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Erwin Schrott (Figaro), Martina Janková (Susanna), Michael Volle (Count), Malin Hartelius (Countess), Judith Schmid (Cherubino), Irène Friedli (Marcellina), Carlos Chausson (Bartolo), Martin Zysset (Basilio), Andreas Winkler (Curzio), Giuseppe Scorsin (Antonio), Eva Liebau (Barbarina) Chor und Orchester der Oper Zürich & Chor des Opernhauses Zürich, Franz Welser-Möst Stage Director - Sven-Eric Bechtolf Stage Design - Rolf Glittenberg Costume Design - Marianne Glittenberg Lighting - Jürgen Hoffmann The Zurich Opera House has recorded more productions for DVD than any other opera house in the world. During the last twelve years, conductor Franz Welser-Möst has conducted more than fifty premieres with the Zurich Opera. They perform regularly together in London, Paris, Tokyo and other major international cities. Welser-Möst has enjoyed a long and very fruitful relationship with the Zurich Opera. From 1995 - 2002, he was Chief Conductor of the House, was Principal Conductor from 2002 - 2005 and was then appointed General Musikdirektor. In June 2007, Welser-Möst was appointed General Musikdirektor designate of the Staatsoper, Vienna, a position he will assume in the 2010/11 season. Prior to that, he undertakes a new production of “The Ring” in Vienna, which started in the 2007/8 season. He is also Music Director of the Cleveland Orchestra. Welser-Möst has assembled over the years a close-knit ensemble which is frequently praised for both its vocal and acting abilities. Please see below for press quotes on this production. Subtitles: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart - Violin Concertos Nos. 3-5
Transart continues to introduce us to exciting new artists with this very special release featuring the talents of violinist Olivier Charlier. “Olivier Charlier is elegance itself. Thanks to a perfect technique and a constant elegance in his playing, he reveals an incisive, percussive side of the violin, while retaining a bright tone, with delightful colouring.” Hubert Stoecklin, Res Musica. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart - Mass in C & Requiem
Gabriele Hierdeis, Alison Browner & Marcus Ullmann Kolner Kantorei, Volker Hempfling The renowned German Choir Kolner Kantorei celebrated it’s 40th anniversary in March 2006 and gave this concert in Limburg Cathedral. This live recording captures the excitement and sheer emotion of the occasion. Conducted by Volker Hempfling choir, soloists and orchestra all give glorious accounts of themselves in these two great choral masterpieces. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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Zaide is one of Mozart’s early Singspiels, an opera that is often ignored partly because it was incomplete. The opera was based on a Turkish fairytale that was popular at the time which dealt with captured Europeans and Turkish sultans, slavery, liberation and gallantry. However, his characters have been deemed one-dimensional and the conflicts immature which is probably the reason it was never finished. The quality of music is not to be dismissed and Mozart himself believed this to be a valuable piece of work, despite the fact he didn’t finish it. This is a stirring new recording and features a stunning cast. Martin Haselböck is a distinguished conductor but also specializes in unearthing long lost vocal/instrumental works and transcribes them for historical resurrections on period instruments with his Wiener Akademie, an ensemble that he founded himself, and performs these round the world. He has conducted many Mozart operas and in 1991 was awarded the Mozart Prize of the City of Prague. | | | (also available to download from $21.00) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Recorded live at Het Musiektheater, Amsterdam on 2nd, 7th & 19th February 2008.
Laura Aikin (Konstanze), Edgaras Montvidas (Belmonte), Kurt Rydl (Osmin), Mojca Erdmann (Blonde), Michael Smallwood (Pedrillo), Steven Van Watermeulen (Bassa Selim) The Netherlands Chamber Orchestra & Chorus of De Nederlandse Opera, Constantinos Carydis (musical director) & Johan Simons (stage director) Johan Simons’ feisty production of Die Entführung aus dem Serail is an intelligently innovative account of Mozart’s 1782 comic tale of abduction, love, loyalty and forgiveness. Kurt Rydl’s Osmin is hilarious, with just the right edge of latent thuggery; Mojca Erdmann’s smart and cheeky Blonde sports a red riding coat, high latex boots and a belt that she is not afraid to use on the men! Laura Aikin’s Konstanze, torn between true love and obligation, reveals a vast range of human emotions and Edgaras Montvidas’ Belmonte portrays his coming-of-age with clarity and genuine charisma. The performance is whipped up to a feverish pitch in the pit by Constantinos Carydis, the orchestra and chorus responding with fleet virtuosity. This ground-breaking performance delivers everything one could wish for from a Mozart opera, combining thrilling energy with a profound sense of lyrical beauty and truth. “Athenian wonder boy Constantinos Carydis has everything you could want from a Mozart conductor, combining manic energy with perfectionism and a profound sense of lyrical beauty.” Bloomberg News PICTURE FORMAT: 16:9
LENGTH: 214 Mins
SOUND: 2.0 LPCM STEREO / 5.0 DTS SURROUND
SUBTITLES: EN/FR/DE/ES/IT/NE
“Director Johan Simons's take on Die Entführung is summed up by a remark in one of the accompanying interviews: 'At the end people see that the Pasha is a much better match for Konstanze than Belmonte is.' Other productions have suggested a mutual attraction between the heroine and her oriental captor. Simons carries this to extremes. His staging is dominated by Konstanze's inner struggle between her loyalty to her betrothed and her disturbing feelings for the man who, we sense, has awakened her sexually. Far from resisting his advances, she and the youthful, half-westernised Pasha, subtly and believably portrayed by Steven van Watermeulen, can hardly keep their hands off each other during her opening aria; and the longing she sings of in 'Traurigkeit' here takes on a very different meaning. Yet even in the final vaudeville, exchanged glances with the Pasha suggest an undertow of regret for romantic passion and exotic adventure sacrificed in the cause of duty. While there are irritating details in Simons's modern-dress production, it is psychologically credible, often compelling. Laura Aikin vividly portrays Konstanze's fluctuating emotions in dialogue and aria. If 'Traurigkeit' ideally needs a softer, more plangent colour, she makes 'Martern aller Arten' a graphic embodiment of her conflicting feelings of desire and guilt, charging the stratospheric coloratura with a sense of neurotic desperation. In Simons's conception Belmonte is an anxious, self-absorbed ditherer, understandably fazed by Konstanze's initial coolness towards him. Wearing a more-or-less permanently bemused air, Edgaras Montvidas sings his four arias with firm, sappy tone, if no special grace of phrasing. Michael Smallwood makes a likeable, resourceful Pedrillo, cheerfully enduring Osmin's sadistic hair-pulling and nose-tweaking; and Mojca Erdmann, clad in mini-skirt and high-heeled patent leather boots, is a delightful, thoroughly selfassured Blonde, impatient with Konstanze's soulsearching, and using her sexual power to reduce Kurt Rydl's formidable, orotund Osmin to a doeeyed baby. In keeping with the whole production, comic gags are largely eschewed. Constantinos Carydis conducts the excellent Netherlands CO with zest and a fair sense of period style. While many will prefer a more comically straightforward staging, Simons's production certainly makes you think afresh about Mozart's ostensibly innocent, happily-ever-after harem Singspiel.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “Other productions have suggested a mutual attraction between the heroine and her oriental captor. Simons carries this to extremes. His staging is dominated by Konstanze's inner struggle between her loyalty to her betrothed and her disturbing feelings for the man who, we sense, has awakened her sexually. While there are irritating details in Simon's modern-dress production, I found it psychologically credible, often compelling. Laura Aikin vividly portrays Konstanze's fluctuating emotions in dialogue and aria. ...she makes "Marten aller Arten" a graphic embodiment of her conflicting feelings of desire and guilt, charging the stratospheric coloratura with a sense of neurotic desperation. Constantinos Carydis conducts the excellent Netherlands CO with zest and a fair sense of period style.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2009 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Karajan - A Profile
Directed by Gernot Friedel English commentary with English, French and German subtitles Herbert von Karajan (1908-1989), one of the twentieth century’s most fascinating and complex geniuses, dominated the post-war classical music world like a colossus. He won unprecedented musical power and public acclaim; received far more adulation, sold far more records and made far more money than any other classical musician of his era. He also had many detractors -those alienated by his superstar status; those who found the purity and beauty of his music-making cold and superficial; those repelled by his headstrong ambition and endlessly demanding pursuit of his artistic ideals; and those for whom he was forever tainted by the shadow of the Third Reich. Yet his musical playboy image was at odds with the private man who was, in reality, a shy, often solitary figure, possessed of great directness, simplicity and wit, who craved inner quiet and concentration, and was deeply loyal to his closest associates. He loved the peace and quiet of lakes and mountains as much as he did his private aeroplane and his fast cars. Charismatic and enigmatic, Karajan was also the construct that was ‘Karajan’. This film reveals the phenomenon of the man and his music. And it is Karajan himself, in archive interviews, who talks of events in his life and relates them to his work as a conductor. Herbert von Karajan’s life, both on and off the podium, is charted. From the influential experiences of his childhood and student days; through his emergence as a young conductor with a reputation for being brilliant but difficult; to his years at the forefkont of classical music; and his last decade when, despite failing health, and beset by acrimonious musical politics, he continued to push himself to the limits of his creative and physical powers. The documentary also touches on the controversial issue of Karajan’s membership of the Nazi Party; his rivalry with FurtwSingler; his fitful association with Walter Legge of EM1 and with the Philharmonia orchestra, founded by Legge in 1945; his fascination with science, technology, art and architecture in relation to music and his conducting style and rapport with his musicians. All are brought into focus and illustrated with a wealth of archive material. And throughout the film there is Karajan’s music, drawn from the many sound and audiovisual recordings he made during the course of his extraordinary career. Extracts fiom works by Beethoven, Mozart, Wagner, J.S. Bach, Puccini, Johann Strauss II, Mahler, Verdi, Richard Strauss and Schoenberg testify to the vast range of the classical repertoire he mastered and summon up the sublime beauty of his music- making. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Diana Damrau - DonnaMozart opera and concert arias
Mozart: | Vorrei spiegarvi, oh Dio! K418 No, che non sei capace, K419 Senti l’eco, ove t’aggiri (from La finta semplice) Martern aller Arten (from Die Entführung aus dem Serail) Durch Zärtlichkeit und Schmeicheln (from Die Entführung aus dem Serail) Ach, ich fühl's (from Die Zauberflöte, K620) Crudele? Ah no, mio bene! ... Non mi dir, bell'idol mio (from Don Giovanni) In quali eccessi ... Mi tradì quell'alma ingrate (from Don Giovanni) Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro) E Susanna non vien! … Dove sono i bei momenti (from Le nozze di Figaro) Al destin che la minaccia (from Mitridate, rè di Ponto) S’altro che lagrime (from La clemenza di Tito) Ecco il punto...Non più di fiori vaghe catene (from La clemenza di Tito) |
Diana Damrau (soprano) Le Cercle de l’Harmonie, Jérémie Rhorer In her second recording as an exclusive Virgin Classics artist Diana Damrau interprets concert and operatic arias by Mozart in a programme which displays her virtuosity and impressive vocal range. Indeed Diana Damrau’s new recital shows she can sing practically all of Mozart’s notably varied soprano roles – ranging from the bravura (Donna Anna, Konstanze, Donna Elvira…) via the more serious (Pamina) to the lighter soprano (generally soubrette roles such as Susanna, Blonde…). From her first recording everyone noted her outstanding Queen of the Night – here she is Pamina (in New York’s Met last Fall, Diana Damrau alternated the two roles with brio). She is also Susanna and the Contessa (Le Nozze di Figaro), Konstanze and Blonde (Die Entführung), Donna Anna and Elvira (Don Giovanni), Servilia and Vitellia (La Clemenza di Tito), pairing major soprano roles within the operas, and concert arias. As for her first recital, ‘Arie di bravura’, French conductor Jérémie Rhorer, who is rapidly gaining international recognition, directs his French period-instrument ensemble Le Cercle de l’Harmonie “Diana Damrau's intelligently planned and superbly executed recital… I can’t remember when I last enjoyed a Mozart recital of this kind so much.” BBC Music Magazine, December 2008 ***** “…Jérémie Rhorer draws tangy, rhythmically lively playing from his period band. "Taste", "fire", "flexibility", "sweetness", "grace of execution" - these were the qualities especially prized in singers of Mozart's day. On this showing Damrau, like Lucia Popp before her, has them all.” Gramophone Magazine, March 2009 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Mozart For Kids
also included: 4) The Magic Flute - Der Vogelfänger bin ich ja (Papageno) 5) The Magic Flute - Das klinget so herrlich (Monostatos, Pamina, Papageno) 6) The Magic Flute - Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen (Papageno) 7) The Magic Flute - Klinget, Glöckchen, klinget… Pa-Pa-Pa-Pa-Papagena! (Papageno, boys, Papagena) 8) Piano Sonata No. 11 in A, K.331 – III Alla turca 9) Horn Concerto No. 4 in E flat, K.495 – Finale 10) Abduction From the Seraglio: Ikhtitaf Fi Assaraya (Overture) 11) Mozart In Egypt: The Queen of the 1001 Nights 12) “O du lieber Augustin? (Trio) 13) Oboe Concerto in C, K.271 – III Allegro 14) Rondo in D, K.485 15) Symphony No. 39 in E-flat, K543 - III Menuetto & Trio 16) Flute Concerto No. 1 in G, K.313 – III Rondo Leopold Mozart 17) Trumpet Concerto in D – II Allegro moderato
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| |  | Barbara Hendricks - Mozart Arias & Lieder
Compact Disc 1 54.16 Concert Arias 1 Misera! Dove son…Ah! Non son io che parlo K369 7.40 2 Non più, tutti ascoltai…Non temer, amato bene K490 9.45 3 Ah lo previdi!...Ah, t’invola…Deh, non varcar K272 3.21 Opera Arias 4 Lucio Silla (Act III): ‘Fra I pensier più funesti di morte’ (Giunia) 3.36 5 Idomeneo (Act I): ‘Quando avran fine omai…Padre, germani, addio !’ (ilia) 8.39 6 Die Zauberflöte (Act II): ‘Ach, ich fühl’s’ (Pamina) 4.30 7 Le Nozze di Figaro (Act III): ‘E Susanna non vien !...Dove sono’ (Contessa) 6.26 Compact Disc 2 61.59 1 Sehnsucht nach dem Frühlinge K596 (Christian Adolf Overbeck) 7.40 2 Ich würd auf meinem Pfad (An die Hoffnung) K390/340c (Johann Timotheus Hermes) 9.45 3 Der Zauberer K472 (Christian Felix Weisse) 13.21 4 Das kleine Spinnerin K531 (Anon.) 3.36 5 Der Verschweigung K518 (Weisse) 8.39 6 Das Lied der Trennung K519 (Klamer Eberhardt Karl Schmidt) 4.30 7 Die Zufriedenheit K473 (Weisse) 6.26 8 Als Luise die Briefe K520 (Gabriele von Baumberg) 7.40 9 Sei du mein Trost (An die Einsamkeit), K391/340b (Hermes) 9.45 10 Das Veilchen K476 (Johann Wolfgang von Goethe) 13.21 11 Abendempfindung K523 (Joachim Heinrich Campe) 3.36 12 An Chloe K524 (Johann Georg Jacobi) 8.39 13 Die ihr des unermesslichen Weltalls K619 (Frank Heinrich Ziegenhagen) 4.30 14 Ridente la calma K152/210a (spurious, by Josef Mysliveãek) 6.26 15 Dans un bois solitaire K308 (Antione Houdar de la Motte) 7.40 16 Oiseaux, si tous les ans K307/284d (Antione Ferrand) 9.45 17 Un moto di gioia K579 (Lorenzo da Ponte) 13.21 18 Komm, liebe Zither K351/367b (Anon.) 3.36 19 Ch’io mi scordi di te…Non temer, amato bene K505† (Giambattista Varesco) 8.39
“This pair of discs gave me even more pleasure than I expected. Hendricks has so slim a voice that I'm surprised that she is as fine a Countess in Figaro as she is Pamina in Die Zauberflöte. Altogether exquisite.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2009 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Amoureuses - Patricia Petibon
Gluck: | Venez, secondez mes désirs from Armide Non, cet affreux devoir... Je t'implore et je tremble (from Iphigénie en Tauride) Ah! Si la liberté me doit être ravie from Armide | Haydn: | Ragion nell'alma siede (from Il mondo della luna) Salamelica from Lo speziale Odio, furor, dispetto from Armida Numi possenti aita!...Dov'è l'amato bene?...Del mio core (from L'anima del filosofo, ossia Orfeo ed Euridice) Fra un dolce deliro from L'isola disabitata | Mozart: | Vorrei spiegarvi, oh Dio! K418 Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (from Die Zauberflöte) L'ho perduta, me meschina (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro) Vanne, t'affretta… Ah se il crudel periglio (from Lucio Silla) Fra i pensier più funesti (from Lucio Silla) Tiger! Wetze nur die Klauen! (from Zaïde) Le perfide Renaud me fuit from Armide |
Exceptional French soprano Patricia Petibon joins the DG roster with her debut album Amoureuses, featuring arias by Mozart, Haydn and Gluck Petibon has established herself as one of the most interesting and versatile sopranos of our day and has been widely acclaimed for her outstanding acting abilities that make her merge completely with whatever role she sings and represents on stage With Amoureuses Petibon circles around the ever-important topic of love and desire – in a series of character-portraits she explores how the very different female characters in the operas of Mozart, Haydn, and Gluck respond to the challenges of love Ranging from the dramatic fury in Haydn’s Odio, furor, dispetto and Mozart’s Der Hölle Rache . . . to the sweetness in his Deh vieni, and from the desperate sadness of his L’ho perduta . . . me meschina! to the grandeur of Gluck’s Ah! Si la liberté, the album is the perfect showcase for Petibon’s exceptional skills of expression and characterization For Amoureuses Petibon teamed up with the acclaimed period-instrument band Concerto Köln and conductor Daniel Harding, a collaboration that guarantees an effervescent, entrancing approach to the music of the Viennese masters – a captivating debut to watch for! “The French soprano's DG debut is a considerable and attractive success. There are excerpts from Gluck's Armide, too, including a heartfelt air from Act 3. In the last scene, Petibon is mesmerising in the recitative - excellent support here, and indeed throughout, from Daniel Harding - before, again, bursting out in fury.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2008 “Patricia Petibon's choice of arias by the three greatest of late 18th-century opera composers is tailor-made to display her range, in terms of both drama and sheer vocal compass. …her debut disc for DG is pure pleasure, and Daniel Harding and Concerto Köln provide first-rate support.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2008 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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