Puccini: Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

This page lists all recordings of Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut), by Giacomo Antonio Domenico Michele Secondo Maria Puccini (1858-1924) on CD, SACD, DVD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

Recommendations

Opera Choice
April 2005
Editor's Choice
Awards Issue 2009
Editor's Choice
March 2005

All recordings

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Puccini: Opera Arias

Puccini: Opera Arias


Puccini:

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (from Madama Butterfly)

with Roberto Alagna (tenor)

Addio, addio mio dolce amor! (from Edgar)

Nel villaggio d'Edgar (from Edgar)

Chi il bel sogno di Doretta (from La Rondine)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

Quando me'n vo (from La Bohème)

Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème)

L'amore e un altra cosa (from La Fanciulla del West)

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Se come voi piccina io fossi (from Le Villi)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

with Roberto Alagna (tenor)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Antonio Pappano


Angela Gheorghiu (soprano)

Royal Opera Chorus & Orchestra Sinfonica di Milano Giuseppe Verdi, Anton Coppola

“Everything Gheorghiu achieves here is technically assured, thought through and emotionally rewarding. This is a deeply satisfying traversal of the Puccini canon.” Gramophone Magazine

EMI Masters - 6783292

(CD)

$10.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Puccini ≡ Passion

Puccini ≡ Passion


Puccini:

Se come voi piccina io fossi (from Le Villi)

Addio, addio mio dolce amor! (from Edgar)

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

Quando me'n vo (from La Bohème)

Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Che tua madre dovrà prenderti in braccio (from Madama Butterfly)

Con onor muore (from Madama Butterfly)

Chi il bel sogno di Doretta (from La Rondine)

Ore dolci e divine (from La Rondine)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

E l'uccellino

Sole e Amore

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)


Cheryl Barker (soprano)

State Orchestra of Victoria, Richard Bonynge

Cheryl Barker first broke the hearts of audiences worldwide as Mimì in Baz Luhrman’s imaginative production of La bohème. In Puccini ≡ Passion the radiant Australian soprano delivers beguiling performances in a panoply of Puccini’s heroines in favourite arias, accompanied by the State Orchestra of Victoria under the baton of Richard Bonynge.

Opera expert Rodney Milnes comments in the booklet: “Puccini famously liked to write about "little women", but he gave them "big" music, which is one thing that makes Cheryl Barker so ideal an interpreter of his soprano roles ... her lyric soprano, with an indefinably sweet vibrancy built in to the tone, adds immeasurably to her appeal. With that vibrancy comes a sense of vulnerability, which helps her bring the characters alive in both vocal and dramatic terms ... This most welcome disc allows her to present an overview of Puccini's women from the very beginning.”

Issued for the first time on SACD, this disc is for all lovers of Puccini, encompassing his most popular soprano arias from Manon Lescaut, Tosca, La bohème and Madama Butterfly, one of Barker’s favourite roles, as well as arias from Le Villi, Edgar, La rondine, Suor Angelica, Gianni Schicci and Turandot. Barker ends with two little known treasures, the folksong-like ‘E l’uccellino’, and ‘Sole e amore’, an 1888 song whose melody Puccini later re-used in La bohème. And in a departure from his usual repertoire Richard Bonynge brings fresh imagination and sparkle to Puccini’s masterful orchestral palette.

Cheryl Barker’s most recent CD, also for Melba and released in 2011, was Pure Diva (MR301129), a very personal tribute to her teacher and fellow Australian soprano, the great Dame Joan Hammond.

Super Audio CD

Format:

Hybrid Multi-channel

Melba Recordings - MR301110

(SACD)

$15.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

The Callas Effect (Deluxe Edition)

The Callas Effect (Deluxe Edition)

2CD / 1DVD


Bellini:

Casta Diva (from Norma)

Col sorriso d'innocenza (from Il Pirata)

Bizet:

L'amour est un oiseau rebelle 'Habanera' (from Carmen)

Carreau! Pique! La mort! (from Carmen)

Catalani:

Ebben? Ne andrò lontana (from La Wally)

Delibes:

Où va la jeune Indoue? 'Bell Song' (from Lakmé)

Giordano, U:

La mamma morta (from Andrea Chénier)

Gluck:

Divinités du Styx (from Alceste)

Gounod:

Ah! Je ris de me voir (from Faust)

Mozart:

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

Ponchielli:

Suicidio! (from La Gioconda)

Puccini:

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Rossini:

Una voce poco fa (from Il barbiere di Siviglia)

Saint-Saëns:

Amour, viens aider ma faiblesse (Samson et Dalila)

Thomas, Ambroise:

Ah, pour ce soir...Je suis Titania (from Mignon)

Verdi:

Mercè, dilette amiche 'Bolero' (from I Vespri Siciliani)

Caro nome (from Rigoletto)

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

La luce langue (from Macbeth)

D'amor sull'ali rosee (from Il Trovatore)

Surta è la notte...Ernani! Ernani, involami (from Ernani)

Ritorna vincitor! (from Aida)

Tu che la vanità (from Don Carlo)

DVD 'The Callas Effect'

1. Introduction

2. Humble Beginnings

3. The New Star

4. Norma at Covent Garden

5. Records and Romance

6. La Traviata

7. Il Trovatore

8. Bringing drama to the opera stage: Tosca

9. Concerts

10. Audience Response

11. High Society and Fashion

12. Losing Voice

13. 'Sola, perduta, abbandonata'

14. The Callas Effect today

15. Conclusion


Maria Callas (soprano)

Maria Callas is the ultimate and original diva. Widely regarded as the greatest Opera singer and performer of all time whose life, voice and performances have intrigued, thrilled and inspired all others.

Maria Callas

34 years after her death Maria Callas remains the definition of a diva. She is not only the world's bestselling soprano but also EMI Classic's bestselling artist of all time. Widely regarded for her intense characterisation and unique interpretations she has become a cultural icon whose music and life continues to influence today.

“Her reputation, extremely high when she died, has become ever greater in the years since her death. As a personality she remains controversial, but as an artist hardly at all: her genius is recognised as supreme by virtually all opera lovers, indeed it is often from listening to her many recordings that people discover what an incredibly potent art form opera can be.” BBC Music Magazine

The Music

This wonderfully constructed 2CD collection of opera arias highlights Callas’s spectacular climb to fame tracking her move from innocent young woman to the tragic heroine in her later years through the opera arias she recorded.

Featuring the most special and exquisitely interpreted arias of her output this collection brings together such opera favourites as O mio babbino caro, Vissi d’arte and Casta diva.

Callas’s recordings have featured prominently in many critically acclaimed movies including Academy Award winner Philadelphia and Academy Award Nominated Milk

Callas is the immortal diva whose music transcends time and sounds as unique and inspired today. Many noted musicians have quoted Callas as a musical influence including Linda Ronstadt, Patti Smith, Emmylou Harris, Celine Dion, Jason Mraz and Rufus Wainwright.

Documentary

EMI Classics has made The Callas Effect because there are powerful first-hand accounts that have not before been revealed of how and why Callas has exerted a unique and extraordinary effect – on other celebrity opera singers, on distinguished stage directors, on actors and actresses, on backstage theatre crews, on recording staff, on impresarios, on audiences who queued up for days and nights to see her, and now on young music-lovers who are captivated by her CDs and DVDs. People from all these walks of life, newly captured just for this memoir and including some who personally knew her, are the passionate witnesses of Maria Callas’s genius in The Callas Effect, which also includes extracts from her performances, recordings and interviews.

“memorable artistry is evident everywhere - utterly exemplary in its musical intelligence, stirring in its interpretative eloquence. The technique dazzles in marvellously expressive trills...and everywhere, of course, the uniquely penetrating dramatic involvement.” International Record Review, January 2012

“This makes a good Callas set for beginners. It contains arias that showcase a good section of her most successful repertoire and it captures her voice at its best.Exactly when it is captured remains a mystery, however: the set’s main problem for pre-existing fans and aficionados is that, while it contains information about where and with whom each track was recorded, we are not given any dates.” MusicWeb International, January 2012

EMI - 0843562

(CD - 2 discs)

$19.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

The Callas Effect (Experience Edition)

The Callas Effect (Experience Edition)


Bellini:

Casta Diva (from Norma)

Col sorriso d'innocenza (from Il Pirata)

Bizet:

L'amour est un oiseau rebelle 'Habanera' (from Carmen)

Carreau! Pique! La mort! (from Carmen)

Catalani:

Ebben? Ne andrò lontana (from La Wally)

Delibes:

Où va la jeune Indoue? 'Bell Song' (from Lakmé)

Giordano, U:

La mamma morta (from Andrea Chénier)

Gluck:

Divinités du Styx (from Alceste)

Gounod:

Ah! Je ris de me voir (from Faust)

Mozart:

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

Ponchielli:

Suicidio! (from La Gioconda)

Puccini:

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Rossini:

Una voce poco fa (from Il barbiere di Siviglia)

Saint-Saëns:

Amour, viens aider ma faiblesse (Samson et Dalila)

Thomas, Ambroise:

Ah, pour ce soir...Je suis Titania (from Mignon)

Verdi:

Mercè, dilette amiche 'Bolero' (from I Vespri Siciliani)

Caro nome (from Rigoletto)

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

La luce langue (from Macbeth)

D'amor sull'ali rosee (from Il Trovatore)

Surta è la notte...Ernani! Ernani, involami (from Ernani)

Ritorna vincitor! (from Aida)

Tu che la vanità (from Don Carlo)


Maria Callas (soprano)

This wonderfully constructed 2CD collection of opera arias highlights Callas’s spectacular climb to fame tracking her move from innocent young woman to the tragic heroine in her later years through the opera arias she recorded.

Featuring the most special and exquisitely interpreted arias of her output this collection brings together such opera favourites as O mio babbino caro, Vissi d’arte and Casta diva.

“memorable artistry is evident everywhere - utterly exemplary in its musical intelligence, stirring in its interpretative eloquence. The technique dazzles in marvellously expressive trills...and everywhere, of course, the uniquely penetrating dramatic involvement.” International Record Review, January 2012

EMI - 0843622

(CD - 2 discs)

$15.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Puccini: La Bohème

Puccini: La Bohème


Puccini:

La Bohème

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)


Renata Tebaldi, Gianna d’Angelo, Carlo Bergonzi, Ettore Bastianini & Cesare Siepi

Chorus & Orchestra of the Accademia di Santa Cecilia, Rome, Tullio Serafin

Alto - ALC2017

(CD - 2 discs)

$11.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Renata Tebaldi sings Puccini and Verdi Favourites

Renata Tebaldi sings Puccini and Verdi Favourites


Puccini:

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

Carlo Bergonzi (tenor)

Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (from Madama Butterfly)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Che tua madre dovrà prenderti in braccio (from Madama Butterfly)

Enzo Sardelli (baritone)

Verdi:

Son giunta … Madre, pietosa Vergine (from La Forza del Destino)

Pace, pace mio Dio! (from La forza del destino)

Ritorna vincitor! (from Aida)

D'amor sull'ali rosee (from Il Trovatore)


“If you were to have just one Tebaldi CD in your collection this must be it. Each aria is an object lesson in how to sing this repertoire.” BBC Music Magazine, August 2011 *****

“To hear Tebaldi in (say) Butterfly's Un bel di...is to be reminded that hers are the classic virtues: those of beautiful tone, musical feeling, sincere utterance. And if for these qualities she was supreme among her contemporary Italian sopranos, she surely stands head and shoulders above any of the present generation” Gramophone Magazine

“the recital rightly concentrates on her stereo remakes of the key Puccini operas...voice still creamily fresh. Vissi d'arte (1959) is particularly beautiful...thrilling in Verdi, too, as the splendid Ritorna vincitor! vibrantly demonstrates...this recital should disappoint no-one.” Penguin Guide

Alto - ALC1133

(CD)

$7.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Karine Babajanyan – Puccini Arias

Karine Babajanyan – Puccini Arias


Puccini:

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Bimba dagli occhi pieni di malia (from Madama Butterfly)

Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (from Madama Butterfly)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Tu, tu, amore tu (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

Nessun dorma (from Turandot)


Karine Babajanyan (soprano) with Giuseppe Giacomini (tenor)

Budapest Symphony Orchestra, Pier Giorgio Morandi

Armenian soprano Karine Babajanyan has made an international impact as Cio-Cio San in numerous Madama Butterfly productions and is one of today's outstanding performers of Puccini’s divas.

“Karine Babajanyan succeeds not only acting wise but also gives us a musically complex portrayal of the title heroin...” the press wrote about her debut at the Opera House Graz as Cio-Cio-San, a role she has since performed at the New National Theatre Tokyo, the Hamburg State Opera, the Opera House Frankfurt, the State Theatres of Saarbrucken and Wiesbaden, and at the Stuttgart State Opera.

Karine Babajanyan began her musical education with piano lessons at the age of seven and continued with singing and choir direction studies at the Erivan City Conservatory, graduating with distinction. After participating in master classes in Italy the young artist returned to her native country. Here, she received her first engagement at the Armenian National Opera.

The versatile artist is hailed by both the press and the public for her “…warm-timbred, youthful dramatic voice…” in all the important roles of her repertoire e.g. the Contessa in ‘Le nozze di Figaro’, Fiordiligi in ‘Cosi fan tutte’, Mimi in ‘La Bohéme’, Leonora in ‘Il Trovatore’, just to name a few.

In 2007 the attractive soprano made her widely noticed debut as Tosca at the Bregenz Festival in Austria – seen by cinema-goers worldwide in the opera scene in the James Bond film ‘Quantum Of Solace’.

Further guest performances took Karine to the Aalto Theatre in Essen, the Mannheim National Theatre, to Bern, Basle, Oslo, Dorset and Mexico, where she keeps celebrating triumphs in roles such as Tatjana (Eugen Onegin), Norma, Leonora (La forza del destino), Maria (Mazeppa)‚ Maddalena (Andrea Chénier) and the press comments “not only is her voice true, powerful and beautiful, but she has that natural presence with which only few are blessed”.

“There was great excitement at the British debut of Armenian soprano Karine Babajanyan in the title role, and she fully satisfied the anticipation. She has attracted rave reviews in Germany, Switzerland and Israel, and local audiences were indeed fortunate to see this remarkable singer so early in her career. Not only is her voice true, powerful and beautiful, but she has that natural presence with which only few are blessed, and her performance was magnetic” Blackmore Vale Magazine on Karine Babajanyan’s UK debut in Norma with Dorset Opera

“Her technique sounds rock solid and her musical instincts are unerring. The surprise of the disc is the excellent condition of the 68-year-old Giuseppe Giacomini in the Butterfly and Manon Lescaut duets. He rounds off with a ringing Nessun dorma that puts most tenors half his age to shame.” Sunday Times, 5th April 2009 ***

“Thanks partly to her appearance in the opera scene in Quantum of Solace, the Armenian soprano Karine Babajanyan is reaching a wide audience. Her appearance as Tosca is echoed here in a stirring "Vissi D'Arte", while her experience as Cio-Cio San comes through in the Butterfly arias "Un Bel Di, Vedremo" and the duet "Bimba Dagli Occhi Pieni Di Malia"; her partner in that, Giuseppe Giacomini, gets a showcase in "Nessun Dorma".” The Independent, 27th March 2009 ***

EMI - 2677312

(CD)

$15.25

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Angela Gheorghiu - Puccini

Angela Gheorghiu - Puccini


Puccini:

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (from Madama Butterfly)

Addio, addio mio dolce amor! (from Edgar)

Nel villaggio d'Edgar (from Edgar)

Chi il bel sogno di Doretta (from La Rondine)

Si, mi chiamano Mimi (from La Bohème)

Quando me'n vo (from La Bohème)

Donde lieta usci (from La Bohème)

Laggiù nel Soledad (from La Fanciulla del West)

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Senza mamma, o bimbo (from Suor Angelica)

O mio babbino caro (from Gianni Schicchi)

Se come voi piccina io fossi (from Le Villi)

Signore, ascolta! (from Turandot)

Tu che di gel sei cinta (from Turandot)

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)


“Angela Gheorghiu delivers some of her finest singing on a disk full of Puccinian gems” BBC Music Magazine, April 2005

GGramophone Magazine

Editor's Choice - March 2005

BBC Music Magazine

Opera Choice - April 2005

EMI - 3323552

(CD)

$14.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Arte Nova Voices - Portrait

Arte Nova Voices - Portrait


Catalani:

Ebben? Ne andrò lontana (from La Wally)

Giordano, U:

La mamma morta (from Andrea Chénier)

Puccini:

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio (from Madama Butterfly)

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

Verdi:

Morrò, ma prima in grazia (from Un Ballo in Maschera)

Tacea la notte (from Il Trovatore)

D'amor sull'ali rosee (from Il Trovatore)

Pace, pace mio Dio! (from La forza del destino)

Tu che la vanità (from Don Carlo)

Ritorna vincitor! (from Aida)

Qui Radamès verrà!... O patria mia (from Aida)

Di te! Scordarmi di te! (from Il Trovatore)


Anda-Louise Bogza (soprano)

Slovak Radio Symphony Orchestra Bratislava, Ivan Anguelov

Arte Nova - 74321852962

(CD)

$6.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Sylvia Sass – The Decca Recitals

Sylvia Sass – The Decca Recitals


Bartók:

Five Songs, Op. 16 (Text: Endre Ady)

Bellini:

Sediziose voci (from Norma)

with the Ambrosian Singers

Liszt:

Die Lorelei

with András Schiff (piano)

Ne brany menya, moy drug, S340a

original version

with András Schiff (piano)

Enfant, si j'étais roi (Hugo), S283

with András Schiff (piano)

Es muss ein Wunderbares sein, S. 314

with András Schiff (piano)

Vergiftet sind meine Lieder, S.289

with András Schiff (piano)

Kling Leise, mein Lied, S301

with András Schiff (piano)

Der König von Thule

with András Schiff (piano)

Die drei Zigeuner, S.320

with András Schiff (piano)

Ponchielli:

Suicidio! (from La Gioconda)

National Philharmonic Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Puccini:

In questa reggia (from Turandot)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Vissi d'arte (from Tosca)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

In quelle trine morbide (from Manon Lescaut)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Sola, perduta, abbandonata (from Manon Lescaut)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Un bel di vedremo (from Madama Butterfly)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Verdi:

Ritorna vincitor! (from Aida)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

Una macchia è qui tutt'ora (from Macbeth)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

O madre, dal cielo …Se vano, se vano è il pregare (from I Lombardi)

London Symphony Orchestra, Lamberto Gardelli

È strano! è strano!...Ah! fors è lui (from La traviata)

with Ian Caley (tenor)

Vanne, lasciami (from Il Trovatore)

La luce langue (from Macbeth)


Sylvia Sass (soprano)

Sylvia Sass was born near Budapest, Hungary, in 1951 to a very musical family. Her mother was a coloratura soprano and her father a high school music teacher. She made her stage debut at age 14 in Adam’s operetta Die Nürnberger Puppe and then commenced study at the celebrated Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest, completing a five-year program in two. Her professional debut was as Frasquita in Carmen in 1971. Several awards followed – 1st prize at the Kodály Voice Competition in Budapest, 1972; winner at the International Opera Competition for Young Singers, of the Grand Prix as Violetta in La traviata, 1973, the Silver Medal at the International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, 1974. She was also made an Honoured Artist of Hungary in 1977.

While still in Budapest, she performed such dramatic roles as Freia in Das Rheingold, Violetta in La traviata and Mimi in La bohème. International stardom came with a composer with whom she is most associated and in a role represented on her Decca recitals – Giselda in Verdi’s I Lombardi at Covent Garden in London, 1976. The next year she made both, her Italian debut in Turin as Lady Macbeth, and her Metropolitan Opera debut as Tosca alongside José Carreras. La Scala followed the year after, in 1978, where she sang Puccini’s tragic heroine Manon Lescaut alongside Plácido Domingo.

Soon, Sass was being heralded as ‘the new Callas’, and she did meet Callas in person, thanks to a meeting set up by Leonard Bernstein. True, the voice had a similar dramatic colour, but Sass quickly rebuffed the comparison, saying, ‘Callas was so great and so unique. I just don’t think it’s fair to compare somebody with such a great artist.’

Her three recital records for Decca include two discs of operatic arias, including all her most celebrated roles, both conducted by Lamberto Gardelli, and a disc of songs by Liszt and Bartók with her compatriot, pianist András Schiff. All of these are issued collectively as a 2CD set for the first time. In recent years, Sass has settled in France, where she keeps busy painting and giving masterclasses.

“you could say that Sylvia Sass had taken the best from Callas's and Sutherland's Norma … ‘Sempre libera’, which sounds appropriately hectic, is fearlessly done (with a tender, ardent incursion from Ian Caley as Alfredo) … her vibrant ‘Suicidio’ is undeniably exciting … The Decca recording is faultless.” Gramophone Magazine

“The very first phrases of the opening aria (Turandot’s ‘In questa reggia’, no less) command attention and let you know that something rather special has arrived on the scene. And as the Puccini arias follow one another it becomes quite clear that here is an exceptional singer, distinctive in timbre, distinguished in artistry. The voice glitters rather than soothes, shines rather than warms. It is powerful, has a wide range, and is firmly placed. The tone can be brilliantly luminous (as in the Turandot aria), or may acquire a deeper kind of radiance (as in the ‘Vissi d’arte’ that follows it).” Gramophone Magazine

“Entering into every nuance of the songs’ moods, and employing a dynamic range from the merest whisper to a full-blooded climax, Sylvia Sass makes the utmost of their not very rewarding vocal line; but the success of this performance is assured by the subtle playing of András Schiff, who conjures up beautiful sounds from the swirling figurations [Bartók] … Die Loreley is an evocative scena, sung imaginatively (and with much flexibility of pace) by Sass, bringing into play a vocal quality as seductive as that of the siren herself; and her gentle singing of the serenade Kling leise, mein Lied would melt the most obdurate heart. … all the performances here are unusually illuminating and satisfying; and the recording is excellent.” Gramophone Magazine (Liszt, Bartók)

Australian Eloquence - 4802093

(CD - 2 discs)

$14.00

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days.

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