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Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868) Il Turco in Italia Callas's Fiorilla is the tenth complete opera recording she made, the only one for EMI [Columbia/Angel]...
Gioachino Rossini (1792-1868)
Il Turco in Italia
Callas's Fiorilla is the tenth complete opera recording
she made, the only one for EMI [Columbia/Angel] that
she undertook of a then unknown work, and which she
would later sing at La Scala, Milan. She had sung it first
at the Eliseo, Rome in 1950, in its first revival in more
than ninety years: half-a-century ago the majority of
Rossini's operas were unfamiliar and rarely if ever
performed, save for Il barbiere di Siviglia and
Guglielmo Tell, and an occasional L'Italiana in Algeri
and La Cenerentola. Sessions took place at La Scala at
the end of August and beginning of September 1954.
The conductor Gianandrea Gavazzeni tells 'how the
performances at the Eliseo were my first encounter with
Callas. She was already quite famous, but as Kundry,
Isotta, Norma and Turandot. I soon learned the capacity
she had for artistic discipline ... she rose to a
remarkable musical level and mastered all the technical
difficulties. She was a revelation in opera buffo ... how
studious she was and never tired of rehearsing. She
adapted her voice to the needs of the comic style; it was
one of her great gifts: the ability to adapt. ... The voice
was very equal in scale, with a great diversity of colour
and with a binding legato. ... She had such a success.
People still speak of her Fiorilla.' This recording was
first published the following April, at the time the new
Zeffirelli production was introduced at La Scala. As
Zeffirelli recalled, it was backstage a couple of years
previously during a rehearsal for his production of La
Cenerentola that Callas came to, she was so amused,
remembering her Roman success in comedy, that she
asked whether he might be interested in producing Il
Turco in Italia.
One of those particularly memorable moments in
many of Callas's performances, barely suggested in the
score, comes in the duet between the ageing husband,
Geronio and his flighty wife, Fiorilla: 'Per piacere alla
Signora'. After timorously rebuking her for flirting with
Selim, the Turk, she rounds on him. 'Ed osate
minacciarmi! Maltrattarmi! Spaventarmi! ... Mi
lasciate ... Vo' vendetta ... Via di qua. Per punirvi aver
vogl'io. Mille amanti ognor d'intorno far la pazza notte
e giorno, divertimi in libertà....' How delicious is her
mock rage! The way she literally flings the words in his
face; the expressive variety she utilizes: 'Leave me!',
'Vengeance', 'I'll have a thousand lovers night and day,
etc., etc.' It is not necessary to understand every word of
the Italian libretto so telling is her delivery.
La Scala was the home of Il Turco in Italia; it had
had its première there in 1814. As with many operas
when Italy was simply a geographical expression,
composers were often content to cannibalise; in those
days travelling from Milan to Naples, depending upon
which road one took, even if they were passable and in
good condition, might involve three, perhaps four
different frontiers, each with its own immigration and
customs. After moving to Naples Rossini was content to
poach several pieces from Il Turco in Italia. For
example the duet referred to above, 'Per piacere', he
also included [with the same text by Romani] in La
Gazzetta a new opera he wrote for the San Carlo two
years later. The edition of Il Turco recorded here, and
used, presumably at the Eliseo, Rome and La Scala, is
typical of its time, with curious cuts of varying length,
only a modicum of appoggiaturas and with hardly any
embellishments. Not until comparatively recently with
the establishment at Pesaro of the Fondazione Rossini
has diligent research been undertaken. A recent
recording, taking advantage of this scholarship, is a
more complete and careful version, but unfortunately it
suffers from a Fiorilla whose florid singing is full of
aspirates [audible exhalations of breath]; so obviously is
her voice caught in her throat, the analogy she conjures
up is that of a turkey gobbling.
Now that Callas's recordings are coming into the
public domain Naxos has chosen to complete this
album, not with recordings made higgledy-piggledy,
when her voice was only a thin echo of what it had once
been, but those that she recorded directly after
completing Il Turco in Italia. Later in September 1954
she journeyed to London, some 35 miles to the northwest,
to Watford Town Hall, and there recorded two
recital discs. From the Coloratura Lyric Album included
here is Rosina's Una voce poco fa from Il barbiere di
Siviglia. Of all the innumerable recordings of this
classic it ranks second only to that of Luisa Tetrazzini
[1871-1940]. When it was first issued a year later, in
September 1955 as I recall, it created a sensation.
Although Serafin's slow tempo does not encourage any
sparkling virtuosity, her florid singing is immaculate -
no turkey gobbling here. Then, before the bel canto
revival was underway, she sings unwritten
embellishments unashamedly, as in Tetrazzini's day.
They can be found in the Ricordi edition of Ricci's
collection; she executes them all accurately and
expressively. At the beginning of the second verse, 'Io
sono docile', so musical is her singing that her voice
seems to pre-echo the succeeding flute passage. Then,
the difference between how she produces the last note at
the end of the cadenza in the first verse, a high B,
wholly in head voice, from the same note at the end of
the aria, in which she mixes middle with head voice.
Later performances survive of her singing it, but it is
typical of her, none is as assured vocally or musically.
No less extraordinary is the Bell Song from Lakme,
which so many coloraturas reduce to a tiresome
vocalise. As she narrates the story of the bells she
supports her voice aloft in the longest-breath legato,
bringing to her singing a considerable range of
expression; each note is cleanly and clearly marked and
throughout she makes all manner of dynamic shadings.
In both verses, at the end of the phrases, 'La magica
squilletta dell'incantator' [the magic bells of the
enchanter'] and 'la squilla dell'Indian incantator' ['the
bells of the Indian enchanter'], which occur
immediately before Lakme imitates the bells, she seems
subtly to anticipate them by finding a matching timbre
to suit them. She shows just how much more music
there is in this aria than the average coloratura suggests.
Following World War II Nicola Rossi-Lemeni
(1920-1991) was one of three important basses in Italy,
with Boris Christoff and Cesare Siepi. Half Russian and
born in Istanbul, he made his debut in 1946 at La Fenice
in Venice, as Varlaam in Boris Godunov. In 1947 he
went to the United States to appear with a new company
in Chicago as Timur in Turandot, and there met Callas,
who was to sing the title rôle. It folded, however, before
it began. In New York they auditioned with the tenor
Giovanni Zenatello, then retired, who was Artistic
Director at Verona arena. As a result in August Callas
made her Italian debut, as Gioconda, and Rossi-Lemeni
was Alvise. In 1948 he sang at La Scala Milan and the
San Carlo Naples. In 1949, again with Callas, he
appeared at the Colon in Buenos Aires. In the early
1950s his career took him to Covent Garden, London,
San Francisco Opera, the Metropolitan New York, the
Paris Opera and, again with Callas, to the Lyric
Chicago. His stage personality was impressive yet he
did not establish himself at any of these. His voice had
no ring on the tone and was not properly supported; air
escaped through it like leaking gas. Although at first he
sang Boris, Don Giovanni, Mephistophelès in Faust,
Boito's Mefistofele, Filippo in Don Carlo, Guardiano in
La forza del destino, Basilio in Il barbiere di Siviglia,
Colline in La Bohème, Ramfis in Aida, Oroveso in
Norma, Giorgio in I Puritani, by the mid-1950s he was
undertaking buffo and character rôles: Caspar in
Weber's Franco Cacciatore, Dulcamara, Selim in
Rossini's Il Turco in Italia, Becket in Pizzetti's
Assassino nella cattedrale and Lazaro di Jorio in La
figlia di Jorio, Lunardo in Wolf-Ferrari's Quattro
Rusteghi, Cerevek in Mussorgsky's La fiesta di
Sorocinzi, and Bloch's Macbeth. He appeared in
several world premières and after 1965 became a stage
director. For EMI [Columbia/Angel] he recorded
Giorgio, Oroveso and Selim with Callas, for Cetra,
Filippo, and for Philips, Rossini's Mose.He was
married to the distinguished soprano Virginia Zeani.
Nicolai Gedda [b.1925] is one of the greatest lyric
tenors of the twentieth century and unquestionably the
most versatile. Born in Stockholm, his father was a
Russian who sang in the Don Cossack Choir; after a
brief interval in Leipzig, where the family went when
his father was appointed cantor with the Orthodox
Church, they returned to Stockholm in 1934. There it
was that young Nicolai discovered his voice and began
his studies with a distinguished teacher, Carl Martin
Ohmann. He made his debut in 1951 in the altitudinous
tenor rôle of Chapdelou in Adam's Le Postillon de
Longjumeau. His career over fifty years took him to
pretty well all the leading opera houses throughout
Europe and America, and he sang a vast repertory in
pretty well every language, in operas like Oberon, Don
Giovanni, Boris Godunov, La Sonnambula, Die
Entführung aus dem Serail, I vespri siciliani, L'elisir
d'amore, Der Barbier von Bagdad, Mireille, La
traviata, I Puritani, Faust, among many others. Equally
renowned as a concert singer, he appeared in recital
with piano and in liturgical works with orchestra. His
recording career was no less exceptional; one of the
busiest undertaken by any singer, it also included
operetta and other music he did not venture in public.
Even in the 21st century, at Covent Garden, he was still
singing and in for him a new rôle, the Archbishop in
Pfitzner's Palestrina.
The career of singing actor baritone Mariano
Stabile [1888-1962] goes back to another age. Born in
Palermo he made his debut there in 1911, as Marcello
in La Bohème; for more than a decade he undertook
other lyric rôles, but without making any particular
effect. Not until his La Scala triumph, under Toscanini
as Verdi's Falstaff, and he was nearly forty, did he
come into his own. Thereafter he appeared mostly as
Falstaff, Don Giovanni and Gianni Schicchi in Milan
and elsewhere in Italy, and with occasional visits to
other European cities, Vienna and Salzburg, as well as
across the Atlantic at Chicago and Buenos Aires. Even
in the 1930s his voice, records suggest, does not sound
much different from the way it does on this recording:
dry and wobbly, he seems always to have been more
actor than singer. Still, though we cannot see him, there
is his enunciation of the text to enjoy.
The conductor Gianandrea Gavazzeni [1909-
1996] was born in Bergamo. Like others in the pre-war
period he began his studies as a composer, at the
Accademia di Santa Cecilia, Rome and later, with
Ildebrando Pizzetti, at the Milan Conservatory. He
made his debut as a conductor in 1940. After the war
from 1948 he appeared regularly at La Scala Milan
[between 1965/8 he was Artistic Director] and was
engaged at the Bolshoy Moscow, Glyndebourne, the
Metropolitan New York and Chicago Lyric. At
Florence in 1955 he conducted his own amplified
edition of Mascagni's Le maschere; at Edinburgh in
1957 the same La Scala Zeffirelli production of Il
Turco in Italia but without Callas; and at La Scala in
1962 an all-star Meyerbeer's Ugonotti with Sutherland,
Simoniato, Cossotto, Corelli, Ganzaroli, Tozzi and
Ghiaurov. As well as a number of opera recordings, he
was also a writer, publishing music criticism for
Corriere della Sera, and studies of various opera
composers, as well as guides to their works.
Michael Scott
is the author of Maria Meneghini Callas
Il Turco in Italia (The Turk in Italy) (more info)
Performed by:
Chieti Marrucino Opera Orchestra
Milan La Scala Orchestra
Composed by:
Gioachino Rossini
Conducted by:
Marzio Conti
Gianandrea Gavazzeni
Gianni Fabbrini, fortepiano
Myrto Papatanasiu, soprano
Massimiliano Gagliardo, baritone
Amedeo Moretti, tenor
Piero Guarnera, baritone
Daniele Zanfardino, tenor
Natale de Carolis, baritone
Jolanda Gardino, mezzo-soprano
Mariano Stabile, baritone
Piero De Palma, tenor
Maria Callas, soprano
Nicola Rossi-Lemeni, bass
Franco Calabrese, bass
Nicolai Gedda, tenor
Damiana Pinti, mezzo-soprano
Fabio D’Orazio, choirmaster
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Act I: Overture - 8:44
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Act I Scene 1: Nostra patria (Chorus, Zaida, Albazar) - 2:20
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Act I Scene 1: Ho da fare un dramma buffo (Poet, Chorus) - 3:02
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Act I Scene 1: Ah! Se di questi zingari l’arrivo (Poet) - 0:46
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Act I Scene 1: Vado in tracci di una zingara (Geronio) - 2:01
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Act I Scene 1: Chi vuol farsi astrologar? (Zaida, Chorus, Geronio) - 1:42
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Act I Scene 1: Ah, mia moglie, san chi sono (Geronio, Zaida, Chorus) - 1:12
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Act I Scene 1: Non si da follia maggiore (Fiorilla) - 3:37
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Act I Scene 1: Voga, voga, a terra, a terra (Chorus, Fiorilla) - 1:45
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Act I Scene 1: Bella Italia, alfin ti miro (Selim, Fiorilla) - 2:39
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Act I Scene 1: Serva...Servo... (Fiorilla, Selim) - 3:36
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Act I Scene 1: Amici...soccorretemi (Geronio, Narciso, Poet) - 0:54
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Act I Scene 1: Un marito scimunito (Poet, Geronio, Narciso) - 5:27
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Act I Scene 2: Ola tosto il caffe (Fiorilla, Selim) - 1:39
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Act I Scene 2: Siete Turchi, non vi credo (Fiorilla, Geronio, Selim, Narciso) - 3:15
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Act I Scene 2: Io stupisco, mi sorprende (Selim, Fiorilla, Geronio, Narciso) - 2:50
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Act I Scene 2: Come! Si grave scorno soffrir potete in pace? (Narciso, Selim, Geronio, Fiorilla) - 3:14
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Act I Scene 2: Un vecchio far non può maggior follia (Geronio, Poet, Fiorilla) - 2:24
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Act I Scene 2: Per piacere alla signora (Geronio, Fiorilla) - 2:30
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Act I Scene 2: No, mia vita, mio tesoro (Fiorilla, Geronio) - 3:32
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Act I Scene 3: Gran meraviglie (Chorus, Zaida) - 1:20
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Act I Scene 3: Per la fuga e tutto lesto (Selim, Poet, Zaida) - 4:31
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Act I Scene 3: Perche mai se son tradito (Narciso) - 2:34
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Act I Scene 3: Evviva d’amore il foco vitale (Chorus) - 0:54
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Act I Scene 3: Chi servir non brama Amor s’allontani (Fiorilla, Selim) - 1:58
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Act I Scene 3: Qui mia moglie ha da venire (Geronio, Fiorilla, Selim, Narciso, Poet, Zaida) - 0:56
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Act I Scene 3: Ah! Che il cor non m’ingannava (Fiorilla, Selim, Poet, Geronio, Narciso, Zaida) - 2:45
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Act I Scene 3: Vada via, si guardi bene di cercar l’amante mio (Zaida, Fiorilla, Selim, Narciso, Geronio, Albazar, Poet) - 4:47
Il Turco in Italia (The Turk in Italy) (more info)
Performed by:
Chieti Marrucino Opera Orchestra
Milan La Scala Orchestra
Composed by:
Gioachino Rossini
Conducted by:
Marzio Conti
Gianandrea Gavazzeni
Gianni Fabbrini, fortepiano
Myrto Papatanasiu, soprano
Massimiliano Gagliardo, baritone
Amedeo Moretti, tenor
Piero Guarnera, baritone
Daniele Zanfardino, tenor
Natale de Carolis, baritone
Jolanda Gardino, mezzo-soprano
Mariano Stabile, baritone
Piero De Palma, tenor
Maria Callas, soprano
Nicola Rossi-Lemeni, bass
Franco Calabrese, bass
Nicolai Gedda, tenor
Damiana Pinti, mezzo-soprano
Fabio D’Orazio, choirmaster
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Act II Scene 1: A proposito, amico (Geronio, Poet, Selim) - 1:18
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Act II Scene 1: D’un bell’uso di Turchia (Selim, Geronio) - 3:17
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Act II Scene 1: Se Fiorilla di vender bramate (Selim, Geronio) - 3:24
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Act II Scene 1: Non v’e piacer perfetto se nol procura amor The latter wishes Fiorilla were amenable, like his first - 2:17
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Act II Scene 1: Che Turca impertinente! (Fiorilla, Zaida, Selim) - 2:28
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Act II Scene 1: Credete alle femmine che dicon d’amarvi! (Selim, Fiorilla) - 1:52
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Act II Scene 1: In Italia certamente non si fa l’amor cosi (Fiorilla, Selim) - 3:15
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Act II Scene 1: Fermate...Cosa c’e (Poet, Geronio, Narciso) - 1:24
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Act II Scene 1: E Selim non si vede! (Fiorilla, Narciso, Selim, Zaida, Geronio) - 2:13
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Act II Scene 1: Oh! Guardate che accidente! (Geronio, Narciso, Zaida, Selim, Fiorilla) - 3:20
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Act II Scene 2: Dunque seguitemi (Geronio, Narciso, Selim, Fiorilla, Zaida) - 1:24
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Act II Scene 2: Questo vecchio maledetto (Fiorilla, Zaida, Narciso, Selim, Geronio) - 2:43
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Act II Scene 3: Si mi e forza partir (Fiorilla, Poet, Geronio) - 1:18
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Act II Scene 3: Son la vite sul campo appassita (Fiorilla, Geronio, Poet) - 2:26
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Act II Scene 3: Rida a voi sereno il cielo (Chorus, Selim, Zaida, Poet, Fiorilla, Geronio, Narciso) - 2:11
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Act II Scene 3: Restate contenti (Selim, Zaida, Poet, Fiorilla, Geronio, Narciso, Chorus) - 0:54
Il barbiere di Siviglia (The Barber of Seville) (more info)
Performed by:
Latvian National Symphony Orchestra
Victor Orchestra
Canadian Opera Company Orchestra
Budapest Failoni Chamber Orchestra
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Frankfurt Brandenburg State Orchestra
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Rome Opera Orchestra
Hungarian State Opera Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
Wurttemberg Philharmonic Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra
Milan La Scala Orchestra
Dresden Staatskapelle
Studio orchestra
English National Opera Orchestra
Torino Teatro Regio Orchestra
RAI Symphony Orchestra, Milan
Metropolitan Orchestra
Composed by:
Pietro Cimara
Lawrence Tibbett
Nathaniel Shilkret
Pietro Mascagni
Gioachino Rossini
Arturo Toscanini
Conducted by:
Lodovico Zocche
Josef A. Pasternack
Will Humburg
Bruno Campanella
Rudolf Kempe
Alberto Erede
Lorenzo Molajoli
Rosario Bourdon
Mario Bernardi
Gabriele Bellini
Michael Halasz
Pier Giorgio Morandi
Alexander Rahbari
Tullio Serafin
Percy Pitt
Richard Bradshaw
Heribert Beissel
Vincenzo Bellezza
David Parry
Alexandrs Vilumanis
Bruno Pola, baritone
Paolo Montarsolo, bass
Alberto Carusi, baritone
John McCormack, tenor
Nicoletta Curiel,
Aaron St. Clair Nicholson, baritone
Elina Garanca, soprano
Friedemann Rohlig, bass
Hao Jiang Tian, bass
Luciana Serra,
Arno Schellenberg, baritone
Feodor Chaliapin, bass
Richard Tauber, tenor
Luisa Tetrazzini, soprano
Thomas Allen, baritone
Nazzareno de Angelis, bass
Titta Ruffo, baritone
Maria Bayo, soprano
Tito Schipa, tenor
Benno Ziegler, baritone
Sonia Ganassi, mezzo-soprano
Franco de Grandis, bass
Jennie Tourel, mezzo-soprano
Studio pianist, piano
Alan Opie, baritone
Ingrid Kertesi, soprano
Bruce Ford, tenor
Andrew Shore, bass
Robert Merrill, baritone
Della Jones, mezzo-soprano
Lado Ataneli, baritone
Risto Lauriala, piano
Kazmer Sarkany, baritone
Laszlo Orban, baritone
Ferenc Korpas, bass
Maria Callas, soprano
Tito Gobbi, baritone
Ewa Podles, contralto
Mario Sammarco, baritone
Angelo Romero, bass
Michael Schade, tenor
Roberto Servile, baritone
Rockwell Blake, tenor
Enzo Dara, bass
Alain Trudel, sackbut
Ramon Vargas, tenor
Marion Talley, soprano
Rinaldo Alessandrini, harpsichord
Allan Monk, baritone
Aurelio Faedda, bass
Russell Braun, baritone
Recording date: 1911
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Il barbiere di Siviglia, Act I: Una voce poco fa - 6:55
Dinorah, "Le pardon de Ploermel" (Sung in Italian) (more info)
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Dinorah, Act II: Ombre legere, "Shadow Song" - 5:43
Lakme (more info)
Performed by:
Victor Orchestra
Canadian Opera Company Orchestra
Lamoureux Concert Association Orchestra
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra
Toronto Symphony Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Studio orchestra
Paris Opera-Comique Orchestra
Orchestra Internazionale d'Italia
Metropolitan Orchestra
Composed by:
Leo Delibes
Conducted by:
Francois Ruhlmann
Rosario Bourdon
Albert Wolff
Mario Bernardi
Georges Sebastian
Tullio Serafin
Johannes Wildner
Richard Bradshaw
Bruno Seidler-Winkler
Maurice Frigara
David Parry
Steven White
Diego Cossu, tenor
John McCormack, tenor
Alison McHardy, mezzo-soprano
Serena Lazzarini, soprano
Thelma Badaro, soprano
Anna Beretta, alto
Miliza Korjus, soprano
Claudine Collart, soprano
Feodor Chaliapin, bass
Mado Robin, soprano
Agnes Disney, mezzo-soprano
Simone LeMaitre, mezzo-soprano
Libero de Luca, baritone
Jean Borthayre, bass
Jacques Jansen, baritone
Pierre Germain, tenor
Jane Perriat, soprano
Edmond Chastenet, tenor
Camille Rouqetty, tenor
Leila Ben Sedira, soprano
Miguel Villabella, tenor
Robert Couzinou, baritone
Tito Schipa, tenor
Alessandra Ruffini, soprano
Bruno Pratico, bass-baritone
Aline Kutan, soprano
Mary Plazas, soprano
Bruce Ford, tenor
Dean Robinson, baritone
Adriana Kohutkova, soprano
Elizabeth Futtal, soprano
Maria Callas, soprano
Giuseppe Morino, tenor
Carlos Piantini,
Lily Pons, soprano
Barry Banks, baritone
Alain Trudel, sackbut
Monica Benvenuti, soprano
Diana Montague, mezzo-soprano
Marcel Wittrisch, tenor
Isabel Bayrakdarian, soprano
Carmelo Corrado Caruso, baritone
Tracy Dahl, soprano
Catherine Robbin, mezzo-soprano
Denisa Slepkovska, mezzo-soprano
Benjamin Butterfield, tenor
Recording date: 25 November 1925
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Lakme, Act II: Ou va la jeune Hindoue?...La-bas, dans la foret, "Bell Song" - 8:01
I vespri siciliani (more info)
Performed by:
Hungarian State Opera Orchestra
Philharmonia Orchestra
Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra
Wurttemberg Philharmonic Orchestra
Berlin State Opera Orchestra
Europa Symphony
Russia Philharmonia
Cologne Radio Orchestra
Composed by:
Giuseppe Verdi
Pietro Mascagni
Conducted by:
Lodovico Zocche
Pier Giorgio Morandi
Alexander Rahbari
Tullio Serafin
Johannes Wildner
Bruno Seidler-Winkler
Helmut Froschauer
Constantine Orbelian
David Parry
Wolfgang Grohs
Sondra Radvanovsky, soprano
Miliza Korjus, soprano
Hao Jiang Tian, bass
Igor Morozov, baritone
Lado Ataneli, baritone
Janez Lotric, tenor
Maria Callas, soprano
Franz Hawlata, bass
Rosa Ponselle, soprano
Alastair Miles, bass
Recording date: 15-24 February 1994
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I vespri siciliani, Act V: Merce, dilette amiche: Bolero - 4:09