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Elektra, opera, Op. 58 (TrV 223)
Composed by Richard Strauss
Performed by Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
with Anny Konetzni, Franz Klarwein, Hans Braun, Daniza Ilitsch, Wilhelm Felden, Martha Modl, Dorothea Frass
Conducted by Dimitri Mitropoulos
Richard Strauss: Elektra,Hans Braun,Richard Strauss,Dimitri Mitropoulos,Maggio Musicale Fiorentino,Anny Konetzni,Daniza Ilitsch,Dorothea Frass,Franz Klarwein,Martha Mödl,Wilhelm Felden,Fonit Cetra Records,Classical,German/Austrian Romantic Opera,Opera,Opera / Operetta / Oratorio
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Richard Strauss: Scenes from Salome & Elektra [Hybrid SACD]
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009U55S8 Release Date: 2005-07-26 |
Customer Reviews:
One of the best.......2007-05-15
If You Own A SACD Player, Buy This Hybrid SACD. If You Have A Normal CD Player, Buy The Earlier Plain CD "Living Stereo" Version.......2006-11-08
Of course if you have a SACD player, you should buy this thing, but if you are like most people who have standard stereos, the original release will sound superior in your normal CD player than the Hybrid SACD. Trust me on this one, I am a perfectionist and an audiophile.
Barnstorming in the Concert Hall!.......2005-12-21
Hair raising Strauss!!.......2005-08-05
Absolutely outstanding. The DSD remastering is phenominal!!
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Richard Strauss: Elektra
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000KLRUJS Release Date: 2007-05-08 |
Customer Reviews:
A harrowing and shocking musical journey.......2007-07-12
However, few similarities exist between their moods. From the first bar of Salomé, the listener is submerged in the moonlit, perfumed, Arabian night of Judea, with erotic bacchanals and limitless orgies; the opening of Elektra is an oppressive death motif and sets a stage of decay, filth, pain, and malice. The two title characters are strikingly different, through they are both princesses. Salomé is an oversexed teenager, a flighty, precocious nymph driven to her sanity's limits by jealousy and rejection; Elektra is not insane (at least, not in the same capacity). Elektra suffered no trauma when her father, Agamemnon, was slaughtered in his bath by his wife, Klytämnestra, and her lover, Aegisth; she is fully aware of what occurred. Her apparent insanity is vested in the fact that she is determined to avenge her father, with the assistance of her long-abandoned brother, Orest, in a decidedly homicidal manner.
Sir Georg Solti was, of course, the master of both of these wondrous operas, and no finer orchestra could have suited him than the mighty Wiener Philharmoniker. The entire score is much like the tone poems (Also sprach Zarathustra, Don Juan, Don Quixote, Ein Heldenleben) which garnished Strauss so much early fame. However, there are certain non-vocal points in which Solti truly excels, notably the opening Agamemnon motif, a poignant, jarring death-wail of misery and woe; the appearance of Klytämnestra, set to the rhythm of a brutal, inhuman march; the brief, tense span after the exit of the two bickering servants; Elektra digging up the axe; Orest's entrance into the castle, followed by Elektra realizing that she forgot to give him the axe; the brief span (accentuated by a harp, no less) before Aegisth enters the castle; and the strange waltz symbolizing Elektra's victorious dance, a motion unseemly and unnatural to onlookers. All of this combines to create an image of this gloomy, ramshackle palace in Mycenae. Every note details the blood-spattered walls, the moldy air, the cramped hallways, and subterranean labyrinths. Hofmannsthal's words also paint grisly images of perpetual births and murders and dwellers reclining on piles of contorted corpses.
Birgit Nilsson did not perform the role of Elektra. She injected the blood of Elektra into her own veins, just as she became the wounded Valkyrie Brünnhilde, the icy Princess Turandot, and the benevolent, self-sacrificing wife Leonore. Nilsson lives through Elektra to hate, to scorn, to seethe, to compile all her passions and energies into the single goal of avenging Agamemnon. This paradoxically level-headed hysteria is heard in her first monologue ("Allein! Weh, ganz allein"), in which she invokes like a priestess the name "Agamemnon" and recounts to the listener, in the most squalid and wretched detail, the manner in which her father's head was split with an axe and his body was dragged, headfirst, from the foaming, scarlet bath. She reaches a fever pitch at its conclusion, insisting that she will slice the throats of his enemies, his horses, and his hunting dogs, and pour the barrels of collected blood around his tomb; then he, she, and Orest will dance in the ecstasy of victory. Her wild, outraged monologue to her mother ("Was bluten muß? Dein eigenes Genick") is no less daunting. Elektra is merciless as she describes how Orest will enter Klytämnestra's bed chamber, chase her from it, back her into a corner, and then, in a brief eternity of villainy and contempt, make the queen wait for the fatal blow; Nilsson rips through the terrible aria like a viper, with venom and spittle pouring across the vile words.
The crowning achievement of Elektra's musical persona is the recognition monologue ("Orest!"), the equivalent of the aforementioned aria in Salomé. It is a massive outpouring of characteristically Straussian melody, richness, and sound. It is also the most delicate moment, a miniscule ounce of humanity within the demented façade of Elektra. Nilsson is too sumptuous and moving to be adequately described; she conveys this moment as the triumph of her entire existence. It is her one happy experience, her first joyful utterance. The monologue is also a look into the pitiful woman's sexuality; it is undoubtedly erotic, with Hofmannsthal's poetic description of Elektra's naked, creamy, nubile body, bathed in the milky light of the moon.
Ultimately conversely, Regina Resnik's Klytämnestra is a suppurating, bloated gorgon. She is a knotted mass of offal, guilt, and spitefulness. Her entrance ("Was willst du?...O Götter, warum liegt ihr so auf mir?") is so violent and callous, one might take it for an outburst of blasphemy. One cannot help but smirk at her horridness as she invokes the gods, wondering why she is forced to suffer "like a wasteland" with nettle growing out of her. Each utterance of "warum" is more unnerving, and strikes the listener in the pit of his or her stomach. She is unendingly foul as she berates her confidante [Margareta Sjöstedt] and the train-bearer [Margarita Lilowa] ("Ich will nichts hören!"), churlishly mocking them for telling her that horrendous "demons with long pointed beaks" suck her blood as she sleeps and insisting that she slaughter sacrificial victim after victim.
However, it is her nightmare monologue ("Ich habe keine guten Nächte"..."Ja, du! denn du bist klug") that is truly dreadful. Here, Strauss could be mistaken for elemental Berg, with brittle, globular dissonance accentuating Resnik's horrified words. The "Etwas" (a nameless "something") which crawls over her at night could only be something indescribably terrifying, some dingy mass of guilt characterized with a leering face and piercing eyes. The monologue descends into further horror. Could Klytämnestra be dead while living, an animated carcass, a breathing pile of rotting sinew and bone? Resnik would have no trouble convincing one that she was.
She also proves her status as a remarkable vocal actress. Her mocking laughter, brought on by the false news that Orest has been killed, is frightfully credible; as she exits the scene, surrounded by torch-bearers, her cruel giggles seem to descend into a churning whirlpool. Later, when Orest murders her offstage, she utters two screams, both of which are inherently different. The first strikes the listener unexpectedly, just as the shadowy figure of the adult Orest, saber in hand, startled the squalid queen into consciousness. The second scream, however, is an animalistic grunt, an attempted repudiation of death by the queen. It is horrible to hear and will haunt the listener perpetually.
Marie Collier's Chrysothemis is the antithesis of Elektra. Chrysothemis is a feminine character who longs for the sexual affections of men and the timeless, natural joys of motherhood ("Ich kann nicht sitzen und ins Dunkel starren"..."Der bist es, die mit Eisenklammern"); Elektra has scarified her sexuality (and, thus, any maternal instincts) unto the memory of her father (as she explained to Orest in the recognition monologue). Collier is particularly potent when she attempts to convince Elektra that her hatred is in vain; Agamemnon is dead and will never be avenged, for Orest will never come back ("Der Vater, der ist tot"). She is infectious in her ecstasy in the finale ("Elektra! Schwester! komm' mit uns!"), as she gleefully tells Elektra that Orest has murdered Aegisth and that the faithful servants have revolted in his honor; her words soar into oblivion, supported by harmonizing praises from the interior chorus.
Tom Krause's Orest is the personified voice of destiny; his is a drawl of terrible and wonderful meaning. His vocal entrance, set against a bleak orchestral backdrop of doom, stands in stark contrast to the frenzied labor of Elektra as she digs up the battle axe. Gerhard Stolze proves his unparalleled genius as a charaktertenor through his performance as Aegisth. He does more with this five-minute role than most singers could throughout an entire recording. His entrance ("He! Lichter! Lichter!") is appropriately condescending and pompous; Strauss' macabre humor is audible in his conversation with Nilsson, who is deviously charming and submissive ("Darf ich nicht leuchten?"). His death-cry ("Helft! Mörder! helft dem Herren!") is not the faux, B-class acting of most operatic singers but rather a believable, hair-curling squeal of horror. Nilsson's cry of "Agamemnon hears you!" ("Agamemnon hört dich!") is as frightening as his following wail of anguish. Tugomir Franc is appropriately domineering as Orest's tutor. Gerhard Unger makes a brief appearance as the fussy young servant who delivers the news of Orest's supposed death to Aegisth. Helen Watts, Maureen Lehane, Yvonne Minton, Jane Cook, Felicia Weathers, and Pauline Tinsley are each singularly defined as the cruel, gossiping maids and their vindictive overseer.
Innovative producer John Culshaw deserves applause for this recording as much as Solti. The slamming of the servants' quarter door during the maids' bickering and gossiping, the pitter-pattering footsteps of Klytämnestra's torch-bearers, and the grimy crunching of Aegisth's steps into the seemingly gaping, hollow citadel are three examples of the master producer who brought so many operas into new realms of life in recordings. Strauss was, of course, a master of the theatre, and it is highly appropriate that a similar master present his work in a recording.
In the end, perhaps the greatest asset of Elektra is that the maestro did not moralize. He was not a devout Christian when he composed Salomé; the musical disgust over Salomé's depraved desires does not stem from any pious pity for the Baptist, but rather over the simple fact that a young girl longs to kiss his dead, bloody lips. It is the same with Elektra. Strauss does not comment on the fact that Agamemnon, who peers down upon the audience from his musical throne, murdered Klytämnestra's daughter Iphigenia in order for the Greeks to fight in the Trojan War. Strauss also declines to comment on the fact that Orest later stood trial before the Furies for committing the double-homicide (that said while excluding the few terrible moments in the finale as the Agamemnon motif is repeated alongside the mournful wails of Chrysothemis, which combine to add an air of momentary uncertainty and, perhaps, regret). In short, the opera is victorious at the end; it is, after all, the opera detailing Elektra's story, not Orest's, and she was, by the end of her life-draining dance of ecstasy, more victorious than any conceivable peer.
A Powerhouse Recording that Deserves All Praise.......2007-06-30
Solti leads the Vienna Philharmonic in the frenzy that this score truly typifies. I still wish that they had asked Karajan to do this opera in the studio since he was able to bring so much out of Strauss' score, but we at least have these gargantuan forces to contend with in the absence of a Karajan studio recording.
A truly mad and demented performance if there ever was one, but you should look at Gwyneth Jones' 1990 performance from Claves records to hear what a theatrical Elektra should sound like.
Richard Strauss: Elektra
This is the most recent release of Solti's famous recording of Elektra.......2007-06-19
Amazon is still selling the first CD release at a much higher price. This is the one to get. The same is true with Solti's equally estimable recording of Salome.
Happy Listening,
G.
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R. Strauss: Elektra
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041RM Release Date: 2002-09-10 |
Tracks:
- Wo bleibt Elektra? - Helen Watts
- Allein! Weh, ganz allein
- Elektra! - Marie Collier
- Ich kann nicht sitzen und ins Dunkel starren - Marie Collier
- Es geht ein Larm los
- Was wilst du? Seht doch, dort! - Regina Resnik
- Die Gotter! bist doch selber eine Gottin
- Ich will nichts horen! - Regina Resnik
- Ich habe keine guten Nachte - Regina Resnik
- Wenn das rechte Blutopfer
- Was bluten mu
- Was sagen sie ihr denn?
Tracks:
- Orest! Orest ist tot! - Marie Collier
- Platz da! Wer lungert so vor einer Tur? - Gerhard Unger
- Nun mues hier von uns geschehm
- Du! Du! denn du bist stark!
- Nun denn, allein!
- Was wilst du, fremder Mensch?
- Elektra! Elektra! - Tom Krause
- Orest!
- Du wirst es tun? Allein?
- Seid ihr von Sinnnen - Tugomir Franc
- Ich habe ihm das Beil nicht geben konnen!
- Es muetwas geschehen sein - Marie Collier
- He! Lichter! Lichter! - Gerhard Stolze
- Elektra! Schwester! - Marie Collier
- Ob ich nich hore?
- Horst du denn nicht, sie tragen ihn - Marie Collier
- Schweig, und tanze
Amazon.com essential recording
If ever there was a dysfunctional family, it was the one in this opera, based on a Greek tragedy but deeply imbued with the ideas of Sigmund Freud. The mother Clytemnestra (mezzo-soprano Regina Resnik) and her lover Aegisthus (tenor Gerhard Stolze) have murdered the father, Agamemnon, on his triumphant return from the Trojan War. They have an excuse: Agamemnon gave his daughter Iphigenia for a human sacrifice. Another daughter, Elektra (soprano Birgit Nilsson), burns for revenge, but as a woman in a patriarchal society, she must use her brother Orestes (baritone Tom Krause) to execute her plan. Nilsson's portrayal is a high point of her career, and the whole brilliant production matches her performance. This is not easy listening, but it puts us in touch with dark realities dangerous to ignore, and the music (after you get used to it, which may take a while) has great power. --Joe McLellanCustomer Reviews:
Visceral, fascinating, almost definitive.......2006-11-24
Back in the 60's though, Sir Georg Solti conducted this benchmark Elektra with Birgit Nilsson in the title role. She had everything the role required for her voice. The top, the middle, and the bottom of the voice was radiant, and she was tireless in a role that would prompt several sopranos to write suicide notes. She perhaps had the ideal voice for Elektra. With her histrionics and her remarkable instrument, no Elektra except perhaps Astrid Varnay and Gwyneth Jones could ever match this magnificent artist. One could wish there was a bit more madness and dementia, but since there is no other voice that could hold to this great artist's performance, one could say that that is alright. As her mother Klytämnestra, Regina Resnik is perhaps one of the roles' most vivid interpreters. While she lacked the psychosexual emphasis that Leonie Rysanek brought to the role, it is a most vivid portrayal of a woman losing her reason. She is perhaps the most demented on disc.
Marie Collier's Chrysothemis is not the best, and that scream was absolutely ridiculous. I far prefer Anne Evans and Lisa Della Casa in the role. The rest of the male cast is excellent, with special mention going to Stolze's crazed Aegisthus. The best Orest though is perhaps Hans Hotter, despite Tom Kraus' magnificent achievement.
And Solti? Well, he brought a demonic drive to this reading that I wish would get more tender in the recognition scene, but all in all, a great account of an important work. Highly recommended!
A truly mad and demented performance if there ever was one, but you should look at Gwyneth Jones' 1990 performance from Claves records to hear what a theatrical Elektra should sound like.
Excellent, love it!.......2006-02-22
The only reason why I gave this item 4 stars, was because of its sound. I did not like the quality when I listened to the sound sample, so I had visited another site to buy the new digital remastered version. BUY THE NEW VERSION. Borders, and Barnes and Nobles are now supplying it, it is much cleaner and the orchestra is much more audible. However, when I had bought it, it took about 3 weeks because it is made in Germany. I don't know if it has changed. Anyway, I love the Solti/Strauss/Elektra cd, but it is only to be fully appreciated if you buy the new digital remastered version that Amazon does not supply.
Birgit Nilsson's Grand Elektra.......2006-01-22
Shattering. Blood-curdling. Terrifying. You get the idea........2004-12-15
But it's Nilsson who elevates this recording into immortality. In "Ring Resounding", John Culshaw - who recorded her Brunnhilde for Solti's landmark Wagner cycle - states that not even Flagstad in her prime could match her vocal power. A bold statement! But no one who listens to this opera will be inclined to doubt it. And her vocal acting here is marvelous as well.
High drama........2004-10-25
That being said, in my ever so humble opinion, Elektra's lure is more the drama and skill rather than conventional beauty. THIS Elektra, though, is very well-sung. While I do respect Birgit Nilsson's monumental talent, there are very few roles in which I enjoy listening to her. I admire her strength and endurance but conflictingly, hers is a talent I enjoy in smaller doses...which is why Strauss and (especially) Wagner make her too much for my taste. Here, however, Elektra's `grotesquerie' works perfectly well with Nilsson. The power is there when needed, as is the wild emotion and (at times) fragility....that notion of a large voice being precariously balanced on very delicate stilts (e.g., the discovery scene where she recognises Orestes; after her initial exclamation, she opines his name with heart-breaking fragility). At times, the music and singing is beautiful indeed (e.g., the encounter with the stranger, who she later discovers to be Orestes, where she laments her fallen state and that of her brother and father). More generally, however, I listen to this for the `rush' and `freak-appeal'...so this isn't a staple diet.
Marie Collier's role as Krysothemis is constantly interesting...all the more intriguing for its brevity. But her upper register is amazing and the tight vibrato adds to the wailing character required for Chrisothemis. Her opening of the second act must have achieved legendary status by now. Special effects aside, her howling and wailing sounds supernatural. Fascinating! Taut and desperate...a must.
It's rightly been said that Klytemnastra is every mezzo's dramatic dream...unless there is a moral objection to the role. Regina Resnik was born to sing this role! Chilling, menacing, horrific (not of voice but of character)....excellent! And her death-scream (more like a defiance of her own mortality) will give you nightmares. Here is one pinnacle of technique, sound technology and drama. Feel your skin prickle as she laments the product of her loins with "O Gotte." Then feel the ground fall from under you as the raw menace of "warum" reverberates through you!
Gerhard Stolze is at his best as a dramatic heldentenor...perhaps THE most dramatic! His Aegisthe is suitably arrogant, flamboyant and eccentric...and that's just his entrance! His very short role comes to a blood-curdling and gory end as he's murdered by Orestes. Whatever Orestes did to him sounds agonising and brutal in the extreme- Aegisthe dies sounding like a stuck pig.
Tom Krause's velvety, brooding and sonorous Orestes transforms wonderfully from the solemn stranger to the heroic heir-returned. He is among the CDs' more beautiful singers. The supporting cast give very involved and talented performances...even the suitably `stroppy' stable-boy.
Sir Solti's conducting is like a new, super-charged and well-oiled machine. A superb, urgent and dramatic reading...just as it should be.
So do expect a few long-winded passages and don't expect harmonious strains but the drama here is monumental. I say give it a try. I'm no lover of the `new trends' in music but this IS art!
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Violin & Piano
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000056C5Z Release Date: 2001-02-20 |
Tracks:
- Son in E flat, Op.18: Allegro, Ma Non Troppo
- Son in E flat, Op.18: Improvisation: Andante Cantabile
- Son in E flat, Op.18: Finale: Andante - Allegro
- Divert: I. Sinf: Andante
- Divert: II. Danses Suisses: Tempo Giusto
- Divert: III. Scherzo: Allegretto Grazioso
- Divert: IV. Pas De Deux: a. Adagio
- Divert: IV. Pas De Deux: b. Var (Allegretto Grazioso)
- Divert: IV. Pas De Deux: c. Coda (Presto)
- Romanian Folkdances: I. Staff Dance
- Romanian Folkdances: II. Sash Dance
- Romanian Folkdances: III. Stamping Dance
- Romanian Folkdances: IV. Dance From Bucium
- Romanian Folkdances: V. Romanian Polka
- Romanian Folkdances: VI. Romanian Folkdances: Quick Dance
Amazon.com
With this record, Vadim Repin proves again that he is one of the finest, most appealing young violinists before the public. His idiomatic flair and virtuosity are stunning, but they are always at the service of the music and so unobtrusive that one simply takes them for granted. It is his tone that is instantly striking and constantly compelling: intoxicatingly beautiful, it has a dark glow in the low register, a shimmering, celestial radiance on top, and he can vary its color and intensity in an instant with bow and vibrato, from sweet to austere, floating to powerful, robust to ecstatic, to fit mood, character and expression. The unanimous rapport between him and his splendid pianist, Boris Beresovsky, is clearly the result of a long partnership; their give-and-take is as natural as human speech. They must be about the same age as Strauss was when he wrote his Sonata; they respond to its romantic ardor and impetuous exuberance with just the right youthful, passionate abandon. The slow movement has a wonderfully wistful inwardness, as well as lightness and charm; the finale soars and glitters. The Stravinsky has lots of color, character, atmosphere, spice, and humor; the dances really dance, the melodies sing. Somehow, Tchaikovsky's and Stravinsky's styles manage to complement rather than interfere with each other. If the Bartók Dances are a little overdone, it serves to bring out their native folk flavor. --Edith EislerCustomer Reviews:
A gem.......2003-07-12
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Birgit Nilsson Sings Richard Wagner & Richard Strauss
Manufacturer: Gala ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001XNS Release Date: 2000-06-06 |
Tracks:
- Ariadne auf Naxos: Es Ist alles vergebens - Es gibt ein Reich
- Salome: Es ist kein Laut zu vernehmen
- Salome: Ah! du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund kussen lassen, Jochanaan
- Salome: Sie ist ein Ungeheuer, deine Tochter
- Salome: Ah! Ich habe deinen Mund gekusst, Jochanaan
- Elektra: Was willst du, Fremder Mensch?
- Die Fau Ohne Schatten: Es dunkelt, dass ich nicht sehe zur Arbeit
- Die Fau Ohne Schatten: Es gibt derer, Die bleiben immer gelassen Abtu ich von meinem Leibe die Kinder
- Die Fau Ohne Schatten: Die Weib ist irre - Barak, ich hab es nicht getan
- Tannhauser: Dich, teure Halle
- Lohengrin: Euch Luften, die mein Klagen
- Lohengrin: Elsa!-Wer Ruft?
- Lohengrin: Ortrud, wo bist du?
Tracks:
- Tristan und Isolde: Horst du sie noch?
- Tristan und Isolde: Mild und leise wie er lachelt
- Die Walkure: Schlafst du, Gast?
- Die Walkure: Wintersturme wichen dem Wonnemond
- Die Walkure: De bist der Lenz
- Die Walkure: O susseste Wonne! Seligstes Weib!
- Die Walkure: Siegmund heiss ich und Siegmund bin ich!
- Siegfried: Ewig war ich, ewig bin ich
- Gotterdammerung: Schweigt eures Jammers jauchzenden Schwall
- Gotterdammerung: Starke Scheite, Schichtet mir dort
Customer Reviews:
The whole career of one of the greatest singers of all time.......2007-01-14
When the news arrived that La Nilsson hade died in her home, surrounded by family members and near friends, on Christmas Day 2005 (kidneys not functioning, and no more dialysis possible) - we at once underrstand her uniquiness - there was nobody there to take over the helm and shield....It is quite wonderful that this eextensive compilation was published just recently. It is a very worthy portrait of a blessed singer!
Birgit Sings Like Sweetness.......2007-01-08
A Document In The Grand Career Of Birgit Nilsson (1918-2005).......2006-03-23
Great.......2003-08-20
If you are a 'historical' freak, buy this. If you are a Birgit Nilsson freak, buy this. If you are an opera freak, buy this. Even if you are not a freak, buy this!!
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Ten Top Sopranos
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000420T Release Date: 1993-03-16 |
Tracks:
- La Boheme: Si, mi chiamano Mim TEN TOP SOPRANOS
- Le nozze di Figaro: E Susanna non vien ... Dove sono - Kiri Te Kanawa
- Undallo in maschera: Saper vorreste - Kathleen Battle
- Lohengrin: Einsam in tragen - Jessye Norman
- Elektra: Allein! Weh, ganz allein - TEN TOP SOPRANOS
- Madama Butterfly: Un bel di - TEN TOP SOPRANOS
- Aida: Ritorna vincitor! - Leontyne Price
- La Wally: Ebben? ... Ne andrntana - Renata Tebaldi
- La Gioconda: Suicidio! - Montserrat Caballe
- Lucia di Lammermoor: Il dolce suono mi colpi di sua voce!... Ardon gl'incensi - Joan Sutherland
Customer Reviews:
Great Works by Great Artists - Under the Decca/London Label.......2006-02-11
I love this CD, it's filled with many little gems showing off the best moments in the many different variations of the soprano voice.
Freni = Lyrico Spinto
Battle = Soubrette
Sutherland = Coloratura
Nilsson = Dramatic
Te Kanawa = Lyric (Her Dove sono is positively sublime!!)
Etc.
A wonderful CD which may introduce you to something you've never heard before.
!!!!.......2004-04-05
Sutherland awesome.......2003-06-04
Sparkling.......2002-09-01
I would recommed this CD to just about anyone! For those new to the opera world...this is probably the absolute best place to start. For those more seasoned, you will find this is one of the most valuable investments you have made. Enjoy~
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Richard Strauss: Elektra [Hybrid SACD]
Manufacturer: Profil - G Haenssler ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BM3MO8 Release Date: 2006-01-17 |
Tracks:
- Wo Bleibt Elektra?
- Ich Will Vor Ihr Mich Niederwerfen
- Allein
- Agamemnon
- Elektra!
- Ich Hab's Wie Feuer In Der Brust
- Immer Sitzen Wir Auf Der Stange
- Was Heulst Du
- Orchesterzwischenspiel
- Was Willst Du? Seht Doch, Dort!
- Ich Will Hinunter
- Ich Habe Keine Guten Nachte
- Ein Jeder
- Lasst Du Den Bruder Nicht Nach Hause?
- Was Bluten Muss
- Lichter
- Orest Ist Tot
- Platz Da!
- Nun Muss Es Hier Von Uns Geschehen
- Wie Stark Du Bist
- Von Jetzt An Will Ich Deine Schwester Sein
Tracks:
- Nun Denn Allein!
- Was Willst Du, Fremder Mensch?
- Wer Bist Denn Du?
- Orest!
- O Lass Deine Augen Mich Sehn
- Nein, Du Sollst Mich Nicht Umarmen!
- Verstehst Du's, Bruder?
- Seid Ihr Von Sinnen
- Ich Habe Ihm Das Beil Nicht Geben Konnen!
- Es Muss Etwas Geschehen Sein
- He, Lichter
- Elektra, Schwester!
- Ob Ich Nicht Hore?
- Tanz
- Elektra! Schweig Und Tanze!
Customer Reviews:
an Above-Average Performance of Strauss' Dangerously Hypnotic Score.......2006-02-02
The WDR Rundfunkchor and Sinfonieorchester Köln are on splendid form, playing and singing better than on Bychkov's recording of DAPHNE for Decca. Their performances on that set, tailored to the abilities and disabilities of its leading lady, are conscientious and quite capable without challenging the conventional wisdom that for musically superior playing of Strauss one must look to Dresden or Vienna (though, in my oft-expressed opinion, the Vienna forces have been in decline during the past decade). In ELEKTRA, however, Bychkov's Köln forces are altogether in their element, so to speak, and provide playing and singing worthy of comparison with the greatest of their rivals past and present. The great climaxes are explosive and hair-raising without being garish, and the final scene is both pulse-quickening and cathartic without descending to pageantry. It is an impressive achievement, and praise is due to Hänssler for capturing it so faithfully.
Personally, I have found Bychkov's operatic work inconsistent. His celebrated YEVGENY ONEGIN recording is, to me, far more valuable for its wonderful singing (Foccile, Hvorostovsky, and Shicoff) than for its conducting, which in my opinion lacks shape and propulsion. The aforementioned DAPHNE suffers from a seeming failure to see the score as an immense, scintillating paragraph rather than as beautiful but disjointed phrases (a comment which I make being mindful of having recently listened to Böhm's 1964 Wiener Festwochen recording with Güden, King, Wunderlich, et. al.), but in fairness one must concede that Decca's DAPHNE was in both inception and execution inherently a 'diva record' and that Bychkov's work was secondary. There is much is his conducting of this ELEKTRA that I like, though. This is very much 'Bayreuth bel canto,' owing perhaps as much to the specific abilities of the cast at hand as to Bychkov's personal interpretation, with the vocal lines shaped in a manner which invites verbally-inflected, accurate singing. Bychkov manages to convey every emotional peak and valley of the work, however, and I find his subtle approach both refreshing and completely effective.
Of Deborah Polaski it must be said that the voice, as recorded at least, is no longer an especially ingratiating instrument, but it is secure and equal to the role. Certainly, this Elektra lacks the power of Nilsson or Borkh, but Polaski compensates with very careful attention to note values and the dynamic indications in the score. There are not many efforts at coloring the voice, but the vital emotions are all there: rage, insurmountable anxiety, utter loss, vulnerability, dissociation, alienation, and ultimately exuberance. There is not a great deal of power or easy resonance in the extreme upper register, but at least in passages such as the great opening monologue ('Allein! Weh ganz allein.') one does not fear that the notes will not be there. In the end, I find Polaski's performance a considerable success and a worthy addition to a sparse discography stretching back to her wonderful Dolly in Wolf-Ferrari's SLY from Hannover.
I recalled when listening to this performance the frequent criticism of Felicity Palmer during her tenure with Harnoncourt's early 'period practice' experiments owing to her whitened tone. Such criticism seems altogether confounding when one hears this Klytämnestra. Palmer's voice is unquestionably smaller than what one associates with the role, but she brings the performance off smashingly. As she reminded audiences with her smoldering Countess in the MET's PIKOVAYA DAMA a couple of seasons ago (quite the most vocally impressive performance of the production despite the presence of Domingo and Dalayman), hers remains a very potent voice, and she provides a Klytämnestra of epoch proportions, all the more menacing for having a smaller sound. It is a memorable performance that, like the sound in which it is preserved, is on an order to be played as a guide to the written letter of the part, both vocally and dramatically.
Considering her past engagements and one production with the Royal Opera in particular, Anne Schwanewilms' Chrysothemis likely cannot avoid comparisons with Deborah Voigt's famous interpretation as given at the MET (one of her first great triumphs, both in the house and on a telecast) and recorded for Sinopoli and Deutsche Grammophon. Schwanewilms' is a leaner sound (pun intended, but apt), less obviously bulky in tone but equally sizable and refulgent on top. Having the advantage of native German, she does not miss even the slightest of verbal felicities. She occasionally disappears -- more so than either Polaski or Palmer -- into the cacophony, but she retains a firm line throughout and sings with very dignified passion rather than the sort of hormonally overwrought desperation that often passes for stylish interpretation of Chrysothemis' situation (she is keen to get on with things as far as her love-life is concerned, but I hardly think that she is writhing in sexual frustration). Schwanewilm's voice as recorded has a brilliant cutting edge and she displays an innate intelligence as a performer that cause me to liken her to the young Silja, though more secure and far more beautiful in tone.
Neither of the principal male singers is up to much vocally. Graham Clark's Aegisth is pale but, after all these years at Bayreuth and anywhere else that gives DER RING, he sounds to the manner born. Franz Grundheber is miscast as Orest. He proved himself capable of fine singing even at this late stage with his Jupiter on cpo's LIEBE DER DANAE from Kiel, but he no longer commands the firmness of both line and utterance required for Orest. Nonetheless, it is not an altogether embarrassing or disfiguring performance, and in the end it does not impede enjoyment of the dénouement. Smaller roles are uniformly entrusted to very capable throats, the five maids especially having lovely voices.
In summary, this ELEKTRA is neither so blatantly powerful as Solti's Decca performance or so wholly right in shape and structure as Böhm's DGG recording, but I find very much to enjoy and think it a great achievement, significantly better than I had expected from a latter-day ELEKTRA.
Average customer rating:
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Strauss: Elektra
Manufacturer: Polygram Int'l ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001GMQ Release Date: 1994-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Elektra: Wo bleibt Elektra? - Cvetka Ahlin/Margarette Sjostedt/Sieglinde Wagner/Judith Hellwig/Gerda Scheyrer/Ilona Steingruber
- Elektra: Allein! Weh, ganz allein. - Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Elektra!/Ah, das Gesicht! - Marianne Schech/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Ich kann nicht sitzen und ins Dunkel starren - Marianne Schech/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Es geht ein Larm los. - Inge Borkh/Marianne Schech
- Elektra: Was willst du? Seht doch, dort! - Jean Madeira/Inge Borkh/Renate Reinecke/Hermi Ambros
- Elektra: Ich will nichts horen! - Jean Madeira
- Elektra: Ich habe keine guten Nachte. - Jean Madeira/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Wenn das rechte Blutopfer unterm Beile fallt - Inge Borkh/Jean Madeira
- Elektra: Was bluten mu Dein eigenes Genick - Inge Borkh/Jean Madeira
Tracks:
- Elektra: Orest! Orest ist tot! - Marianne Schech/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Platz da! Wer lungert so vor einer Tur? - Gerhard Unger/Siegfried Vogel
- Elektra: Nun mues hier von uns geschehn - Inge Borkh/Marianne Schech
- Elektra: Wie stark du bist! - Inge Borkh/Marianne Schech
- Elektra: Nun denn, allein! - Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Was willst du, fremder Mensch? - Inge Borkh/Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
- Elektra: Wer bist denn du? - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Orest! Orest! Es ruhrt sich niemand! - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Du wirst es tun? Allein? Du armes Kind? - Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Seid ihr von Sinnen - Fred Teschler
- Elektra: Ich habe ihm das Beil nicht geben konnen! - Inge Borkh/Jean Madeira/Marianne Schech/Cvetka Ahlin/Margarete Sjostedt/Sieglinde Wagner/Judith...
- Elektra: He! Lichter! Lichter! - Fritz Uhl/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Helft! Morder! - Fritz Uhl/Inge Borkh
- Elektra: Elektra! Schwester! - Marianne Schech/Chor der Staatsoper Dresden
- Elektra: Ob ich nicht hore? - Inge Borkh/Marianne Schech
- Elektra: Electra's Dance - Staatskapelle Dresden/Bohm
- Elektra: Elaktra!/Schweig, und tanze. - Inge Borkh/Marianne Schech
Customer Reviews:
terrific opera and amazing performance.......2004-08-14
I think, Elektra is the most horrific (more than Salome, with it's music, orchestration, colours) opera of Richard Strauss. It is written in very border of tonality. Strauss called very large orchestra, includes bass oboe, 5 clarinet, basset-horns, 8 horns, 6 trumptes, conrabass-trombone (!), 5 tubas, large percussion, almostly 70-80 strings...!
Also, this is the first complete recording of Elektra. I suppose, Karl Bohm is more succesful performed, than Sir Georg Solti, who is another famous Strauss conductor. I think, Solti is ill-tempered and his orchestra not play plump, powerful or effective. However, Karl Bohm (I always more admire him) and his orchestra performed with these special features and they are more perfect.
This set has full libretto and Karl Bohm's a review on this opera. Highly recommended.
One of the best Elektras around.......2003-10-02
The Elektra You Should Own.......2002-12-23
excellent performances.......2002-07-07
Frenzy!.......2001-10-19
Average customer rating:
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Strauss: Elektra
Manufacturer: BBC Legends ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000I8OIXO Release Date: 2007-01-30 |
Tracks:
- Wo Bleibt Elektra?
- Ich Will Vor Ihr Mich Niederwerfen
- Allein! Weh, Ganz Allein
- Elektra! Ah, Das Gesicht!
- Ich Kann Nicht Sitzen Und Ins Dunkel Starren
- Es Geht Ein Larm Los
- Was Willst Du? Seht Doch, Dort!
- Ich Habe Keine Guten Nachte
- Lasst Du Den Bruder Nicht Nach Hause, Mutter?
- Was Bluten Muss?
- Orest! Orest Ist Tot!
Tracks:
- Platz Da!
- Nun Muss Es Hier Von Uns Geschehn
- Wie Stark Du Bist!
- Von Jetz An Will Ich Deine Schwester Sein
- Sei Verflucht!
- Was Willst Du, Fremder Mensch?
- Die Hunde Auf Dem Hof Erkennen Mich
- Es Ruhrt Sich Niemand
- Di Wirst Es Tun? Allein?
- Seid Ihr Von Sinnen
- Ich Hab' Ihm Das Beil Nicht Geben Konnen!
- Es Muss Etwas Geschehen Sein
- He! Lichter! Lichter!
- Helft! Morder!
- Elektra! Schwester!
- Ob Ich Nicht Hore?
- Sie Fahren Dahin Wie Die Scharfe Des Schwerts
- Schweig, Und Tanze
- Lord Harewood In Conversation With Roger Beardsley
Customer Reviews:
Another Strauss winner.......2007-07-15
Average customer rating:
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Ritorna vincitor! - The Legendary Birgit Nilsson (2 CDs)
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00008MLU4 Release Date: 2003-05-13 |
Tracks:
- Ritorna Vincitor! - John Pritchard
- O Don Fatale - Aregeo Quadri
- Pace, Pace, Mio Dio! - Argeo Quadri
- Nel Di Della Vittoria Io Le Incontrai... Ambizioso Spirto... Vieni T'affretta! - VIRGILIO CARBONARI
- Vissi D'arte - Lorin Maazel
- Einsam In Truben Tagen - Edward Downes
- Starke Scheite Schichtet Mir Dort - Sir Georg Solti
- Allein! Weh, Ganz Allein - Sir Georg Solti
- Ein Handwerk Verstehst Du Sicher Nicht - Walter Berry
- Ah! Du Wolltest Mich Nicht Deinen Mund Kussen Lassen, Jokanaan!... Sie Ist Ein Ungeheuer, Deine Tochter... Ah! Ich Habe Deinen Mund Gekusst - Gerhard Stolze
Tracks:
- Dich, Teure Halle - Edward Downes
- Mild Und Leise Wie Er Lachelt - Hans Knappertsbusch
- I Der Engel - 'In Der Kindheit Fruhen Tagen' - Sir Colin Davis
- II Stehe Still! - 'Sausendes, Brausendes Rad Der Zeit' - Sir Colin Davis
- III Im Treibhaus - 'Hochgewolbte Blatterkronen' - Sir Colin Davis
- IV Schmerzen - 'Sonne, Weinsest Jeden Abend Dir Die Schonen Augen Rot' - Sir Colin Davis
- V Traume - 'Sag', Welch Wunderbare Traume' - Sir Colin Davis
- Var Det En Drom? (Was It A Dream?) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Flickan Kom Ifran Sin Alsklings Mote (The Tryst) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Svarta Rosor (Black Roses) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Sav, Sav, Susa (Sigh, Rushes, Sigh) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Diamanten Pa Marssnon (The Diamond On The March Snow) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Hostkvall (Autumn Evening) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Varen Flyktar Hastigt (Spring Flies Fast) - Bertil Bokstedt
- En Svane (A Swan) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Fra Monte Pincio - Bertil Bokstedt
- Varen (Spring) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Melodi (Melody) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Bon Till Natten (Prayer To Night) - Bertil Bokstedt
- Skoldmon (Valkyrie) - Bertil Bokstedt
- En Gammal Dansrytm (An Old Dance Rhythm) - Bertil Bokstedt
- I Could Have Danced All Night - Herbert Von Karajan
Customer Reviews:
Return to Valhalla OhValhalla Goddess.......2006-03-11
What we have here are wonderful accounts of arias from diverse operas. Let's analyze some of them, in hopes you can get hooked on Nilsson and check out her full-length opera recordings.
Wagner: Ring Des Nibelungen: Every opera connoisseur knows that Birgit Nilsson was the heir to Kirsten Flagstad's throne when it came to singing Brunhilde. Possessing a superhuman and radiant voice, she found a bit of her Swedish self in the mythic character of the Valkyrie Brunhilde. To me, there is no greater Brunhilde. She had a heroic voice so that the Immolation Scene in Gotterdammerung (featured here) is by far the best account. She appears in the Karl Bohm recordings of the Ring and the studio engineered Ring under the baton of George Solti. TRISTAN UND ISOLDE: Her debut role at the Metropolitan Opera was as Isolde. She masters the role, which is possibly the most difficult in Wagner opera, and essays the high tessitura with great aplomb. Not featured here is the great Curse Aria. The Liebestod was a piece of cake for Isolde, and it is featured here. She sings this well, no doubt, but her only fault is that she could never quiet her voice the way some sopranos could. If anyone had trouble hearing Nilssons' mega voice, something was wrong with their hearing! TANNHAUSER: She was able to sing Elisabeth and Venus, and she got into the character's romantic nature. The Hall Aria is on here and it's great.
STRAUSS: As excting as her Wagner heroines were, her Strauss heroines were just as impressive. She understood the intensity of the music and delved into the character's psyches, even more so than the Wagner roles. As such, her SALOME is largely regarded as the best on record. While she could not physically convince us as a teenage nubile princess who inflammes the passions of her pagan father, she was able to sing the role with electrifying power and frightening madness. If you listen to the Solti recording, you will note how she could get into Salome's twisted mentality starting from the scene in which she asks for Jochanaan's head and the finale in which she kisses the severed head. This final scene is on here, thank God. Her interpretation of ELEKTRA set the bar high for all subsequent sopranos. She once again got into the character's depravity and lunacy. The intensity of the role never took its toll on her and she tirelessly sings the part in a combo of dramatic power and beautiful singing. Please check out her Elektra recording under Solti again, where she is paired with Regina Resnik.
PUCCINI: Yes, Birgit Nilsson sang Puccini and she did a damn good job of it too. Very few critics gave her credit for her superb Puccini heroines. At the Met in the 60's, audiences saw her stage performances of Tosca, Turandot and Minnie from La Fanciulla Del West. Her TOSCA is powerful, unsubtle but dramatically compelling. In the Lorin Maazel recoding opposite Franco Corelli, she was able to make her voice sound more round, warmer and more "Italian". Here we have her "Vissi D'Arte" but she could really deliver in such moments as the Death of Scarpia, the Torture/Interrogation Scene and the Finale. In fact her cry "O Scarpia Avanti Addio!" is possibly the best on record. She sang TURANDOT at the Met opposite Franco Corelli in riveting performances, rivaling any other soprano who sang Turandot at the time. The size of her voice, her regal presence (fashion designer Cecil Beaton made a Chinese Empress costume, complete with a decorative crown, especially for her) and her command of the music made for a stunning Turandot. Check out the EMI recording with Corelli and Scotto.
Verdi: She sang Verdi, though it was not a repertoire she followed up on extensively. Audiences saw her as Lady Macbeth, Princess Eboli, Elisabeth Di Valois (from Don Carlos) and Leonora from Forza del Destino. And of course as AIDA. Her Aida is not the most beautifully sung or the warmest, but in sheer volume and grandness she takes the crown. There is a studio recording she sang opposite Franco Corelli and Grace Bumbry. At the Met, audiences saw her paired with Jon Vickers' Radames. Ritorna Vincitor! Aida's first great aria in Act 1 is on here and it's the title of the album. Her LADY MACBETH is by far her greatest Verdi role. The cold, icy, unfeeling way she sings the part makes her Lady Macbeth by far the most wicked and dramatically convincing. Even without the Italian fire in the belly, she could get into character as good as the rest of them.
SWEDISH SONGS, BROADWAY AND MOZART: Her account of her native Swedish folk songs are lovely, and in her time, legendary, and even in her heyday as an opera singer she would sing Swedish songs on Swedish radio. As a girl growing up in her father's farm, she sung these folk songs which eventually drew the attention of Conservatory instructors and operatic voice coaches. Broadway ? I'm sorry. This is cute and experimental of her to sing "I Could Have Danced All Night" from My Fair Lady but this is not her forte. Her voice is too big for the role of Liza Doolittle and the waltz-like/operetta song is way out of her league. On a final note, Nilsson sang Mozart, namely the part of Dona Ana in Don Giovanni, which is found on at least two studio recordings, the famous one being the one with Cesare Siepi as Don Giovanni and Leontyne Price as Elvira under the baton of Erich Leinsdorf. Her Dona Ana is neither beautiful nor mannered, she sings with the usual Nilsson bravura and attempts to soften her voice but she shows no real command for the Mozart reperotire and again this was purely experimental for her.
LONG LIVE BIRGIT NILSSON! I WILL FOREVER REMEMBER HER AS BRUNHILDE, SINGING WITH SUPERHUMAN POWER AND PASSION IN THAT CLIMATIC IMMOLATION SCENE AT THE END OF GOTTERDAMMERUNG. NO ONE CAN MASTER THAT GRAND SCENE "Fleight Hom, Ih Rabens (Fly home you Ravens!) .."GRANE..MEIN ROSS (Grane My Horse!) HER VOICE GETS STRONGER, HIGHER AND MORE INTENSE, FLYING, FLYING EVER UPWARD TO VALHALLA.
Birgit Nilsson Now Sings In Heaven.......2006-01-22
Ave Atque Vale, Birgit Nilsson.......2006-01-13
This 2 CD set is a gathering of excerpts form many recordings and while it does not have the impact of, say, a full performance as Isolde or Brunnhilde or Turandot or Salome, it does offer a generous sampling of the many roles she mastered. Included on this set are arias form 'Macbeth', 'Aida', 'La Forza del Destino', 'Don Carlo', 'Tosca', 'Lohengrin', 'Die Götterdämmerung', 'Elektra', 'Salome', 'Die Frau ohne Schatten', 'Tannhäuser', 'Tristan und Isolde' and songs by Wagner ('Wesendonk Lieder'), Sibelius, Grieg, and Ture Rangström, and yes, even Frederick Lowe! She performs with various orchestras and conductors and pianists.
Not usually one for these 'best of' albums, this one is special, especially with the news that this extraordinary artist whose voice could reach the heavens is gone. An aptly titled memento -Highly Recommended. Grady Harp, January 06
RIP BIRGIT NILSSON - 5/17/1918 - 12/25/2005.......2006-01-12
Thank you for the music, Madame Nilsson.
Meditation Music:
- Rimsky-Korsakoff: La Nuit de Mai
- Romantic Opera
- Rossini - La Cambiale di Matrimonio / Dara · Jeun · Canonici · Frontali · Laurenza · Rinaldi Miliani · RAI · Renzetti
- Schubert: Lieder
- Smetana: Dalibor
- Strauss Arabella
- Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos
- Strauss: Scenes from Elektra and Salome
- Strauss: Scenes from Salome and Elektra
- Tchaikovsky: Scenes and Arias from Eugene Onegin [Import]
Meditation Music
The King Will Come: Live [Live] [Import]
The Most Unforgettable French Classics Ever
The Peoples Guide to Opera 2 [Box set]
Tomodachi E: Say What You Will [CD-single] [Import]