Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
2. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 1: Am stillen Herd in Winterszeit
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
3. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 2: Was duftet doch der Flieder/Gut'n Abend, Meister
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
4. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 2: Jerum! Jerum! Hallo hallohe!/Wie, Meister? Auf? Den Tag seh' ich erscheinen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
5. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 2: Darf ich mich Meister nennen/Hört, ihr Leut' und laßt euch sagen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
6. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: Prelude: Gleich, Meister, hier!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
7. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: Wahn! Wahn! Überall Wahn!/Grüß Gott, mein Junker
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
8. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: ein Werbelied! Von Sachs!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
9. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: O Sachs! Mein Freund!/Ein Kind ward hier geboren
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
10. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: Jetzt all' am Fleck/Sankt Crispin, lobet ihn
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
11. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: Seht, Meister Sachs!/Wach, auf es nahet gen den Tag/... mit allem Hab und Eigen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
12. Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg, opera, WWV 96 Act 3: das Lied, fürwahr, ist nicht von mir
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Kurt Bohme , Karl Ettl , Hermann Gallos , Josef Hermann , Peter Klein , Fritz Krenn , Erich Kunz , Georg Monthy , Torsten Ralf , Maria Reining
Conducted by Karl Bohm
13. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Prelude
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
14. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 1: Hört! Grafen, Edle, Freie von Brabant
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
15. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 1: Du trugest zu ihm meine Klage
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
16. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 1: Nun sei bedankt, mein lieber Schwan
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
17. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 1: Elsa, ich liebe dich!/Steh ab vom Kampf!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
18. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 1: Durch Gottes Sieg ist jetzt dein Leben mein
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
19. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Euch Lüften, die mein Klagen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
20. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Entweihte Götter/Ortrud, wo bist du?
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
21. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Du Ärmste kannst wohl nie ermessen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
22. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Hiel ihm, den Gott gesandt/Nun hört, was er durch mich euch sagen läßt
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
23. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Gesegnet soll sie schreiten/Zurück, Elsa! Nicht länger will ich dulden
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
24. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 2: Elsa, erhebe dich
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
25. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 3: Prelude
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
26. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 3: Wie hehr erkenn' ich unsrer Liebe Wesen
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
27. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 3: Sie vor den König zu geleiten/Heil König Heinrich!/Habt Dank, ihr Lieben von Brabant!/Mein Herr und König, laß dir melden
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
28. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 3: ... wollt ich dem Dienst des reinen Herzens/Mein Gatte, nein!
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
29. Lohengrin, opera, WWV 75 Act 3: Weh! Weh! Du edler, holder Mann/Fahr heim!/Seht da den Herzog von Brabant
Composed by Richard Wagner
Performed by Vienna State Opera Orchestra with Walter Grossmann , Margarete Klose , Josef von Manowarda , Maria Muller , Jaro Prohaska , Franz Volker
Conducted by Heinz Tietjen
Wagner: Lohengrin WWV75; Meistersinger von Nürnberg WWV96,Richard Wagner,Heinz Tietjen,Karl Böhm,Wiener Staatsopernorchester,Egyd Toriff,Erich Kunz,Franz Völker,Franz Worff,Fritz Krenn,Georg Monthy,Hans Schweiger,Hermann Gallos,Jaro Prohaska,Josef Hermann,Josef Herrmann,Josef von Manowarda,Karl Ettl,Kurt Böhme,Margarete Klose,Maria Muller,Maria Reining,Peter Klein,Richard Sallaba,Roland Neumann,Torsten Ralf,Walter Grossmann,William Wernigk,Koch Schwann,German/Austrian Romantic Opera,Opera,Orchestral,Orchestral Music
Average customer rating:
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Nessun Dorma ~ 20 Great Tenor Arias / Pavarotti, Carreras, Domingo, Bergonzi, Aragall, Björling, Di Stefano, Kollo, Corelli, Del Monaco...
Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000007OTX Release Date: 1998-06-09 |
Tracks:
- La Boheme: Che gelida manina
- Manon Lescaut: Donna non vidi mai
- Carmen Bizet: La fleur que tu m'avais jetee (Flower Song)
- Luisa Miller: O! fede negar potessi .. Quando le sere al placido
- La Traviata: Lunge da lei ... De' miei bollenti spiriti
- Martha: M'appari
- Giordano: Amor ti vieta
- L'Africaine: Mi batte il cuor .. O paradiso
- La Favorita: Favorita del re . . . Spirto gentil
- Werther: 'Pourquoi me reveiller'
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: 'Morgenlich leuchtend in rosigem Schein'
- Les Contes d'Hoffmann: O Dieu! De quelle ivresse
- TOSCA: E lucevan le stelle
- Pagliacci: Recitar! ... Vesti la giubba
- Il Trovatore: Di quella pira
- Aida: Se quel guerrier .. Celeste Aida
- TOSCA: Recondita armonia
- L'Elisir d'Amore: Una furtiva lagrima
- La Gioconda: Cielo e mar!
- Turandot: Nessun dorma
Customer Reviews:
The End of the Big Voice?.......2007-04-16
Fla Gator Lady.......2007-01-12
20 Great Tenor Arias.......2007-01-09
Plesantly surprised..........2006-01-14
First it is a great buy. A booklet with pictures of each tenor, a small bio, the year recorded and TRANSLATIONS of each aria are provided. This is really nice. It seems more & more that translations are being left out. Being a former opera singer, I may know most of the words, but sometimes it's just nice to read along (sometimes it's just nice to listen too).
Being on the Decca label, there is admittedly quite a few Pavarotti selections. Out of 20 selections, he has 6 of them. But I love Pavarotti, so this is no problem for me. These are all early recordings & his voice is magnificent! Being a singer, I still marvel at his ability to sing "All'armi!" on a high D and still say the 2nd syllable "mi" on such a note! WOW. There is also of course his very sweet, impassioned and lyrical turn as Rodolfo in "La Boheme" as well as the lesser known (although I still have it on casette) "La Favorita" which has a particularly high tessitura.
Also featured are a young Plácido Domingo singing a VERY nice "Flower song/ La fleur que tu m'avais jetée" from Carmen. He usually sounds too pushed for me on the top notes (as one might expect from a Pavarotti fan, I like free top notes) but in this recording he is pretty darn fabulous. He also sings an aria from "Tales of Hoffman/Les Contes d'Hoffman" and I have always felt that he, like Neil Schicoff, were well suited to this role.
Lamentably there are only one selection each from Carreras, Correlli, Monaco, Aragall & Kollo. Especial kudos to the young recording they feature for Aragall. He had a very free and nice high tenor well suited to Verdi. Of course as his career went forward with the natural darkening of his voice and the "heavier" roles, he did start to develop a wobble. But this recording is before that. His top, his phrasing are all beautifully done in his featured aria from "La Traviata."
Mario del Monaco's "E lucevan le stelle" is hauntingly beautiful and has such a wonderful pianissimo in it that it makes you just want to gasp for beauty's sake. I now know every tenor I've heard sing this aria was trying to emulate what he did.
This is a great CD because it does bring together on one CD some of the greatest singers of the 20th/21st century. Bergonzi, di Stefano, Björling, in addition to the previously mentioned artists is quite an impressive collection. I'm sure there's only one of each for Carreras, Aragall (I believe they are formerly EMI/Angel artists) and perhaps some of the others because they are "imported" from another label. There's so much Pavarotti on this CD because he IS a Decca artist.
A highly recommended CD, affordable, not the usually obscure and unpolished artists that are sometimes found on compilations. Plus acutal linear notes and translations. Nicely done, Decca!!!
Absolutely Agree About Corelli.......2005-05-27
Average customer rating:
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The #1 Opera Album
Giacomo Puccini , Giuseppe Verdi , Léo Delibes , Georges Bizet , Umberto Giordano , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Richard Wagner , Gioachino Rossini , Alfredo Catalani , Jacques Offenbach , Ruggiero Leoncavallo , Charles Gounod , Gaetano Donizetti , Pietro Mascagni , Antonin Dvorak , Richard Bonynge , Herbert von Karajan , Alberto Erede , Lamberto Gardelli , Giuseppe Patane , John Mauceri , Zubin Mehta , Charles Dutoit , Gyorgy Fischer , Riccardo Chailly , Istvan Kertesz , Leone Magiera , Evelino Pido , Gianandrea Gavazzeni , Renée Fleming , Cecilia Bartoli , Luciano Pavarotti , Jussi Bjorling , and Renata Tebaldi Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000059RXO Release Date: 2001-02-27 |
Tracks:
- Carmen: Act 1: Prld - LPO/Sir Georg Solti
- La Traviata: Brindisi: Libiamo, Ne'lieti Calici - Luciano Pavarotti/Joan Sutherland/London Opr Chor/Terry Edwards
- La Boheme: Che Gelida Manina - Luciano Pavarotti
- Lakme: Flower Duet: Dome Epais Le Jasmin - Joan Sutherland/Jane Berbie
- Fedora: Amor Ti Vieta - Jussi Bjorling
- Carmen: Habanera: L'amour Est Un Oiseau Rebelle - Tatiana Troyanos/John Alldis Chor/John Alldis
- Nabucco: Chor Of The Hebrew Slaves: Va Pensiero - Chicago Sym Chor/Margaret Hills
- Le Nozze Di Figaro: Dove Sono - Kiri Te Kanawa
- Rigoletto: La Donna E Mobile - Luciano Pavarotti
- Lohengrin: Bridal Chor: Treulich Gefuhrt Ziehet Dahin - Konzertvereinigung Wiener Staatsopernchor/Walter Hagen-Groll
- Gianni Schicchi: O Mio Babbino Caro - Renata Tebaldi
- Il Barbiere Di Siviglia: Largo Al Factotum - Leo Nucci
- La Wally: Ebben?... Ne Andro Lontana - Angela Gheorghiu
- Madama Butterfly: Humming Chor - Wiener Staatsopernchor/Norbert Balatsch
- Carmen: Flower Song: La Fleur Que Tu M'avais Jetee - Placido Domingo
- Les Contes D'Hoffmann: Barcarolle: Belle Nuit, O Nuit D'Amour - Joan Sutherland/Huguette Tourangeau/Chor De La Radio Suisse Romande, Pro Arte De Lausanne Et Du...
- Tosca: E Lucevan Le Stelle - Placido Domingo
- Madama Butterfly: Un Bel Di - Mirella Freni
- Les Pecheurs De Perles: C'est Toi... Au Fond Du Temple Saint - Gregory Cross/Gino Quilico
Tracks:
- Die Walkure: The Ride Of The Valkyries - Wiener Phil/Solti
- Le Nozze Di Figaro: Voi Che Sapete - Cecilia Bartoli
- Pagliacci: Recitar!... Vesti La Giubba - Luciano Pavarotti
- La Boheme: O Soave Fanciulla - Mirella Freni/Luciano Pavarotti/Roland Panerai
- Il Trovatore: Anvil Chor: Vedi! Le Fosche - Chicago Sym Chor/Margaret Hillis
- Manon Lescaut: Donna Non Vidi Mai - Jose Carreras
- Don Giovanni: La Ci Darem La Mano - Lucia Popp/Tom Krause
- Mattinata - Andrea Bocelli
- Faust: Soldiers' Chor - Ambrosian Opr Chor/John McCarthy
- L'elisir D'amore: Una Furtiva Lagrima - Roberto Alagna
- Turandot: Signore, Ascolta! - Montserrat Caballe
- Don Giovanni: Champagne Aria: Finch'han Dal Vino - Bryn Terfel
- Cosi Fan Tutte: Trio: Soave Sia Il Vento - Renee Fleming/Anne Sofie Von Otter/Michele Pertusi
- Il Trovatore: Di Quella Pira - Luciano Pavarotti/Joan Sutherland/London Opr Chor/Terry Edwards
- Tosca: Vissi D'arte - Kiri Te Kanawa
- Carmen: Toreador Song - Jose Van Dam/Tatiana Troyanos/Norma Burrowes/Jane Berbie/Thomas Allen/Pierre Thau/John Alldis...
- Madama Butterfly: Love Duet: Vogliatemi Bene - Mirella Freni/Luciano Pavarotti
- Cavalleria Rusticana: Intermezzo - Nat PO/Gianandrea Gavazzeni
- Rusalka: O Silver Moon - Renee Fleming
- La Boheme: Si. Mi Chiamano Mimi - Angela Gheorghiu
- Turandot: Nessun Dorma - Luciano Pavarotti/John Alldis Chor/John Alldis
Amazon.com
The labels that are now gathered under the Universal Classics umbrella have a pretty impressive scorecard in the area of classical compilations. We've seen The Greatest Opera Show on Earth, The Yellow Guide: Classical Music, Best of the Millennium, and now there's The No. 1 Opera Album. But that's no surprise, since Universal has some of the finest interpreters in its catalogue to draw from. This two-CD set (at the price of one), for example, brings together the likes of Cecilia Bartoli, Renée Fleming, Luciano Pavarotti, Kiri Te Kanawa, Sir Georg Solti, Herbert von Karajan, and many more. Yet the other key to a successful compilation is canny anthologizing, and here again, you have a nice selection to give you a smattering of opera's heavyweights from the Italian, German, and French repertory (there's even a step outside the standard framework with an aria from Dvorák's lovely Rusalka). Ranging from 1959 to 1997, the choices from back catalogue will doubtless be the entry ticket for many into this grandest of the arts. --Sarah ChinCustomer Reviews:
The beautiful gift of opera..........2007-07-17
Pretty darn good.......2007-07-04
The Opera #1 Opera Album.......2007-06-07
Excellent assortment.......2007-05-12
Great Selections.......2007-03-31
covering mainly from the classcal
to the to the romantic periods, a most
memorable selection here is Leo Nucci
in a lagendary performance of Rossini's
"Largo al Factotum" from "Il Barbiere di Seviglia"
also Andrea Bocelli in his performance of Leoncavallo's
memorable "Matinatta" here in an orchestrated version.
Indeed some of opera's most loved arias are in this recording
various conductors, orchestras, and soloists. All in their
very best. Indeed a five-star recording...
Average customer rating:
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The Most Famous Opera Duets
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002SCA Release Date: 1994-04-12 |
Tracks:
- Les Peurs des perles Act 1 - Au fond du temple saint
- Madama Butterfly Act 1- Vogliatemi bene, un bene piccolino
- Le Nozze di Figaro Act III - Sull'aria - Le Nozze di Figaro
- La Traviata Act I - Un di, felice, eterea
- Lucia Di Lammermoor Act I - Ah! Verranna a te sull'aure
- Tristan und Isolde Act II - O sink hernieder, Nacht der Liebe
- Carmen Act I - Parle-moi de m
- Die ZauberflAct I - Bei Mern, welche Liebe F
- Lakmct I - Viens, Mallika
- Rigoletto Act I - il sol dell'anima
- Der Rosenkavalier Act II - Mir ist die Ehre wilderfahren
- Don Giovanni Act I - Li darem la mano
- La Boh Act IV - O Mimi, tu pi torni
- Il Trovatore Act IV - Miserere...Quel suon, quelle preci
Amazon.com
This is a misnomer--not all of these duets are all that famous--but it's a fine compilation nonetheless. You'll hear selections from Bizet's The Pearl Fishers (Nicolai Gedda and Ernest Blanc at their most elegant French), Madama Butterfly (Carlo Bergonzi and Renata Scotto--an impassioned pair), Lucia di Lammermoor (a classy Alfredo Kraus and Edita Gruberova), the lovely Lakme duet, The Presentation of the Silver Rose from Der Rosenkavalier (with the earnest Christa Ludwig and the other-worldly Teresa Stich-Randall), and a fine Trovatore "Miserere" (with Leontyne Price and Franco Bonisolli singing up a storm). There are many others, too--a veritable cornucopia of couplings--and a treat for the opera lover. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
Can't go wrong.......2007-07-14
Most Famous???.......2007-05-14
Only one song knew well.......2007-05-14
The Most Famous Opera Duets.......2007-01-05
Thanks again!!!!!
Good selection of opera highlights.......2006-11-04
Average customer rating:
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Masters of Classical Music (Box Set)
Manufacturer: Delta ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001VU5 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Eine kleine Nachtmusik: Allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Piano Concerto In A Major, K 488: Adagio - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Flute Concerto In D Major, K 314: Allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Symphony No. 40 in G minor: Molto allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Clarinet Concerto KV 622: Adagio - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Serenade, K 375: Menuetto - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Turkish March - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Violin Concerto, K 216: Allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Divertimento, K 334: Menuetto - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Horn Concerto, K 447: Allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
- Cassation, K 99: Allegro - Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Tracks:
- Overture No. 4 In Major: Rejouissance - J.S.Bach
- Overture No. 3 In D Major: Air - J.S.Bach
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 2 In F Major: I. Allegro - J.S.Bach
- Jesu, Joy Of Man's Desiring - J.S.Bach
- Overture No. 2 In B Minor: Menuet & Badinerie - J.S.Bach
- Prelude In C Major - J.S.Bach
- Toccata And Fugue In D Minor - J.S.Bach
- Prelude In C Minor - J.S.Bach
- Overture No. 1 In C Major: Passepied - J.S.Bach
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 1 In F Major: II. Adagio - J.S.Bach
- Kommst du nun, Jesu vom Himmel herunter, Chorale - J.S.Bach
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 In G Major: II. Allegro - J.S.Bach
- Violin Concerto In E Major: I. Adagio - J.S.Bach
- St. Matthew Passion: Finale Chorus: 'Wir setzen uns mit Tranen nieder' - J.S.Bach
Tracks:
- Symphony No. 5: Allegro con brio - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Fur Elise - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Violin Romance No. 2 - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- 'Moonlight' Sonata: Adagio sostenuto - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Minuet - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Symphony No. 8 In F Major: Allegretto scherzando - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Coriolan: Overture - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Piano Concerto No. 2: Adagio - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Symphony No. 5 In C Minor: Allegro - Ludwig Van Beethoven
- Egmont: Overture - Ludwig Van Beethoven
Tracks:
- Die Fledermaus: Die Fledermaus (Excerpts) - Johann Strauss
- Wine, Woman And Song - Johann Strauss
- Tritsch Tratsch Polka - Johann Strauss
- The Blue Danube - Johann Strauss
- The Gypsy Baron: Introduction - Johann Strauss
- Annen Polka - Johann Strauss
- Vienna Blood - Johann Strauss
- The Gypsy Baron: Einzugsmarsch - Johann Strauss
Tracks:
- Tannhauser: Overture - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Dance Of The Prentices - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Prelude Act 3 - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Aufzug der Meistersinger - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Der fliegende Hollander: Overture - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Lohengrin: Prelude - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Tristan und Isolde: Prelude And Liebestod - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
- Tannhauser: Arrival Of The Guests At Wartburg - MASTERS OF CLASSICAL MUSIC
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1: Allegro non troppo - Peter Tchaikovsky
- String Serenade: Waltz - Peter Tchaikovsky
- Violin Concerto: Andante - Peter Tchaikovsky
- The Sleeping Beauty: Introduction - Peter Tchaikovsky
- The Sleeping Beauty: Pas d'action - Adagio - Peter Tchaikovsky
- The Sleeping Beauty: Waltz - Peter Tchaikovsky
- Capriccio italien Op. 45 - Peter Tchaikovsky
- Swan Lake: Ballet Suite: Scene No. 10 - Peter Tchaikovsky
- Swan Lake: Ballet Suite: Waltz - Peter Tchaikovsky
- Eugene Onegin: Polonaise - Peter Tchaikovsky
Tracks:
- The 4 Seasons: Concerto No. 1 In E Major: Spring - VIVALDI, Antonio
- Siciliano - VIVALDI, Antonio
- Concerto In D Minor:: (Allegro Assai) Cologne Concerto - VIVALDI, Antonio
- The 4 Seasons: Concerto No. 2 In G Minor: Summer - VIVALDI, Antonio
- Oboe Sonata In B Flat Major, RV 34: Adagio - Allegro - Largo - Allegro - VIVALDI, Antonio
- The 4 Seasons: Concerto No. 3 In F Major: Autumn - VIVALDI, Antonio
- Oboe Concerto: Allegro non tasto - Largo - Allegro non molto - VIVALDI, Antonio
- Concerto In D Minor: (Largo e spiccato) Cologne Concerto - VIVALDI, Antonio
- The 4 Seasons: Concerto No. 4 In F Minor: Winter - VIVALDI, Antonio
Tracks:
- Scherzo No 1 In B Minor, Op. 20 - Frederic Chopin_
- Three Nocturnes, Op. 9: No 3 In B Major - Frederic Chopin_
- Twelve Etudes, Op. 10: No 5 In G Flat Major - Frederic Chopin_
- Twelve Etudes, Op. 25: No 10 In B Minor - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 13 In F Sharp Major - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 14 In E Flat Minor - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 15 In D Flat Major 'Raindrops' - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 16 In B Flat Minor - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 17 In A Flat Major - Frederic Chopin_
- 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 18 In F Minor - Frederic Chopin_
- Scherzo No. 2 In B Flat Minor, Op. 31 - Frederic Chopin_
- Waltz In E Flat Major, Op. 18 - Frederic Chopin_
- Nocturne In C Sharp Minor, Op. Posth. - Frederic Chopin_
- Four Mazurkas, Op. 24: No. 3 In A Flat Major - Frederic Chopin_
- Four Mazurkas, Op. 24: No. 4 In B Flat Minor - Frederic Chopin_
Tracks:
- Ave Maria - Franz Schubert
- Impromptu In E Flat Major - Franz Schubert
- Standchen - Franz Schubert
- Trout Quintet: Tema con variazioni - Franz Schubert
- 'Rosamunde': Entr'acte No. 1 - Franz Schubert
- Moment Musical In A Flat Major - Franz Schubert
- 'Rosamunde': Entr'acte No. 2 - Franz Schubert
- Moment Musical No. 3 In F Minor - Franz Schubert
- 'Rosamunde': Ballet Music No.2 - Franz Schubert
- Symphony No. 8 In B Minor 'Unfinished': Allegro moderato - Franz Schubert
Tracks:
- Nabucco: Overture - Verdi, Giuseppe
- Nabucco: Va pensiero, sull'ali dorate - Verdi, Giuseppe
- Aida: Prelude - Verdi, Giuseppe
- II Trovatore: Verdi! le fosche notturne (Gypsies' Chorus) - Verdi, Giuseppe
- II Trovatore: Or co' daddi, ma fra poco (Soldiers' Chorus) - Verdi, Giuseppe
- Aroldo: Overture - Verdi, Giuseppe
- La Traviata: Prelude - Verdi, Giuseppe
- La Traviata: Noi siamo zingarelle - Verdi, Giuseppe
- La Traviata:: Libiamo ne' lieti calici - Verdi, Giuseppe
- La Traviata: Di Madride noi siam mattadori - Verdi, Giuseppe
- La forza del destino: Overture - Verdi, Giuseppe
Customer Reviews:
masters of classical music.......2007-03-26
A good basic collection.......2006-11-10
An excellent introduction to classical music.......2006-10-18
Very Beautiful!!!!!1.......2006-10-05
Still Stuck on Beethoven.......2006-08-22
My interest started in this genre of music because I'm researching my ancestry in Prussia and this is the music of those times. Never mind my ancestors were poor peasants who probably never got the chance to hear such wonderful music... when listening to these CDs, I'm taken back in time... to a royal court in Europe... to another place in time. The music is inspiring, relaxing, invigorating.
I have yet to listen to all the CD's in the set. I'm stuck on Beethoven! Wasn't he AWESOME!?!
I think this set is a wonderful introduction to classical music!!!!!
Average customer rating:
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Twilight of the Gods: The Essential Wagner Collection
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000009ON7 Release Date: 1998-08-11 |
Tracks:
- The Valkyries: Ride Of The Valkyries
- Twilight Of The Gods: Siegfried's Funeral March
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act III
- The Flying Dutchman: Overture
- The Flying Dutchman: Sailors' Chorus
- The Rheingold: Journey Down To Nibelheim
- The Mastersingers Of Nuremberg: Overture
- Tannhauser: Overture
- Tannhauser: Entry Of The Guests
- Tannhauser: Tannhauser's Pilgrimage
- Siegfried: Act III Orchestral Interlude
- Twilight Of The Gods: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Twilight Of The Gods: Finale
- The Rheingold: Entry Of The Gods Into Valhalla
Tracks:
- Lohengrin: Prelude To Act I
- Lohengrin: Bridal Chorus
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act I
- Parsifal: Good Friday Music
- Parsifal: Transformation Scene
- Tannhauser: Venusberg Music
- Tannhauser: Pilgrims Chorus
- The Mastersingers Of Nuremburg: Prelude To Act III
- The Rheingold: Vision Of Valhalla (Scene II Introduction)
- Siegfried Idyll
- Siegfried: Brunnhildes Awakening
- Tristan And Isolde: Prelude To Act III
- Tristan And Isolde: Death Of Isolde
Amazon.com
If you like your Wagner served up in bleeding chunks or if you're simply in a hurry to hear the tunes, then this compilation is for you. The performances, drawn from the Polygram (mainly Deutsche Grammophon) back catalog, are for the most part authoritative. They feature the likes of Herbert von Karajan, with the Berlin Philharmonic, and Karl Böhm, with the Bayreuth Festival Orchestra (and chorus), in extracts from recordings of complete operas, and conductors Giuseppe Sinopoli, Otto Gerdes, and Antal Doráti in some of the more familiar overtures and preludes. Singing, without which it is impossible to get the full flavor of Wagner's work, is skirted whenever possible: this is an unapologetic tribute to Wagner the orchestral genius. At times the salesmanship is a little overblown--the glitzy packaging includes a cover shot of the helicopters from Apocalypse Now--and the sound, some of it from very good originals, seems to have been juiced with a little added digital reverb, resulting in an overall glassiness. The gaps between tracks are minimized, disco style, so there's no dead air, and the whole thing has an Entertainment Tonight feel to it. Were he around, Wagner would have screamed bloody murder, then happily taken his cut of the action. For today's on-the-go listener, this may well be the most practical way to enjoy Wagner's music, but we won't be happy until it motivates at least one newcomer to seek out a recording of a complete opera. Anyone who does that will find out what "apocalypse" really means. --Ted LibbeyCustomer Reviews:
Wonderful collection and price!.......2007-05-11
Awesome collection!.......2007-01-10
Helicopters? Marines?.......2006-12-05
Marine? Marine? Them Hueys in the movie was ARMY Air Cav, slick! "First of the ninth--air mobile." If you're going to dally down that primrose path, at least get it right.
Better yet, drop the choppers. Most people who listen to Wagner probably realize that quality of an artistic work has a mystically inverse relationship to the number of helicopters contained in it.
As for the music, it is good, but the operatic equivalent of sound bites, which may be just right for people who are new to Wagner or just can't take very much of him. Hmm...perfect for a helicopter ride, perhaps?
A great addition to my music collection.......2006-07-20
Quintessential Wagner.......2006-05-15
But if you like Wagner and appreciate "Ride Of The Valkyries", and maybe require it in just a little more substance than what is included in "Apocolypse Now Redux", then this is what you want. The extra tracks are bonuses and are quite good. Meets my needs, presentation great, performance excellent. I recommend it for anyone that needs a Wagner fix.
Average customer rating:
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Wagner: Das Rheingold
Manufacturer: Testament UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000J20D6A Release Date: 2006-12-12 |
Tracks:
- Prelude
- Weia! Wega!
- Garstig Glatter Glitsch'riger Glimmer
- Wallala! Wallala! Lalaleia! Lalaleia!
- Lugt, Schewestern!
- Der Welt Erbe
- Wotan, Gemahl, Erwache!
- Sanft Schlob Schlaf Dein Aug'
- Zu Mir, Freia!
- Endlich Loge!
- Immer Ist Undank Loges Lohn!
- Eini Runezauber Zwingt Das Gold Zum Reif
- Hor, Wotan, Der Harrenden Wort!
- Was Sinnt Nun Wotan So Wild?
- Jetzt Fand Ich's
Tracks:
- Auf, Loge, Hinab Mit Mir!
- Schau, Du Schelm!
- Nibelheim Hier
- Nehmt Euch In Acht!
- Vergeh', Frevelnder Gauch!
- Ohe! Ha Ha Ha!
- Da, Vetter, Sitze Du Fest!
- Gezahlt Hab'ich
- Bin Ich Nun Frei?
- Fasolt Und Fafner Nahen Von Fern
- Gepflanzt Sind Die Pfahle Nach Pfandes Mab
- Weiche, Wotan; Weiche!
- Hort, Ihr Riesen!
- Schwules Gedunst
- Abendlich Strahlt Der Sonne Auge
- Ihrem Ende Eilen Sie Zu
- Rheingold! Rheingold! Reines Gold!
Amazon.com
This, the third installment in the first stereo Ring (once thought lost), from the stage of the Bayreuth Festival in 1955, is as impressive and crucial to any collection as the previously released Siegfried and Die Walküre. Joseph Keilberth, whose devotion to Wagner was so great that he died conducting the second act of Tristan, leads an incredibly tight performance--almost jaunty in its storytelling. The opening chord, depicting the Rhine, is not played softly as marked; it does rather plunge us into the action with more energy than usual. The singing is universally remarkable. Hans Hotter's Wotan towers in its snideness and potency, while the Fricka of Georgine von Milinkovic is more subtle and alluring than we're accustomed to. Gustav Neidlinger's Alberich is, as on so many other recordings in which he sings this role, something to reckon with--a despicable but wretched character. The giants of Ludwig Weber and Josef Greindl have probably never been bettered; Paul Kuen's Mime is articulate and creepy and Rudolf Lustig's Loge is wily and clearly, cleanly sung. The only stain on this recording is the dreadful hissing noise given off by something called a "Mixtur-Trautonium," an electronic device invented to simulate the sound of the Nibelungs' anvils in Nibelheim. It's a distraction, but it can be lived with. This set is a must-have, and the extraneous noise during that scene is small price to pay for a performance this thrilling. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
An AWESOME "Rheingold" from a "RING" for the Ages!.......2007-06-19
Going back over the decades of my life, I remember when you only had one choice for a "Ring"...Solti/Decca, and that was it.
Then, there came the von Karajan, and then the Bohm/Bayreuth. Then, there seemed to be a mini-explosion of "Rings" over the following years, so many that it became/becomes staggering to think about!
Two statements:
1) If you are NEW to Wagner's "Ring" do not become confused with all the choices out there. There are really only two live recordings you need consider...the Krauss/Bayreuth, and this one, Keilberth/Bayreuth, and one studio recording to think about, the Solti/Decca set. You may think this excessive, but you NEED all three of these recordings. Period.
2) If you are FAMILIAR with Wagner's "Ring", then, assumably, you want the Best recording of it. I will assume you already have the Solti set, as most people do. The Krauss set you may or may not have. It is a stunner. And, now, the Keilberth....the most awesome recording, in many ways, you will ever experience.
Think: 1955, live, Bayreuth, the Best Wagnerians of their age, assembled together at the behest of Wagner's grandsons, in Wagner's theater, and the best part....recorded in STEREO! By Decca, of all people, before the Solti studio Ring was ever thought about! Why Decca sat on these magnificent recordings just blows my mind.
Luckily for us, Testament acquired the rights to release these timeless recordings, and we now, after 52 years, can marvel at and enjoy these magnificent performances of four of the greatest musical masterpieces ever written, combining to make up the most monumental work ever written for the stage! Enjoy this (set) of Masterpiece Recordings! ~operabruin
Age defying performance........2007-05-07
To those who have no Ring, this is an excellent choice. to those who own the Solti Ring, Karajan Ring, or whomever, this is a wonderful alternative. I was amazed at the quality of the sound. Why only 4 stars? Well, in the later music dramas, Walküre and Siegfried, Keilberth takes tempi that would allow those two operas to be on three CDs each. But they spread them over four CDs. At the Testament price, that gets very expensive.
What a find!.......2007-03-22
The Bayreuth 1955 Ring Cycle by Testament.......2007-03-08
All are excellent recordings. Truly top notch, though not inexpensive.
If the Ring Cycle is music you enjoy, I highly recommend this set with it's excellent musicians and singers.
About that "hissing noise"..........2007-02-22
Anybody who dismisses this remarkable set simply because of that is just missing the forest for the trees. But if you're in doubt, all you have to do is listen to the audio samples that Amazon has so helpfully provided: those for Disc 2, tracks 2 through 6 show off the "hissing noise" at its worst.
For whatever it's worth, I think that those who are kicking up a fuss over said "hissing nose" are being more than a bit silly. And I can't help wondering whether they could deal, even for a moment, with the much more severe audio compromises required to appreciate the incomparable recorded interpretations of Frida Leider & Lauritz Melchior & Friedrich Schorr.
Average customer rating:
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Wagner: Götterdämmerung
Manufacturer: Testament UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000J20D6K Release Date: 2007-02-13 |
Tracks:
- Prelude (orchestra) PROLOGUE
- Welch' Licht leuchtet dort?
- Dammert der Tag? (Drei Nornen)
- Dawn/Tagesgrauen/Lever du jour (Orchestra)
- Zu neuen Taten, teurer Helde (Brunnhilde)
- Mehr gabst du, Wunderfrau (Siegfried/Brunnhilde)
- O heilige Gotter (Brunnhilde/Siegfried)
- Siegfried's Rhine Journey (Orchestra)
- Nun hor, Hagen (Gunther/Hagen) ACT ONE, scene one
- En Weib weiss ich (Hagen/Gunther/Gutrune)
- Vom Rhein her tont das Horn (Gunther/Hagen/Siegfried) scene two Heil! Siegfried, teurer Heldi!
- Wer ist Gibichs Sohn? (Siegfried/Gunther/Hagen)
- Bergrusse froh, o Held (Gunther/Siegfried/Hagen/Gutrune)
- Vergass' ich alles (Siegfried)
Tracks:
- Gunther, wie heisst deine Schwester?
- Bluhenden Lebens labendes Blut (Siegfried/Gunther)
- Was nahmst du am Eide nicht teil? (Siegfried/Hagen/Gunther/Gutrune)
- Hier sitz' ich zur Wacht (Hagen) scene three
- Altgewohntes Gerausch (Brunnhilde/Waltraute)
- Hore mit Sinn, was ich dir sage !(Waltraute)
- Welch banger Traume Maren (Brunnhilde/Waltraute)
- Blitzend Gewolk (Brunnhilde)
- Brunnhild'1 Ein Freier kam (Siegfried/Brunnhilde)
- Jetzt bist du mein (Siegfried/Brunnhilde)
Tracks:
- Prelude (orchestra) ACT TWO, scene one
- Schlafst du, Hagen, mein Sohn? (Alberich/Hagen) scene two
- Hoiho, Hagen ! (Siegfried/hagen/Gutrune) scene three
- Hoiho! Hoihohoho!
- Rustet euch wohl (Hagen/choir)
- Gross Gluck und Heil (Choir/Hagen) scene four
- Heil dir, Gunther! (Choir)
- Brunnhild', die hehrste Frau (Gunther/Choir)
- Gegrusst sei, teurer Held (Gunther/Choir/Siegfried/Brunnhilde/Hagen)
- Einen Ring sah ich an deiner Hand (Brunnhilde/Siegfried/Gunther/Hagen)
- Betrug! Betrug! (Brunnhilde/Gutrune/Choir/Gunther/Siegfried)
- Helle Wehr! Heilige Waffe!(Siegfried/Brunnhilde/Choir)
- Glaub', mehr zurnt es mich als dich (Siegfried) scene five
- Welches Unholds List (Brunnhilde)
- Vertraue mir, betrogne Frau! (Hagen/Brunnhilde)
- Auf, Gunther, edler Gibichung! (Hagen/Gunther/Brunnhilde)
- So soll es sein! (Gunther/Brunnhilde/Hagen)
Tracks:
- Prelude (Orchestra) ACT THREE, scene one
- Frau Sonne sendet lichte Strahlen (Woglinde/Wellgunde/Flosshilde)
- Eine Albe fuhrte mich irr (Siegfried)
- Siegfried !
- Ein goldner Ring ragt dir am Finger!
- Behalt ihn, Held
- Weialala leia (Flosshilde/Wellgunde/Wogline/Siegfried) scene two
- Hoiho! (Hagen/Choir/Siegfried)
- Trink, Gunther, trink! (Siegfried/Gunther/hagen)
- Mime hiess ein murrischer Zwerg (Siegfried/Hagen/Choir)
- In Leid zu dem Wipfel (Siegfried/Hagen)
- Was hor' ich? (Gunther/Hagen/Choir)
- Brunnhilde, heilige Braut! (Siegfried)
- Funeral March (Orchestra) scene three
- War das sein Horn? (Gutrune)
- Hoiho! Hoiho!
- Siegfried - Siegfried ershlagen!(Gutrune/Gunther/Hagen)
- Schweight eures Jammers jauchzenden Schwall (Brunnhilde/Gutrune)
- Starke Scheite schichtet mir dort
- Wie Sonne lauter strahlt mir sein Licht
- O ihr, der Eide ewige Huter!
- Mein Erbe nun nehm/ ich zu eigen
- Fliegt heim, ihr Raben!
- Grane, mein Ross, sei mir gegrusst! (Brunnhilde)
Amazon.com
Testament's 1955 Bayreuth Festival Götterdämmerung completes their release of that extraordinary Ring cycle. As in the previous operas of the tetralogy, this Götterdämmerung scores on several counts. As part of the first Ring cycle to be recorded in true stereo it has important historical interest. As an example of Joseph Keilberth's revelatory conducting, it reminds us that he was a great Wagnerian. His control of the dramatic narrative is superb, with tempos that were considered fast for his time but now are convincingly apt. And as an example of great Wagner singing, it's nothing less than spectacular. Astrid Varnay is a magnificent Brünnhilde, singing with passion, her big dramatic soprano soaring over the orchestra in the Immolation Scene. Windgassen was the Siegfried of choice in the 1950s, and he fits the bill with his virile tenor and characterization. In Joseph Greindl, Keilberth had a black-voiced Hagen who conveyed real menace.The rest of the large cast is as close to flawless as we have a right to expect, with perhaps the best Gunther (Hermann Uhde) and Alberich (Gustav Neidlinger) on disc, and in Maria von Ilosvay, a Waltraute who is gripping in her long scene with Brünnhilde. The singers are as strong in the last act as they are in the first, remarkable for this long opera. The orchestra is uniformly excellent and the sonics, if not up to today's state-of-the-art engineering, are natural, accurately depicting the voices and projecting a good sense of space and stage spread. This is a unique Götterdämmerung (and Ring cycle), with an unbeatable combination of great performance and decent stereo sound. --Dan Davis
Album Description
The is the fourth and final release of the first stereo recording of Wagner's Ring Cycle, Gotterdammerung recorded during the 1955 Bayreuth Festival and featuring Astrid Varnay, with Joseph Keilberth, conductor.Customer Reviews:
A "GOTTERDAMMERUNG" and a "RING" for the AGES!.......2007-06-19
Going back over the decades of my life, I remember when you only had one choice for a "Ring"...Solti/Decca, and that was it.
Then, there came the von Karajan, and then the Bohm/Bayreuth. Then, there seemed to be a mini-explosion of "Rings" over the following years, so many that it became/becomes staggering to think about!
Two statements:
1) If you are NEW to Wagner's "Ring" do not become confused with all the choices out there. There are really only two live recordings you need consider...the Krauss/Bayreuth, and this one, Keilberth/Bayreuth, and one studio recording to think about, the Solti/Decca set. You may think this excessive, but you NEED all three of these recordings. Period.
2) If you are FAMILIAR with Wagner's "Ring", then, assumably, you want the Best recording of it. I will assume you already have the Solti set, as most people do. The Krauss set you may or may not have. It is a stunner. And, now, the Keilberth....the most awesome recording, in many ways, you will ever experience.
Think: 1955, live, Bayreuth, the Best Wagnerians of their age, assembled together at the behest of Wagner's grandsons, in Wagner's theater, and the best part....recorded in STEREO! By Decca, of all people, before the Solti studio Ring was ever thought about! Why Decca sat on these magnificent recordings just blows my mind.
Luckily for us, Testament acquired the rights to release these timeless recordings, and we now, after 52 years, can marvel at and enjoy these magnificent performances of four of the greatest musical masterpieces ever written, combining to make up the most monumental work ever written for the stage! Enjoy this (set) of Masterpiece Recordings! ~operabruin
Full Circle.......2007-05-09
I would not want to be without the Clemens Krauss RING of 1953, another great cycle from Bayreuth, but the quality of sound, good as it is, cannot match the 1955 cycle, concluded with this recording. The only real problem the Decca team encountered was with the 'infernal' smoke and fire machine that runs through the Nibelheim scene of DAS RHEINGOLD.
There is no such technical problem with GOTTERDAMMERUNG. This, and its companion dramas of the Cycle, surely must be the benchmark in terms of cast, sound quality, conducting, and orchestral execution. It may be outpointed in certain areas, but overall this GOTTERDAMMERUNG completes a RING that ought to be the first choice, if cost is not an issue.
It is expensive. The cost for the vinyl version is staggering, though I suppose purists will insist on having that incarnation. I am very happy with the CDs, which I purchased one set at a time as they emerged. It took a while, but the wait has been worth it.
Which Gotterdammerung to buy, Keilberth or Solti?.......2007-04-21
Solti: The overwhelming element here has always been the Vienna Phil, recorded in sumptuous grandeur by Decca. For sweep and epic proportion, no one has ever come close to matching them. The next freat thrill comes from Nilsson, a Brunnhilde of incomparable power and gleaming penetration. Solti gives us his best effort in Wanger, and among the supporting roles Christa Ludwig (Waltraute), Gunter (Fischer-Dieskau), Alberich (Neidlinger) and Hagen (Frick) cannot be faulted. Windgassen's voice had become worn and leathery over the years, and his Siegfried, although highly experiened and musical, isn't a pleasure to listen to for beauty of voice or youthfulness. (It sounds considerably more taxed in the live Bayreuth set under Bohm on Philips.)
It must be remembered that the stereo era hadn't seen a complete Gotterdammerung before this pioneering effort, which stunned the classical music world in the early Sixties. After four decades, it remains undiminished and sells for reduced price is various reissues. ONe should seek out the latest remastering since the original ADRM version from the early Eighties sounds thin and shrill compared to the original LPs.
Keilberth: Decca also recorded this 1955 live Gotterdammerung, which would be the standard to this day if they hadn't rejected it and moved on to record Solti seven years later. The decision made sense at the time. Although the sonics are fine for a live performance, we hear considerable audience noise and the occasional fluff in the orchestra, which in any event isn't the equal of the Vienna Phil. by a long stretch. Keilberth does one of his best jobs coducting, but he is proficient rather than inspired. I like the opening of the opera, which he keeps from dawdling, but at times Keilberth is too anxious to move forward, and the great set pieces of the Rhine Journey, Funeral March, and Immolation Scene lack the grandeur of studio recordings.
In the cast the standout is Astrid Varnay as Brunnhilde, who sings with passion and commitment, and whose voice is heroic and gleaming enough to encompass the role (she doesn't get tired by the end but is even ore resplendent in the Immolation Scene). Windgassen is nearly as good--he and Varnay were frequently paird and had made DG duet recordings of Wagner). HIs voice is fresh, and he shows stamina during the Act 1 love duet. In the end he was an almost-Heldentenor, but we haven't seen his like as Siegfried since, so I can't complain. The supporting cast is nearly as strong as for Solti, with Neidlinger repeating his signature Alberich. Decca's microhones capture the voices onstage quite realistically and with minimal fade-out due to stage movements.
Overall, Keilberth's interpreatation goes for momentum and propulsion, which is fine in such a long evening, while Solti gives us richness, epic sweep, and the incomparable beauty of the VPO. I am not aobut to make recommendations between the two sets. Many of us who love Gotterdammerung have owned the Solti forever, so it's wonderful to get a second bite of the apple. We'll own both and be greateful.
FINE ENDING TO A GOOD RING.......2007-02-23
Having said all that, I must admit that this Gotterdammerung is the finest part of Keilberth's cycle. The urgency of his conducting carries the narrative along on a wave of inevitability to its tragic (if, indeed, it can be called tragic) and glorious end. This works to best effect in the taut, urgent and intense arch of Act 2. In the grandest moments of Act 3, however, you may feel something more is needed. For a Funeral March and an Immolation that carry the full grandeur and weight of the destruction of a whole civilisation (which is what they ultimately are), perhaps you need to turn to Kna, to Goodall or to Furtwangler.
The singers throughout the lifespan of this first Wieland Wagner production were remarkably consistent and uniformly of a far higher standard than we are forced to accept these days. Varnay never sang with less than 100% commitment, here more than ever. Hers is a white-hot performance: the voice has more warmth and darkness (if that's not oxymoronic) than a Nilsson, less mumsiness than a Flagstad and she uses it with bold abandon in the Dawn Duet and the Oathtaking of Act 2. Windgassen is truly a youthful hero (compared to his outings for Solti and Bohm) and brings real poetry to the Narration and Death. I'm inclined to think Neidlinger the definitive Alberich and here, as throughout the cycle, he gives his definitive performance. Uhde, too, is near enough the definitive Gunther, but his performance for Knappertsbusch in '51 perhaps shades this one for penetrating depth of characterisation. I've always found Greindl's voice a bit unattractive compared to the rich blackness of a Frick or an Andresen, but it certainly has the size to dominate a Wagnerian orchestra in full cry in his summoning of the vassals. Rhinemaidens, Norns and a superb Pitz-trained chorus are all worthy of their colleagues.
This is undoubtedly a very fine performance, one that does not deserve to have lain gathering dust on the shelves for so long. The finest Ring on disc, though? For my money that accolade would go to Krauss or, in Gotterdammerung alone, Knappertsbusch in 1951 - a concentrated, intense and profoundly moving performance on the grandest scale. The sound on these new `First Ever Stereo' recordings is good, too, giving an excellent impression of the unique Bayreuth acoustic, but Culshaw and Solti in Vienna are undeniably in a different class. To sum up, this is a Gotterdammerung well worth hearing, owning even, alongside other Bayreuth versions. But to say it sweeps all before it is perhaps overstating the case.
The Climax of the Definitive Ring.......2007-02-16
I would like to clarify something here. I fully appreciate other ring recordings in existence. I would never want to be without the Kempe or Krauss Bayreuth Rings, or the great 1951 Knappertsbusch Gotterdammerung. Each has something to contribute to our knowledge and appreciation of this, one of the greatest works of western art. But again, I must say that if I prefer this Keilberth Ring above others, it is merely because this is one Ring in which everything has gone right and fits so perfectly together. Plus, Keilberth seems to unite all the best qualities of the aforementioned conductors and makes this such a compelling experience for this listener. As for the recorded sound, I do not agree that it is behind in quality to the Solti/Decca. Wagner intended for there to be a BALANCE between singer and orchestra, not a predominance of orchestra over singer, something that happens in the Solti at times. This is not to belittle that achievement, but rather, that to my mind and ears, this is more what the composer wanted us to hear. The contrapuntal yextures are simply clearet in this recording; the Rhine Journey could almost be a Bach Brandenburg Concerto! REAL power comes from clarity, subtlety, light and shade, and tension, rather than from sheer muscle and brute force. I feel that Keilberth, like Krauss, Kempe and (at times) Knappertsbusch, offers us these qualities in greater portions than does Solti (again, not to in any way belittle his great concept). It is fortunate that, as I had said in the Rheingold review, there is a richness of great Ring recordings to offer us thought.
Average customer rating:
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Wagner: Die Walküre
Manufacturer: Testament UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FILUMY Release Date: 2006-06-13 |
Tracks:
- Die Walkure: Prelude (Vorspiel) (Act One)
- Wes Herd dies auch sei (Act One, Scene One)
- Kuhlende Labung gab mir
- Mud am Herd fand ich den Mann (Act One, Scene Two)
- Friedmund darf ich nicht heissen
- Aus dem Wald trieb es mich fort
- Ich weiss ein wildes Geschlect (Hunding)
- Ein Schwert werhiess mir der Vater (Siegmund) (Act One, Scene Three)
- Schlafst du, Gast? (Sieglinde/Siegmund)
- Wintersturme wichen dem wonnermond (Siegmund)
- Du bist der Lenz
- Wehwalt heisst du furwahr? (Sielinde/Siegmund)
Tracks:
- Prelude (Vorspiel) (Act Two)
- Nun zaume dein Ross (Wotan/Brunnhilde) (Act Two , Scene One)
- Der alte Sturm (Wotan/Frica)
- So ist es denn aus mit den weigen Gottern (Frica)
- Nichts lerntest du
- Was verlangst du? (Wotan/Fricka/Brunnhilde)
- Schlimm, furcht' ich, schloss der Streit (Brunnhilde/Wotan) (Act Two, Scene Two)
- Was keinem in Worten ich kunde
- Ein andres ist's (Wotan/Brunnhilde)
- O sag/, kunde (Brunnhilde/Wotan)
- Raste nun hier (Act Two, Scene Three)
- Hinweg! Hinweg ! (Siegmund/Sieglinde)
Tracks:
- Siegmund ! Sieh' auf mich! (Act Two, Scene Four)
- Hehr bist du, und heilig gewaht'ich
- So wenig achtest du ewige Wonne? (Brunnhilde/Siegmund)
- Zauberfest bezahmt ein Schlaf(Siegmund)(Act Two, Scene Five)
- Kehrte der Vater nur heim ! (Sieglinde/Hunding/Siegmund/Brunnhilde/Wotan)
Tracks:
- Prelude - Hojotoho! Hojotoho! (Die acht Walkuren)
- Schuzt mich und helft (Brunnhilde/Die acht Walkuren) (Act Three, Scene One)
- Nicht sehre dich Sorge um mich (Sieglinde/Brunnhilde/Waltraute/ortlinde/Die acht Walkuren
- Steh, Brunnhild'! (Wotan/Die acht Walkuren/Brunnhilde)
- Wo is Brunnhild' (Wotan/Die acht Walkuren) (Act Three, Scene Two)
- Hier bin ich, Vater (Brunnhilde/Wotan)
- Wehe ! Weh'! Schwester (Die acht Walkuren/Brunnhilde/Wotan)
- War es so schmahlich (Act Three, Scene Three)
- Nicht weise bin ich
- So tatest du
- Du zeugtest ein edles Geschlect (Brunnhilde/Wotan)
- Leb wohl, du kuhnes, herrliches Kind !
- Denn einer nur freie die Braut
- Loge, hor! Lausche hieher ! (Wotan)
Amazon.com
"Best" is an overused word, and particularly difficult to apply to performances of operas as huge and multifaceted as Wagner's. There are now dozens of Walküres available on CD, and most have much to recommend them. This one, part of a live Bayreuth Ring recorded in real stereo by the Decca recording crew in 1955 but never before released, is just about ideal: all of the singers, absolute golden-age-of-Wagner-singing performers, are in their prime. Ramon Vinay's baritonal Siegmend is both powerful and sympathetic; Gré Brouwenstijn's Sieglinde is wonderfully womanly, though occasionally troubled by a prominent vibrato; Josef Greindl's Hunding is a character to fear. Hans Hotter's Wotan is flawless---his sadness and tenderness are as vividly expressed as his rage and, thanks to the always- alert and dramatically intelligent leadership of Joseph Keilberth, his confrontation with the imperious Fricka of Georgine von Milinkovic has the ring of absolute honesty. Astrid Varnay's Brünnhilde is here caught at its best--utterly secure at all registers, girlish and impetuous but loving, a true powerhouse. The Valkyries are a noisy but accurate bunch. The Bayreuth Orchestra plays as if possessed---the trilling flutes in the "Ride," wonderfully captured by the engineers, add to the thrill. The "best"? Well, absolutely remarkable. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
A "Die Walkure" for the AGES from a "RING for the AGES".......2007-06-19
Going back over the decades of my life, I remember when you only had one choice for a "Ring"...Solti/Decca, and that was it.
Then, there came the von Karajan, and then the Bohm/Bayreuth. Then, there seemed to be a mini-explosion of "Rings" over the following years, so many that it became/becomes staggering to think about!
Two statements:
1) If you are NEW to Wagner's "Ring" do not become confused with all the choices out there. There are really only two live recordings you need consider...the Krauss/Bayreuth, and this one, Keilberth/Bayreuth, and one studio recording to think about, the Solti/Decca set. You may think this excessive, but you NEED all three of these recordings. Period.
2) If you are FAMILIAR with Wagner's "Ring", then, assumably, you want the Best recording of it. I will assume you already have the Solti set, as most people do. The Krauss set you may or may not have. It is a stunner. And, now, the Keilberth....the most awesome recording, in many ways, you will ever experience.
Think: 1955, live, Bayreuth, the Best Wagnerians of their age, assembled together at the behest of Wagner's grandsons, in Wagner's theater, and the best part....recorded in STEREO! By Decca, of all people, before the Solti studio Ring was ever thought about! Why Decca sat on these magnificent recordings just blows my mind.
Luckily for us, Testament acquired the rights to release these timeless recordings, and we now, after 52 years, can marvel at and enjoy these magnificent performances of four of the greatest musical masterpieces ever written, combining to make up the most monumental work ever written for the stage! Enjoy this (set) of Masterpiece Recordings! ~operabruin
A Memorable Performance!.......2007-02-05
The two stars of the show are clearly Hans Hotter as Wotan and Astrid Varnay as Brunnehilde. Hotter was probably the leading heldenbaritone of the 20th century, and there really is no one better as Wotan. Others may have richer and fuller voices, but few are as good singing actors as was Hotter. Varnay is a revelation. If Birgit Nilsson was said to have a voice like burnished steel, Varnay, (who was one of Nillson's closest friends in the business), has a darker, richer instrument that gives her portrayal more "humanity", if one can use that word about a god's daughter! (She's also incredible on the "Siegfried" CD and don't miss her Tristan und Isolde with Ramon Vinay.) Known to many of my generation only through her later "character" mezzo roles, she is enjoying a renaissance now through these incredible releases from the mid-50s, the height of her career.
Joseph Keilberth conducts with drive and energy, and he gets ample support from the Bayreuth orchestra. The sound quality is remarkable for that time, (and in stereo, no less), and although the price is a bit steep, if one buys it from one of the dealers that sell on Amazon one can save quite a bit.
It may not be the "best" Ring cycle, but it's right up there and a wonderful opportunity to hear some of the last 50 years' top Wagnerian artists in their prime.
Nostalgic Pleasure.......2007-01-21
AN EPIC RING - PART II.......2007-01-10
I'm Overwhelmed!.......2006-12-22
I'd like to add a few words about Astrid Varnay's performance. She delivers the most spellbinding "Todesverkuendigung" Scene ever. She begins absolutely majestically and implacably, stern and impersonal in her delivery of Siegmund's fate, then gradually undergoes the most convincing transformation to a compassionate and ultimately rebellious daughter that I have ever experienced. The same goes for Hotter, turning from optimism over his plan succeeding to utter dismay and finally despair when Fricka pulls out the rug from under him. I cannot fathom the sheer stupidity of John Culshaw in vetoing the issue of this Ring.
Average customer rating:
|
Wagner: Overtures & Preludes
Manufacturer: EMI Classics ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002S08 Release Date: 1992-09-29 |
Tracks:
- Tannher: Overture
- Tannher: Grand March
- Der Fliegende Holler: Overture
- Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 1
- Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act 3
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Overture
- Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg: Prelude to Act 3
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 1
Tracks:
- Lohengrin: Prelude to Act 3
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act 1
- Parsifal: Act 1 Transformation scene
- Parsifal: Prelude to Act 3
- Parsifal: Good Friday Music
- Das Rheingold: Entrance of the Gods
- Die Walkure: Ride of the Walkyries
- Siegfried: Forest murmurs
- Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Rhine Journey
- Gotterdammerung: Siegfried's Funeral March
Customer Reviews:
A well-kept secret.......2007-05-18
Essential Wagner.......2006-06-17
Even if you have other compilations of Wagner's music in "bleeding chunks", I can assure you they don't come close to this one; and with two discs (the second containing mostly music from Parsifal and the "Ring") at 14 bucks, there is absolutely no excuse not to have this essential recording. So go ahead and buy this disc, never buy another Wagner compilation again, and with the money you save get started on the more important task at hand: the full operas.
Excellent Wagner from a surprising source ... or maybe not!.......2004-09-27
Go For Boult.......2003-07-08
Memorable and dramatic- A must have for Wagner fans.......2000-03-20
Average customer rating:
|
Wagner: Siegfried
Manufacturer: Testament UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000E4FI54 Release Date: 2006-04-11 |
Amazon.com
This live-from-Bayreuth 1955 Siegfried, in stereo, was professionally recorded by Decca's engineers as part of what was to be the first full Ring Cycle on records. Contractual disputes and producer John Culshaw's desire to produce an "ideal" Ring in the studio killed the release of this Ring, and the tapes were locked away in some dark chamber until now. The result is breathtaking: Hotter, Windgassen (playing his first Siegfried), Neidlinger (as Alberich), and Varnay at their best, with Joseph Keilberth at the helm. Keilberth was not one for "interpretation" or anything other than telling a good story with drama, fine pacing, and musical accuracy. His tempi are invariably quick without ever being rushed, and he has some of Böhm's intensity, some of Solti's visceral excitement, and some of Furtwängler's grandeur, while at the same time presenting a Siegfried that is very much its own. I'm not certain that this is the "best" performance of this opera, but if it were the only one you owned, it would be enough. --Robert LevineCustomer Reviews:
A "SIEGFRIED" for the AGES from a "RING for the AGES".......2007-06-20
Going back over the decades of my life, I remember when you only had one choice for a "Ring"...Solti/Decca, and that was it.
Then, there came the von Karajan, and then the Bohm/Bayreuth. Then, there seemed to be a mini-explosion of "Rings" over the following years, so many that it became/becomes staggering to think about!
Two statements:
1) If you are NEW to Wagner's "Ring" do not become confused with all the choices out there. There are really only two live recordings you need consider...the Krauss/Bayreuth, and this one, Keilberth/Bayreuth, and one studio recording to think about, the Solti/Decca set. You may think this excessive, but you NEED all three of these recordings. Period.
2) If you are FAMILIAR with Wagner's "Ring", then, assumably, you want the Best recording of it. I will assume you already have the Solti set, as most people do. The Krauss set you may or may not have. It is a stunner. And, now, the Keilberth....the most awesome recording, in many ways, you will ever experience.
Think: 1955, live, Bayreuth, the Best Wagnerians of their age, assembled together at the behest of Wagner's grandsons, in Wagner's theater, and the best part....recorded in STEREO! By Decca, of all people, before the Solti studio Ring was ever thought about! Why Decca sat on these magnificent recordings just blows my mind.
Luckily for us, Testament acquired the rights to release these timeless recordings, and we now, after 52 years, can marvel at and enjoy these magnificent performances of four of the greatest musical masterpieces ever written, combining to make up the most monumental work ever written for the stage! Enjoy this (set) of Masterpiece Recordings! ~operabruin
Part 3 of the Definitive Ring.......2007-01-29
Conductor Joseph Keilberth delivers the most exhuberant reading I have ever heard of this score. At first, I found his jarring, as though it did not fit with the character of Rheingold and Walkure, but as he works his way to Act 3 and Wotan's resigned encounter with Erda, the underlying gloom is there, alright, just momentarily supplanted by the courageous young Volsung who has forged his father's sword, gained his identity, and is off to experience the one emotion he has never received from anyone, love. It is impossible to speak of all the great details and character of Keilberth's performance save to say that it tops every other in drive, sensitivity (the Forest Murmurs have to be heard to be believed in their extreme sensitivity)and profundity. This is for me the very peak of great Wagner conducting.
The cast is probasbly the best ever assembled for this work. Windgassen completely surpasses himself; he is more tender and vulnerable than almost any other Siegfried (Max Lorenz is his equal, but no better, and Windgassen makes Melchior sound like a noisy bellower), but in addition, HE REALLY IS A HELDENTENOR HERE! He rings with heroic might in "Nothung! Nothung! Neidliches Schwert!" in Act 1, his musings in Acts 2 and 3 are the very height of gentleness (No Nazi, this Siegfried!) and he is freah and ardent in the great Awakening Scene. For sure, he has never equalled his sheer potency in this role. I am sure he will be at least as great in Goetterdaemmerung.
Hans Hotter completes his role of Wotan, under the guise of Wanderer. He is wise, humorous, resigned in his encounter with Erda in Act 3, but then suddenly reveals Wotan's self-delusions when he reacts aggressively to Siegfried, only to be rudely dismissed when his power is shattered. No other Wotan has ever reached these heights, and Hotter remains THE Wotan of all time, even beating such immortals as Schorr, Schipper, Bockelmann, and Sigurd Bjoerling.
Paul Kuen is really deliciously maliciuos as Mime, especially in his oily, poisonous attempt to kill Siegfried in Act 2; for once, there is no reason to pity this character, he is just SO nasty and slimy. Neidlinger's Alberich, by comparison, has dignity and just grievances against his counterpart Wotan ("Licht-Alberich", after all!). Greindl is frightening as Fafner, giant-turned-dragon, but dies with regret at having murdered his brother Fasolt and now suffering the same fate. Hollweg is an enchanting Forest Bird, almost sounding like a boy treble, as specified by Wagner. Von Illosvay is even more impressive as Erda here than in Rheingold, majestically implacable and outraged at Wotan's hypocrisy.
And then, there is Astrid Varnay.
Flagstad, Nilsson, Moedl, Leider, move over! ASTRID RULES!
Has there ever been as radiant a "Heil dir, Sonne!" as Varnay's? NO! She is perfection itself. From proud goddess to a woman fearful of human emotions to ardent lover, she is right there at every moment. How she could have been so unappreicated in America is appalling to me. She is truly the great Hochdramatische!
The sound is if anything even more impressive than in the previous two operss. Culshaw should be resurrected and hung byt he you-=know-whats for keeping this from the public ofr so many years.
No doubt about it, BAYREUTH, KEILBERTH, WINDGASSEN, HOTTER AND VARNAY RULE FOREVER!
None Better!.......2007-01-20
Hans Hotter is perhaps the greatest Wagnerian baritone of the 20th century. Others may have had darker or richer natural voices, but few have had voices with more character and none sang with greater artistry. And Astrid Varnay is nothing short of a revelation. She sings with a fiery richness, with almost a mezzo-soprano timbre, that makes her singing, particularly her final duet with Windgassen, simply electrifying. Interestingly enough, although all three sang at the Met, neither Windgassen nor Hotter had much of a Met career, and Varnay was essentially forced out of regular Met appearances--all because Rudolph Bing didn't like any of them. (What WAS he thinking of! This is probably the best cast for Siegfried assembled in the last 60 years!)
The smaller parts are also well sung, and the orchestra plays with a richness of tone and directness of purpose that is quite refreshing when compared to some other, more self-indulgent, performances. The sound quality is quite good--and is positively remarkable for a live stereo recording in 1955. The price is a little scary, but the recording is available for less from the other sellers on Amazon. It is worth it.
AN EPIC RING - PART III.......2007-01-14
Excellent Work - Limited Appeal.......2006-11-06
Track Listings:
- Weill: Berliner Requiem; Walt Whitman Songs
- Wilhelm Friedemann Bach: Twelve Polonaises, F. 12 - Steve Barrell
- Zelenka: Lamentationes Jeremiæ Prophetæ
- 17th Century Italian Recorder Music
- Alexander Scriabin: The Preludes, Vol. 2 - Paul Komen
- Bach: Overture No.2/Vivaldi: Concerto Op.3/Marcello: Concerto/Telemann: Concerto/Quantz: Concerto
- Bach: Trio Sonatas in Original Versions
- Balkan Vistas, Spanish Dreams
- Bartok: Piano Works
- Bassoon Music - Virtuoso
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Great Composers Instrumental Collection: Johann Sebastian Bach
Forty Years - The Artistry of Tony Bennett [Box set]
Hits Of Luther Vandross (Karaoke)
Jon Øivind Ness: Schatten; Dandy Garbage