| 1. Cantando |
| 2. Siempre Fue Lo Mismo |
| 3. Ahora |
| 4. Se Me Eriza la Piel |
| 5. Si Me Dejaras Amarte |
| 6. Yo No Soy un Angel |
| 7. Mentira |
| 8. Dia Sin Tu Amor |
Cantando,Cheo Feliciano,Sony International,Charanga,Latin,Latin Continuum,Salsa,Tropical
Average customer rating:
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Duets with Spanish Guitar
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002S1C Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Entr'acte
- Bachianas brasileiras No. 5 - Aria
- Ronde
- Azulao
- Prelude In E Minor, Op. 28 No. 4
- O Cacador
- Pastorale joyeuse
- Tes pontos de santo
- Tambourin
- Boi-Bumba
- Sicilienne
- Para ninar
- Piece en forme de habanera
- Maracatu
- Pavane pour une Infante defunte
- Passarinho esta cantando
- Modinha
- Serenade For Strings: Waltz
- Siete Canciones populares espanolas: Cancion
- The Three Cornered Hat: Farruca
Customer Reviews:
A Perfect Gem from so many years ago...STILL Available!.......2007-07-18
Years passed, and cds came, and it was transferred, and I immediately snapped up a copy of it, again. In these following years, I fear I had completely forgotten about it....shame on me! I am so pleased to know that it is still available, and that I can recommend something that is STILL available to you (which is rare for me to be able to do).
I cannot recommend highly enough that you purchase a copy of this great album to enjoy, over and over again. I guarantee it will become a highlight in your collection. I have taken my copy off the shelf and am listening to it as I type this review. I recommend you go to the little snips above, and listen to # 2, Villa Lobos...that should do it! ~operabruin
Like Finding An Old Friend.......2007-07-14
A Sweet Piece of Art Work.......2007-05-13
Haunting Beauty.......2007-03-22
Superb .......2007-01-08
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Renée Fleming - Signatures ~ Great Opera Scenes / Sir Georg Solti
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Pyotr Il'yich Tchaikovsky , Antonin Dvorak , Giuseppe Verdi , Benjamin Britten , Richard Strauss , London Symphony Orchestra , Sir Georg Solti , Renée Fleming , Larissa Diadkova , and Jonathan Summers Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000042HU Release Date: 1997-09-09 |
Tracks:
- Le nozze di Figaro: Porgi, Amor
- Le nozze di Figaro: E Susanna Non Vien!...Dove Sono I Bei Momenti
- Eugene Onegin: Nu, Zaboltalas Ya!...Puskai Pogibnu Ya (Letter Scene)
- Rusalka: Mesicku Na Nebi Hlubokem (O Silver Moon)
- Otello: Era Piu Calmo?...'Piangea Cantando Nell Erma Landa'... Ave Maria
- Peter Grimes: Peter Seems To Have Disappeared...Embroidery In Childhood Was A Luxury Of Idleness
- Daphne: Ich Komme - Ich Komme (Transformation Scene)
Amazon.com essential recording
As the possessor of one of the great lyric soprano voices of our time, soprano Renée Fleming is in demand in the world's great opera houses. (It doesn't hurt that she's also lovely and a fine actress.) This album is an outstanding collection of great arias, ravishingly sung. It shows something of Fleming's range, including as it does music by Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Dvorák (the sumptuous "Song to the Moon" from Rusalka, the best part of the entire opera, and sung here in definitive fashion), Verdi, Britten (an effective "Embroidery Scene" from Peter Grimes), and Richard Strauss. This disc is a good starting point for someone seeking to learn more about operatic singing, and a valuable addition to the library of anyone already converted. Fleming is given strong support by mezzo-soprano Larissa Diadkova, baritone Jonathan Summers, and by the late Sir Georg Solti in one of his last recordings. --Sarah Bryan MillerCustomer Reviews:
what a voice...........2006-09-14
Her voice , with its richness and dusky timbre and beautiful, strong higher notes is a treat to hear.
She did sound expressive too but has not yet touched a chord in me when it comes to emotion and feeling.
Call me a helpless Callas fan, but I couldn't help but wonder how La Divina would sound if she sang Russian and played Tatyana in the "Letter" scene; what a great vehicle for acting!
But it does take voices a while to grow on me and that might be it.
I do plan on buying more of her CDs.
Amazing!!.......2005-09-28
Renee Fleming - Signatures-Great Oper Scenes.......2005-08-11
BEAUTIFUL CROSS SECTION OF STYLES.......2004-11-22
Renee Fleming's greatest recital ever!.......2004-04-16
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Sempre Libera
Giacomo Puccini , Giuseppe Verdi , Claudio Abbado , Sascha Reckert , Sara Mingardo , Mahler Chamber Orchestra , and Saimir Pirgu Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000295TXC Release Date: 2004-08-10 |
Tracks:
- E strano! - "Ah, fors'ui"
- Sempre libera
- Ah! Se una volta sola
- Ah, non credea mirarti
- Ah! non giunge uman pensiero
- O rendetemi le speme...Qui la voce
- Ah! tu sorridi
- Vien, diletto, n ciel la luna
- O giusto cielo! (Act 2)
- OihmSorge il tremendo
- Ardon gli incensi... (Act 2)
- Spargi d'amaro pianto (Act 2)
- Era pimo?
- Piangea cantando nell'erma landa...
- Ave Maria, piena di grazia
- O mio babbino caro
Amazon.com
Anna Netrebko's second CD is even more impressive than her first. She still may not be an absolutely polished, finished artist, but she's working at it and presents here a very satisfying---even thrilling---program. She doesn't quite have the stature or insights for Verdi's Violetta yet, but aside from some smudged coloratura in low-lying passages she sings the first act scene quite well (capped with a well-placed, big E-flat). She's close to ideal in the Sonnambula and Puritani excerpts, where her girlishness is entirely right, her coloratura dazzling, and her ability to sound tearful really impressive. The Lucia Mad Scene (also notable here for its use of the glass harmonica for which it was composed in place of the usual flute) is quite wonderful, even if the runs are sometimes not as well-delineated as they should be. And although she's not vocally suited to Desdemona's Willow Song and Ave Maria, she does manage to darken her voice to fit the character and presents a very moving portrait. The CD ends with an utterly charming "O mio babbino caro." Artistry and everything else aside, her voice is just beautiful. Claudio Abbado's leadership is ideal. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
I am in love with Anna.......2007-05-15
If you love getting great voice, buy this.
simple stunning.......2007-05-10
Ok but not a bel canto singer.......2007-03-21
Her broadcast from the Met Live of the I Puritani was alright, but scooping, avoidance of repetitions, running through passages like a locomotive, and an ending that would have brought the wrath of most opera houses in the world..scooping again, and a tight awful sounding high note. The same tentativenes is also here on this CD.She should know this. Her beauty and acting and allure are what interest the masses, not the voice, which is forgiven everything.
Too bad; she could be a lovely Tatyana some day.Also too, the Traviata is not that great; Anna Moffo , Renee Fleming, M. Caballe, and of course Maria Callas..Listen to these and hear the difference.
Having It All.......2007-01-22
There are criticisms of her trill, or her lack of a trill. Renee Fleming doesn't have a trill, and she has been the acclaimed queen for some time. Because of Anna's trill issues, she's criticized as lacking something that a coloratura should have. Well, she's not a coloratura. A good bel canto singer does not have to be a coloratura. There are criticisms of Anna's repertoire choices. You know why she picked this interesting melange for this CD? Because these are difficult scenes and arias, and she can do them. The only aria I didn't think "fit" is the "O mio babbino caro". She does it well, I just can't figure out what it's doing on this CD.
The "La Traviata" scene that starts the CD is absolutely magnificent. She is a wonderful Violetta, and sings this demanding scene with panache. She does the high E-flat at the end. Of course, she was coached by Scotto on this aria. Nice coaching if you can get it. No less remarkable are her scenes from "La sonnambula" and "I puritani". Her "Qui la voce" was beautiful. To listen to that gorgeous singing, and only focus on whether or not she has a trill is to miss the point of the music. I can definitely see why the Met is giving her the "Puritani" this season. Her scenes from "Lucia di Lammermoor" were technically perfect, and her mad scene very well done. The "Otello" scenes were amazing, particularly the floated pianos and pianissimos in the "Ave Maria". Abbado and the Mahler Chamber Orchestra are wonderful collaborators.
Ignore the criticisms and buy this CD! You'll be glad that you did. Highly recommended.
Talented singer, but should she choose her reportoire better?.......2007-01-10
First, she has a Callas-like habit (not a great compliment) when she ups her volume on higher notes of producing a rather unpleasant sound. In "Sempre libera," from "La Traviata," this is manifest. I compare this with the silky smooth lyric voice of Anna Moffo, from the 1960s and 1970s, who essayed this same piece in a manner much more attractive to the ear. Second, I could not hear a single trill on this CD (although maybe I missed something). In the colorature/bel canto repertoire, this is not a trifle. A trill is a standard part of a coloratura soprano's armamentorium. In that, again, she is like Callas, who scarcely issued forth a trill. "Spargi d'amaro pianto" is one of the classic cabalettas for coloratura sopranos. Sung without trills, it is not very satisfying. Some who have recorded the pyrotechnics of the "Mad Scene" have only displayed adequate trills (e.g., Anna Moffo or Angela Gheorghiu). Others, of course, have deployed wondrous effects, such as Joan Sutherland and Beverly Sills. Just so, the cabalettas in "La Sonnambula" and "I Puritani."
Certainly, Netrebko also exhibits considerable strengths. Other ornamentation is fine; she has an agile voice; she can hit all the notes, including the high ones. Her vocal sound is most attractive (outside the one example noted earlier of a certain harshness). Her singing in the pieces from "Otello" and "Gianni Schicchi" are very well done.
So, all in all, a nice CD, but one that does not seem to feature Anna Netrebko at her best.
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The Art of the Prima Donna
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004XQ8G Release Date: 2000-10-10 |
Tracks:
- Artaxerxes: The Soldier Tir'd
- Samson: Let The Bright Seraphim
- Norma: Sediziose voci ... Casta diva ... Ah! bello a me ritorna
- I Puritani: Son vergin vezzosa (Polonaise)
- Semiramide: Bel raggio lusinghier
- I Puritani: O rendetemi la speme ... Qui la voce ... Vien, diletto
- La Sonnambula: Care compagne ... Come per me sereno ... Sovra il sen
- Faust: O Dieu! que de bijoux ... Ah! je ris de me voir
Tracks:
- Romeo et Juliette: Ah! Je veux vivre
- Otello: Mia madre aveva una povera ancella ... Piangea cantando
- Die Entfuhrung Aus Dem Serail: Martern aller Arten
- La Traviata: E' strano ... Ah, fors'e lui ... Sempre libera
- Hamlet: A vos jeux, mes amis
- Lakme: Ah! Ou va la jeune Indue
- Les Huguenots: O beau pays de la Touraine!
- Rigoletto: Gualtier Malde ... Caro nome
Amazon.com
In February 1959, an unknown (well, comparatively) Australian singer appeared at Covent Garden in Franco Zeffirelli's new production of Lucia di Lammermoor and took the world by storm. The following year, Joan Sutherland went into the studio to record this reissued tribute to prima donnas of previous generations, illustrating along the way the bel canto tradition of which she was to become a leading exponent. The 16 excerpts on this digitally remastered double CD include several roles she had already sung or was on the verge of singing, from Gilda in Rigoletto, which she had sung at Covent Garden before her Lucia debut, to Norma. What a performance! The voice is fresh, remarkable in its beauty, and she makes it all sound so effortless, tossing off Handel's "Let the bright Seraphim" or the Jewel aria from Gounod's Faust as if they're the easiest things in the world. This sparkling selection of glorious singing demonstrates just why Sutherland was to remain at the top of her profession for the next 30 years and join those to whom she here pays tribute as one of the great singers of all time. --Richard FawkesCustomer Reviews:
La Stupenda is stupendous on this recording. Don't miss it!.......2007-01-05
I completely disagree with those who believe that Sutherland lost the gleam on her voice after 1961. It's true that she suffered for several years with intermittently poor diction and rhythmic lapses, but these were due to terrible medical problems and the results of serious operations that were required to restore her health. Later she recovered most of her vocal lustre and all of her enthusiasm for performing, and her diction steadily improved. Her fabulous technique remained intact until her retirement in 1990.
No singers sound as fresh at 50 as they do at 30. Just listen to how Callas sounded in her later years, when her voice had almost completely deteriorated, and her career was far shorter than Sutherland's. The fact is that Sutherland sang in public for forty years, without amplification and often in barnlike theatres, and yet she still sounded formidable when she retired. Just listen to her performance of the final aria from "Lucrezia Borgia" on YouTube. I heard her debut in that role, again in Vancouver, shortly before that Covent Garden performance, and can attest that she was still in fabulous voice at the age of 53 and her coloratura remained spectacular.
What "The Art of the Prima Donna" gives us is the memory of an unparalleled vocal phenomenon in her glorious youth, before her physical disabilities briefly interrupted her career. No singer since has created a recording that exhibits anything like the range, vocal beauty and versatility that Sutherland displayed on this historic recording--not Callas, nor Caballe, nor Sills, nor any of their recent imitators. The title of this recording was not an exaggeration. This is singing that truly revived "The Age of Bel Canto," to quote the title of another Sutherland recording. "The Art of the Prima Donna" and Sutherland's earlier recordings, if you can get them, constitute an invaluable legacy from an artist who truly restored the golden age of singing.
Sutherland is Amazing.......2006-06-29
In her repertoire, JS was one of the greatest voices with an incredible technique and style that ever made recordings. This is a great CD - but some others which were issued on vinyl but to my knowledge not on CD help round out the Sutherland greatnes, viz., Command Performance, The Age of Bel Canto and the French Opera Album. She did a 2 disc set called "A Festival of Baroque Operas- There is an aria called "Barbaro, Barbaro" which is mind boggling for the speed and clarity of its coloratura. Even in 1977 at 51 yrs old her video performance of Lucrezia Borgia is amazing - it is one of the greatest performances she ever did- exciting, tender and again with that huge voice and flexibility. The last scene is amazing.
Flawless-NO Unique-WITHOUT A DOUBT!!!!!
A Phenomenal Historic Recording Newly Minted.......2005-10-08
One wonders if any other soprano in history ever sang so fast, so high and so loud while always preserving such a full, golden, round sound. Sutherland was a genuine vocal phenomenon, and even those who don't generally care for her singing surely must find their jaws on the floor repeatedly during this recital. Every selection has something treasurable. My personal favorites: "A soldier tir'd," "Bel raggio lusinghier," "Qui la voce," "Come per me sereno," the "Hamlet" Mad Scene, the Bell Song, and "O beau pays."
The remastering is superb, enabling us to hear Sutherland's voice in all its pristine glory. The engineers have even managed to mitigate the rumble of Underground trains (the Picadilly Line?) that were a perpetual problem in Kingsway Hall, although I was glad to hear that the loud yell in the distance one hears during the "Croce e delizia" section of "Ah, fors'e lui" is still there; by now it is an old friend, and I would miss it.
Canary in the silver mine .......2005-09-20
However, after digesting this CD for several weeks, I still have a mixed response to all these Stupendous vocalistics.
The beginning is the main sour note- Arne is tired, with often imprecise, behind the beat coloratura, quite unlike the rest of Sutherland's output, and Let the Bright Seraphim is unbelievably leaden- the orchestra in particular sounds awful, and clunky. I can't comment on ornamentation here because I didn't detect any. This is a poor man's Seraphim, only impressive if you never heard any other versions, and Sutherland's voice is wasted in this piece.
This CD really picks up with Casta Diva, a dazzling showcase for Sutherland's voice. I was very impressed with Sutherland's performance as Norma in this recording- what happened to her in later years, when her "acting" was limited to, as she herself described it, wearing a "generally pained expression" and singing without much color or feeling?
Pieces from I Puritani are great, then we get excellent Rossini, wonderful Jewel Song, and then sparkling Juliet and very effective, beautiful and dramatically involved Desdemona.
And then- another fly in the ointment, Marten Aller Arten. This is one of my favourite arias and I can be very unforgiving when it comes to its performance, plus I like Konstanze to be really angry and wired, which is sort of opposite of what Joan does. This is a pretty, chirpy Marten, and she works hard on her German- way too hard actually, she seems to be slowing down trying to pronounce it, and still "Ich verlache" and "mich" turn into "Ich ve-ayee" and "meeeh", plus she does not sound as secure on top as I would expect, with a metallic high C. She picks up at the very end, putting some feeling into the sound, then topples again... This is a hit and miss one.
Fortunately the rest of the CD is filled with sparklers more in Sutherland's vein. Violetta is really great, with a fantastic high E, Ophelia is nice, Lakme is vocally one of the best I have ever heard, the dull Meyerbeer aria is made interesting and shimmery- that fabulous trill is finally put to work after many tracks of underuse- and then it all ends with a most charming Gilda.
It's not the greatest vocal performance ever put on vinyl/plastic/megabites, but overall, a good, historical set to add to your collection of opera recitals and soprano specials.
Bel Canto from an angelic voice.......2005-04-19
2. Samson, oratorio, HWV 57 Let the bright Seraphim
Composed by George Frideric Handel
with Joan Sutherland
A sparkling and intense interpretation of this well known yet hardly ever magnificently performed piece. Lucid, beautiful and technically impeccable.
3. Norma, opera Sediziose voci... Casta diva... Ah! bello
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
with Joan Sutherland
Surely her best studio-recording of this killer-aria. She is one of the few Normas who masters the recitativo without cracking or sounding strained, yet full of authority and intelligent drama. The Casta Diva itself is fluent, the make-or-break coloratura wonderfully executed. As for the cabaletta, not since young Callas in 1949 have I heard this piece sung so beautifully! Amazing high notes crown a cabaletta that broke more than one famous Norma before.
6. I Puritani, opera O rendetemi la speme... Qui la voce... Vien, diletto
Composed by Vincenzo Bellini
A Bellinian madscene at its finest. Once again only Callas in 1949 can be compared to this wonder of a recording. Callas too found darker colours and more intensity. (Dolore e passione as described in the score) Sutherland may lack these but she sings it with her own sense for drama which is uniquely sublime.
10. Otello, opera Mia madre aveva una povera ancella... Piangea cantando
Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
with Joan Sutherland
An interesting and excellent choice. There are pictures of Joan Sutherland as Desdemona and what a pity that no complete recording of her performances survived. I find her Desdemona to be far more convincing than Tebaldi because she sounds more fragile and elegant, plus she has that silvery tone of innocence that I don't hear in Tebaldi's golden, sensual voice. Excellent in the floating lines, beautiful and tender in the cantabile.
16. Rigoletto, opera Gualtier Maldè... Caro nome
Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
with Joan Sutherland
This can be compared to Maria Callas' live-performance of this piece and, being in excellent sound, might be preferred. (Callas was excellent in the studio as well, yet in 1955 she was less daring and defying) Stunningly intense in the cantabile and brilliant in the coloratura-passages. Far better than her famous performance with Pavarotti where she had lost the youthful, silvery sound that made her earlier Gilda so loveable.
I do not adore her as much in French opera and La Traviata or anything German but that doesn't mean that her singing was anything but amazing, just a personal preference. In short: Buy it and discover why Joan Sutherland is indeed La Stupenda!
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Cantando Historias
Ivan Lins Manufacturer: EMI Int'l ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0006VBGW4 Release Date: 2004-12-27 |
Tracks:
- Abre Alas
- Guarde Nos Olhos
- Dinorah, Dinorah
- O Tempo Me Guardou Voc
- Desesperar, Jamais
- Aos Nossos Filhos/Cartomante
- Bilhete
- Porta Entreaberta
- Vitoriosa
- Viesta/Iluminados
- Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai
- Come de Novo
- O Amor O Meu Pa
- Madalena
Album Details
Excellent Interpreter/Composer, Recorded in September 2004, in Rio De Janeiro. In Commemoration of his 33 Years of Career, Great Special Guests As: Jorge Vercilo "Guarde Nos Olhos", Simone "Comecar De Novo" and Zizi Possi "Bilhete".Customer Reviews:
Felicidade.......2007-05-05
A JOYOUS CELEBRATION - THE 2005 LATIN GRAMMY ALBUM OF THE YEAR.......2005-12-12
The CD was the surprise of the 2005 Latin Grammy Awards, taking the overall "Album of the Year", a first for a Portuguese singing artist. It also won the "MPB Album" Latin Grammy. The singing is in wonderful Portuguese, but the beautiful, powerful music will sweep you away without the need for translation. I speak no Portuguese and I love this music. There are also special guests on this CD: a smoldering performance by Simone (sporting a fetching short hairdo as seen on the CD insert), Jorge Vercilo in great form, and the elegant Zizi Possi, who add their special flair to this live performance.
My favorites, 'Pieces D'Resistance', are the joyous CD opener "Abre Alas" (Clear The Area), the beautiful gentle samba "Porta Entreaberta" (The Half-Opened Gate), Zizi Possi in duet with Ivan on the heartfelt "Bilhete" (Ticket), and the senusous Simone/Lins duet on "Comecar de Novo" (New Beginning, aka The Island). In addition, "Guarde nos Olhos" with Lins and Jorge Vercilo is spellbinding, as are classics "Madalena", "Dinorah, Dinorah", "O Tempo Me Guardou Voce" and a rocking "Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai". Five HUGE Stars!!
For new fans, Ivan is known outside of Brazil chiefly for a slew of his famous compositions which have attracted major artists, including the Grammy winning song "Velas" ('Sails'), which was beautifully recorded by Quincy Jones with Toots Thielemans; "Love Dance" (Lembranca) by Dianne Schurr and Vanessa Williams, "Before It's Too Late" (Antes Que Seja Tarde) by the Manhattan Transfer, "The Island" (Comecar de Novo) by Sarah Vaughn and Barbra Streisand, the huge Elis Regina hit "Madalena" which Ella Fitzgerald fell in love with and recorded, "She Walks This Earth" (Soberana Rosa) by Sting, and "Dinorah, Dinorah", which was recorded by jazz man George Benson and Elis Regina. Whew!!
(Note: "Guarde nos Olhos" and "Desesperar Jamais" (Never Despair) are not shown in the Track Listing, but they are on the CD as Track 2 and 5, respectively. The songs "Aos Nossos Filhos" (To Our Children") & "Cartomante" are merged on Track 6; "Vieste" (You Came) & "Iluminados" (Illuminated) are merged on Track 10. All of which yields 14 great tracks. Enjoy!)
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The Art of Joan Sutherland
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000654OUQ Release Date: 2005-03-15 |
Customer Reviews:
Valuable compendium.......2007-01-24
Rareties available on CD at last!.......2006-03-29
While this newest set does include a lot of bits of this and that, ranging from her very first LPs to excerpts from complete recordings most Sutherland fans already have and a few "live" performances, what is perhaps most significant about it is that it features the complete contents of the "Sutherland Sings Wagner" LP--a real repertoire departure for her--and the double-LP album called "French Opera Gala" (in the U.S.--the British title was "Romantic French Arias"), neither of which, to the best of my knowledge, has been available on CD before. "Opera News" magazine once ran an article in which they asked various stars to name the one album that they felt best represented their artistry for future generations, and Dame Joan selected the "French Opera Gala," so for Sutherland fans, this is a long-awaited treat.
I'm not going to waste space saying how miraculous I consider Dame Joan's artistry. If you are familiar with her work already, you know whether you adore her or not; and if you aren't, this massive set is probably not the best place to start (that would be "The Art of the Prima Donna" album that introduced her to most listeners decades ago)--especially since this newest set doesn't contain the lyrics, a must for newcomers. Let's hope Decca/London gets around to releasing the rest of her recordings intact instead of endlessly scrambling and repackaging the same selections over and over.
Heavenly.......2006-01-31
WHO ELSE CAN SING LIKE THIS TODAY?.......2005-04-10
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Montserrat Caballé: Ultimate Collection
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000J914 Release Date: 1999-05-25 |
Tracks:
- La Boheme: Si. Mi chiamano Mimi
- Norma: Casta diva
- L'Assedio di Corinto: Giusto ciel! In tal periglio
- Sapho: O ma lyre immortelle
- Semiramide: Serbami ognor... Alle piu calde immagini
- Otello: Piangea cantando (Willow Song) -
- Otello: Ave Maria
- Herodiade: Il est doux, il est bon
- Lucrezia Borgia: Tranquillo ei posa... Com'e bello!
- Suor Angelica: Senza mamma
- Rigoletto: Caro nome
- La Sonnambula: Ah! non credea mirarti
Tracks:
- La Traviata: E strano, e strano! -
- La Traviata: Follie! Follie! -
- La Traviata: Sempre libera degg'io
- TOSCA: Vissi d'arte
- Il corsaro: Egli non riede ancora!
- Il corsaro: Non so le tetre immagini
- Armida: D'amore al dolce impero
- I Pagliacci: Qual fiamma avea nel guardo!
- Roberto Devereux: E Sara in questi orribili momenti... Vivi, ingrato
- Il Trovatore: D'amor sull'ali rosee
- Stabat Mater: Inflammatus et accensus
- Adriana Lecouvreur: Io son l'umile ancella
- Anna Bolena: Al dolce guidami
- Adelson e Salvini: Dopo l'oscuro nembo
- I Vespri Sicillani: Arrigo! Ah, parli a un core
Customer Reviews:
A fab collection of the loveliest soprano voice ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1.......2005-12-23
LA SUPERBA!.......2005-11-22
Madame Caballé is great!!!.......2003-04-06
Amazing collection!.......2003-04-05
First off, this compilation is amazing! I have always thrilled to hearing Caballé's voice and this compilation is no different. I am amazed at Caballé's instrument; such extraordinary purity combined with great power! Even when she sings pianissimo, she can be clearly heard! Her voice literally fills up the room. These arias really show off her remarkable voice. Of special note is her rendition of the hauntingly beautiful "Non so le tetre immagini". Amazing! Her "D'amor sull'ali rosee" is exquisite, but she sings it too softly. Her trill is quite weak. Voices like hers don't respond well to being forced to trill. The tracks from the 1990's show off the remarkable preservation of her voice. The voice retains its purity and beautiful timbre, but is now heavier and darker. "Sempre libera" is not that good. Her coloratura is not up to par with Verdi's demands and she cannot hit the high E-flat at the end. However, she sings the main part of Violetta's aria very well, with supple, gorgeous tone and ravishing pianissimos. "Ah! non credea mirarti" is ravishing, but it is missing its energetic cabaletta. Presumably, it was cut because Caballé could not deal with the coloratura. Caballé's legato lines in this aria are superb. Her version of the "Lucrezia Borgia" Prologue is masterful. Elizabeth's last aria from "Roberto Devereux" is noble and touching. She is not quite Sills, but that aria benefits from a spinto voice instead of a soubrette one. Her aristocratic phrasing is very well used throughout the selections, with a few exceptions. Her "Willow Song" is beautiful, first time on CD. However, she fails to completely show Desdemona's despair. Some parts were good, but the whole thing failed to touch the heart. Her phrasing here is too indulgent. I have to say that I prefer Sutherland's touching version on her "The Art of the Prima Donna" recording. However, I loved "Ave Maria". Caballé sounds most beautiful when singing softly and this selection really shows her in the best light. Her cadenzas are intoxicatingly beautiful. "Caro nome" is not really her aria. The coloratura is suspect and some of the staccati are replaced with upward flourishes. She avoids the last short passage of staccati. Her phrasing in this aria is way too indulgent and she really fails to suggest Gilda's innocence. Even Sutherland is better at portraying Gilda's girlish qualities. Her "Armida" aria has some nice coloratura. She does the runs really well and is fearless in the triplet passages. For some reason, she does not sing the second "fronde" in the first line of the third stanza nor does she sing the last line of this stanza, "i muti abitator". She also does not sing the last line of the fifth stanza, "il tempo vorator". Caballé's first recorded version of "Vissi d'arte, vissi d'amore" is included here. This just may be the most beautiful version of this aria ever recorded. It certainly is Caballé's best version of the aria. The climax is handled in one breath by Caballé. She diminuendos the big high note twice in the same breath. Amazing! The rolling of the "r" in "Signor" after the last diminuendo is quite nasal and reminds us that the sound we are hearing is coming from a human throat. It also shows that these diminuendos are natural and not studio produced. She infuses Tosca's aria with real feeling and piety. The compilation ends with a knockout reading of "Arrigo, parli a un core". Caballé is at her best in this aria. She sings softly to stunning effect. This version may be the most beautiful of this particular aria ever recorded. RCA has done Caballé justice with this wonderful collection. Caballé is truly a remarkable artist with a million-dollar voice. Brava!
Cannot be called an "ultimate" collection.......2003-02-05
Other reviewers here have cried out against the exclusion of one of her most essential and artistic roles, Imogene from Il Pirata. I would like to emphatically express the same. In fact, I would even have settled for the exclusion of Casta Diva, in favor of Col Sorriso di Innocenza.
Some other stellar recordings not represented her are the Sleepwalking Scene from MacBeth, and Pace, Pace Mio Dio from La Forza del Destino. Also worth mentioning is her O Patria Mia from Aida. She might not be Leontyne Price or Martina Arroyo, but she gives a superb reading of this wonderful aria.
Of course, brevity does require some editing- a true "Ultimate" Caballe collection would span four or five CDs, at least- but to include late-career and less-than-best selections at the expense of others is a crime.
Perhaps the major Opera labels should start letting fans put together the track lists for these "best of" collections! We could do a much better job.
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Monteverdi - Madrigali guerrieri et amorosi / Rooley, The Consort of Musicke
Claudio Monteverdi , Anthony Rooley , Emma Kirkby , Evelyn Tubb , The Consort of Musicke , Kristine Szulik, Paul Agnew, Andrew King Mary Nichols , and Alan Ewing, Allan Parkes Richard Edgar-Wilson Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000J2PZ Release Date: 1999-06-08 |
Tracks:
- Madrigali guerrieri: Altri canti d'Amor: Sinfonia - Altri canti d'Amor
- Madrigali guerrieri: Altri canti d'Amor: Tu Cui tessuta han di Cesare alloro
- Madrigali guerrieri: Hor che'l ciel: Hor che'l ciel, e la terra, e'l vento tace
- Madrigali guerrieri: Hor che'l ciel: Cosi sol d'una chiara fonte viva
- Madrigali guerrieri: Gira il nemico insidioso
- Madrigali guerrieri: Se vittorie si belle
- Madrigali guerrieri: Armato il cor
- Madrigali guerrieri: Ogni amante e guerrier
- Madrigali guerrieri: Ogni amante e guerrier: Io che nell'otio naqui e d'otio vissi
- Madrigali guerrieri: Ogni amante e guerrier: Ma per quel ampio Egeo spieghi le vele
- Madrigali guerrieri: Ardo, ardo, avvampo
- Madrigali guerrieri: Volgendo il ciel
- Madrigali guerrieri: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda: Tancredi, che Clorinda un homo stima
- Madrigali guerrieri: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda: Non schivar, non parar, non pur ritrarsi
- Madrigali guerrieri: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda: Tre volte il cavalier la donna stringe
- Madrigali guerrieri: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda: Torna l'ira nei cori, e li trasporta
- Madrigali guerrieri: Il Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda: Amico, hai vinto: io ti perdon...perdona
Tracks:
- Madrigali amorosi: Altri canti di Marte
- Madrigali amorosi: Altri canti di Marte: Due begli occhi fur l'armi
- Madrigali amorosi: Mentre vaga Angioletta
- Madrigali amorosi: Ardo e scoprir
- Madrigali amorosi: O sia tranquillo il mare
- Madrigali amorosi: Ninfa, che scalza il piede
- Madrigali amorosi: Dolcissimo uscignolo
- Madrigali amorosi: Chi vol haver felice
- Madrigali amorosi: Lamento della ninfa: Non havea Febo ancora
- Madrigali amorosi: Lamento della ninfa: Amor, dicea, il ciel
- Madrigali amorosi: Perche t'en fuggi, o Fillide
- Madrigali amorosi: Non partir ritrosetta
- Madrigali amorosi: Su, su, su, pastorelli vezzosi
- Madrigali amorosi: Vago augelletto
Amazon.com
"Madrigali guerrieri et amorosi" ("Madrigals Warlike and Amorous") is how Claudio Monteverdi titled his eighth and largest book of madrigals--which was actually two volumes in one. The "warlike madrigals" (concerned largely with the "war of love") feature the "agitated style" Monteverdi pioneered: quick, almost nervous writing, lots of rapidly repeated notes, and more syllables than a Gilbert & Sullivan patter song. These works culminate in the famous short quasi-opera Il Combattimento de Tancredi e Clorinda. The "amorous madrigals" are no less ardent, but they are less, well, warlike--that is, more leisurely paced, with plenty of chromaticism, dissonant suspensions, and giddily virtuosic runs to depict the pain and excitement of love.Anthony Rooley, Emma Kirkby, and the Consort of Musicke made these recordings in the early 1990s. While the performances were widely admired in their day, they're now universally considered (at least by those of us who actually spend time thinking about such things) to have been superseded by the remarkable work of Rinaldo Alessandrini and Concerto Italiano. It's true that some of the singing on the Consort's first disc is lackluster, but things perk right up with the young Paul Agnew's solo in Volgendo il ciel followed by an energetic Combattimento. Everyone's back in fine form for the "amorous" madrigals on the second disc; particularly notable are the virtuoso turns for Agnew, Andrew King, and Alan Ewing, as well as the Divine Miss Emma. Yes, Concerto Italiano is preferable if you can afford both of the full-price discs, but at the bargain price Virgin is charging for these reissues, you'll get more than your money's worth. --Matthew Westphal
Customer Reviews:
Mature Monteverdi at his best!.......2000-05-11
The enginnering of the recording was excellent. The only disapointment was a dearth of information about the text of the score.
Highly recommended!!
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Monteverdi: Ottavo Libro de' Madrigali, Vol.1
Claudio Monteverdi , Rinaldo Alessandrini , and Concerto Italiano Manufacturer: Opus 111 ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005W5F Release Date: 1997-09-09 |
Tracks:
- Sinfonia
- Altri canti d'Amor
- Lamento della Ninfa (1)
- Lamento della Ninfa (2)
- Vago augelletto
- Perche t'en fuggi, o Fillide?
- Altri canti di Marte (1)
- Altri canti di Marte (2)
- Ogni amante e guerrier (1)
- Ogni amante e guerrier (2)
- Ogni amante e guerrier (3)
- Ogni amante e guerrier (4)
- Hor che 'l ciel e la terra (1)
- Hor che 'l ciel e la terra (2)
- Gira il nemico, insidioso Amore
- Dolcissimo uscignolo
- Ardo, ardo, avvampo
Amazon.com essential recording
The madrigals in this book, aptly titled by Monteverdi "Madrigals of War and Love," range from solo voice or duo with continuo to works for eight singers and strings. Concerto Italiano gives a magnificent performance: the opening of "Hor che'l ciel" is daringly slow and still, only to give way suddenly to the narrator's cries of torment; "Ardo, avvampo" proceeds from the thrilling chaos of fire alarms to an extraordinary hush as two tenors end the piece in unison. In the famous "Lamento della ninfa," the musicians have found a way to follow Monteverdi's instructions that the three men should sing in strict tempo ("following the hand"), while the solo soprano nymph sings her lament in freer time, "following the heart." The result is astonishing. --Matthew WestphalCustomer Reviews:
Ectasy.......1999-07-13
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La Tebaldi
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041Y8 Release Date: 1991-08-09 |
Tracks:
- Madama Butterfly: Un bel dvedremo
- La Boheme: Si, mi chiamano Mimi
- TOSCA: Vissi d'arte
- Mefistofele: L'altra notte
- Aida: Ritorna vincitor
- Otello: Mia madre aveva...Piangea cantando...Ave Maria - Verdi
- Il Trovatore: Siam giunti...D'amor sull'ali rosee
- Verdi: Pace, pace, mio Dio!
- Guglielmo Tell: S'allontanano alfine!...Selva opaca
- Adriana Lecouvreur: Ecco, respiro appena...Io son l'umile ancella
- Cecilia: Grazie sorelle
Tracks:
- Gianni Schicchi: O mio babbino caro
- Suor Angelica: Senza mamma, o bimbo
- Andrea Chenier: La mamma morta
- La Wally: Ebben?... Ne andro lontana
- Don Carlo: Tu che la vanit
- Un Ballo in Maschera: Ecco l'orrido campo...Ma dall'arido stelo divulsa
- Un Ballo in Maschera: Morro, ma prima in grazia
- Giovanna d'Arco: Oh ben s'addice...Sempre all'alba
- Turandot: In questa reggia
- La Gioconda: Suicidio!
- La rondine: Sogno di Doretta
- Cavalleria Rusticana: Voi lo sapete
- L'arlesiana: Esser madre e un inferno
Customer Reviews:
Tebaldi at her best!.......2007-04-07
Tebaldi the Great.......2007-02-19
She "leads off" with "Un bel di" from Puccini's "Madame Butterfly." Her voice brings life to this aria; her characterization is right on. At the point, where the volume of her voice increases, the sound remains lush; there is no bleating or ugliness in her singing.
There follow two more classic Puccini arias that Tebaldi does justice to. "Si, mi chiamano Mimi" from "La Boheme" is a wonderful version of this work. She captures the poignancy in Mimi's character. Her work here can probably justly be termed "iconic." In short, this is a ravishing turn by "La Tebaldi." So, too, is her take of "Vissi d'arte" from "Tosca." One can understand the enthusiasm of her claque at La Scala as one listens to her singing. Her rich voice fits these roles nicely; her characterization is well rendered. Her version of "Ritorna vincitor" from Verdi's "Aida" is also well done. Her voice richly captures the character and fits the music well.
Verdi and Puccini are not the only composers represented on this 2 CD set. Also recorded are her singing Boito ("Mefistofele"), Rossini ("William Tell"), Cilea ("Adriana Lecouvreur"), Giordano ("Andrea Chenier"), Catalani ("La Wally"), and so on. Once more, the selection of music in this set well represents her body of work.
All in all, a satisfying selection of "the greatest hits" of Renata Tebaldi. The "liner notes" conclude by referring to her as possessing "a perfect voice of bewitching beauty." I'm not sure that anyone can achieve perfection (the statement has a bit of hyperbole); nonetheless, her voice is ravishing as already noted. Those interested in her recorded oeuvre would be well rewarded by acquiring this work. The CDs serve well to introduce "La Tebaldi" to those who may not have heard her before. Such listeners will be richly rewarded by that introduction.
A legacy for the ages!.......2001-02-23
Her Puccini arias will make the most demanding listener cry. Her verdian heroines, enriched with her personal touch, are of exceptional value. Her Desdemona (Otello), Donna Leonora (Forza del destino) and Aida stand perhaps out. Her many verisimo roles sooo moving, full of sorrow and pain, exactly how they are supposed to sound. Just listen to "La mamma morta"! An unsurpassed shocking experience! A previous reviewer (F.W.Barton) correctly mentioned that not all moments are from her complete studio recordings, so this is a unique chance to enjoy alternative Tebaldi performances. Strongly recommended!!!!
Best Collection.......2001-01-11
Modified rapture.......2000-04-24
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