All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | La bellezza del canto
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| |  | Julia Lezhneva sings Rossini
A star is born! The Russian soprano Julia Lezhneva is the vocal revelation that everyone is talking about. Still only 21, a protégée of Dame Kiri Te Kanawa and the winner of several major awards, Lezhneva makes her solo recital debut with a programme of arias by Rossini, a composer of whom is particularly fond. She is accompanied by the Sinfonia Varsovia conducted by its new artistic director Marc Minkowski. In 2007 Julia Lezhneva won the prestigious Elena Obraztsova International Competition for Young Opera Singers in St Petersburg, for which the judges included Teresa Berganza, Christa Ludwig and Eva Marton. She has sung opposite Juan Diego Flórez at the Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro, and made her UK debut, aged 19, with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vasily Petrenko, also performing Rossini. Her London debut, introduced by Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, came at the 2010 Classical Brit Awards singing Elena’s Final Rondo from Rossini’s La Donna del Lago in the Royal Albert Hall. In October 2010 she confirmed her status as one of the world’s most exciting talents by winning the First International Opera Competition held at the Theatre des Champs-Elysees in Paris. Her performance in the recent Naïve recording of Vivaldi’s opera Ottone in Villa, conducted by Giovanni Antonini, has been praised to the skies by the international press. Her debut solo concerts at the 2010 Salzburg Festival with the Mozarteum Orchestra and Marc Minkowski likewise achieved extraordinary success. Minkowski has followed the young singer’s career closely; it was he who invited her in 2009 to take part in Bach’s B minor Mass, her first recording, and in summer 2011 she will sing the part of Fiordiligi under his baton in a new production of Mozart’s Così fan tutte at Salzburg. Despite her youth, Julia Lezhneva has a huge and extremely varied repertoire, ranging from the Baroque and bel canto styles to Romantic and contemporary music. “The 21-year-old Russian soprano — winner of Finland’s prestigious Mirjam Helin singing competition in 2009 — is clearly a name to watch. Hers is a bright, high soprano of limpid timbre and an easy coloratura technique” Sunday Times, 3rd April 2011 *** “She has attractively full tone in the lower middle, where much of the music lies, and she possesses the flexibility to negotiate exceedingly challenging coloratura...[Minkowski] should lead Rossini more frequently - his vigour, intelligence and sheer polish are most welcome here.” International Record Review, April 2011 “Lezhneva's voice is perfectly suited to a flamboyant coloratura piece such as "Tanti Affetti", from La Donna del Iago, with her tiptoeing trills teetering delicately along. But the standout here is "Assisa a' piè d'un salice...for which the liquid harp glissandi and subtle strings of the Sinfonia Varsovia provide the most delightful, sensitive setting.” The Independent, 29th April 2011 **** “Her sense of line is unquestionably superb, as is her technique: there are trills and staccatos here, the likes of which we hear all too rarely.” The Guardian, 5th May 2011 *** “there is real flair and talent here, with much of the coloratura neatly despatched, and some stylistic grace that is admirable...Minkowski and his Polish musicians are marvellous, especially in a knockout account of the Cenerentola overture.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2011 *** “a pure, pellucid soprano with an intriguing hint of mezzo plangency, fluent movement between the registers, and scintillating (if faintly aspirated) coloratura...this is a highly enjoyable debut recital, by turns affecting exhilarating, from a soprano of impressive accomplishment and still more exciting potential. Orchestral accompaniments are trim and alert” Gramophone Magazine, July 2011 “she delivers truly heart-stopping versions of the coloratura showpieces...Marc Minkowski's conducting is full of joie de vivre and sparkle too.” Classic FM Magazine, July 2011 *** “Lezhneva’s vibrant pyrotechnics during "Tanti affeti" from La donna del lago are as wittily entertaining as they are musically appropriate...There’s crisp support from the Warsaw chorus and effortless, gossamer-light orchestral backing. Remarkable indeed.” The Arts Desk, 26th June 2011 “she sings with pinpoint accuracy, real elegance and musicality, and the voice itself is warm and round and womanly and beautifully clean...there is a gorgeous relaxed feel to her singing...This lovely disc, neatly accompanied by Marc Minkowski and the Sinfonia Varsovia, is genuinely the herald of a special new voice.” Opera Now, September/October 2011 **** | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini - Colbran, the MuseOpera arias
“A superstar in the Rossini repertory” Chicago Tribune After the success of her first Virgin Classics recital – Furore, arias by Handel – Joyce DiDonato turns to the composer whose heroines first brought her to international stardom: Gioacchino Rossini. “Is Joyce DiDonato the world's best Rossini singer?”, asked the New York magazine Opera News after the American mezzo sang the finale of La Cenerentola at Carnegie Hall in January 2009. “That title certainly seemed hers by sovereign right,” it continued; “Her phrasing was silky, her timbre rich and glowing, and her ornaments were impeccably stylish and utterly beguiling. Most impressive was DiDonato's combination of immaculate technical control with an air of wild, unstoppable joy. This was truly a moment to treasure from an artist who is at the very top of her game.” If La Cenerentola does not appear in this new recital, recorded in Rome in June, her other signature Rossini role holds a place of honour: she has been described by the UK’s Sunday Times as “the world’s reigning Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia”. In 2009 alone she sings the role in Vienna, London (to be recorded for DVD by Virgin Classics) and New York, and the role has also taken her to Paris, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Houston, San Francisco, Bologna and Rossini’s birthplace, Pesaro. Rossini’s two best-known comic operas proved essential in building the Kansas-born singer’s reputation over the last decade, but this recital focuses primarily on his serious works – although the tragic tensions do not perhaps run as consistently high as in DiDonato’s first Virgin Classics recital: Furore, the Handel programme released last year and described by The Daily Telegraph as “an exhilarating roller-coaster of a recital from a charismatic singing-actress”. This Rossini programme includes two arias from La donna del lago, which DiDonato is scheduled to sing over the coming seasons in Geneva, Paris, Milan and London. She takes the role of Elena, written for a soprano, but a great success in the 1980s for DiDonato’s idol, fellow high mezzo Frederica von Stade. The other arias on the CD were also all composed for soprano: they come from Otello, Semiramide, Armida, Maometto II and Elisabetta regina d'Inghilterra. DiDonato proved that she can triumph in music written for soprano with her recent complete recording of Handel’s Alcina and her debut last year in the role of Mozart’s Donna Elvira; the performances at London’s Royal Opera House prompted The Guardian to describe her as “the real star … singing her first Elvira and nailing even the topmost notes,” while The Daily Telegraph praised her performance in a similar vein: “The star of the show was … Joyce DiDonato, who sang Elvira with a style, sensitivity and bravura that outclassed everyone else on stage.” To return to Rossini and Rosina, the role for DiDonato’s debut at the Vienna State Opera in April 2009, the Wiener Zeitung had this to say: “She tossed off crystal-clear coloratura, presented a dark, secure low register, a confidently nuanced mid-range, bright and voluminous high notes – in short, everything that makes for great, modern bel canto style. She appears undaunted by the role's many technically tricky passages, and even more: she sang musically challenging variations on every repeated phrase, shaped every single bar with brio, and presented a psychologically multi-faceted characterisation with wildly joyful abandon.” “DiDonato is proving herself one of the most delightful artists of our time. She sings with a rare purity of tone, ease on the high Bs, an impressive degree of technical skill and lively powers of characterisation. She is invigoratingly precise in her placement, fluent in scale work and well furnished with staccati and trills. ...the difficult repertoire is sung with charm and mastery, and from all we read, their original exponent, to whom the recital is dedicated, is worthily honoured. Choral and orchestral work are equally stylish, and the short tenor solos by Lawrence Brownlee are a treat.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2009 “DiDonato’s pearly tone and easy coloratura make this difficult music sound effortless: she sports a more than acceptable trill, brilliant high staccato notes and long-breathed cantilena lines, prerequisites for a singer of the bel canto repertoire...This is outstanding Rossini singing by any standards, idiomatically accompanied.” Sunday Times, 22nd November 2009 **** “In everything she does, DiDonato convinces...There’s more on display than simple technical triumphs. Her clear diction, controlled breaths and phrasing, and the diversity of her emotional colouring always bring her characters to life and make each one an individual... Long live the yankeediva.” The Times, 20th November 2009 **** “A majestic display from first to last, DiDonato balancing precision and emotion.” The Independent, 20th November 2009 ***** “This is an artist who moves between registers with grace and skill, whose legato is seamless and whose tone is pearly. Indeed so creamy in 'D'amor al dolce impero', also from Armida, that you feel you could eat it on a spoon. Then there's that hushed quality to DiDonato's singing; a thrilling sensation that she's holding back, say at the beginning of 'Tanti affeti' from La donna del lago. Conductor Edoardo Müller is the perfect partner showing DiDonato off to her best advantage.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2010 ***** “This disc features some of the most authoritative bel canto singing that I have heard since Cecilia Bartoli emerged 20 years ago. Joyce DiDonato combines superb coloratura technique and clarity of tone with musical intelligence.” The Telegraph, 18th February 2010 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Cecilia Bartoli - MariaThe Barcelona Concert + Malibran Rediscovered
DVD 1 features the Barcelona concert from the ongoing Maria album tour La Rivoluzione Romantica. The 80 minute programmed performed in the stunning Palau de la Musica Catalana features highlights from the Maria album, and includes Rossini’s Willow Song as a DVD exclusive. DVD 2 features a fascinating 70 minute film Malibran Rediscovered , following Cecilia Bartoli as she researches the life of Maria Malibran and records the album. “Bartoli's evident, and infectious, enthusiasm and delight in studying the career of Maria Malibran is sketched in Michael Sturminger's documentary… Bartoli's concert, in the spectacular surroundings of Barcelona's Palau de la Música Catalana, includes many of the same arias that were on her CD "Maria" (12/07). With the encouragement of a wildly enthusiastic audience, she surpasses those performances, and in two Rossini items, the Willow Song from Otello and the final Rondo from La Cenerentola (neither on the CD), one feels that she is indeed invoking the shade of Manuel García's daughter. As for the final encore, "Yo que soy contrabandista" from García's opera El poeta calculista, in which Bartoli is accompanied by guitar, castanets, and "clappers", it has to be heard and seen to be appreciated: serious fun.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2009 “No prima donna since Callas and Sutherland has excited such extreme reactions in audiences and critics as Cecilia Bartoli. This pair of DVDs will delight her admirers and perhaps confound some of the detractors. Bartoli's evident, and infectious, enthusiasm and delight in studying the career of Maria Malibran is sketched in Michael Sturminger's documentary, in whichwe follow her to many of the theatres and streets associated with the diva beloved of the Romantic imagination. In libraries and museums we are able to view some of the scores used by Malibran in her brief and stormy progress through the capitals of Europe. From the opening shots of a gondola in Venice passing through the Rio Malibran, to the final glimpse of her tomb in Brussels, one gets some idea of the impact she made on audiences in the 1820s and '30s. Bartoli's concert, in the spectacular surroundings of Barcelona's Palau de la Música Catalana, includes many of the same arias that were on her CD 'Maria' (see above). With the encouragement of a wildly enthusiastic audience, she surpasses those performances, and in two Rossini items, the Willow Song from Otello and the final Rondo from La Cenerentola (neither on the CD), one feels that she is indeed invoking the shade of Manuel García's daughter. 'Nacqui' all'affano' benefits from Bartoli's study of Malibran's own variations for Cenerentola. As for the final encore, 'Yo que soy contrabandista' from García's opera El poeta calculista, in which Bartoli is accompanied by guitar, castanets, and 'clappers', it has to be heard and seen to be appreciated: serious fun.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “[Bartoli] has aimed not only to present Malibran's repertoire but also to capture her sound. Bartoli's rich voice, with its pyrotechnical capabilities and dramatic powers, couldn’t have been better suited to the task...More than just a history lesson though, this is wonderful music sung by a modern-day star.” Charlotte Gardner, bbc.co.uk, 11th January 2008 “Bartoli's personality comes through superbly...The concert was clearly a success and the excitement of the occasion comes over well in this handsomely produced DVD” Penguin Guide, 2011 edition | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Airs d'Operas Italiens
Donizetti: | Plauso! Voci di gioia (from Belisario) Sin la tomba e a me negata! (from Belisario) O desio della vendetta (from Belisario) No, piu salir non ponno ( from Parisina d’este) Ciel, sei tu in tal momento (from Parisina d’este) Ugo e spento (Parisina d’este) Fatal Goffredo!...Io l'udia ne' suoi bei carmi (from Torquato Tasso) Trono e corona (from Torquato Tasso) Lascia, Guido, ch'io possa vendicare (from Gemma di Vergy) Una voce al cor d'intorno...Egli riede? (from Gemma di Vergy) | Rossini: | Tanti affetti in tal momento (from La donna del lago) La donna del lago: Fra il padre, e fra l'amante O tu, del mio dolor (from Otello) Assisa a' piè d'un salice (from Otello) Deh calma, o ciel, nel sonno (from Otello) Stabat Mater: Inflammatus Armida: D'amor al dolce impero O patria...Di tanti palpiti (from Tancredi) L'ora fatal s'appressa ... Giusto ciel! (from L'Assedio di Corinto) | Verdi: | Ah! Non m'hanno ingannata!...Grave a core innamorato (from Un Giorno di Regno) Se de cadar la vedova (from Un Giorno di Regno) Qual prodigio!...Non fu sogno! (from I Lombardi) No, mi lasciate...Tu al cui sguardo onnipossente (from I due Foscari) Che mi rechi?... La clemenza! (from I due Foscari) Riposa. Tutte, in suo dolor vegliante (from Alzira) Da Gusman, su fragil barca (from Alzira) Alta pietade ogn'anima...Nell'astro che più fulgido (from Alzira) Liberamente or piangi (from Attila) Egli non riede ancora! (from Il Corsaro) Non so le tetre immagini (from Il Corsaro) Oh, cielo! Dove son'io!...Ah! dagli scanni eterei...Ah, dal sen di quella tomba (from Aroldo) |
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| |  | Montserrat CaballéA collection of Donizetti, Rossini & Verdi Rarities
Donizetti: | Plauso! Voci di gioia (from Belisario) No, piu salir non ponno ( from Parisina d’este) Ciel, sei tu in tal momento (from Parisina d’este) Ugo e spento (Parisina d’este) Fatal Goffredo!...Io l'udia ne' suoi bei carmi (from Torquato Tasso) Trono e corona (from Torquato Tasso) Lascia, Guido, ch'io possa vendicare (from Gemma di Vergy) Una voce al cor d'intorno...Egli riede? (from Gemma di Vergy) | Rossini: | Tanti affetti in tal momento (from La donna del lago) La donna del lago: Fra il padre, e fra l'amante O tu, del mio dolor (from Otello) Assisa a' piè d'un salice (from Otello) Deh calma, o ciel, nel sonno (from Otello) Stabat Mater: Inflammatus Armida: D'amor al dolce impero L'ora fatal s'appressa ... Giusto ciel! (from L'Assedio di Corinto) | Verdi: | Oh, cielo! Dove son'io!...Ah! dagli scanni eterei...Ah, dal sen di quella tomba (from Aroldo) Egli non riede ancora! (from Il Corsaro) Non so le tetre immagini (from Il Corsaro) Oh nel fuggente nuvolo (from Attila) Riposa. Tutte, in suo dolor vegliante (from Alzira) Da Gusman, su fragil barca (from Alzira) Alta pietade ogn'anima...Nell'astro che più fulgido (from Alzira) Qual prodigio!...Non fu sogno! (from I Lombardi) No...mi lasciate (from I due Foscari) No, mi lasciate...Tu al cui sguardo onnipossente (from I due Foscari) Ah! Non m'hanno ingannata!...Grave a core innamorato (from Un Giorno di Regno) Se de cadar la vedova (from Un Giorno di Regno) |
“Re-listening to these performances, one can understand why Caballe's career really took off...Her bel canto has a fine-spun purity, and in these excerpts of Verdi's early genius she conveys melodic freshness...there is both brilliance and beauty in plenty here.” Penguin Guide, 2010 edition *** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Rossini: Liederabend 1992
Although Marilyn Horne was 58 years old at the time of this concert, she appears at the height of her abilities as an artist on this CD. Among the recordings over the course of Horne's career, there are many Rossini operas and this all-Rossini program shows that she could also convincingly dominate the smaller forms as well. Contains some previously unavailable recordings. | 
| | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Bel Canto Bully: The Musical Legacy of the Legendary Opera Impresario Domenico Barbaja
Domenico Barbaja (1777–1841) was the legendary impresario who dominated European operatic stages for thirty years. The ruthless mogul was at the very heart of the bel canto era in which beautiful singing, allied to flawless technique, was brought to perfection. This release celebrates his legacy in exploring how Barbaja influenced the way opera was written and performed, by commissioning a series of masterpieces from the greatest composers of the time, such as Rossini, Donizetti and Weber, and staging them in his magnificent opera houses, performed by the most glamorous singers of the age. | 
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| |  | Cecilia Bartoli sings Rossini Arias
“[a] starry debut recital, from 1988, introduced Bartoli's Italianate mezzo - her technique and accurate coloratura mingled with earthy, sweet-sour tone.” BBC Music Magazine, November 2011 **** | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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