving tempos, the last thing this wandering opera needs.
As for the singers, they make the show. Cheryl Studer was a miraculous artist in her brief heyday, a soprano capable of singing Wagner, Strauss, Mozart, and Gounod. It's amazing to think that a voice suited to Pamina, Elsa, Salome, and Marguerite could exist in the same person. She makes a musical, touching, and often vocally thrilling heroine, the best in modern times since de los Angeles. Her Faust, Richard Leach, makes up in style and ardor what he lacks in voice (his attractive lyric tenor is innately small), and dramatic fervor carries him a long way. Jose van Dam would have been a perfect Mephisto ten years before this rrecording was made (1994, I believe), and he's still a great stylist, but the voice itself had thickened and blurred. Even so, he is preferable to almost any other modern Devil, excepting the ultra-hammy but terrifying Boris Christoff for Cluytens. I must admit to being disappointed by Thomas Hampson's one-size-fits-all Valentin, who doesn't sound remotely like a loving brother or a soldier, either.
I've tried to offer a realistic appraisal of this enjoyable Faust, which makes a good standby while we wait for the ideal performance. I'd place it well below the Davis and just below the Cluytens.
A Fine French Faust.......2006-01-23
Leech is by no means the greatest Faust, especially after you've heard Placido Domingo or Jerry Hadley. But Leech has a strong voice that has a beautiful tone and bloom. He is actually the only tenor who excelled in mainly French repertoire. Other roles he has sung with acclaim (in French-Canada) include Raoul from Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots, not an easy role as he has a lot of difficult music and that opera is very long.
Cheryl Studer as Marguerite is equally beautiful and she holds her own opposite Leech. Her voice is bright, crystalline and feminine. She sings Marguerite with all the technical abilities of past Marguerites like Victoria De Los Angeles and even Christine Nilsson at the turn of the century. Thankfully, the sound is great and Studer's Marguerite sounds well on record. Her account of each aria is a vocal feast. But in this respect, she's like Joan Sutherland. It's all razzle-dazzle and beauty but she has killed all dramatic effect. She does not live her role nor attempt to sound dramatic, like Mirella Freni does in the Pretre recording with Domingo. It is true though that Gounod did not give enough drama to the role of Marguerite. If sung in an old-school manner, she's simply a coloratura vehicle in the tradition of bel canto heroines like Lucia. But if you're a devotee of Cheryl Studer, this is a must have, as she is in top form and sings with utmost confidence and beauty. I especially love her voice in the final trio "Ange Pure Ange Radieux".
Jose Van Dam does not excell in the role of the Devil. This is not how the Devil from Faust should be sung. If you want to hear how it should be sung, look for Nicolai Ghiurov in the Pretre recording with Domingo and Freni or Samuel Ramey in the Rizzo recording with Hadley and Gazdia. Van Dam does not have enough of a dark edge to his voice, nor does he put forth any true effort to sound devilish and nasty. It's simply a lot of bel canto singing in the bass voice.
Doesn't deserve 5 Stars but it's a beautiful recording and one that is the most French of the Fausts I've heard, thanks to the great conducting of Plasson. You should always keep in mind that he is always conducting in the old French school style when you hear his version of Bizet's Carmen or Massenet's Manon.
The Best 'Faust' on record!.......2003-12-26
It is outstanding!!!
An operatic train wreck.......2003-09-09
Plasson is a good conductor, or at least the best french one we have at the moment, (compliment or sacrasm? I'll let you decide). However, any sense of dramatic pacing seems to elude him. All the big moments just seem to pass by in a flash. Every important scene has just the same weight and drama as the most trivial. He has a good view of the whole picture, but not of the parts that make it up. Besides that he is a rather OK conductor, with perhaps tempo a bit too fast at times.
I was a bit suprised by Studer. As of late she has been moving into heavier, more dramatic-soprano type roles. Here though she does a decent turn as Marguerite. My only complaints would be she doesn't have much in the way of a trill & in softer passages she tends to let her singing get a bit loose.
Leech makes a decent Faust, but in comparison with say, Gedda, he is totally blown out of the water. He does have a nice bright voice that is rather firm with no howled notes (Corelli) & a decent middle range. But on the whole his performance is so terribly bland that it ruins any enjoyment you could get out of his performance.
Van Dam's status as a bass-baritone seems to have gone to his, (or the producers) head. In no way is this a Mephistopheles voice. He can sing all the notes well enough & only runs into any sort of trouble on the lower-lying passages. But after hearing a true bass in this role (ie: Christoff, Ghiaurov). He sounds undernourished & a bit dry. Hampson makes an average Valentin, nothing new, nothing remarkable enough to mention.
On the whole, this is a dramatically dull recording with some aimless conducting. Nobody really seems to get that this is an opera, interpretation from all the soloists is pretty much nil. Also, if you thought of buying just for the extra 15 minutes worth of music, don't bother. There was a reason that Gounod cut it out after all.
There isn't a better digital FAUST!.......2003-05-09
Average customer rating:
|
Gounod - Faust / Studer · Leech · van Dam · Hampson · Mahé · Denize · Barrard · Capitole de Toulouse · Plasson
Charles Gounod , Michel Plasson , Cheryl Studer , Richard Leech , Choeur et Orchestre du Capitole de Toulouse , Choeur de l'Armée Française , José van Dam , Thomas Hampson , Nadine Denize , Martine Mahé , and Marc Barrard Manufacturer: Capitol ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000002RS5 Release Date: 1991-11-08 |
Customer Reviews:
A good modern Faust, with impressive singing.......2007-02-19
This set under Michel Plasson and his Toulouse Opera forces is a decent contender, thoroughly French in style--even if none of the lead roles are taken by French singers (Van Dam is Belgian)--and dramatically convincing. But it's far from ideal. To begin with, Faust is a very long, very uneven work, and only the best conducting, or a good deal of cutting, enables a listener to hold interest over the long haul. Beecham prfers the cuts, Davis tries for extended drama. Plasson is merely good, rating higher than his Teldec rival, Carlo Rizzi, but not as high as Cluytens, much less Davis. Also, it's fairly obvious that his orchestra and chorus aren't first-rate. The final, fatal flaw is Plasson's preference for slow, loving tempos, the last thing this wandering opera needs.
As for the singers, they make the show. Cheryl Studer was a miraculous artist in her brief heyday, a soprano capable of singing Wagner, Strauss, Mozart, and Gounod. It's amazing to think that a voice suited to Pamina, Elsa, Salome, and Marguerite could exist in the same person. She makes a musical, touching, and often vocally thrilling heroine, the best in modern times since de los Angeles. Her Faust, Richard Leach, makes up in style and ardor what he lacks in voice (his attractive lyric tenor is innately small), and dramatic fervor carries him a long way. Jose van Dam would have been a perfect Mephisto ten years before this rrecording was made (1994, I believe), and he's still a great stylist, but the voice itself had thickened and blurred. Even so, he is preferable to almost any other modern Devil, excepting the ultra-hammy but terrifying Boris Christoff for Cluytens. I must admit to being disappointed by Thomas Hampson's one-size-fits-all Valentin, who doesn't sound remotely like a loving brother or a soldier, either.
I've tried to offer a realistic appraisal of this enjoyable Faust, which makes a good standby while we wait for the ideal performance. I'd place it well below the Davis and just below the Cluytens.
Meditation Music:
- Handel: Partenope [Box set]
- Handel - Serse (Xerxes) / Watkinson · Hendricks · Esswood · Wenkel · Rodde · Cold · U. Studer · Malgoire
- Hasse: Piramo e Tisbe
- Helge Rosvaenge in Szenen aus Othello und Tosca
- Italian Opera Choruses
- Jean Philippe Rameau: Hippolyte Et Aricie (Suite)
- Johann Strauss: Eine Nacht in Venedig
- Jules Massenet: Werther
- La Bohème
- Le Nozze Di Figaro
Meditation Music
Sir Douglas Quintet + 2 = Honkey Blues
actoractressgallery.com Music: 3 Clarinet Concertos: Die Böhmischen
Music: Double Drop [CD-single] [Import]
Hard to Love Easy to Lay [CD-single] [Import]
Language. Sex. Violence. Other?
Jazz Giants 56 [Import] [Original recording remastered]
En Musica y en Fotos [Enhanced]
Illegitimate Factors from the Bay [Explicit Lyrics]