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Kurt Moll, who will celebrate his 75th birthday this coming spring, was not merely a celebrated opera singer who performed on the world’s most famous stages. The sophistication and precise diction that characterized his greatest roles – such as Gurnemanz in Wagner’s Parsifal, Baron Ochs in Strauss’s Rosenkavalier or Sarastro in Mozart’s Magic Flute – always reminded one that he was a singer who, besides opera, also paid equal attention to the lied, to which he devoted the same perfectionism. As was traditional for a bass with a full-bodied, supple timbre and a deep register, he enjoyed particular triumphs on the concert podium with ballads ranging from Haydn via Loewe to Shostakovich. In the genre of the lied he also achieved success with a repertoire that has usually been dominated by higher voices. If we want to know how Moll managed to become an exception to the rule, we can easily find out by listening to his recording of Schubert’s Winterreise from 1982. It is now available once more on the ORFEO label, and on a single CD for the first-ever time (its length had made this technically impossible in earlier editions). Together with his regular accompanist Cord Garben, Kurt Moll here offers what the international press of the day hailed as an exemplary recording of perhaps the most famous song cycle of all. This recording was thus awarded the Diapason d’or in France, where Moll’s Winterreise was held in similar regard to the legendary performances of Hans Hotter. He was especially praised for his unmannered, introverted interpretation. His thoroughly cantabile style was without any declamatory harshness, yet remains completely clear in its articulation. Kurt Moll’s Winterreise thus remains captivating to the present day and is one of the most important acoustic documents of this singer’s art. With the ideal balance that he achieved between words and music he became not just one of the most significant singers of recent decades, but also one of the singing teachers most in demand. | 
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| |  | sung in German
Jeanette Scovotti (Olympia), Norma Sharp (Giulietta), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Lindorf, Coppelius, Dapertutto, Mirakel), Julia Varady (Antonia), Gisela Schunk (Stella), Hanna Schwarz (Stimme der Mutter), Siegfried Jerusalem (Hoffmann), Klaus Hirte (Spalanzani), Norbert Orth (Nathanael) & Kurt Moll (Crespel) Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks & Münchner Rundfunkorchester, Heinz Wallberg Jacques Offenbach’s grand opera Les Contes d’Hoffmann sung in German, following a German tradition up to nowadays. The 1980 Electrola recording is led by an all-star cast including Siegfried Jerusalem, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Julia Varady and Hanna Schwarz, conducted by Heinz Wallberg. | 
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| |  | The Essential Wagner
Hildegard Behrens, Jessye Norman, Helga Dernesch, Cheryl Studer, Birgit Nilsson (sopranos), Marjana Lipovsek, Christa Ludwig (mezzos), Siegfried Jerusalem, Jon Vickers, Nicolai Gedda, Ben Heppner (tenors), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (baritone), Kurt Moll (bass) Bernard Haitink, Klaus Tennstedt, Herbert von Karajan, Andre Cluytens, Sir Adrian Boult The best-loved and most popular works by Richard Wagner, performed by the world’s leading artists, in an accessible format at budget price. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Carlos Cossutta (Otello), Margaret Price (Desdemona), Gabriel Bacquier (Iago), Peter Dvorsky (Cassio), Kurt Equiluz (Rodrigo), Kurt Moll (Lodovico), Stafford Dean (Montano), Jane Berbié (Emilia), Hans Helm (Un Araldo) Wiener Philharmoniker, Wiener Staatsoper, Sir Georg Solti “Under Solti's baton, this Otello is too fast and furious but Price is one of the finest Desdemonas on CD.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2012 *** “It has [Solti's] particular flair for seizing upon the tensions of each scene and emphasizing them...Cossutta is a no-nonsense Otello. He sings the role as well if not better than anyone since del Monaco...[Price] is even more precise and sensitive in her singing...what a joy to hear the music done with such consistently clear, fresh and full tone....[Bacquier's] touch with the text—examples proliferate— constantly has one marvelling again at the wonderful marriage of Boito's words and Verdi's music.” Gramophone Magazine, September 1978 | | | (Sorry, download not available in your country) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Anneliese Rothenberger (Pamina), Edda Moser (Königin der Nacht), Peter Schreier (Tamino), Walter Berry (Papageno), Kurt Moll (Sarastro), Theo Adam (Sprecher), Willi Brokmeier (Monostatos), Olivera Miljakovic (Papagena), Leonore Kirschstein, Ilse Gramatzki, Brigitte Fassbaender (Drei Damen), Walter Gampert, Peter Hinterreiter, Andreas Stein (Drei Knaben), Wilfried Badorek, Günter Wewel (Zwei Priesten/Zwei Geharnischten) Chor & Orchester der Bayerischen Staatsoper, Wolfgang Sawallisch From fairy tale to great opera: with Die Zauberflöte Mozart made the step from simple Singspiel to a full-blown German opera, thus laying the foundations for an independent opera culture in the German language. The 1973 Electrola recording combines a truly legendary vocal ensemble, featuring first and foremost Edda Moser, whom many people still regard as the best Queen of the Night of all time, Walter Berry as a Papageno oozing Viennese charm, and Anneliese Rothenberger as an enchantingly touching Pamina. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Eva Marton (Elektra), Marjana Lipovsek (Klytämnestra), Bernd Weikl (Oreste), Hermann Winkle (Aegisth), Kurt Moll (Orest's Tutor), Daphne Evangelatos, Shirley Close, Birgit Calm, Julie Faulkner, Caroline Maria Petrig (Maids) Chor und Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks, Wolfgang Sawallisch The mid-price collection presents some of the most important and admired recordings of the EMI Classics and Virgin Classics catalogue which make EMI - The Home of Opera. Bonus Disc contains synopsis and libretto with translation. “The women are particularly good: Eva Marton's heavy duty soprano especially rich in lower colours in the title role; Cheryl Studer's Chrysothemis light and fluttery; and Marjana Lipovsek's Klytämnestra magnificently baleful.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2011 **** “Marton's devastating portrayal of the crazed, obsessive Elektra was a riveting experience in the theatre and her complete involvement in the role comes across with comparable immediacy here - the blood runs cold on several occasions...Lipovsek's Klytämnestra is superb: a frighteningly credible depiction of delusion and hate...A formidable success from every point of view” International Record Review, January 2011 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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