Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Vivica Genaux: Bel Canto Arias
Rossini, Bellini, Donizetti: these three men alone sufficed to popularise the art of Italian opera during the first half of the nineteenth century, a century so propitious to the spread of romanticism in all its manifestations. If we set aside Bellini, who flashed across the sky like a meteor, this leaves Rossini and Donizetti, and the differences between them are patent. Rossini was born in Pesaro in 1792 and died in Paris in 1868. His stage career began in 1810 in Venice with a ‘farsa’, Il cambiale di matrimonio, establishing immediately the high standard which he maintained without faltering until he suddenly stopped writing operas in 1839. His last opera was Guillaume Tell which failed to convince the regular audience at the Paris Opéra, unresponsive as they were to its ground-breaking aspects. Rossini’s decision to stop has given rise to endless speculation, but the most likely explanation is that he had grown weary of seeing audiences’ tastes changing and forsaking the ideal of vocal beauty for which he always strove. Donizetti’s life was shorter, and more full of drama – though we should no longer see Rossini, who suffered from depression, as a jovial fun-lover, a popular but misleading view. Donizetti was born in Bergamo in 1797 and died there in April 1848. A pupil of Giovanni Simone Mayr, he had a very full professional life which was nevertheless marred by sorrow and illness. He produced over seventy-five operas of all kinds from comic to tragic and, like Rossini, his career took him to Paris. Surprisingly, much of Rossini’s output is not well known. The image of him which mainly springs to mind is linked to the comedies La Cenerentola, L’italiana in Algeri and above all Il barbiere di Siviglia, an undisputed masterpiece and in a way his emblematic work. But this is to leave out a large number of significant works, his opere serie, which are rarely performed today despite their outstanding qualities. The type of female voice Rossini preferred was the contralto (a term to be understood in the context of its time, when vocal nomenclature was far less precise than today), with a sumptuous, opulent low register, tawny amber colours and a full, rich sound. Although the contralto’s high register was at first only rarely called upon, she was not confined to viragos or trouser roles; for certain parts she had to be capable of moderating and lightening her naturally full-bodied instrument. When the writing moves into the upper range it takes on similarities with the mezzo-soprano, as well as slightly more femininity. The disappearance of the castrati at the start of the nineteenth century encouraged the fashion for the contralto. Rossini was probably harking back to the golden age of the castrato when he wrote some of his finest serious roles, such as Arsace in Semiramide. This was written for Rosa Mariani, who performed it for the first time in Venice in 1823 opposite the composer’s wife Isabella Colbran as the Queen of Babylon. It is a magnificent role, that of a courageous young man of whom the queen is enamoured and who, by the most unhappy mischance, turns out to be her son, and, even more unfortunately, the involuntary cause of her death. ‘Eccomi alfine in Babilonia… Ah! quel giorno’ is his entrance aria, classically structured in three parts, recitative, slow section, quick section: certainly a bravura piece, but one in which the singer has to give expression to feelings as varied as ardent love and fear of the future. Even finer, and more intensely poetic, is Malcolm’s ‘Mura felici’ from La donna del lago, a Scottish tale over which hovers the shade of Sir Walter Scott, so dear to nineteenth-century opera. In 1819, at the San Carlo in Naples, Rosmunda Pisaroni captured the dream-like essence of this aria so perfectly that the smallpox blemishing her face was entirely forgotten. But the contralto can also play the woman – especially of the strong-willed, courageous type, like Isabella in L’italiana in Algeri, a difficult part which, in Venice in 1813, gave Marietta Marcolini the chance to shine. The role exhibits throughout a blend of charm and virtuosity, unabated energy and unshakable good humour, whether at Isabella’s entrance in Act I, cursing her fate before sharpening her weapons of seduction (‘Cruda sorte’) or exhorting her beloved, before the finale, to behave like a true Italian (‘Pensa alla patria’). For the final rondo of La Cenerentola, the voice lightens, using less of its lower register; Angelina’s goodness and joie de vivre shine through. At the world premiere in Rome in 1817, Geltrude Giorgi-Righetti took the part. A year earlier, also in Rome, she lent her personality to the exuberant Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, who displays her determination to marry Lindoro in ‘Una voce poco fa’. Donizetti followed a different path both musically and theatrically. The idea of opera as simply a feast of singing begins to fade before dramatic urgency; the power of song alone is no longer enough, and words come into their own. Can we still speak of ‘bel canto’? The same devices are used, the same ornamentation, the role of colour, nuance, dynamics and contrast, but they are regarded more as a means than as an end in themselves. At the Teatro Carcano in Milan in 1830, Anna Bolena was enthusiastically received. This time the contralto (Amalia Laroche) again had a trouser role, the page Smeton; we can perhaps see something of Cherubino in this adolescent boy who is far from indifferent to Anna’s charms (‘È sgombro il loco’, from Act I, Scene 1). The Victor Hugo-inspired Lucrezia Borgia was not to the liking of either the poet or the censor. Its hero Orsini is yet again a trouser role (one of Marietta Brambilla’s parts at La Scala, Milan, in 1833); he launches the plot in the prologue by telling his friend Gennaro that they will both be killed by Lucrezia Borgia – ‘Nella fatal di Rimini’. Later, during the fateful banquet of the final act he sings a brindisi, a drinking-song with a catchy rhythm which was immensely popular at the time (‘Il segreto per esser felici’); its second verse lends itself to brilliant ornamentation. Alahor in Granata was first staged by the Teatro Carolino in Palermo in January 1826, but the work was forgotten throughout the twentieth century until the Teatro de la Maestranza in Seville revived it for the opening of its 1998 season. It is a youthful work, though it came after some remarkably accomplished efforts such as the delightful L’ajo nell’imbarazzo (1824), itself preceded, in 1822, by Zoraide di Granata, another picturesque piece drawn from Spanish history. The trouser role here is that of King Muley-Hassem (first performed by Marietta Gioia-Tamburini), who is in love with Zobeida, a member of an enemy tribe, the Abencerrages. Here, the king appears in the role of peace-maker; his efforts put an end to the war and win him his beloved. There could be no better way to round off this gallery of portraits devoted to a voice distinguished, among other qualities, by its rarity. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Great Operatic Arias 7 - Della JonesSung in English
Bellini: | Deh! Con te li prendi ... Mira,o Norma (from Norma) Sung in English as 'Take my children, take them with you...See, O Norma' Anne Mason (Adalgisa) | Bishop, H R: | Home, Sweet Home | Donizetti: | Leonora, taci! (from La Favorita) Sung in English as 'Leonora, be silent!' Il segreto per esser felici (from Lucrezia Borgia) Sung in English as 'Oh the secret of life, you may hear it' | German: | O peaceful England (from Merrie England) | Handel: | Dove sei, amato bene? (from Rodelinda) Sung in English as 'Art thou troubled?' Frondi tenere e belle ... Ombra mai fù (from Serse) Sung in English as 'May the Fates be kind...Under thy shade' | Mozart: | Ecco il punto...Non più di fiori vaghe catene (from La clemenza di Tito) Sung in English as 'Now is the moment...No bridal garlands' | Ponchielli: | Voce di donna o d'angelo (from La Gioconda) Sung in English as 'Voice that consoles me' | Rossini: | Di tanti palpiti (from Tancredi) Sung in English as 'Tell me, my beating heart' Ai capricci della sorte (from L'Italiana in Algeri) Sung in English as 'All the changes in my fortune' Andrew Shore (Taddeo) Je rends à votre amour (from Guillaume Tell) Sung in English as 'My brave new son, to you' Mary Plazas (Jemmy), Anne Mason (Hedwige) Io sono docile (from Il barbiere di Siviglia) Sung in English as 'I can be so demure' Per lui che adoro from L'Italiana in Algeri Sung in English as 'All for the pleasure' Peter Wedd (Lindoro), Andrew Shore (Taddeo), Simon Bailey (Mustafa) |
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Opera 2010
Bellini: | Casta Diva (from Norma) Maria Callas (soprano) Coro e Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala, Milano Care compagne, et voi, teneri amici ... Come per me sereno (from La Sonnambula) Evelino Pidò | Cilea: | Ecco: respiro appena. Io son l'umile ancella (from Adriana Lecouvreur) Myung-Whun Chung | Donizetti: | Il segreto per esser felici (from Lucrezia Borgia) Vivica Genaux (mezzo) | Dvorak: | Mesícku na nebi hlubokém 'Song to the Moon' (from Rusalka) Münchner Rundfunkorchester | Gershwin: | Bess, you is my woman now (from Porgy and Bess) | Giordano, U: | La mamma morta (from Andrea Chénier) Maria Callas (soprano) | Gluck: | Che faro' senza Euridice? (from Orfeo ed Euridice) David Daniels (countertenor) Harry Bicket | Gounod: | Ah! Je veux vivre dans ce rêve (from Roméo et Juliette) Diana Damrau (soprano) L'amour, l'amour... Ah, lève-toi soleil (from Roméo et Juliette) Rolando Villazón (tenor) Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France | Handel: | Rival ti sono (from Faramondo) Caro amico amplesso! (from Poro) Precipitoso nel mar che freme (from Aci, Galatea e Polifemo) Laurent Naouri (baritone) Crude furie degli orridi abissi (from Serse) Ove son...Qui ti sfido (from Arianna) Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor) Frondi tenere e belle ... Ombra mai fù (from Serse) David Daniels (countertenor) | Mascagni: | Attesa (from the Intermezzo from Cavalleria Rusticana) Sarah Brightman (soprano) Ed anchè Beppe amò (from L'amico Fritz) Gianandrea Gavazzeni Suzel, buon di 'Cherry Duet' (from L'amico Fritz) Gianandrea Gavazzeni Mamma, quel vino (from Cavalleria Rusticana) | Massenet: | Instant charmant … En fermant les yeux (from Manon) | Mozart: | Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (from Die Zauberflöte) Natalie Dessay (soprano) Louis Langree Và pure ad altri in braccio (from La finta giardiniera) Elina Garanca (mezzo) Camerata Salzburg, Louis Langree In quali eccessi ... Mi tradì quell'alma ingrate (from Don Giovanni) Véronique Gens (soprano) Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio (from Le nozze di Figaro) Teresa Berganza (mezzo) E Susanna non vien! … Dove sono i bei momenti (from Le nozze di Figaro) Jeffrey Tate O zittre nicht (from Die Zauberflöte) Le Cercle De L'Harmonie | Offenbach: | Barcarolle (from Les Contes d'Hoffmann ) Jessye Norman (soprano) | Puccini: | Vissi d'arte (from Tosca) Angela Gheorghiu (soprano) Vogliatemi bene, un bene piccolini (from Madama Butterfly) Angela Gheorghiu (soprano), Jonas Kaufmann (tenor) O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi) E lucevan le stelle (from Tosca) James Levine Nessun dorma (from Turandot) Orchestre Philharmonique de Strasbourg | Rameau: | Triste séjour – Argie Les Talens Lyriques | Rossini: | La donna del lago: Fra il padre, e fra l'amante Joyce DiDonato (mezzo) Edoardo Muller | Verdi: | Celeste Aida (from Aida) Plácido Domingo (tenor) La donna è mobile (from Rigoletto) Münchner Rundfunkorchester Libiamo, ne' lieti calici (from La Traviata) Terry Edwards | Vivaldi: | Griselda: Agitata da due venti Vivica Genaux (mezzo) Se in ogni guardo from Orlando finto pazzo Philippe Jaroussky (countertenor) Jean-Christophe Spinosi |
Following the enormous success of the album OPERA 2009, EMI Classics is releasing OPERA 2010. Great voices of today and legendary singers of the past, from the EMI and Virgin Classics catalogue: the home of opera. With 40 tracks, and over 2½ hours of operatic arias and duets, this double album features the best and most popular names in opera from the catalogues of both Virgin Classics and EMI Classics, ranging from the newest arrivals on the operatic scene, as well as many present day superstars, to iconic legends. This is an unmissable collection of the best in opera that will have a wide appeal. Present day superstars include Angela Gheorghiu, Natalie Dessay, Sarah Brightman, Barbara Hendricks, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Jessye Norman, Placido Domingo, José Carreras, Rolando Villazón, Roberto Alagna and Bryn Terfel. Rising new artists are strongly represented by Joyce DiDonato, Diana Damrau, Elina Garanca, Vivica Genaux, Véronique Gens, Patrizia Ciofi, Philippe Jaroussky, Jonas Kaufmann, David Daniels, Max Emanuel Cencic and Laurent Naouri. The programme also contains tracks by some of the world’s greatest singers of the past such as Victoria de los Angeles, Teresa Berganza, Mirella Freni, Lucia Popp and Franco Corelli as well as the legendary Luciano Pavarotti and the unique Maria Callas. All the most popular operatic composers are represented, from Baroque masters like Vivaldi, Rameau and Handel, through Gluck and Mozart to Bellini, Donizetti, Verdi, Puccini, Mascagni, Cilea and Gershwin, as well as French favourites Gounod, Massenet and Offenbach. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Ewa Podles - Contralto
Ewa Podles (contralto) Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Lukasz Borowicz With her distinctive, dramatic voice of staggering range, agility and amplitude, Ewa Podles is regarded as the world’s foremost contralto. This live recording made in 2008 amply demonstrates her fine qualities and will be eagerly sought after by her legion of fans. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Elina Garanca - Bel CantoArias from operas by Bellini, Donizetti & Rossini
Elina Garanca follows her exceptional DG debut splash, Aria Cantilena, with bel canto solos and ensembles featuring guest luminaries like Ildebrando d’Arcangelo. Flawless coloratura and a “one-in-a-million” mezzo (The Independent) make this exciting young artist ideal for this repertoire. Balancing familiar numbers and ensembles with little known treasures by Bellini, Donizetti and Rossini, Elina rides bel canto’s vocal acrobatics and spun out melodies through an emotional spectrum to unforgettable effect. “How Rossini would have fallen for the Latvian Elina Garanca! Her voice, with its creamy mezzo middle and purposeful drop into the chest register suggests a perfect Rosina; part passionate young woman but mostly knowing minx. …no recent artist, including the magnificent Marilyn Horne, has recorded a more affecting rendition of Tancredi's recitative and cavatina, 'O patria... Di tanti paliti': every word articulated, every musical phrase properly shaped and a seemingly effortless legato. This is a deeply satisfying CD from a great artist in the making.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2009 ***** “A refreshingly unhackneyed selection of bel canto arises from a star mezzo. The gentle songs from Adelson e Salvini and Dom Sébastien make a nice contrast with the fireworks of "Di tanti palpiti" from Tancredi. Roberto Abbado and the Bologna orchestra provide the always sympathetic accompaniment... What of that long bel canto line? It is never allowed to overwhelm the dramatic situation of each scene but Garanca seems to find no difficulty in any of this music.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2009 “Unjustly denied first prize at the Cardiff Singer of the World competition in 2001, the glamorous Latvian mezzo-soprano Elina Garanca has gone on to prove the judges wrong by carving a front-ranking international career. This well-programmed recital of less familiar material from operas by Rossini, Donizetti and Bellini shows off her superb technique, with its fluent coloratura and beautiful upper register. The melancholy Romanza from Bellini's early Adelson e Salvini and the lilting "Di tanti palpiti" from Rossini's Tancredi both show her at her impressive best.” The Telegraph, 12th February 2009 | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Jennifer Larmore - Opera Arias
“Diverse arias, including items by Gluck, Mozart, Rossini, Meyerbeer, and Tchaikovsky among others, shows Larmore as a peerless contemporary mezzo, oddly underestimated.” BBC Music Magazine, August 2006 **** | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Clara Butt
Prima Voce has assembled some truly remarkable examples of Clara Butt’s art and even at first hearing the listener will be struck by the vocal presence and personality behind each recording. The deliberate but completely unforced exploitation of those extraordinary and smoothly blended cello-like bottom notes in her lower and middle registers was beautifully managed throughout her career, but they do evoke different reactions from some modern commentators on vocal-art. Recorded 1909-1925 | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Ernestine Schumann-Heink - Opera Arias & SongsRecordings 1900-1935
Arditi: | Leggero invisible 'Bolero' | Brahms: | Sapphische Ode, Op. 94 No. 4 Wiegenlied, Op. 49 No. 4 (Lullaby) | Carpenter, J A: | The Home Road | Delibes: | Bonjour, Suzon! | Donizetti: | Il segreto per esser felici (from Lucrezia Borgia) | Elgar: | Coronation Ode, Op. 44: Land of Hope and Glory | Foster, S: | Old Black Joe | Gounod: | Ô ma lyre immortelle (from Sapho) | Grieg: | Moderen synger (Mother's Lament), Op. 60 No. 2 Mens jeg venter (On the Water), Op. 60 No. 3 | Gruber, F: | Stille Nacht | Hermann, H: | Barbchen Schlafliedchen, Op. 53 No. 3 | Hildach: | Der Lenz | Huerter: | Pirate Dreams | Humperdinck: | Weihnachten, EHWV 111 | Loewe, C: | Das Erkennen, Op. 65 No. 2 | Manahan: | Shepherd's Love | Mehrkens: | Wie ein Grüssen, Op. 18 | Mendelssohn: | But the Lord is mindful | Meyerbeer: | O prêtres de Baal (from Le Prophète) Il va venir (from Le Prophète) Ah, mon fils! (from Le Prophète) | Millöcker: | I und mei bua | Mozart: | Parto, parto, ma tu ben mio (from La Clemenza di Tito) | Nevin, E W: | The Rosary | O'Hara: | There is no death | Raff: | Sei still | Ronald: | Down in the forest | Rubinstein: | Wanderers Nachtlied, Op. 48 No. 5 | Saint-Saëns: | Mon cœur s'ouvre à ta voix (from Samson et Dalila) Printemps qui commence (from Samson et Dalila) | Schubert: | Der Tod und das Mädchen, D531 Die Forelle, D550 Erlkönig, D328 | Schumann: | Mondnacht (No. 5 from Liederkreis, Op. 39) | Smith, J S: | The Star-Spangled Banner | Strauss, R: | Traum durch die Dämmerung, Op. 29 No. 1 | trad.: | Londonderry Air Taps | Wagner: | Weiche, Wotan, weiche! (from Das Rheingold) Gerechter Gott! (from Rienzi) Träume (No. 5 from Wesendonck-Lieder) Höre mit Sinn was ich dir sage (from Götterdämmerung) |
Ernestine Schumann-Heink (contralto) | | | (also available to download from $21.00) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Marilyn Horne in Recital: Milan, 1981
Alvarez, F M: | La Partida | Beethoven: | In questa tomba oscura, WoO.133 Zärtliche Liebe 'Ich liebe dich', WoO 123 Busslied (No. 5 from 6 Lieder von Gellert, Op. 48) | Copland: | Ching-a-ring Chaw Simple Gifts (from Old American Songs, Set I) Long Time Ago At the River | Donizetti: | Il segreto per esser felici (from Lucrezia Borgia) | Duparc: | L'Invitation au voyage Extase Le Manoir de Rosemonde | Foster, S: | Beautiful Dreamer I Dream of Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair | Granados: | Tonadillas: No. 3, La maja dolorosa | Handel: | Semele: Hence, Iris, hence away | Montsalvatge: | Canción negra No. 4, Cancion de cuna para dormir a un negrito | Obradors: | El Vito (from Canciones clásicas españolas) | Rossini: | Eccomi alfine in Babilonia (from Semiramide) Se il vuol, la molinara |
Though Marilyn Horne is known mostly for her virtuosic operatic roles, she is a superb recitalist who can scale her powerful voice down to the more intimate requirements of the recital stage. In 1981, she appeared at Milan’s La Scala opera house in a recital consisting of music by Italian, German, Spanish, French and American composers. Horne was in particularly superb form that evening, partnered brilliantly by Martin Katz at the piano. 93 minutes, color, mono. Live performance: 2nd June, 1981 | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | The Golden Age of Singing Vol. 1, 1900 - 191050 Years of Great Voices on Record
Bellini: | Vi ravviso, o luoghi ameni (from La Sonnambula) Pol Plancon (bass) Ah, non credea mirarti (from La Sonnambula) Adelina Patti (soprano), Alfredo Barili (piano) | Bizet: | L'amour est un oiseau rebelle 'Habanera' (from Carmen) Emma Calve (soprano) | Boito: | Giunto sul passo estremo (from Mefistofele) Dmitri Smirnov (tenor) | Donizetti: | Una furtiva lagrima (from L'elisir d'amore) Enrico Caruso (tenor) Quel guardo il cavaliere (from Don Pasquale) Rosina Storchio (soprano) Una parola…Chiedi all'aura (from L'elisir d'amore) Maria Galvany (soprano), Aristodemo Giorgini (tenor) A tanto amor (from La Favorita) Mario Ancona (baritone) Sogno soave e casto (from Don Pasquale) Giuseppe Anselmi (tenor) Di pescatore ignobile (from Lucrezia Borgia) Francesco Marconi (tenor) Il segreto per esser felici (from Lucrezia Borgia) Clara Butt (contralto) | Erkel: | Ah Rebeges! (from Hunyadi László) Lillian Nordica (soprano) | Flotow: | Martha: Lasst mich euch fragen (Porterlied) sung in Italian as 'Chi mi dira' Edouard de Reszke (tenor) | Goldmark: | Magische Töne, berauschender Duft (from Die Königin von Saba) Leo Slezak (tenor) | Gounod: | Ah! Je veux vivre dans ce rêve (from Roméo et Juliette) Emma Eames (soprano) | Massenet: | Promesse de mon avenir (from Le roi de Lahore) Maurice Renaud (baritone) Instant charmant … En fermant les yeux (from Manon) sung in Italian Fernando de Lucia (tenor) Ah! Tout est bien fini... O souverain (from Le Cid) Vilhelm Herold (tenor) | Meyerbeer: | Pour Bertha (from Le Prophète) sung in Italian Francesco Vignas (tenor) A ce mot (from Les Huguenots) Olimpia Boronat (soprano) O beau pays de la Touraine (from Les Huguenots) Antonina Nezhdanova (soprano) | Mozart: | O Isis und Osiris, schenket (from Die Zauberflöte) Wilhelm Hesch (bass) Porgi amor (from Le nozze di Figaro) sung in German Lilli Lehmann (soprano) | Ponchielli: | Così mantieni il patto? (from La Gioconda) Eugenia Burzio/Giuseppe De Luca | Puccini: | Con onor muore (from Madama Butterfly) Emmy Destinn (soprano) | Rimsky Korsakov: | They Guess the Truth (from A Life for the Tsar) Vladimir Kastorsky (bass) Gey, khlopci! Ya uveshcheval vas idti spat (Hey, lads! I urged you to go to sleep) (from May Night) Leonid Sobinov (tenor) | Rossini: | La calunnia è un venticello (from Il barbiere di Siviglia) Adamo Didur (bass) Bel raggio lusinghier (from Semiramide) Marcella Sembrich (soprano) | Tchaikovsky: | Forgive me, loveliest of creatures (from Pique Dame) Nikolay Figner (tenor) | Thomas, Ambroise: | O vin, dissipe la tristesse (from Hamlet) sung in Italian Titta Ruffo (baritone) | Verdi: | Niun mi tema (from Otello) Francesco Tamagno (tenor) Nel fiero anelito...Fuggiam gli arodi inospiti (from Aida) Celestina Boninsegna/Giovanni Valls Era la notte (from Otello) Victor Maurel (baritone) Vanne, la tua meta gia vedo…Credo in un Dio crudel (from Otello) Eugenio Giraldoni (baritone) O sommo Carlo (from Ernani) Mattia Battistini/Emilia Corsi/Luigi Colazza Oh! fede negar potessi (from Luisa Miller) Alessandro Bonci (tenor) Caro nome (from Rigoletto) Nellie Melba (soprano) A te l'estremo addio ... Il lacerato spirito (from Simon Boccanegra) Francesco Navarrini (bass) Quando ero paggio (from Falstaff) Antonio Scotti (baritone) | Wagner: | Einsam in trüben Tagen (from Lohengrin) Felia Litvinne (soprano) Gerechter Gott! (from Rienzi) Ernestine Schumann-Heink (mezzo) Fliegt heim, ihr Raben (from Götterdämmerung) Johanna Gadski (soprano) |
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