Description
EMI Testament 33CX1204 Mono 180 Gram Virgin Vinyl
Pure Analogue Audiophile Mastering Pressed in Germany
Testament has revived these classic titles from the EMI catalog using only the original EMI master tapes,cut onto lacquer at EMIs Abbey Road Studios and mastered using full analog techniques throughout production.
PUCCINI Operatic Arias:
Gianni Schicchi, Suor Angelica
Manon Lescaut, La Bohème,
Turandot, Madama Butterfly
Maria Callas
Philharmonia Orchestra
Tullio Serafin
Lescaut, Madama Butterfly, La Boheme, Suor Angelica, Glanni Schicchi and Turandot Maria Callas / Philharmonia Orchestra / Serafin
In September 1954, when this famous recording was made, the legendary soprano Maria Callas was vocally at her peak. In this, her first recital record, she shows an extraordinary ability to evoke the atmosphere and drama that characterize some of the most famous arias in Puccinis romantic operas. Perhaps no singer has brought such passion and variety of mood to this composers music as did Callas, and she is ably partnered by the Philharmonic Orchestra under a favorite conductor colleague, the vastly experienced Tullio Serafin. EMIs engineers captured both the quality of Callas voice and Puccinis magical orchestration to great effect, and Testaments LP transfer recaptures the quality of the original production with the greatest fidelity.
Although Maria Callas considered herself a bel canto and Verdi soprano, through recordings and video documents her name is inextricably linked with that of Puccini. This extraordinary album of Puccini arias was aptly named Puccini Heroines, as it is indeed a collection of portraits of many of the composers powerful creations for soprano. By September 1954, Callas had reinvented herself as a slim, elegant diva; the weight loss brought a new slenderness to the voice as well, while the instrument retained flexibility and plushness. Listening to this disc 60 years on, one is struck immediately by the sheer beauty in much of the singing. Callass bel canto skills, combined with her musical genius, add a host of ravishing touches: perfectly weighted portamentos, exquisite melismas, stunning diminuendos all essential ingredients for Puccini, often omitted by singers less gifted, all used here for expression.
Callas offers a gallery of characters, each with her own voice an effect never accomplished in an applied manner, always organic-sounding. One senses Manons pampered melancholy in In quelle trine morbide, and her exhausted desperation in Sola, perduta, abbandonata. Brilliant storytelling and keen observation of Puccinis markings make the familiar Un bel dì vedremo anything but routine. Going from Butterflys death to Mimìs narrative is akin to a splash of cold water on the listeners face, so profound is the change. Callas balances perfectly the parlando and legato in both arias from La bohème, while Senza mamma is as extraordinary for its sense of loss as O mio babbino caro is for its directness. And what other soprano could so fully capture both Liù and Turandot? But then, this is what makes Callas Callas






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