| 1. Blest Pair of Sirens |
| 2. Wanderer |
| 3. Down in the Gleamy Vale |
| 4. Distress'd Mother |
| 5. Duet in D Minor on Scottish Airs |
| 6. Ellen's Song: Ave Maria |
| 7. Coronach: He Is Gone on the Mountain |
| 8. Jessie |
| 9. Rondo in E Flat |
| 10. Love Wakes and Weeps |
| 11. O Sing Unto Mie Roundelaie |
| 12. Funeral March in Honour of Beethoven |
| 13. Captivity |
| 14. Soilder's Dream |
| 15. Death of the Common Soilder |
| 16. Lady Anne Bothwell's Lament |
| 17. Spirit's Song |
Romantic Muse,Invocation,Hyperion,Chamber Music & Recitals,Classical,Classical Collections-Artist Desc.
Average customer rating:
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Italian Opera Arias
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00018TIOA Release Date: 2004-02-10 |
Tracks:
- Lamento: E La Solita Storia
- Recitativo E Romanza: Inosservato...Angelo Casto E Bel
- Aria: Quanto E Bella
- Aria: Una Furtiva Lagrima
- Recitativo Ed Aria: Tombe Degli Avi Miei...Fra Poco
- Aria: Il L'ho Perduta...Io La Vidi
- Aria: Io L'ho Perduta...Io La Vidi
- Aria: O Figli...Ah! La Paterna Mano
- Scena Ed Aria: Ella Mi Fu Rapita...Parmi Veder
- Canzone: La Donna E Mobile
- Scena, Aria E Cabaletta: Lunge De Iei...De' Miei Bollenti...O Mio Rimorso
- Aria: Che Gelida Manina
- Aria: E Lucevan Le Stelle
- Aria: Anche Tu Beppe Giungi...O Amore
- Aria: Vergini, Muse...Quando Al Soave Anelito
Amazon.com
This is a glorious debut recital by a tenor, from whom, if he sings the right roles and keeps way from jet-setting and too much singing, might just be the lyrico-spinto tenor we've been waiting for. He has the class of Carlo Bergonzi and a ringing tone which is somewhere between Domingo's big, dark sound and Pavarotti's brightness; he sings with a true mezza voce (not a falsetto); he always obeys the composer's markings and delineates character. He seems incapable of vulgarity, refusing to gulp or sob when a musically expressive gesture will do. The opening aria here--from L'Arlesiana--is so beautifully, touchingly sung that it's a heartbreaker; he doesn't take the usually opted-for high note near the end, but never fear: in the Traviata and Bohème excerpts, Villazon offers big, whopping high Cs. This CD is a knockout; let's hope it's only the beginning of an illustrious career, both recorded and live. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Another supeb tenor........2007-05-13
The one........2006-06-24
A New Star voice.......2005-09-25
I don't really want to ruin the magic of his singing, with caddy comparisons, but it is sufficient to say that he excellent. Many compare his to Domingo, to that I would say that Villazon has an ease to his top that Domingo never had, but perhaps lacks the focus and thickness of Domingo's lower registers.
Overall what hits you most about Villazons performance, is the induviduality of his interpretations and voice. The top of his voice has a ring and tone that sets his apart from the pack.
To my ear, he sounds at his best in the Mid Period verdi, where the cut of voice come through in the long high-lying passage, (expecially the cut from Traviata,
Enjoy this incredible singer
Quite Good.......2005-05-26
Promising debut by new lyric tenor.......2005-05-05
This recital of Italian opera arias presents Villazon near the alpha of his career (one appearance as the Steersman on the Barenboim Flying Dutchman before, for Teldec) and the conductor at his omega - the just deceased Marcello Viotti, at the age of 52, who suddenly replaced Sinopoli in Berlin for the second of two performances of Verdi's Aida in 2001. Sinopoli had passed away at 54 the night of the first performance that weekend in Berlin.
On first impression, Federico's lament from Cilea's L'Arlesiana is taken too slowly, and yet from repeated listening to this disc, it is one of nearly half a dozen selections that contribute the most to making this an interesting recital. The lachrymose manner and delivery here, though, sets a little too much of an overall tone for the rest of the recital, including its several or so lighter numbers. Said to also be a Caruso favorite, the aria from Donizetti's Duca d'Alba is a real highlight as close to being Schubertian in feeling as some Verdi - as late into Verdi's work as Forza and Don Carlo. Villazon's singing here is as warmly ardent as you'll find anywhere on this disc, and his personal identification with the character of Don Carlo, several tracks later, is as complete as that of its best interpreters of the recent past, Placido Domingo especially.
The two Elisir d'amore selections are pleasant vocally, but too dark, especially the start to so many phrases of "Una furtiva." The remorse felt during the opening aria of the Tomb Scene from Lucia, after a slightly uncertain start, is entirely felt. Oronte's brief aria from Verdi's Lombardi is handled with an easy, pleasant swagger from both Villazon and Viotti, leading one to expect similar lightness in selections that soon follow, and which is not entirely forthcoming; the beginning of the recitative to "Parmi veder" from Rigoletto shows a palpable anxiety in this peculiar moment for the Duke in which he finds himself. Intonation falters momentarily at the end of this aria. "Ah! la paterna mano", after good recitative, gets pushed a little too forward, robbing the crest of several lines in it their full expressive potential. Contrast of expression between Alfredo's aria and cabaletta from Traviata is so minimal, almost to have been erased altogether; Viotti here, so deft and highly musical an accompanist he is for most of the rest of this disc, is similarly disengaged. Connecting music between aria and cabaletta and repeat of the latter both get awkwardly cut.
That leaves four verismo tracks for the remainder of this disc. Most distinctively sung is "E lucevan le stelle" from Tosca, but frequently quite close to sounding a copy of Domingo's interpretation. The honeyed placement for the top of the staff, once the voice takes on the melodic line, could hardly remind you of anyone else. "Che gelida manina" is also given a fine performance here, but begins to lose all consonants on a couple of words right before the ascent to the high C in the aria. After hearing Dino Borgioli and Cesare Valletti as Fritz, each more of a benchmark than Pavarotti, it is hard to identify the villager Fritz, from how disinteresed Villazon sounds. A slight cut is taken between two portions of recitative before Fritz's Act III aria. "Quando al soave anelito" from Mascagni's Nerone, obviously a rarity, is one for which I can only find a Domingo recital before. Here, the singing is fine, but the youthful sense of wonderment for Nero, in his vision of Venus, as wordly-wise a fellow he is, gets understated. Accompaniments to these four arias are mostly as fine as the others, but all come to abrupt endings, the endings of Boheme and Amico Fritz which lose all their shimmer here.
Much criticism here, but there is also much hope felt from listening to this disc, for a bright future for Mr. Villazon still. He is only seldom a conscientious and musical performer, but as opposed to what the liner notes might say, part of being musical in singing such selections or opera in general, is being specific for each character being portrayed here. Villazon should also take note that his singing is most interesting and also most easy to distinguish from his widely celebrated mentor, when he sings lightly. First impressions are strong - I first anticipated awarding this disc five stars - but unfortunately it just barely deserves four. Sound quality, if a bit heavily miked for climaxes and a bit recessed for the orchestra, especially at closings to arias, is warm and full.
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The Muse Surmounted: Florence Foster Jenkins and Eleven of Her Rivals
Manufacturer: Homophone Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00067Z2Q4 Release Date: 2004-11-09 |
Customer Reviews:
For lovers of mal canto, this is without equal........2004-11-11
"The Muse Surmounted", Homophone's first offering, is an uproariously funny excursion into what I would label "mal canto". Each singer in this collection set her own substandard for vocal art, and each one is presented in transfers that allow the holes in one's technique to shine through. Brightly.
The disc opens with an "overture" of sorts, a "Carmen" potpourri by the original Homophone Orchestra. If you like your Bizet with slap-tongued baritone saxophones and your Toreadors to boast to a fox-trot beat, this one's for you.
Next in line is a certain Rosalina Mello, in a "fado portugues" that is rendered in a tone reminiscent of a cat in heat. She also approaches several high A's in this piece with a long-discarded vocal technique known as "portamentissimo". Better put Garfield outside before giving Mme. Mello a listen.
Next we encounter Alice Gerstl Duschak, a long-time teacher at Baltimore's Peabody Conservatory. Benko's (excellent, I might add) program notes state that she was a teacher of Jessye Norman, and I might add that Gerstl Duschak's voice, as represented here, had no sideways.
The name Betty-Jo Schramm was hilarious enough for me - before hearing the track, I could picture her in pigtail and poodle skirt. According to Benko, she was a pioneer in the early-music movement, singing the music a half-tone lower than we normally hear it today. However, she failed to cue the orchestra in on her innovation.
Tryphosa Bates-Batcheller, another favorite of the producer, cut her precious few discs at the same Melotone studio where her more famous predecessor, Florence Foster Jenkins, sought to perpetuate her art. And what an art it is. She is represented with a Meyer-Helmund song and an American folk song. Edith Helena at 81 sang better than this.
My favorite - at least for now - is Natalia de Andrade, a rather interesting character, who imposes upon the role of Manon a rather distinctive tritone tremolo reminiscent of the dearly departed Mrs. Elva Miller. It takes a life of its own, creating a somewhat minimalist rhythmic shift and will cause you to reach for the tequila. Perhaps she already had.
Olive Middleton, beloved diva assoluta of the La Puma Opera Workshop, is represented with her beloved "Miserere" from "Trovatore" her alleged high C ringing rather clearly through the speakers.
A lovely surprise was the discovery of Norma-Jean Erdmann-Chadbourne, who is in fact the "Jenny Williams" of the Victor "Faust Travesty". If you thought her final trio from Faust (sung as a duet) with her partner "Thomas Burns" (actually Ellis Chadbourne, listed here as Thomas Garcia - he had to change his name a lot) was simply the living end of opera finales, just you wait until you hear their Tomb Scene from Aida.
A certain Sylvia Sawyer, who evidently actually filled in a few mezzo-soprano roles on some early-fifties opera LPs, offers an Aida excerpt (Amneris) that, although shows no gross lapses of pitch, taste, or intonation, is a precious textbook example of bland mediocrity combined with indifferent attention to the peculiars of Italian pronunciation. One wonders if the Capitol label thought to check the Yellow Pages under "mezzo-sopranos" when casting for this Aida album.
From the lamented Remington label comes the "Tosca from Hell", an infamous performance by Vassilka Petrova.
Madame Mari Lyn (although the program notes claim that she was a woman, and a widow to boot, I swear I think this person was a drag queen!) gives her special vocal rendition of "Una voce poco fa". [Later research on the part of this writer revealed that she was, in fact, a she. Mea culpa.]
The most disturbing performance on the disc is a 1980 performance by socialite and trophy-wife Sari Bunchuk Wontner, who gave staged performances of "Traviata" in her home - with full casts and orchestra. (One hell of a Tupperware party, don't you think?) Of course, art imitates life, and she was Violetta. Secretly taped from a live performance (presumably by a "former friend"), this first-act scene defies description. She is often several beats ahead of or behind the orchestra, she may be as much as a third off of the key in either direction, and the whole affair sounds as if she had a flask of Cuervo hidden behind each prop. A year after this performance, she fell overboard from her yacht. Perhaps she was rehearsing for a future Tosca.
Surely the best-known name included is that of Florence Foster Jenkins, arguably the most famous of the daffier divas. The track, a Cosme McMoon decomposition entitled "Valse Caressante", is not included in the Victor reissue of dear Flofojen's legendary Melotone discs; in fact it is not included in the Jenkins discography in the magazine "The Record Collector". This rather long affair seems to find the diva, the pianist, and the flautist all on a bad day, with the result being a performance that is cheaper than a home perm and twice as curly on your hair.
The last track is a recording of Jenkins' accompanist, Cosme McMoon, reminiscing about his musical life with our dear Flofojen. Benko also clears the air, after careful research, about the "Cosme McMoon was actually Edwin McArthur" rumor. Buy the CD to find the answer.
This is also a first-class prodution, with attention to quality in presentation. The program notes alone are worth the price of the CD. Benko has carefully researched these singers, often waiting years for leads to information. In fact, a picture of Natalia de Andrade arrived after the disc went to press, and it is posted on the Homophone website. Our poor Manon looks for all the world like trailer trash showing up for a Jerry Springer taping.
Another picture of interest to many will be the penultimate photo - a picture of Cosme McMoon, radiant in a 70s combover, flanked by ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER at the 1974 Mr. Universe Contest, during the time he had given up his music career and was managing a male bordello.
This will be The Party Album of the New Millenium. Buy it.
Average customer rating:
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Offenbach - Les Contes d'Hoffmann / Alagna, van Dam, Dessay, Vaduva, Jo, Lascarro, Dubosc, Ragon, Sénéchal, Bacquier, Lamprecht, Nagano
Jacques Offenbach , Roberto Alagna , Natalie Dessay , Kent Nagano , Choeur et Orchestre de l'Opéra National de Lyon , Leontina Vaduva , Sumi Jo , José van Dam , Catherine Dubosc , Gilles Ragon , Gabriel Bacquier , Doris Lamprecht , and Juanita Lascarro Manufacturer: Erato ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005E4D Release Date: 1996-10-29 |
Tracks:
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Prelude - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Act 1, Scene 1: Glou! Glou! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Couplets de la muse: La verite, dit-on, sortait d'un puits - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Elle est sur la scene, un peuple l'acclame - La Muse - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 2: Le conseiller Lindorf, morbleu! - Lindorf, Andres - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 3: Vayons? Pour Hoffmann! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Couplets: Dans les roles d'amoureux - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Deux heures devant moi - Scene 4: Vite, vite, qu'on se remue! - Lindorf, Luther - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 5: Choeur des Etudiants - Drig, drig - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Vrai Dieu! Mes amis - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Eh! Luther! Ma grosse tonne - Lindorf, Luther, Nathanael, Hermann, Wolfram, Wilhelm - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 6: Bonjour, amis! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Couplets and Andante: Va pour Kleinzach! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Peuh! Cette biere est detestable! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Duo: Et par ou votre Diablerie - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Simple echange de politesse - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Je vous dis, moi - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Ma maitresse? - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Final: Messieurs, on va lever le rideau! - Hoffmann, Nicklausse, Lindorf, Luther, Nathanael, Hermann, Wolfram, Wilhelm - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Act 2: Entracte - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 1: La! Dors en paix - Spalanzani - Scene 2: Ah! Bonjour! Enchacte! - Spalanzani, Hoffmann - Scene 3: Fais allumer partout! - Spalanzani, Cochenille - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 4: Allons! Courage et confiance! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Pardieu! J'etais bien sur - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Couplets: Une poupee aux yeux d'email - Nicklausse, Hoffmann - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 5: C'est moi, Coppelius! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Je me nomme Coppelius - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: J'ai deux jeux, de beaux yeux - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Serviteur - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Ah! Ange du ciel, est-ce bien toi? - Nicklausse, Hoffmann, Coppelius - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 6: Hein! Vous! - Hoffmann, Coppelius, Spalanzani - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 7: Choeur des Invites: Non aucun hote vraiment - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Vous serez satisfaits, messieurs - Hoffmann, Spalanzani, Nicklausse - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 8: Mesdames et Messieurs - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Mesdames et Meisseurs, fiere de vos bravos - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Air: Les oiseaux dans la charmille - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Ah! Mon ami! Quel accent! - Hoffmann, Spalanzani, Nicklausse, Olympia, Cochenille - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 9: Ils se sont eloignes! Enfin! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Ah! Vivre deux! - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Tu me fuis? - Hoffmann, Olympia - Scene 10: Eh! morbleu! modere ton zele! - Hoffmann, Nicklausse - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 11: Voleur! Brigand! Quelle deroute! - Coppelius - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Scene 12: En place les danseurs - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Voila! Assez, assez, ma fille - Kent Nagano
- Les Contes D' Hoffmann: Ah! Quoi? L'homme aux lunettes, la! - Spalanzani, Cochenille, Hoffmann, Olympia, Nicklausse, Coppelius - Kent Nagano
Tracks:
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Act 3: Entracte - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 1: Elle a fui, la tourterelle - Antonia - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 2: Malheureuse enfant! - Crespel, Antonia - Scene 3: Desespoir! Tout a l'heure, encore! - Crespel - Scene 4: Frantz! n'ouvre a personne! - Crespel, Frantz - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 5: Jour et nuit je me mets en quatre - Frantz - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 6: Frantz, c'est ici! - Hoffmann, Frantz - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 7: Enfin je vais savoir pourquoi - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Romance: Vois sous l'archet fremissant - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: C'est une chanson d'amour - Hoffmann, Antonia, Nicklausse - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 8: Ah! Je le savais bien - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ah! J'ai le bonheur dans l'ame - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Pourtant, o ma fiancee - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Viens la comme autrefois - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Qu'as-tu donc? - Antonia, Hoffmann - Scene 9: Rien! J'ai cru qu'Hoffmann etait ici! - Hoffmann, Crespel, Frantz, Miracle - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 10: Pour conjurer la danger - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Allons, parle! et sois bref! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: J'ai la certains flacons - Miracle, Crespel, Hoffmann, Antonia - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 11: Ne plus chanter - Hoffmann, Antonia - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 12: Tu ne chanteras plus? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ah! Quelle est cette voix? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ta mere, oses-tu l'interroger? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Non! Assez! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ja cede au transport qui m'enivre! - Miracle, Antonia, La Voix - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 13: Mon enfant, ma fille! - Crespel, Antonia, Hoffmann, Nicklausse, Miracle - Jacques Offenbach
Tracks:
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Act IV: Entracte - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 1: Messieurs, silence! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Recit et Chant bachique: Et moi, ce n'est pas la - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Amis, l'amour tendre et reveur - Hoffmann, Nicklausse, Giulietta - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 2: Je vois qu'on est en fete! - Schlemil, Giulietta, Pitchinaccio, Hoffmann - Scene 3: Au premier reve je t'enleve - Nicklausse, Hoffmann - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 4: Tourne, tourne, miroir - Dapertutto - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 5: Cher ange! - Dapertutto, Giulietta - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 6: Melodrame: Vivat! J'ai tout gagne! - Giulietta, Schlemil, Dapertutto - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 7: Giulietta, palsembleu! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Air de Giulietta: Vous ne jouez pas? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Que dit-elle? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Giulietta, je vous jure! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Oui, fut-ce au prix de ma vie - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Sextuor and Choeur: Helas! Je vais encore la suivre - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Morbleu! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Il a ma cle - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 1: Ton ami dit vrai! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Romance: O Dieu, de quelle ivresse - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Jusque-la, cependant - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Si ta presence m'est ravie - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ah! Tu m'as defiee - Giulietta, Hoffmann, Dapertutto, Pitchinaccio - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 2: Alerte, Hoffmann! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Voyez! Il n'a plus le moindre reflet! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Je n'aime pas qu'on me defie! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ainsi, tu mentais! - Nicklausse, Hoffmann, Dapertutto, Pitchinaccio, Giulietta - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Act V: Entracte - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 1: Choeur: Folie! Oublie tes douleurs - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Voila quelle fut l'histoire - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Choeur des Esprits et des Etudiants: Glou! Glou! - Hoffmann, Luther, Lindorf, Nathanael, Nicklausse - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Scene 2: Stella, Stella! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Couplet: Pour le coeur de Phrygne - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Denouement: Hola! Quelqu'un de fort pour emporter Hoffmann! - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Ingrat! Et moi? - Jacques Offenbach
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: Adieu! Je t'abandonne - Andres, Hoffmann, Nicklausse, Stella, La Muse, Lindorf - Jacques Offenbach
Amazon.com
Of all the revisionist Hoffmanns, this one is the best, using the latest (and one trusts) last version of Michael Kaye's edition, based on sketches recently discovered for the unfinished opera. Most of the changes are in the Giulietta act; it now tracks better dramatically, and unlike some restoration attempts, its length is sensible. In the title role, Roberto Alagna is full of imaginative touches of characterization, singing the famous Kleinzach song with an intentional vocal roughness in a worthy effort to convey the Hoffmann's debauched state. As the mechanical doll Olympia, Natalie Dessay proves she's not only a phenomenal singer but a great comedienne. Kent Nagano deploys his Lyon Opera forces with great stylistic authority. --David Patrick StearnsCustomer Reviews:
Not a flawless version, but one to be REALLY loved.......2006-05-09
First, about the edition. The Kaye edition restores a lot of music including recitatives written by Offenbach and a number of musical numbers. It also goes for the Guiraud recitatives which some versions totally omit and replace by the dialogues which Offenbach likely might have intended. Compared to, say, the historical Sutherland/Domingo/Bonynge version, this version is significantly longer and more substantial, musically speaking. With more than 30 minutes of music compared to the Bonynge edition, it is understandable why the Kaye version needs up to 3 CDs to bear the substantial amount of music.
While fans of Contes d'Hoffmann would likely be grateful at the ressurrection of so much musical material, I personally find this version sometimes just too painfully long. The Guiraud recitatives sometimes simply are bland and cause the opera to just drag along. Yes, Guiraud obviously has a lot of skills and bright ideas in these recitatives, mostly shown by the quoting of music by Offenbach in these recitatives to give the opera a better sense of unison. But compared to the simpler recitatives that Offenbach himself wrote, the Guiraud sometimes just seems aloof. Unless you really have a lot of time, you might want to stick to the more important musical numbers. Also, the new ending, with Hoffmann facing the Muse in the apotheose is a wonderful ensemble, with sounds from the church organ that gives the scene its necessary "holy" feel.
Now to the singers. Alagna has a masculine voice and is dramatically very effective. He also has a perfect French diction-crisp, idiomatic and a real joy to listen to. His instrument naturally is not very beautiful; and I personally find his Hoffmann a bit beefy and hysterical; but his good understanding of the role still helps him come across as a better Hoffmann. The best Hoffmann is in my opinion either Domingo or Schicoff.
The ladies are provided with quite a luxury cast. Natalie Dessay's Olympia is perhaps second only to Sutherland and Sills. To everyone who honors La Stupenda's E flats, listen: Dessay presents the role of the mechanical doll with FOUR Gs, yes 4 full-voiced, stunning, jaw-dropping Gs!!! Musically speaking, Dessay is not as comedic as Sutherland; her tone is a little thin and nasal but her coloratura and lovely portrayal of the role is simply untterly convincing.
Vaduva's Antonia is excellent: excellent diction, girly tone and very successfully portrays the youngsinger's vulnerability and sensibility. She however lacks power in the trio and that C sharp falls flat. Her "Elle a fui la tourterelle" is however wonderfully touching and moving. The best Antonia, in my opinion, is Victoria de Los Angeles. To one of the reviewers here, Vaduva is not a Slavic singer. She is a French singer of Romanian origin. A totally Latin singer!
Sumi Jo portrays a very convincing Giulietta with very believable spinto qualities, which she provides effectively with chaning in tone. The rediscovered coloratura, with a couple of E flats and spellbinding runs, well, brings the wonderful Korean coloratura soprano to her prime best. Her French is surprisingly idiomatic.
Lascarro's got a small role as Stella. I personally don't like her tone; but she is good enough in the beautiful apotheose ensemble.
Jose Van Dam's quartet villain almost matches Bacquier's famous portrayal. His voice is not as dark or evil-sounding as Bacquier's but still gives a top-notch interpretation. His doctor Miracle might have been the best on record if he took some of those melodramatic laughs in the Trio. His reluctance, combined with Vaduva's small voice, creates a flat Trio. This being said, the French bass's quartet of villains stills ranks among the undisputed best. My favorite villain quartet, Gabriel Bacquier has a cameo role here as Crespel, which he does a great job.
Gilles Ragon's a good tenor and his stuttering in the portrayal of Cochenille is very convincing. I however find him a bit too serious and heavy for these tenore buffo roles. The same can be said for Senechal's Spalanzani. Compared to Charon's Spalanzani on the Bonynge recording, he is very unfunny. The "brigand! Bandit!" quarrel after the destruction of the doll is bland and lifeless.
Catherine's Dubosc has a lovely voice and does great job as Nicklausse. There is nothing to criticize about her singing qualities. My only objection is that the casting of this trouser role for a soprano harms the overall balance of the opera: 5 soprano roles and 1 mezzo role (the voice of the mother): this is not a good balance. The Barcarolle duet, in particular, suffers from both a misbalance and a ridiculous fast tempo.
Kent Nagano's conducting does not have the solid tempos of Bonynge and sometimes overwhelms the singers: most notably in that C sharp of the Trio. But he has really interesting ideas and provides invaluable support.
With the exception of a bland Spalanzani, some strange tempos and the unusual length of the edition, this is a very good Hoffmann. Together with the Bonynge version, this is another very good all-around recording. The set is a tad expensive, but given the substantial amount of music and a very informative booklet, this is a recording to really consider. It will provide a lot of listening pleasures. You will not be disappointed.
The best of a mediocre-to-bad lot.......2003-10-30
Now that musicologists have finished playing with the Mahler 10th Symphony (which ended rather well) and the Beethoven 10th (which ended rather badly), they have been taking a whack at "Hoffmann," rushing to revise music the composer never sanctioned and adding music found in buckets and boxes long after his death. My personal feeling was, if it ain't broke, don't fix it: you're not Offenbach, and to speak for him requires a tremendous amount of chutzpah. And a lot of the revisions, to my ear, simply do not work well, such as turning Giulietta into a coloratura soprano, spinning out an aria that ends much like Olympia's doll song as on this recording.
I'm also not fond of switching the Antonia and Giulietta acts from their traditional positions for both dramatic and musical reasons. To begin with, having the "tales" end with Antonia gives Hoffmann's character a certain sense of redemption that simply isn't there the other way. Also, the Giulietta act is musically the weakest: as primiarily an operetta composer, Offenbach simply had a hard time creating music for this act which is darker and more tensely dramatic than anything else in the work. The superp trio that climaxes the Antonia act, on the other hand, is one of the most brilliant and transcendent things he wrote.
That being said, there is much to admire in this set. Kent Nagano conducts briskly, which is his wont, thereby tying together the music in a cohesive and satisfying way where others (particularly Cluytens and Cambreling) sound slow and rambling. On the other hand, his chorus of the spirits, though light and brisk, just misses the rapt, enchanting sound achieved by Bonynge; and though it was probably Offenbach's intent to have only a few strings play the violin motif in the Antonia trio, they sound too thin, not sweeping or driven enough, for the dramatic situation. Nagano also conducts the famed "Barcarolle" at a shade-too-fast tempo, thus robbing the music of its mysterious charm (even Arthur Fiedler made a better recording of the instrumental version). These moments point to a lack of "theatricality" in Nagano's conducting style that Bonynge, Rudel and even Beecham managed to capture.
Alagna is not as suavely beautiful or haunting in the role as Robert Rounseville or Stuart Burrows were. This is something of an abrupt, nervous reading, though if one knows something about E.T.A. Hoffmann and his tales it is perfectly in keeping with his character. (I have yet, however, to see ANY tenor perform the role made up to LOOK like Hoffmann, a scrawny little man with a square jaw, popping eyes and a shock of unruly, frizzy hair. I guess no tenor really wants to look like that!)
This is unquestionably the finest performance Dessay has ever recorded: her voice is brilliant, in focus, on pitch and wonderfully secure. Only Bond in the Beecham performance and Sutherland come close, though I personally feel that Sutherland was funnier in the role. She had a real flair for comedy, whereas she did not possess enough personal warmth for Antonia or Giulietta.
The Sutherland recording also had the best "villains" in Gabriel Bacquier in his prime, but to my ears Van Dam is an excellent second. (Treigle, in the Sills set, was good but not great, his somewhat gruff voice rather overwhelimg the roles with too much histrionics.)
Vaduva has a pretty tone but your typical "Slavic wobble," more noticeable in the early and late parts of her act. For some reason, the voice is better focused in the middle sections, but she does not efface memories of de los Angeles who was the best Antonia ever.
Jo is surprisingly good as Giulietta: though her voice is even smaller than Dessay's, it had a fuller lyric sound in the mid-range which captured well on records. (I have beel told that her "live" career is just about over on stage as the voice is too small to carry in most modern theaters.) I liked Margherita Grandi in the old Beecham film, but a chesty, spinto Giulietta is apparently persona non grata in the new Michael Kaye edition of the work.
Dubosc is a good Nicklausse, though I preferred Tourangeau and the singer (I forget her name) from the Beecham film. Bacquier, with far less voice, is still predictably good as Crespel; the timeless Senechal is a classic Spalanzani; Ragon is an excellent Cochenille, not so memorable as Franz. (I miss Andrea Velis, the old Met comp, who was brilliant in these roles but was never recorded in them.) The other small roles range from excellent (Tezier as Schlemil) to poor (Juanita Lascarre as Stella).
An ideal modern "Hoffmann" would have Elisabeth Vidal as Olympia, Hong as Antonia, Fleming as Giulietta, Alvarez as Hoffmann, Rene Pape as the three villains, and someone like Pappano or Plasson conducting.....but we can dream all we want. The era of complete opera recordings, according to many inside sources, is over as we know it--even the Bobby & Angela act is being shelved--so we must pick from what we have, and this is simply the finest over all "Hoffmann" on record, with Bonynge's being a good second choice, though I do not like Domingo's hard-voiced, beefy Hoffmann.
Hoffman contines to elude the recording world.......2001-10-03
I prefer Domingo's more passionate Hoffman to Alagna's workmanlike effort, which is still quite fine.
On the other hand, having different female vocalists, as this recording does is preferable to my ear than having the same throughout as the Domingo/Sutherland recording does. The three female leads here range from good (Dessay) to excellent (Jo). Having heard Sumi Jo sing Olympia on record and in person, I find it hard to enjoy Dessay's quite as much. Jo is here as Antonia however.
No single recording of Hoffman is clearly preferable and listening to each is recommended. In the meanwhile, there is still an opening here for a more fully satisying Hoffman.
Excellent but not definitive.......2001-04-20
First, the good points. Listening to this recording one definitely thinks of the opera's characters rather than the artists portraying them.... I find Alagna's voice quite beautiful on this recording and feel that he portrays the character of Hoffmann with spectacular success....
Van Dam is one of the recording's great assets as the villains. The three main heroines are each memorable(.).......(Jo's) interpretation of Giulietta's long-lost coloratura aria is spectacular and features a spine-chilling moment in her climactic cadenza ...she sings a rising series of notes almost identical to one sung by Dessay as Olympia in Act II, emphasizing the connection of the heroines. ...Lascarro does a very good job in the small role of Stella (....Dubosc is excellent as the Muse and Nicklausse, giving a truly memorable performance of nearly the entire role. Unfortunately, Nicklausse's Antonia-act aria, arguably the artistic and emotional heart of the entire opera ...,seems somehow disappointing on this recording. Dubosc's voice does not cut through the orchestra as it should when she sings in her lower register, and as a result the aria fails to have the cathartic impact on me that it has when I have heard it in Metropolitan Opera broadcasts. .... Ragon gives an excellent, highly memorable performance in the four "grotesque" roles.
Now I may turn to the disappointing features of this recording. ....(T)his recording contains no extra-musical sound effects whatsoever. To a certain extent this is a valid approach to recording an opera. The problem is that "Hoffmann" contains an unusually high number of passages which were composed with the extra-musical sounds that would be heard from the stage in mind and which lack some of their intended impact without sound effects. The effectiveness of the students' drinking song is reduced when we don't hear them banging their glasses together and on the tables, and without the winding-up sound the pauses in Olympia's song when she runs down make less sense. We also should hear Coppelius smashing Olympia, Hoffmann and Schlemil moving around heavily as they duel, the death-gasp of another character who dies in the new ending of the Giulietta act (I won't spoil the unfamiliar twists of plot here), and various other sound effects which would add to the drama of the story. Moreover, Van Dam's villains never laugh except when their laughter is notated in the score, even though the libretto specifies some additional evil laughs, notably the one as Dr. Miracle disappears and Antonia falls dying at the end of the trio for Miracle, Antonia and the voice of Antonia's mother.
One of the main problems with the recording is that Van Dam, Ragon and Dubosc are the only performers to play multiple roles. Not only are the heroines played by four different sopranos, but none of the artists who play Luther and the students reappear in other roles in the acts devoted to Hoffmann's three stories. All of this goes against what are presumed to be Offenbach's wishes for his opera, despite the fact that this is a recording of Kaye's critical edition (in its "grand opera" version). Moreover, this recording was, unfortunately, made before Offenbach's own finished finale for the Giulietta act, written very shortly before his death, became available for inclusion in Kaye's edition. ....
Finally, it seems bizarre that the aria "Scintille, diamant," which has been one of the most popular numbers in the opera for a long time, is not included on this recording. ....
Despite these flaws, this recording is recommended. It is extremely enjoyable and represents the totality of Offenbach's intentions for "Hoffmann" more fully than any other recording currently available. One hopes that a new recording of Kaye's edition, with the definitive ending for the Giulietta act and with a single soprano playing all four heroines, will be made in the not-too-distant future.
O Dieu, de quelle ivresse embrasse-tu mon âme?.......1999-11-21
This recording is undoubtedly one of the two benchmark recordings of this opera, the other one being the classic Sutherland/Domingo/Bonynge set. It is the most complete set with the "newly-discovered" Giuletta ending, and even includes the terrific but apocryphal sextet that is missing in the Bonynge recording. Alagna is the true star here, reflecting the spirit of Hoffmann throughout the opera, and singing in a very ideomatic French (unlike Domingo). The four heroines are marvellous, even though I prefer a single soprano singing all the four roles. Van Dam is great as the four villians, but he could have been more sinister in the trio in the Antonia act. Nagano is fine, but has some problems with the tempi at times.
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Earl Wild's Legendary Rachmaninoff Song Transcriptions
Manufacturer: Ivory Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00022LJ4C Release Date: 2004-05-11 |
Customer Reviews:
This is gold mine.......2005-11-15
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Rachmaninov: Songs
Manufacturer: Chandos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000007TRT Release Date: 1998-07-21 |
Tracks:
- Again You Are Bestirred, My Heart
- Sing not, O lovely One (Op. 4, No. 4)
- It Wasn't Long Ago, My Friend (Op. 4, No. 6)
- Prayer (Op. 8, No. 6)
- I Await You (Op. 14, No. 1)
- Small Island (Op. 14, No. 2)
- Do Not Believe Me, Friend (Op. 14, No. 7)
- Spring Torrents (Op. 14, No. 11)
- Lilacs (Op. 21, No. 5)
- Fragment From A. Musset (Op. 21, No. 6)
- How Peaceful (Op. 21, No. 7)
- I Am Not A Prophet (Op. 21, No. 11)
- How Pained I Am (Op. 21, No. 12)
- Let Us Leave, My Sweet (Op. 26, No. 5)
- I Am Again Alone (Op. 26, No. 9)
- At My Window (Op. 26, No. 10)
- Night Is Sorrowful (Op. 26, No. 12)
- The Muse (Op. 34, No. 1)
- A Passing Breeze (Op. 34, No. 4)
- Dissonance (Op. 34, No. 13)
- Vocalise (Op. 34, No. 14)
- At Night In My Garden (Op. 38, No. 1)
- To Her (Op. 38, No. 2)
- Daisies (Op. 38, No. 3)
- The Pied Piper (Op. 38, No. 4)
- Sleep (Op. 38, No. 5)
- A-Oo (Op. 38, No. 6)
- A Prayer
- All Glory To God
Customer Reviews:
Desert Island Disc.......2003-03-14
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Neujahrskonzert 1996
Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003G10 Release Date: 1996-10-15 |
Tracks:
- Festival March
- Viennese Citizens
- The Girl from Nasswald
- Floral Festive Polka
- Lagoon Waltz
- With Pleasure
- 'Green Woodruff Punch': Overture
- The Wings of the Phoenix
- The Dancing Muse
- 'The Goddess of Reason': Overture
- Seconds Polka
- Emperor Waltz
- Jockey Polka
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Camille Saint-Saëns, Vol. 2
Manufacturer: Cala Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000FDLV Release Date: 1994-01-04 |
Tracks:
- La jota aragonese, Op. 64, World Premi Recording
- Samson et Dalila-Grande fantasie (Luigini), World Premi R
- Overture to La princesse jaune, Op 30
- La muse et le po, Op 132, Stephanie Chase, violin & Rober
- Danse macabre, Op. 40, (song version), World Premi Record
- Symphony No. 3 in C minor, Op 78 (Organ) i. Adagio-Allegro-Adagio, The Organ of Westminster Cathedral, James O'Donnell
- Symphony No. 3 in C minor, Op 78 (Organ) ii. Allegro, The Organ of Westminster Cathedral, James O'Donnell
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Lieder, Songs, Aria, Duets
Manufacturer: Guild ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0002Z9X60 Release Date: 2005-01-17 |
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Open Sky
Manufacturer: Creative Muse Productions ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006HCBN Release Date: 2002-03-15 |
Tracks:
- Setting Sail
- Common Ground
- Upon Your Return
- The Road to Caernarvon
- Because of You
- Knowing
- When I See You
- Out of the Blue
- Full Moon Circle
- New Friends
- Letting Go
- Shadow of the Sun
Album Description
What does Open Sky sound like? Here's a description:"Open Sky, the much anticipated follow-up to Jeanette Alexander's internationally acclaimed debut CD Still Point, is a treasury of gentle, memorable melodies, lush with strings arranged by producer and violinist, Jeffey Sick, and graced by special guests oboist Nancy Rumbel and guitarist Eric Tingstad.
Destined to be a hidden flower in a desert of synthesizer music,the all-acoustic sound of Open Sky will delight your senses, inspire your heart, and soothe your spirit."
Touching melodies and unbridled creativity await listeners on the gorgeous sophomore album from Jeanette Alexander titled OPEN SKY. Alexander's vivid compositions are equal parts classical sophistication and romantic abandon - beautiful flights of fancy that set the spirit free. "Common Ground," one of the album's most powerful works, is like an ode to lost love and bittersweet youthful memories. The interplay between Alexander's poignant piano melodies and the warm instrumentation of Jeffery Sick (violin) as well as guest artists Eric Tingstad (guitar) and Nancy Rumbel (oboe) adds to the piece's emotional impact. Others like "Because of You" and "Out of the Blue" make one feel as if time no longer exists, just a realm of endless peace and rejuvenation.
Jeanette Alexander
Creative Muse Productions
info@JeanetteAlexanderMusic.com
Phone (888) 976-7760 Fax (425) 776-7878
"Creating Music to Restore Inner Balance".
Customer Reviews:
Touches the Soul.......2003-05-28
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Singphonic Rossini
Manufacturer: Cpo Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000001RWE Release Date: 1994-02-01 |
Tracks:
- Preghiera
- Chant Funebre
- La Notte Di Santo Natale
- Toast Pour Le Novel An
- Choeur De Chasseurs Democrates
- Ov 'Il Barbiere Di Siviglia'
- La Pastorella
- Der Gondelfahrer
- I Gondolieri
- Ov 'La Gazza ladra'
- L'Invito
- La Danza
- Un Sou
- Ov 'Guillaume Tell'
Music Review:
- Russiche Oster-Vesper Op. 37
- Schubert: Symphonien Nos. 5 & 6
- Schulhoff Quartet, Violin Sonata, Violin/Cello Duo, Sextet / Petersen Quartet
- Serenaden
- Simpson: Violin Sonata
- Songs by Hugo Wolf
- Summer Storm [Import]
- Symphonic Poems by James Forsyth Based on Franz Waxman's "The Spirit of St. Louis" and "Ruth"
- Symphonie Concertante / Toccata / Improvisation
- The Secular Solo Songs of Henry Purcell, Vol. 1
Music Review
Henry Purcell: Music For A While
Frente a Frente: Voces del Corrido