Verdi: Messa da Requiem; Quattro pezzi sacri
On this CD:
1. Requiem Mass, for soloists, chorus & orchestra (Manzoni Requiem)
Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
Performed by Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
with Leontyne Price, Jussi Bjorling, Rosalind Elias, Giorgio Tozzi
Conducted by Fritz Reiner
2. Sacred Pieces (4), for chorus & orchestra (Quattro pezzi sacri)
Composed by Giuseppe Verdi
Performed by Los Angeles Master Chorale / Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra
with Yvonne Minton
Conducted by Zubin Mehta
Verdi: Messa da Requiem; Quattro pezzi sacri, Music, Giorgio Tozzi, Giuseppe Verdi, Fritz Reiner, Zubin Mehta, Rosalind Elias, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Wiener Philharmoniker, Leontyne Price, Jussi Björling, Yvonne Minton, Choral, Choral Music, Classical, Classical Music, Opera / Operetta / Oratorio, Requiem/Requiem Section
Average customer rating:
- Schwarzkopf sings Verdi
- TREMENDAE MAJESTATIS
- Great Performance, TERRIBLE SOUND buyers beware !!!
- An amazing achievement
- Heroic
|
Verdi: Messa da Requiem /Quattro Pezzi Sacri
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Verdi
| Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Forms & Genres
| Early Music
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Symphonies
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
More Titles at Least 20% Off
| Classical Music Blowout
| Stores
| Music
All Classical Music Blowout
| Classical Music Blowout
| Stores
| Music
Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Composers, A-Z
| Classical Music Blowout
| Stores
| Music
Opera & Vocal
| Classical Music Blowout
| Stores
| Music
Similar Items:
- Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem [A German Requiem]
- Richard Strauss - Capriccio / Schwarzkopf, Wächter, Gedda, Fischer-Dieskau, Hotter, Ludwig, Moffo, Philharmonia Orchestra, Sawallisch
- Strauss - Der Rosenkavalier / Schwarzkopf · Ludwig · Karajan
- Tchaikovsky: Symphonies Nos. 4, 5, 6 "Pathetique"
- Verdi - Don Carlo / Domingo · Caballé · Raimondi · Milnes · Verrett · Estes · Giulini
ASIN: B00005AVMO
Release Date: 2001-04-10 |
Tracks:
- Messa Da Requiem: I. Requiem & Kyrie: Requiem Aeternam - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: I. Requiem & Kyrie: Kyrie Eleison - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Dies Irae - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Tuba Mirum - Mors Stupebit - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Liber Scriptus - Dies Irae - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Quid Sum Miser - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Rex Tremendae - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Recordare - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Ingemisco - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Confutatis Maledictis - Dies Irae - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: II. Sequence (Dies Irae): Lacrimosa - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: III. Offertorio: Domine Jesu Christe - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: III. Offertorio: Hostias Et Preces - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: IV. Sanctus - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: V. Agnus Dei - Elisabeth Schwarzkopf/Christa Ludwig/Nicolai Gedda/Nicolai Ghiaurov/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
Tracks:
- Messa Da Requiem: VI. Lux Aeterna - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: VII. Libera Me: Libera Me - Dies Irae - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: VII. Libera Me: Requiem Aeternam - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Messa Da Requiem: VII. Libera Me: Libera Me - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Quattro Pezzi Sacri: Ave Maria - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Quattro Pezzi Sacri: Stabat Mater - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Quattro Pezzi Sacri: Laudi Alla Vergine - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
- Quattro Pezzi Sacri: Te Deum - Janet Baker/Philharmonia Chor/Wilhelm Pitz
Customer Reviews:
Schwarzkopf sings Verdi.......2007-04-04
There are very few recordings available of Elisabeth Schwarzkopf singing Verdi (anything beside Falstaff?), so for that reason alone, this CD deserves to be treasured.
Schwarzkopf's is a unique sound, and her Verdi Requiem sounds like no other. Another reviewer praised her high B-flat in the Libera Me - I totally agree, it is wonderful.
For those more accustomed to Pavarotti or Domingo as the tenor soloist, Gedda may not be for all tastes. His is a much more lyrical approach. But if conductor Giulini was looking for a more "reverent" sound among his soloists, he certainly didn't err in his choice of Gedda.
Nicolai Ghiaurov, on the other hand, is a pure blood & guts Verdian. From the first note out of his mouth, you know he is capable of blowing down the house with his immense cavernous sound. He is really fantastic to listen to.
The Requiem was recorded in September 1963 and April 1964, and digitally remastered in 1997. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem as if the remastering was very well done. The Philharmonia Chorus, a spectacular choral ensemble, sounds very distorted at times, especially when they come at you at full volume. The Dies Irae really suffers because of this.
The accompanying Quattro Pezzi Sacri, on the other hand, has fared much better. This recording was actually made earlier (December 1962), yet the engineered sound is positively heavenly. The spectacular sound of this chorus can be much better appreciated in this piece. This recording of the Quattro Pezzi Sacri is a real treasure that you won't forget.
Texts and translations included. One star off for the poor engineered sound of the Requiem.
TREMENDAE MAJESTATIS.......2005-09-13
This set can be recommended from two points of view. Firstly it contains all Verdi's mature choral works; and in the second place this account of the Requiem is perhaps the greatest ever recorded. After the Requiem came Otello and Faslstaff, and last of all he gave us the Four Sacred Pieces. Two of these are for unaccompanied voices, one in particular featuring an allegedly special scale, which I doubt we would be aware of if we had not been told. They are only described as `academic' or as `exercises' because they are by Verdi, who put up a smokescreen of self-ascribed simplicity all his career. In fact he had always studied and loved the mediaeval Italian polyphonists and these two compositions can easily rank with similar works by Brahms in my opinion. In Brahms or Bach we take the academic element for granted as all part of the style, which is entirely in the German tradition. Verdi was almost as exclusively based in his own country's music - all he took from German music was features of style that Italy had given to Germany in the first place, and we hear him at that with the explicit reference to Schubert's A minor quartet at the start of the Requiem. However there is more unaccompanied vocal work in his Requiem than in anything in the German choral/orchestral repertory, and that should not surprise us.
There is a slightly average liner-note that assures us solemnly that `it is not necessary to be a practising Catholic...to conduct Verdi's sacred music'. I guess that lets Toscanini off the hook, and I don't think Giulini's performance of the Te Deum is quite the equal of his. However in the Requiem Giulini seems to me to surpass everyone I've ever heard, Toscanini among them. There is not an Italian among the soloists, and when I listen to, say, Schwarzkopf's exquisite falling phrase at `Salva me' I still experience a slight longing to hear it dragged down in a lachrymose Italian tone, but they have too much integrity for cheap compromises, they are simply terrific in their own right, and Giulini supplies the Italian element. His sense for this great score seems to me perfect. He understands Verdi's alternations of fierce and almost brutal power with relaxed lyricism. Verdi's energy is physical, not nervous like Beethoven's. He is always powerful but rarely or never tense. The soloists do not miss a trick either. The monstrous demands of first climax of the Kyrie, with the soprano required to dominate her colleagues, choir and orchestra flat-out, are achieved grandly, and at the other extreme they are sublime in all their solos, and the great phrase at Tantus labor non sit cassus is wringing with emotion but perfectly under control. The Philharmonia chorus of the day (1963) was probably the best in the world, and the orchestra probably likewise. At full tilt in the Dies irae, with the spotlight on the brass at Tuba mirum, the cellos climbing above the treble clef at the start of the Offertorium, the celestial bassoon obbligato in the Quid sum miser - everything is just right and more.
For me Verdi's Requiem is the greatest choral masterpiece since Handel himself, and his Te Deum for me surpasses Berlioz and Bruckner and is indeed the finest setting since Handel's own mighty production celebrating the ludicrous victory at Dettingen. Giulini is excellent by any standard, but I still miss the incomparable surge and thrust that Toscanini brought to it. However there is a startling bonus here in the form of a solo of a few bars right at the end from Janet Baker no less. I wonder what that cost -- the spot is normally given to a member of the chorus. The Stabat Mater is powerful and affecting, and the chorus perform superbly on their own in the other two works. The recording is not awfully `forward' and it doesn't always treat Ghiaurov very well, but otherwise I must say my Sony equipment coped perfectly adequately, and it was a relief to be rid of the surface swish and pre-echo at points on my LP set.
I checked the text and translation of the Dies irae and the Stabat Mater, and the standard was a lot better than I have been encountering lately on other productions. There are two minor misprints in the Stabat Mater (`corni' for `cordi' and `pagis' for `plagis'). `Fac me crucem inebriari' is not Latin, and we can be pretty sure the text ought to be `...cruce...', with this line and the next meaning literally `Make me drunk with the cross and with the blood of the Son'. Otherwise my only comment is that the stanza `To stand with thee...' should be governed by the verb `I desire'. I lack the discernment of the liner-note author who finds the stanzas of varying literary merit.
Giulini did at least one later version, but I never yet heard one to equal this, from him or from anyone. I have no real difficulty with the recording, and I greatly hope you do not either.
Great Performance, TERRIBLE SOUND buyers beware !!!.......2005-05-25
This is indubitably a great performance. The quartet of soloist sing superbly. Schwarzkopf's high C (pianissimo) in the Liberame remains unsurpassed. The other famous recording of this work is the Shaw/Atlanta for Telarc. The soprano, in Shaw's recording, Susan Dunn, while also very good, cannot sing the same note in pianissimo as written by Verdi.
My beef with the Giulini recording is the sound. In loud passages such as the Dies Irae the distortion is so pronounced it is laughable. You would think that for a large record company such as EMI to reissue a recording they would spend a few bucks and do a decent remastering job. But this is not the case. The Shaw recording simply knocks the socks off the Giulini in terms of sonics. Hell, even the Toscannini sounds better and it was recording in the 40's.
In short, Giulini gets 5 stars for performance and no stars for sound.
An amazing achievement.......2004-06-21
Verdi's Requiem, like many of his later works, is extremely demanding when comes to bringing it to life in full strength. You need powerful orchestral and choral forces, extremely potent and expressive voices and of course a really insightfull conductor capable of holding all together and making the drama and meanings come to life.
Fortunately it looks that everyone who tried approaching this masterpiece tried its best. But among them are the real achievers. And I will mention only the three of them I think really need to be mentioned in this context: first, at least historically, is Da Sabata. I am one of not so many lucky listeners who has his edition feturing Maria Caniglia. And that is an achievement approaching perfection. The next one is Toscanini with his incisiveness which works its powerrs all the way through his 1951 live recording. And then is the recording at hand here.
This is one of the recordings documenting the glorious (so unfortunately dawned) era of music making at its highest. It shouldn't come as a surprise that behind it one finds Carlo Maria Giulini. This is just one of his greatest achievements that are landmarking the history of music. The attention to detail, so insightfull choice of tempo, the ability of conducting music so flowlessly to its highs and deep downs, the ability of using musical powers under his command to their very best and not least the profound understanding of the musical score are shown here in their full power. It grabs you from the beginning and you will find yourself under its powers everafter.
The choir might be the best you find on disc. It is highly responsive and produces some of the greatest moments of this piece. Along comes the Philarhmonia Orchestra in beatiful sound and very attentive and responsive to its mastreful conductor.
The soloists are as much as you could wish for. Envolved, musically perfect, rendering the amount of human drama that this piece comprises, the true voices of humanity you might say. I am especially delighted with Christa Ludwig which seems a different singer from her recording under Karajan (recording available from Deutsche Grammophone) and Ghiaurov who displays such a sensibility along with his powerful voice. Damme Schwartzkopf and Gedda are also very good although I couldn't stop myself dreaming at Franco Corelli, giving the amazing musical power unleashed here (you can hear him in the recording of the verdian requiem under Mehta).
As one of the other reviewers mentioned if you want only one recording of Verdi's Requiem you have to have this one. You will hear inner voices inside the orchestra, choir and soloists you will not hear anywhere else. The only real threat to this recording is Da Sabata's which is set back just by a poorer sound which makes it harder to come out with the greatest effect.
Heroic.......2003-11-06
Verdi's requiem often sounds more like opera than mass, and it seems Giulini and cast are not ashamed of that, either. The performance has tremendous dynamic range - heroically bright when the tenor first blasts out the "Kyrie", dark and brooding in the "Requiem", bleak and helpless in "Agnus Dei", and everything in between. The recording supports this - turn up the volume to audible levels at the start of "Requiem" and be blasted out of the room by "Dies Irae". Schwarzkopf is especially gripping, like she's trying to physically hold on to you with her voice.
The tempi and expression are very traditional (at least when looking at the score), but as I said, the cast are not afraid to live it up. No need to spend more.
Average customer rating:
|
Verdi: Messa da Requiem; Quattro pezzi sacri
Manufacturer: Polygram Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Verdi
| Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Forms & Genres
| Early Music
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
| ( V )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B0000041UO
Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Average customer rating:
- Verdi Choral Spectacular Conducted By The Great Toscanini
- hair-rising
- Absolutely the best "Requiem" ever
- Excellent! Terrific rendition of terrific music
- Perhaps the classic performance of the "Requiem".
|
Verdi: Te Deum/Messa Da Requiem/Nabucco/Luisa Miller/Hymn Of The Nations
Manufacturer: RCA
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Verdi
| Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Forms & Genres
| Early Music
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Toscanini, Arturo
| ( T )
| Featured Performers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Romantic (c.1820-1910)
| Historical Periods
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Italian
| Languages
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Classical Music
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
Opera & Vocal
| The Sony BMG Masterworks Store
| Amazon.com Label Stores
| Stores
| Music
ASIN: B000003EXT
Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Quattro pezzi sacri, Four Sacred Pieces, No. 4: Te Deum
- Messa da requiem: Requiem & Kyrie
- Dies irae
- Dies Irae: Tuba mirum
- Dies Irae: Mors stupebit
- Dies Irae: Liber scriptus
- Dies Irae: Quid sum miser
- Dies Irae: Rex tremendae
- Dies Irae: Recordare
- Dies Irae: Ingemisco
- Dies Irae: Confutatis
- Dies Irae: Lacrymosa
Tracks:
- Offertorio: Domine Jesu Christe
- Offertorio: Hostias
- Offertorio: Sanctus
- Offertorio: Agnus Dei
- Offertorio: Lux aeterna
- Libera Me: Libera me, Domine
- Libera Me: Dies irae
- Libera Me: Libera me, Domine
- Nabucco: Va, pensiero, sull'ali dorate
- Luisa Miller: Quandro le sere al placido
- Inno delle nazioni,Hymn of the Nations
Amazon.com
This has long been the standard by which other recordings of Verdi's Requiem are measured. Many others have better sound engineering, you may prefer a soloist or even the chorus (perhaps a later group trained by Robert Shaw) in one competing version or another, and it is quite possible to prefer the period-instrument sound of John Gardiner's taut interpretation. But no other conductor has matched the sheer intensity with which Arturo Toscanini translates the titanic and fearful vision of his friend Verdi into sound. This vision, which includes the end of the world, the dead rising from their graves and the assignment of each one either to heaven or to hell, is the climactic point of Verdi's epic style. The fillers are mostly interesting and inspiring, though Hymn of the Nations, a collage of national anthems, is one of Verdi's creative low points. --Joe McLellan
Customer Reviews:
Verdi Choral Spectacular Conducted By The Great Toscanini.......2005-11-07
This recording of Verdi choral masterpieces is conducted by Arturo Toscanini in his old age when he was a popular American figure in the NBC radio broadcasts. He still packs a punch and the quality of this recording is terrific. On here are Sacred Pieces for chorus & orchestra and the Te Deum, a fitting prelude to the more large-scale and famous Requiem. The singers are in glorious form and they were popular 50's opera stars - tenor Giuseppe Di Stefano, mezzo soprano Fedora Barbieri, baritone Cesare Siepi and soprano Herva Nelli. They make the music sound exceptionally bombastic and lyrical. The anthem-like Va Pensiero from Verdi's opera Nabucco is on here and is sung with sensational musicality. The tenor aria "Quando de sere al placido" is interpreted by Jan Peerce, whose ringing voice is shimmering with bravura but he pulls out all the stops for the Hymn of the Nations, a pastiche of nationalistic songs from the Italian national anthem to "The Star Spangled Banner". For fans of Verdi, this is a must have, especially because Hymn of the Nations is such a rarity.
hair-rising.......2002-02-03
I listened to some of this Verdi requiem and the paint started to peel off of the walls. This is absolutely stunning, to say the least, and no one has ever made it this way the was toscanini has. The man knew Verdi, and was probably the most respected Verdi conductor of his time, making this a classic of the gramophone, and deservedly so. It is fortunate this has been preserved. Cesare siepi is excellent as the bass soloist. fedora barbieri is always nice, and so is di stefano, though he it not the greatest in "ingemisco." the sound here is a bit constricted, preventing true pianissimo, which toscanini was definitely capable of producing. His thrilling fortissimos nearly break the equipment they are so strong. incredible stuff.
Absolutely the best "Requiem" ever.......2000-07-13
Never a favorite of mine on LP - the sound was too thin, harsh and compressed - this performance of Verdi's "Requiem," given to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the composer's death, speaks volumes for the Toscanini "legend." It is a performance that satisfies both the intellect and the emotions, despite the fact that the "Ingemisco" and the "Offertorio" are conducted faster than I have ever heard them...nothing sounds rushed, the singers are excellent, and the performance has perfect balance and cohesion.
However, I prefer the new 20-bit digital remastering to even this CD issue. To find my review there, enter "Arturo Toscanini" under Classical Music, scroll down the page, and click on "Conducts Verdi/Cherubini - Cho". This new reissue is coupled with Verdi's "Te Deum" and the Cherubini "Requiem," two great works which the maestro also conducts beautifully. This one isn't just an OK performance, it's a must for any collection.
Excellent! Terrific rendition of terrific music.......1998-09-11
I will admit to getting the CD just for the Requiem, of which it is one of the better recordings available, the Lacrymosa being especially good, if not perfect. Also, "Va, pensario" is one of the classic choruses of opera, and is well executed on this CD. With those, and the Te Deum, this CD is a goldmine for Verdi fans.
Perhaps the classic performance of the "Requiem"........1998-09-10
While Herva Nelli gives a more than credible performance, and Siepi demonstrates his potential greatness, this is, clearly, Toscanini's show. The NBC Orchestra is functioning on all cylinders, as is the Maestro. One can clearly hear Toscanini's exhortation(s): "Louder! Louder!" When the listener is aware of the fact that the Conductor was a close aquaintance of Verdi and, therefore, more than a mere casual interpreter of his work, the performance's meaning is enhanced.
Average customer rating:
|
Verdi: Messa da Requiem; Quattro Pezzi Sacri
Manufacturer: Capitol
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Verdi
| Verdi, Giuseppe
| ( V )
| Featured Composers, A-Z
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Forms & Genres
| Early Music
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General Modern
| Modern, 20th, & 21st Century
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Requiems
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000002RNP
Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Average customer rating:
- Pavarotti, where are you?
|
Messa Da Requiem / Te Deum
Verdi , Pavarotti , Scotto , Horne , and Abbado
Manufacturer: Opera D'oro
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Operettas
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B000065UM3
Release Date: 2002-05-07 |
Customer Reviews:
Pavarotti, where are you?.......2004-07-05
I have a strong feeling that this was a fine performance of the Verdi Requiem. Just look at the stellar line-up of soloists. But unfortunately, I am unable to tell, because the sound quality is just DREADFUL. It's all cloudy and murky from beginning to end - you can just sense the wonderful voices of Pavarotti and Scotto lurking underneath the mud. Please don't get this recording if you plan on doing anything with it other than enjoying the cover art and the program notes.
Music Review:
- Vivaldi: Six Concertos
- Vivaldi: Six Flute Concertos
- Vocal Series: Beniamino Gigli
- Wagner: Götterdämmerung WWV86d; Walküre WWV86b
- Walzer von Johann Strauss
- 4 Ballades/Scherzos/Mazurkas (RMST) [Original recording remastered]
- 4 Famous Mezzos of Past
- Albinoni: 8 Concertos
- Amor ist mein Lied
- Arturo Toscanini Collection, Volume 15: Franz Schubert
Music Review
music review
Music Review
Out There [CD-single] [Import]
Water Colors
Vivaldi (Box Set) [Box set]
Au Theatre Des Champs-Elysees [Live]
Wishbone Four/There's the Rub/ [Box set]
Ultimas Noticias
Years Gone By, Vol. 1
Water
Violao [Import]
Villa-Lobos: Piano Music Vol. 1 / Rubinsky
Two Originals-Can't [Import]
Tropa de Valientes
West Coast Gambinos, Vol. 2 [Explicit Lyrics]
For His Glory: Hymns of Faith and Inspiration
Live at the Jazz Corner