Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Teresa Berganza - An Evening of Song, 1985
Teresa Berganza is undoubtedly one of the greatest Spanish singers of the 20th century. She enchanted audiences in opera houses around the world. Throughout her career, she would give recitals of songs, especially the songs of her homeland. This recital includes songs by Haydn, Fauré, Respighi, Braga and Rossini. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Victoria de los Angeles: The Early Recordings 1942-1953
Brahms: | Von ewiger Liebe, Op. 43 No. 1 | Falla: | El pano moruna (No. 1 from Siete canciones populares españolas) Seguidilla murciana (No. 2 from Siete canciones populares españolas) Jota (No. 4 from Siete canciones populares españolas) | Fuste: | Háblame de amores | Granados: | Tonadillas: No. 3, La maja dolorosa Tonadillas: No. 4, El majo discreto Tonadillas: No. 8, El mirar de la maja | Guridi Bidaola: | Jota (from Six canciones castellanas) No quiero tus avellanas (from Six canciones castellanas) | Handel: | Joshua: Oh! had I Jubal's lyre | Nin: | El paño murciano (from Cantos populares españoles) El Vito (from Cantos populares españoles) | Respighi: | Stornellatrice E se un giorno tornasse, P. 96 | Schumann: | Widmung, Op. 25 No. 1 Der Nussbaum, Op. 25 No. 3 Ich grolle nicht (No. 7 from Dichterliebe, Op. 48) | Toldrá: | Madre, unos ojuelos ví | trad.: | Hungarian folksongs & Csárdás | Turina: | Farruca (from Triptico, Op. 45) Saeta en forme de Salve a la Virgen de la Esperanza, Op. 60 Poema en forma de canciones, Op. 19: No. 3, 'Cantares' | Valverde: | Clavelitos | Vives: | El retrato de Isabela El amor y los ojos |
“The two Respighi songs are magical performances – Stornellatrice, with the golden voice at its richest and E se un giorno tornasse, a study in subtle shading of tone, a dialogue between a mother and her dying, jilted daughter. For those two brief items alone, superbly transferred, this collection is an essential for all admirers of this singer, but there's much more. Handel's 'O had I Jubal's lyre' in German rather than English may be odd, but the performance sparkles and among the Lieder it's good to have not just 'Der Nussbaum' – the Schumann song which was always special to her – but two previously unpublished, 'Widmung' from the Myrthe songs and 'Ich grolle nicht' from Dichterliebe. Through the whole collection the superb transfers capture the full–throated glory of los Angeles's voice at the beginning of her career. The 1942 recordings of two Hungarian folk– songs, previously unpublished, may be rough and limited – made when the singer was only 18 – but they amply demonstrate that already the voice was fully developed in its beauty. No fewer than 18 of the 27 items are of Spanish songs, and though in one or two instances los Angeles was destined to make even more idiomatic readings later with a Spanish accompanist, these ones with Gerald Moore as her partner have a freshness and brilliance that has rarely been matched in this repertory. In particular it's good to have her first recording of the encore number which she made her own, Clavelitos.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Valentina Levko: Star of the Bolshoi
Albéniz: | Tango | Bach, J S: | St Matthew Passion, BWV244: Erbarme dich St Matthew Passion, BWV244: Buss und Reu Christmas Oratorio, BWV248: Bereite dich, Zion Mass in B minor, BWV232: Qui sedes ad dexteram Patris Mass in B minor, BWV232: Agnus Dei | Bizet: | Si vous aimez! Vasco da Gama: Ouvre ton coeur L'amour est un oiseau rebelle 'Habanera' (from Carmen) | Bononcini, G B: | Vado ben spesso | Borodin: | Merknet svyet dnevnoy (from Prince Igor) Ty li, Vladimir moy? (from Prince Igor) | Brahms: | Two songs for contralto with viola obbligato, Op. 91 | Champagne, T: | Song of the Rose Shepherd Boy | Falconieri: | Bella rosa | Falla: | Siete Canciones populares españolas | Glinka: | Vanya's Aria (from Ivan Susanin/A Life for the Tsar) I zhar, i znoi smenila nochi ten (from Ruslan and Lyudmila) Ratmir's Romance (from Ruslan and Lyudmila) | Granados: | Tonadillas: Oh, muerte cruel! Ay majo de mi vida!: No. 1, La maja dolorosa Tonadillas: No. 3, La maja dolorosa: III 'De aquel majo amante' | Handel: | Lascia ch'io pianga (from Rinaldo) Te Deum in D major 'Dettingen', HWV283: Dignare, Domine Ombra mai fu (from Serse) Deggio morire, o stelle (from Siroe) | Mahler: | Symphony No. 3 in D minor: O Mensch, gib acht sung in Russian | Marcello, B: | Quella fiamma che m'accende | Martini, J P: | Plaisir d'amour | Massenet: | Elégie | Mozart: | Ombra felice!...Io ti lascio, K255 | Mussorgsky: | Khovanshchina - Marfa's Song (edited by Rimsky-Korsakov) Marfa's Prophecy (from Khovanshchina) | Parisotti: | Se tu m'ami | Ponchielli: | Voce di donna o d'angelo (from La Gioconda) | Prokofiev: | Incantation of Water and Fire (No. 1 from Fünf Gedichte von Kontantin Bal'mont, Op. 36) | Purcell: | When I am laid in earth (from Dido and Aeneas) | Rachmaninov: | Selected songs | Respighi: | E se un giorno tornasse, P. 96 sung in Russian Echo sung in Russian | Rimsky Korsakov: | Lel's Third Song (from The Snow Maiden) Lioubasha's aria (from The Tsar's Bride) | Rossini: | Ah! quel giorno ognor rammento (from Semiramide) | Saint-Saëns: | Printemps qui commence (from Samson et Dalila) Amour, viens aider ma faiblesse (Samson et Dalila) Mon cœur s'ouvre à ta voix (from Samson et Dalila) | Schubert: | Aufenthalt D957 No. 5 Die Forelle, D550 Erlkönig, D328 Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118 Im Frühling, D882 Ave Maria, D839 | Serov: | Varangian Ballad (from Rogneda) | Stradella: | Pieta, Signore | Tchaikovsky: | Countess's Scene (from Pique Dame) Selected songs | Verdi: | Stride la vampa (from Il Trovatore) | Vinci, Leonardo: | Confusa, smarrita (from Catone in Utica) |
and traditional Russian songs
Valentina Levko (contralto) A true discovery for many western ears: Valentina Levko, star contralto of the Bolshoi! “In a career of 50 years, I have rarely encountered such a voice, rounded, youthful, with an uncommon timbre and astonishing warmth” , thus said the legendary Sol Hurok, one of the most famous American Impresarios, who introduced Valentina Levko in the New York Met. Although she frequently toured the world, her real home was Russia, where she reigned for more than 40 years, and 25 years as the star contralto of the Bolshoi Theatre. This set features Levko in a wide variety of repertoire, ranging from moving Baroque arias by Bach and Handel, through the art songs of Schubert and Brahms, towards great opera scenes from Prince Igor, Ruslan & Ludmilla, Ivan Susanin, Queen of Spades, Rossini, Verdi, the songs of Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff, and a superb collection of Russian folk songs. An unrivalled breadth of recordings. Valentina Levko was another in the glorious line of Russian 20th‐century contraltos who in some ways defined the sound of Russian opera for ears, both Eastern and Western, which were often discovering the rich tradition of Russian opera for the first time through recordings. Levko's name, however, unlike compatriots such as Elena Obratzova, never travelled as far or as well. Committed to her contract at the Bolshoi, she spurned several opportunities to make a name for herself in the West, with the lucrative recording contracts that would surely have followed. And yet hers was, as this important set reveals, a voice and dramatic presence firmly in the mould of greats of the past such as Zara Dolukhanova. The set is carefully curated by themes, thereby revealing Levko's remarkable versatility. Arias from Bolshoi classics by Glinka, Rimsky‐Korsakov and Tchaikovsky sit alongside Western operas by Ponchielli, Verdi and others; her ability to scale her voice to an intimate environment results in warmly idiomatic recordings of art song by Schubert, Brahms, Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninov. The pleasure she took in the popular song of her own country also resulted in many recordings with the Ossipov Folk Orchestra, but her facility extended to folk songs of many languages, as the last CD reveals. Perhaps most remarkably of all, the first CD reveals a natural interpreter of Bach and Handel. An extensive booklet note discusses her life and career; for anyone interested in Russian voices, this set will be essential. | 
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