Mozart: Alma grande e nobil core K578

This page lists all recordings of Alma grande e nobil core K578, by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-91) on CD, DVD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

Disc of the Month
September 2006
Editor's Choice
May 2006

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Mozart - Opera & Concert Arias

Mozart - Opera & Concert Arias


Mozart:

Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582

La clemenza di Tito, K621 - Deh, se piacermi vuoi

Và pure ad altri in braccio (from La finta giardiniera)

Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Misero me...Misero pargoletto, K77

Smanie implacabili (from Così fan tutte)

Ch'io mi scordi di te?... Non temer, amato bene, K505

Come scoglio (from Così fan tutte)


“Elina Garanca is a Latvian mezzo who is equally happy as a Dorabella or a Fiordiligi. The Camerata Salzburg is her accompanist; and that superb Mozartian Louis Langrée makes a diva of every woodwind soloist within that band.” BBC Music Magazine, April 2006 ****

“Elina Garanca's voice is warm and ample, its quality enriched in the lower register but still full-bodied, pure and resonant on the top B flats.
Her legato and fluency are alike well schooled, her intervals exceptionally clean and her feeling for light-and-shade at any rate aware that it exists. Room for developments lies principally in this area: she is not inexpressive but there is more to be made of the emotions and the part words play in their communication.
The selection of arias, concert and operatic, makes for a satisfying programme. Much is on the grand scale: injured women cry out against malign fate and determine to confront it. This includes, we note, both the mezzo and soprano leads in Così fan tutte: essentially sung in the same voice (she does not audibly 'turn soprano' for 'Come scoglio') and, one might well conclude, by the same character. The lighter, more intimate tone used in Ch'io mi scordi di te is welcome, and welcome too are some lesser known concert arias, most of all Ah, non lasciarmi, which has a melody almost as lovely as the now-famous 'Ruhe sanft' from Zaide. The longest is the profoundly set Misero me!, where the intricacies of the implied dramatic situation form something of a barrier, but where the sustained powers of the music and the singer impress deeply.
Thinking of comparisons, she is richer and warmer than Teresa Berganza, less imaginative and personally involved than Cecilia Bartoli, but also free of mannerisms. With lively accompaniment by the Salzburg Camerata, this is an exceptionally successful debut recital.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

“Elina Garanča is a mezzo-soprano from Latvia… Her voice is warm and ample, its quality enriched in the lower register but still full-bodied, pure and resonant on the top B flats. Her legato and fluency are alike well schooled, her intervals exceptionally clean... Thinking of comparisons, I would say she is richer and warmer than Berganza, less imaginative and personally involved in Bartoli, but also free of mannerisms. With lively accompaniment by the Salzburg Camerata, this is an exceptionally successful debut recital.” Gramophone Magazine, May 2006

GGramophone Magazine

Editor's Choice - May 2006

Virgin - 3326312

(CD)

$12.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Koopman conducts Mozart and Cimarosa

Koopman conducts Mozart and Cimarosa


Cimarosa:

Il maestro di cappella

Mozart:

Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Exsultate, jubilate, K165

Symphony No. 23 in D major, K181

Symphony No. 34 in C major, K338


Recorded live at the Mozarteum (Großer Saal), Salzburg, 2 February 2002

DVD Video

Region: 0

Format: NTSC

Medici Arts - 2072218

(DVD Video)

$30.25

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

Mozart - Arias

Mozart - Arias


Mozart:

Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Ch'io mi scordi di te?... Non temer, amato bene, K505

In uomini, in soldati (from Così fan tutte)

Ei parte...Per pietà (from Così fan tutte)

E amore un ladroncello (from Così fan tutte)

Non più di fiori (from La clemenza di Tito)

Quando avran fine omai ... Padre, germani, addio! (from Idomeneo)

Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583

Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Giunse alfin il momento - Al desio di chi t'adora K492/577


“'Singing Mozart is second nature to her,' enthuses Rattle of Magdalena KoOená. 'Each woman on each track is a completely distinct personality.' Promotional hype? Well, in hyper-Beckmesserish mode you could say her legato in 'Per pietà' is not quite seamless, the tempo for 'Deh vieni' a touch too jaunty. But this is barrel-scraping. If anyone has recorded a lovelier Mozart recital in recent years, we've yet to hear it. In her early thirties, KoOená is now consummate mistress of her art. Her liquid high mezzo, with its easy upward extension, combines warmth with the bloom and freshness of youth, while her coloratura, on display in 'Al desio di chi t'adora', is as brilliant and expressive as Bartoli's, yet without the Italian diva's intrusive aspirates.
Beyond this, Rattle's claim is hard to refute.
Cherubino (whose 'Voi che sapete' is sung in an embellished version published in 1810) and Dorabella (a blithe, flighty 'È amore un ladroncino') are the only roles here in KoOená's stage repertoire. But she 'lives' each of these wide-ranging characters intensely, from the remorseful Vitellia in La clemenza di Tito (sorrow etched into the texture of her voice) via the tenderness and anguish of Ilia in Idomeneo to a delightfully sly, knowing Despina. The vivid, tangy accompaniments from Rattle and the OAE go well beyond mere good style, with a classy basset-horn obbligato from Anthony Pay in the Vitellia aria. Fortepianist Jos van Immerseel is an equally sympathetic partner in an impassioned yet intimate performance of Ch'iomi scordi di te.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

GGramophone Magazine

Disc of the Month - September 2006

DG Archiv - E4776272

(CD)

$16.75

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

Bella mia Fiamma

Bella mia Fiamma

Mozart Concert Arias


Mozart:

Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582

Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583

Ah, lo previdi... Ah, l'invola agl'occhi miei, K272

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Ch'io mi scordi di te?... Non temer, amato bene, K505

Misera, dove son? - Ah! non son' io che parlo! K369

Giunse alfin il momento - Al desio di chi t'adora K492/577

Der Liebe himmlisches Gefühl K119 (382h)

Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528

Nehmt meinen Dank, ihr holden Gönner!, concert aria K383


Juliane Banse (soprano), Silke Avenhaus (piano)

Munich Chamber Orchestra, Christopher Poppen

“Banse is…. a discerning artist, with a graceful, subtle feeling for a Mozartian line, fluent coloratura and plenty of fire in a piece like the magnificent scena Ah, lo previdi - arguably Mozart's first truly great vocal work. …the orchestral playing is consistently alert and polished, with the solo oboe matching the soprano's eloquence in Ah, lo previdi.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2005

Tudor - TUDOR7073

(CD)

$17.00

(also available to download from $10.50)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Mozart: Concert Arias

Mozart: Concert Arias


Mozart:

Ah, lo previdi... Ah, l'invola agl'occhi miei, K272

Misera, dove son? - Ah! non son' io che parlo! K369

A questo seno deh vieni…Or che il cielo, K374

Bella mia fiamma, addio... Resta, oh cara, K528

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583

Grabmusik, K42: Betracht dies Herz


Gundula Janowitz (soprano)

Wiener Symphoniker, Wilfried Böttcher

DG Originals - E4497232

(CD)

$11.25

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

Mozart: Arias

Mozart: Arias


Mozart:

Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Chi sà, chi sà qual sia, K582

E amore un ladroncello (from Così fan tutte)

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Vedrai, carino (from Don Giovanni)

Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Parto, parto, ma tu ben mio (from La Clemenza di Tito)

Ecco il punto...Non più di fiori vaghe catene (from La clemenza di Tito)

Deh, per questo istante solo (from La Clemenza di Tito)

Ch'io mi scordi di te?... Non temer, amato bene, K505


Cecilia Bartoli

Wiener Kammerorchester, György Fischer

“Mozart wrote some of his most appealing music for the mezzo-soprano voice with the roles of Cherubino and Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro, Dorabella in Così fan tutte and Zerlina in DonGiovanni each boasting at least one memorable aria. Alongside these this disc includes a handful of concert arias including Ch'io mi scordi di te? which was written for the farewell performance of the great mezzo Nancy Storace with Mozart playing the concertante piano role. Here with as innate an interpreter of Mozart's piano writing as András Schiff and a voice so remarkably selfassured as Cecilia Bartoli's the electricity of that first, historic performance seems almost to be recreated. And, here as elsewhere, György Fischer directs the splendid Vienna Chamber Orchestra with disarming sensitivity while the recording is wonderfully warm and vibrant.
Cecilia Bartoli boasts a voice of extraordinary charm and unassuming virtuosity: her vocal characterisations would be the envy of the finest actresses and her intuitive singing is in itself a sheer delight. But she also brings to these arias a conviction and understanding of the subtleties of the language which only a native Italian could. Listen to the subtle nuances of 'Voi che sapete', the depth of understanding behind Dorabella's seemingly frivolous 'E'amore un ladroncello'; these aren't mere performances, but interpretations which cut to the very soul of the music. No Mozart lover should be without this CD.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Decca - E4305132

(CD)

$16.75

(Sorry, download not available in your country)

Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days.

Mozart: Concert Arias

Mozart: Concert Arias


Mozart:

Ah se in ciel, benigne stelle, K538

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Basta, vincesti… Ah, non lasciarmi Didone K468

Così dunque tradisci … Aspri rimorsi atroci, K432

Mentre ti lascio, K513

Misera, dove son? - Ah! non son' io che parlo! K369

Non più, tutto ascoltai - Non temer, amato bene, K490

Rivolgete a lui lo sguardo (from Così fan tutte)

Un bacio di mano, K541

Voi avete un cor fedele, K217


Christine Whittlesey, Edith Mathis, Edith Wiens (soprano), Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (baritone)

Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Kazimierz Kord, Michael Gielen, Uri Segal

Membran Allegria - 221050

(CD)

$9.00

Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days.

Festival of the Primadonnas - The Great Sopranos

Festival of the Primadonnas - The Great Sopranos


Beethoven:

Abscheulicher! Wo eilst du hin? (from Fidelio)

Bellini:

Casta Diva (from Norma)

Boito:

L'altra notte in fondo al mare (from Mefistofele)

Donizetti:

Ardon gli incensi (from Lucia di Lammermoor)

Fall:

Du mein Schonbrunn (from Die Kaiserin)

Gounod:

Ah! Je ris de me voir (from Faust)

Heuberger:

Gehen wir ins Chambre séparée) from The Opera Ball

Kalman:

Höre ich Zigeunergeigen (from Gräfin Mariza)

Lehár:

Viljalied (from Die lustige Witwe)

Ballsirenen (on themes from `Die lustige Witwe`)

Spiel' mir das Lied von Gluck und Treu (from Die ungarische Hochzeit)

Leoncavallo:

Qual fiamma avea nel guardo!.... Hui! Stridono lassù (from I Pagliacci)

sung in German

Mozart:

E Susanna non vien! … Dove sono i bei momenti (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Don Ottavio, son morta!...Or sai chi l'onore (from Don Giovanni)

Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (from Die Zauberflöte)

O zittre nicht (from Die Zauberflöte)

Puccini:

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Strauss, J, II:

Klänge der Heimat (from Die Fledermaus)

Dieser Anstand, so manierlich (from Die Fledermaus)

Wer uns getraut? (from Der Zigeunerbaron)

O, habet Acht (Saffi)

Wiener Blut: 'Das eines kann --- Ich war ein echtes Wiener Blut ...Wiener Blut!'

Frühlingsstimmen Walzer Op. 410

O, wie ist dass Leben schon (from Der Karneval in Rom)

Strauss, R:

Herr Gott in Himmel! (from Der Rosenkavalier)

Ah! Du wolltest mich nicht deinen Mund küssen lassen (from Salome)

Suppe:

Florenz hat schöne Frauen (from Boccaccio)

Thomas, Ambroise:

Connais-tu le pays (from Mignon)

sung in German

Verdi:

Ah, fors'è lui che l'anima (from La Traviata)

Ave Maria (from Otello)

Wagner:

Dich, teure Halle (from Tannhauser)

Wie aus der Ferne längst (from Der Fliegende Holländer)


This special priced 3 CD set entitled the Festival of the Primadonnas, features some of the greatest sopranos of our time singing arias from great operas such as Tosca, Lucia di Lammermoor, La Traviata, Aida, Don Giovanni and Fidelio to name a few.

This wide selection is sung by sopranos including Maria Callas and Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and they are accompanied by an impressive selection of orchestras and conductors.

Profil Medien - PH08025

(CD - 3 discs)

$23.00

(also available to download from $16.50)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Elizabeth Schwarzkopf: The Radiant Soprano

Elizabeth Schwarzkopf: The Radiant Soprano


Bach, J S:

Cantata BWV51 'Jauchzet Gott in allen Landen'

Cantata BWV208 'Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd!'

Cantata BWV68 'Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt: Mein glaubiges Herze

Cantata BWV199 'Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut'

Bist du bei mir, BWV508

Brahms:

Vergebliches Ständchen, Op. 84 No. 4

Immer leiser wird mein Schlummer, Op. 105 No. 2

Wie Melodien zieht es mir, Op. 105 No. 1

Der Jäger (No. 4 from Sieben Lieder, Op. 95)

Liebestreu, Op. 3 No. 1

Ständchen, Op. 106 No. 1

Dvorak:

Songs My Mother Taught Me, Op. 55 No. 4

Grieg:

Barnlige sange, Op. 61 No. 3 'Lok'

Ich liebe Dich, Op. 5 No. 3

Med en vandlije, Op. 25 No. 4

Våren, Op. 33 No. 2

Det første møde, Op. 21 No. 1

Zur Rosenzeit (No. 5 from Seks Sange, Op. 48)

Handel:

L'Allegro, Il Penseroso ed Il Moderato: Sweet Bird

Heuberger:

Gehen wir ins Chambre séparée) from The Opera Ball

Humperdinck:

Suse, liebe Suse... Brüderchen, komm tanz mit mir (from Hänsel und Gretel)

Der kleine Sandmann bin ich (from Hänsel und Gretel)

Irmgard Seefried (Hansel

Philharmonia Orchestra, Josef Krips

Jensen, A:

Murmelndes Lüftchen, Op. 21 No. 4

Lehár:

Bitte meine Herren (from Die Lustige Witwe)

Viljalied (from Die lustige Witwe)

Lippen schweigen (from Die Lustige Witwe)

Eberhard Wächter (baritone)

Philharmonia Orchestra & Chorus, Lovro von Matačić

Einer wird kommen (from Der Zarewitsch)

Heut’ noch werd' ich Ehefrau...Unbekannt, deshalb nicht minder interessant (from Der Graf von Luxemburg)

Ich danke...Soll ich? Soll ich nicht? (from Der Graf von Luxemburg)

Meine Lippen sie Kussen so heiss (from Giuditta)

Liszt:

Die drei Zigeuner, S.320

Mahler:

Lob des hohen Verstandes (Des Knaben Wunderhorn)

Medtner:

Selbstbetrug, Op. 15 No. 3

Aus 'Lila', Op. 15 No. 5

Mendelssohn:

Auf Flügeln des Gesanges, Op. 34 No. 2

Millöcker:

Ich habe Liebe schon genossen...Ich schenk' mein Herz (from Die Dubarry)

Was ich im Leben beginne...Ja so ist sie, die Dubarry (from Die Dubarry)

Mozart:

Exsultate, jubilate, K165

Ridente la calma, K152

Oiseaux, si tous les ans, K307

Dans un bois solitaire, K308

Die kleine Spinnerin, K531

Als Luise die Briefe, K520

Abendempfindung an Laura, K523

Das Kinderspiel, K598

Die Alte K517

Das Traumbild, K.530

Das Veilchen, K476

Im Frühlingsanfang, K597

Die Zufriedenheit,K.349

Das Lied der Trennung, K519

An Chloë, K524

Sehnsucht nach dem Frühlinge, K596

Ch'io mi scordi di te?... Non temer, amato bene, K505

Vado, ma dove? oh Dei!, K583

Alma grande e nobil core K578

Nehmt meinen Dank, ihr holden Gönner!, concert aria K383

L'amerò, sarò costante (from Il re pastore)

Zeffiretti lusinghieri (from Idomeneo)

Welche Kummer herrscht in meiner Seele (from Die Entführung aus dem Serail)

Traurigkeit (from Die Entführung aus dem Serail)

Martern aller Arten (from Die Entführung aus dem Serail)

Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Porgi amor (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Dove sono i bei momenti (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Giunse alfin il momento... Deh, vieni, non tardar… (from Le nozze di Figaro)

Batti, batti, o bel Masetto (from Don Giovanni)

Vedrai, carino (from Don Giovanni)

In quali eccessi ... Mi tradì quell'alma ingrate (from Don Giovanni)

Crudele? Ah no, mio bene! ... Non mi dir, bell'idol mio (from Don Giovanni)

Ach, ich fühl's (from Die Zauberflöte, K620)

Come scoglio (from Così fan tutte)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Karl Böhm

Mussorgsky:

In der Pilzen

Puccini:

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

Wiener Philharmoniker, Karl Böhm

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Wiener Phlharmoniker, Herbert von Karajan

Rossini:

La regata veneziana (C. Pepoli)

Victoria de los Angeles (soprano)

Duetto buffo di due gatti (Comic Duet for Two Cats)

Victoria de los Angeles (soprano)

Schubert:

Die Vogel D691

Liebhaber in allen Gestalten, D558

An die Musik D547

Im Frühling, D882

Wehmut, D772 (Collin)

Ganymed, D544 (Goethe)

Das Lied im Grünen, D917

Gretchen am Spinnrade, D118

Nähe des Geliebten, D162

Die junge Nonne, D828

An Sylvia, D891

Auf dem Wasser zu singen, D774

Nachtviolen D752 (Mayrhofer)

Der Musensohn, D764 (Goethe)

Litanei auf das Fest Allerseelen, D343

Ungeduld (No. 7 from Die schöne Müllerin, D795)

Heidenröslein, D257

Der Jüngling an der Quelle, D300 (Salis-Seewis)

Der Einsame, D800

Die Forelle, D550

Liebe schwarmt auf allen Wegen, D239 No. 6 (Goethe)

Seligkeit D433 (Holty)

An mein Klavier D342 (Schubart)

Erlkönig, D328

Schumann:

Liederkreis, Op. 39

Aufträge, Op. 77 No. 5

Widmung, Op. 25 No. 1

Tanzlied

Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (baritone)

Siecynski:

Wien, Wien nur du Allein (Vienna, City of My Dreams)

Strauss, J, II:

Dieser Anstand, so manierlich (from Die Fledermaus)

Nicolai Gedda (tenor)

Klänge der Heimat (from Die Fledermaus)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Herbert von Karajan

So elend und so true…O habet acht (from Der Zigeunerbaron)

Nicolai Gedda (tenor)

Wer uns getraut? (from Der Zigeunerbaron)

Willy Ferenz (bass)

Philharmonia Orchestra & Chorus, Otto Ackermann

Nun's Chorus & Laura's Song from Casanova

Strauss, R:

Four Last Songs

Morgen mittag um elf! (from Capriccio)

Ich danke, Fraulein (from Arabella)

Anny Felbermayer (Zdenka)

Mein Elemer! Das hat so einen sonderbaren (from Arabella)

Anny Felbermayer (Zdenka), Murray Dickie (Elemer)

Sie woll'n mich heiraten, sagt mein Vater (from Arabella)

Josef Metternich (Mandryka)

Und jetzt sag ich Adieu, mein lieber Dominik (from Arabella)

Harald Pröglhöf (Dominik), Walter Berry (Lamoral)

Das war sehr gut, Mandryka (from Arabella)

Josef Metternich (Mandryka)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Lovro von Matačić

Der Rosenkavalier: excerpts

Christa Ludwig (Octavian), Teresa Stich-Randall (Sophie)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Herbert von Karajan

Muttertändelei, Op. 43 No. 2

Waldseligkeit, Op. 49 No. 1

Zueignung, Op. 10 No. 1

Freundliche Vision, Op. 48 No. 1

Die heiligen drei Könige aus Morgenland Op. 56 No. 6

Radio-Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, George Szell

Ruhe, meine Seele!, Op. 27 No. 1

Meinem Kinde, Op. 37 No. 3

Wiegenlied, Op. 41 No. 1

Morgen, Op. 27 No. 4

Edith Peinemann (violin)

Das Bächlein, Op. 88 No. 1

Das Rosenband, Op. 36 No. 1

Winterweihe, Op. 48 No. 4

London Symphony Orchestra, George Szell

Herr Gott in Himmel! (from Der Rosenkavalier)

Irmgard Seefried (Octavian)

Wiener Philharmoniker, Herbert von Karajan

Suppe:

Hab' ich nur deine Liebe (from Boccaccio)

Tchaikovsky:

None but the lonely heart, Op. 6 No. 6

Verdi:

Libera me (from Requiem)

Philharmonia Chorus and Orchestra, Carlo Maria Giulini

Wagner:

Dich, teure Halle (from Tannhauser)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Walter Susskind

Einsam in trüben Tagen (from Lohengrin)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Walter Susskind

Weber:

Wie nahte mir der Schlummer … Leise, leise, fromme Weise (from Der Freischütz)

Philharmonia Orchestra, Walter Susskind

Wolf, H:

Im Frühling (No. 13 from Mörike-Lieder)

Elfenlied (No. 16 from Mörike-Lieder)

Lebe wohl (No. 36 from Mörike-Lieder)

Schlafendes Jesuskind (No. 25 from Mörike-Lieder)

Phänomen (No. 32 from Goethe-Lieder)

Die Spröde (No. 26 from Goethe-Lieder)

Die Bekehrte (No. 27 from Goethe-Lieder)

Anakreons Grab (No. 29 from Goethe-Lieder)

Blumengruss (No. 24 from Goethe-Lieder)

Epiphanias (No. 19 from Goethe-Lieder)

Wie lange schon war immer mein Verlangen (No. 11 from Italienisches Liederbuch)

Was soll der Zorn, mein Schatz, der dich erhitzt? (No. 32 from Italienisches Liederbuch)

Nein, junger Herr, so treibt man’s nicht, fürwahr (No. 12 from Italienisches Liederbuch)

Mein Liebster hat zu Tische mich geladen (No. 25 from Italienisches Liederbuch)

Bedeckt mich mit Blumen (No. 26 from Spanisches Liederbuch: Weltliche Lieder)

Herr, was trägt der Boden hier (from Spanisches Liederbuch)

In dem Schatten meiner Locken (No. 2 from Spanisches Liederbuch: Weltliche Lieder)

Mögen alle bösen Zungen (No. 13 from Spanisches Liederbuch: Weltliche Lieder)

Wie Glanzet der Helle Mond

Wiegenlied im Sommer (from Sechs Lieder für eine Frauenstimme)

Nachtzauber (No. 8 from Eichendorff-Lieder)

Die Zigeunerin (No. 7 from Eichendorff-Lieder)

Mignon IV 'Kennst du das Land' (No. 9 from Goethe-Lieder)

Zeller:

Ich bin die Christel von der Post (from Der Vogelhändler)

Schenkt man sich Rosen in Tirol (from Der Vogelhändler)

Wo sie war die Müllerin...Sei nicht bös' (from Der Obersteiger)


Elizabeth Schwarzkopf (soprano)

Elisabeth Schwarzkopf (1915–2006) is universally acknowledged to be one of the greatest singers of the 20th century. Blessed with a voice of exquisite beauty, as well as a striking physical presence, she shone brightly in opera, excelled in the concert hall and brought a unique artistry to the recital platform. She was signed exclusively to EMI in 1946 by the recording producer Walter Legge, with whom she formed a dedicated artistic and personal relationship, and together they produced a stream of magnificent recordings over almost 30 years. In addition to the tonal qualities of her voice, Schwarzkopf was renowned for her unrivalled communicative ability, which the vocal critic John Steane described as 'almost making the voice visible'. Thus she could translate her charismatic stage presence into purely vocal terms through the medium of recording, and still convey all the dramatic meaning of her songs and operatic characters to listeners who could hear but not see her. This rare quality is evident in all the recordings in this unique collection, which covers a lifetime of work and reveals the development of her art.

The first CD begins with recordings of works by Bach, Handel and Mozart that are among the earliest that Schwarzkopf made for EMI. They show her voice at its freshest and also exhibit her fine legato and appreciable technique in Baroque music.

CD 2 begins with the famous collaboration between Schwarzkopf and the eminent pianist Walter Gieseking in a collection of simple but refined songs by Mozart that reveal great beauty of tone, evenness of line and sincerity of expression in the singing, as well as sensitive accompaniment from Gieseking. These are followed by four of Mozart’s concert arias with orchestra, in which the conductor is the highly regarded George Szell.

At the beginning of her career, Schwarzkopf sang mainly lighter roles and in CD 3 we have a collection of Mozart arias that demonstrate this part of her repertoire in the arias of Susanna (Le nozze di Figaro) and Pamina (Die Zauberflöte), but also a number of lyric roles that she never sang on stage, including Zerlina (Don Giovanni) and Cherubino (Le nozze di Figaro). This disc also gives us the chance to compare Schwarzkopf’s totally different characterisation of the three principal female roles in Don Giovanni (Elvira, Anna and Zerlina) and Le nozze di Figaro (Susanna, Cherubino and the Countess).

CD 4 brings us back to the field of Lieder and includes another collaboration with a famous pianist, this time Edwin Fischer, in a highly acclaimed recital of Schubert Lieder, as well as more Schubert songs with her two regular accompanists, Gerald Moore and Geoffrey Parsons.

In CD 5 we encounter the widely varied programmes of songs by a wide-ranging selection of composers – from Mendelssohn and Schumann, through Liszt and Brahms, to Mahler and Medtner and many more in between – that would often be a feature of Schwarzkopf’s recitals. To each of these songs she brings her own individuality and stamps them with her personal qualities of beautiful singing and vivid interpretation.

The next disc is devoted entirely to the songs of Hugo Wolf, a composer whom Legge had championed since the beginning of the 1930s. Guided by Legge, Schwarzkopf became a peerless interpreter of Wolf's compositions. This live recording is of a legendary concert in Salzburg on 12 August 1953 marking the 50th anniversary of Hugo Wolf’s death. The piano accompanist is the great conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler.

CD 7 brings us to Richard Strauss, a composer of whose works Schwarzkopf was a matchless performer. It begins with Schwarzkopf’s 1953 recording of Strauss’s valedictory Vier letzte Lieder, followed by the closing scene from Capriccio, an opera that Schwarzkopf performed a number of times on stage, and ends with scenes from Arabella, which Schwarzkopf sang only in the recording studio.

CD 8 stays with Richard Strauss. It starts with a long extract from the first act of Der Rosenkavalier beginning with the aging Marschallin contemplating the passing of the years in a famous monologue and then going to the end of the act in an extended duet with her young lover, the handsome Octavian. This is followed by the glorious trio from the end of the third act, one of Strauss’s most beautiful compositions for the female voice. Then come 12 of Strauss’s wonderful songs for soprano with orchestra, all conducted in supreme Straussian style by George Szell.

In CD 9 we turn to the lighter side of Schwarzkopf’s repertoire with extracts from a whole range of delightful Viennese operettas, beginning with two of Johann Strauss II’s favourite works: Die Fledermaus and Der Zigeunerbaron. Then come several extracts from Schwarzkopf’s second complete recording of Die lustige Witwe by Franz Lehár, and finally the complete recital of operetta arias that was always one of Schwarzkopf’s must popular albums.

The final CD in the set starts with some of Schwarzkopf’s earliest operatic recordings, when she was singing Sophie in Der Rosenkavalier rather than the Marschallin, and a very youthful-sounding Gretel in Hänsel und Gretel. Then come a varied assortment of operatic arias that recall some of the roles that Schwarzkopf sang in the early part of her career, and the disc concludes with four items from the memorable concert at the Royal Festival Hall, London, in February 1967, when Schwarzkopf joined with her two distinguished colleagues Dietrich Fischer- Dieskau and Victoria de los Angeles to pay homage to that doyen of accompanists, Gerald Moore.

EMI Icons - 9184592

(CD - 10 discs)

$37.75

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