Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | recorded 1950
In 1950 Ferenc Fricsay made this one and only recording of Verdi’s opera “Rigoletto”. The opera was sung in German as was customary at that time. This recording refutes convincingly the widespread prejudice that a refined orchestral sound is not of prime importance in Verdi’s operas. Fricsay makes it plainly audible that the essential dramatic features of this opera manifest themselves in the instrumental shades and colours as well as in the expression of the vocal passages. | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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Includes optional subtitles in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish with embedded Japanese subtitles. 131 minutes, black & white, mono, all regions. Recorded in Takarazuka Hall, Tokyo on 4th February, 1959 | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Luciano Pavarotti: In Memoriam 1935-2007Live Concert Collection
Adam: | O Holy Night | Beethoven: | In questa tomba oscura, WoO.133 | Bellini: | Son salvo, alfin son salvo...A una fonte afflitto (from I Puritani) Credeasi misera, da me tradita (from I Puritani) E serbato a questo acciaro (from I Capuleti e i Montecchi) Vieni, fra queste braccia! (from I Puritani) Perdona, o mia diletta (from La Sonnambula) Ola ! Chi sei? (from I Capuleti e i Montecchi) La mia canzon d'amor...Elvira, Elvira! (from I Puritani) Vanne, o rosa fortunata Bella Nice che d'amore Ma rendi pur contento A te, o cara (from I Puritani) Vaga luna che inargenti | Donizetti: | Una furtiva lagrima (from L'elisir d'amore) Ah! mes amis, quel jour de fête! (from La Fille du Régiment) Pour me rapprocher de Marie (from La Fille du régiment) Sung in Italian Ardir! Ha forse il cielo ... Ecco il magico liquore ... Va, mortale fortunate (from L'Elisir d'amore) Quanto è bella, quanto è cara! (from L'Elisir d'amore) Tombe degl'avi miei … Fra poco a me ricovero...Tu che a Dio spiegasti l'ali (from Lucia di Lammermoor) two recordings Una parola…Chiedi all'aura (from L'elisir d'amore) Qui di sposa eterna...Ah! Verrano a te sull'aure (from Lucia di Lammermoor) | Flotow: | M'appari (from Martha) | Franck, C: | Panis Angelicus | Giordano, U: | Amor ti vieta (from Fedora) | Gruber, F: | Stille Nacht | Leoncavallo: | Vesti la giubba (from I Pagliacci) | Liszt: | Sonetto 104 del Petrarca 'Pace non trovo', S270 No. 1 | Massenet: | Ah! fuyez douce image (from Manon) Sung in Italian Instant charmant … En fermant les yeux (from Manon) Sung in Italian; two recordings A Parigi n'andrem (Manon) | Mozart: | Non ho colpa (from Idomeneo) Ah, qual gelido orror...Il padre adorato (from Idomeneo) No, la morte io non pavento (from Idomeneo) Spiegarti non poss'io, K489 Padre, mio caro padre (from Idomeneo) Dalla sua pace (from Don Giovanni) Un'aura amorosa del nostro tesoro (from Così fan tutte) | Puccini: | O soave fanciulla (from La Bohème) two recordings Nessun dorma (from Turandot) Che gelida manina (from La Bohème) two recordings In un Coupe?...O Mimi, tu piu non torni (from La Bohème) Recondita armonia (from Tosca) Mario! Mario! Mario! ...Son qui! ... Mia gelosa! (from Tosca) E lucevan le stelle (from Tosca) Ch'ella mi creda libero e lontano (from La Fanciulla del West) Addio, fiorito asil (from Madama Butterfly) Viene la sera (from Madama Butterfly) Tra voi, belle (from Manon Lescaut) Donna non vidi mai (from Manon Lescaut) Ah! Non v'avvicinate! No, pazzo son (from Manon Lescaut) Non piangere, Liù! (from Turandot) Dunque è proprio finita! (from La Bohème) Nessun dorma (from Turandot) Dunque è proprio finita! (from La Bohème) | Rossini: | Stabat Mater: Cujus animam gementem La promessa Soirées musicales: La Danza | Schubert: | Mille Cherubini in coro | Stradella: | Pieta, Signore | Tosti: | A vucchella | Verdi: | Forse la soglia attinse (from Un ballo in maschera) Libiamo, ne' lieti calici (from La Traviata) Lunge da lei…De’ miei bollenti spiriti (from La Traviata) La mia letizia infondere (from I Lombardi) Amelia a d'ess'ancor (from Luisa Miller) two recordings Oh! fede negar potessi (from Luisa Miller) Ella mi fu rapita! (from Rigoletto) La donna è mobile (from Rigoletto) Parigi, o cara (from La Traviata) Ma se m'è forza perderti (from Un ballo in maschera) Bella figlia dell'amore (from Rigoletto) È il sol dell'anima (from Rigoletto) Un dì felice, eterea (from La traviata) Kyrie eleison (from Requiem) Di quella pira (from Il trovatore) O madra mia ... Come poteva un angelo (from I Lombardi) Ah sì ben mio (from Il trovatore) |
| | | This item is currently out of stock at the UK distributor. You may order it now but please be aware that it may be six weeks or more before it can be despatched. |
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| |  | Bryn Terfel - A Song in my Heart
| | The Vagabond Whither Must I Wander Sea Fever Little Prince (The Little Prince) They Call the Wind Maria (Paint Your Wagon) English Northern Philharmonia, Paul Daniel Come Home (Allegro) English Northern Philharmonia, Paul Daniel Suo-Gan (Lullaby) Sì, tra i ceppi e le ritorte (Berenice) Vouchsafe, O Lord (Dettingen Te Deum) Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Mackerras | Berlioz: | Une puce gentille 'Flea Song' (from La damnation de Faust) Voici des roses (Air de Méphistophélès) Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus, Myung-Whun Chung | Gurney: | Sleep | Hughes, J: | Guide me, O thou great Redeemer (Cwm Rhondda) The Black Mountain Chorus, Risca Male Choir & The Orchestra of Welsh National Opera, Gareth Jones | Mahler: | In diesem Wetter, in diesem Braus (Kindertotenlieder) Philharmonia Orchestra, Giuseppe Sinopoli | Mendelssohn: | Lord God of Abraham (Elijah) Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Paul Daniel | Mozart: | Non piu andrai, farfallone amoroso (from Le Nozze di Figaro) Il core vi dono (from Così fan tutte) Cecilia Bartoli (Dorabella) & Bryn Terfel (Guglielmo) Orchestra dell’Accademia die Santa Cecilia, Myung-Chun Chung Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen (from Die Zauberflöte) Io ti lascio, oh cara, addio, KAnh. 245 Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Sir Charles Mackerras | Quilter: | Go, lovely Rose, Op. 24 No. 3 (Edmund Wailer) Malcolm Martineau (piano) | Rutter: | The Lord bless you and keep you London Symphony Orchestra, Barry Wordsworth | Schubert: | Erlkönig, D328 Du bist die Ruh D776 (Rückert) Der Musensohn, D764 (Goethe) | Schumann: | Du bist wie eine Blume, Op. 25 No. 24 Die beiden Grenadiere, Op. 49 No. 1 Mein Wagen rollet langsam, Op. 142 No. 4 | Sullivan, A: | Hereupon we’re both agreed (The Yeomen of the Guard) Academy of St Martin in the Fields, Sir Neville Marriner | trad.: | Amazing Grace London Symphony Orchestra, Barry Wordsworth Shenandoah London Symphony Orchestra, Barry Wordsworth Ar hyd y Nos (All through the night) Deep River arr. Chris Hazell | Vaughan Williams: | Silent Noon | Verdi: | Ehi! Paggio! ... L'onore! Ladri! (from Falstaff) MET Orchestra, James Levine | Wagner: | Die Frist ist um (from Der fliegende Holländer) Berliner Philharmoniker, Claudio Abbado O du, mein holder Abendstern (from Tannhäuser) The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, James Levine |
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| |  | Sung in German
Scippio Colombo (Nabucco); Gerda Scheyrer (Abigaille);Walter Berry (Zaccaria); Lazar Javanovic (Ismaele); Josefine Zlabinger (Fenena) & Hilde Vadura (Anka) Vienna State Opera Chorus & Viennese Radio, Berislav Klobucar Recorded 1955 | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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Aldo Bertocci (Arvino); Plinio Clabassi (Pagano, hermit); Lucille Udovich (Viclinda); Magda Laszlo (Giselda); Ivan Sardi (Pirro); Alfredo Nobile (Un Priore); Franco Ventriglia (Acciano); Raffaele Lagares (Oronte); Luisella Ciaffi (Sofia) RAI Torino, Fulvio Vernizzi Recorded 14/6/1957 | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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Recorded 14/3/1956 | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| | | (also available to download from $21.25) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Carlo Maria Giulini
Recorded: Royal Festival Hall, London, 30 April 1962 “The Faure is reverentially tender...the chorus eagerly responsive and so perfectly blended.” John Steane, Gramophone Magazine “Giulini responds sympathetically to Faure's emphasis of the word 'requiem' itself in five of the seven movements, and guides the Philharmonia Choir with a strong a sure hand. The very opening prayer is heavy and burdened, with a gravity that is never over-emphatic…Giulini's is a full-bloodedly Romantic performance. It is a characteristic performance, scrupulous, effective but quite without showiness.” John Warrack, International Record Review | |
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Maria Callas (Elena), Boris Christoff (Giovanni da Procida), Enzo Mascherini (Guido di Montforte), Giorgio Kokolios-Bardi (Arrigo), Bruno Carmassi (Il Sire di Bethume), Mario Frosini (Il Conte Vaudemont), Mafalda Masini (Ninetta), Gino Sarri (Danieli), Aldo De Paoli (Tebaldo), Lido Pettini (Roberto), Brenno Ristori (Manfredo) Chorus and Orchestra of the Teatro Comunale di Firenze, Erich Kleiber Recorded live on 26th May 1951 at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino. “This recording, like Verdi's opera, has attracted mixed reviews over the years. Composed for Paris in 1855, Les Vêpres siciliennes has never enjoyed the affection of critics or public in the way the other 'mid-period' operas (Boccanegra, Ballo and Forza) have. This revival was one of the productions that helped to spread Maria Callas's fame. At the time, Lord Harewood wrote memorably in Opera magazine about the tremendous force he puts into the recitative in Act 1, in which the Duchess Elena encourages the Sicilian population to rebellion with the words 'Il vostro fato e in vostra man' ('Your fate is in your own hands'). Callas is terrific in the Act 1 aria and cabaletta, as well as in the long duet with Arrigo in Act 4, sung by Greek tenor Giorgio Kokolios-Bardi. He had been one of Callas's leading men at the National Opera in Athens, and she particularly requested him for this part. He's no Di Stefano but he gives a good performance, especially of the aria in the Fourth Act, 'Giorno di pianto'. In some ways this opera is dominated by the two low male voices – Boris Christoff is magnificent as the gloomy, unforgiving Procida, while Enzo Mascherini is in his element as the anguished Guido di Montforte, who finds out too late that his opponent is his own son. Erich Kleiber is not usually associated with the 19th-century Italian repertory but he leads a vigorous performance, although there are quite a few cuts. This tape (made for Walter Legge) does not include the overture, so the opera fits on two CDs. For Callas and Christoff admirers, of course, this is an essential document. Although the sound quality is variable, it is clearer than previous issues. The Testament booklet is excellent, the libretto available to download from the company's website.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “Callas is terrific in the Act 1 aria and cabaletta, as well as in the long duet with Arrigo in Act 4… Boris Christoff is magnificent as the gloomy, unforgiving Procida… Erich Kleiber… leads a vigorous performance…” Gramophone Magazine, Janurary 2008 “[Callas] is already magnetic, the voice at its freshest...The sound has been again remastered and, though very variable, is certainly acceptable.” Penguin Guide, 2010 edition *** | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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