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This Catalogue contains all Double-Sided Celebrity Records issued up to and including March 31st, 1924. The Single-Sided Celebrity Records are also included, and will be found under the records of the following artists :-CLARA Burr (all records), CARUSO and MELBA (Duet 054129), CARUSO,TETRAZZINI, AMATO, JOURNET, BADA, JACOBY (Sextet 2-054034), KUBELIK, one record only (3-7966), and TETRAZZINI, one record only (2-033027). International Celebrity Artists ALDA CORSI, A. P. GALLI-CURCI KURZ RUMFORD AMATO CORTOT GALVANY LUNN SAMMARCO ANSSEAU CULP GARRISON MARSH SCHIPA BAKLANOFF DALMORES GIGLI MARTINELLI SCHUMANN-HEINK BARTOLOMASI DE GOGORZA GILLY MCCORMACK Scorn BATTISTINI DE LUCA GLUCK MELBA SEMBRICH BONINSEGNA DE' MURO HEIFETZ MOSCISCA SMIRN6FF BORI DESTINN HEMPEL PADEREWSKI TAMAGNO BRASLAU DRAGONI HISLOP PAOLI TETRAZZINI BI1TT EAMES HOMER PARETO THIBAUD CALVE EDVINA HUGUET PATTt WERRENRATH CARUSO ELMAN JADLOWKER PLANCON WHITEHILL CASAZZA FARRAR JERITZA POLI-RANDACIO WILLIAMS CHALIAPINE FLETA JOHNSON POWELL ZANELLIi CHEMET FLONZALEY JOURNET RACHM.4NINOFF ZIMBALIST CICADA QUARTET KNIIPFER REIMERSROSINGRUFFO CLEMENT FRANZ KREISLER CORSI, E. GADSKI KUBELIK PRICES DOUBLE-SIDED RECORDS. LabelRed Price6!-867'-10-11.,613,616/- (D.A.) 10-inch - - Red (D.B.) 12-inch - - Buff (D.J.) 10-inch - - Buff (D.K.) 12-inch - - Pale Green (D.M.) 12-inch Pale Blue (D.O.) 12-inch White (D.Q.) 12-inch - SINGLE-SIDED RECORDS included in this Catalogue. Red Label 10-inch - - 5'676 12-inch - - Pale Green 12-inch - 10612,615j'- Dark Blue (C. Butt) 12-inch White (Sextet) 12-inch - ALDA, FRANCES, Soprano (Ahl'-dah) New Zealand. She Madame Frances Aida was born at Christchurch, was trained under Opera Comique Paris, Since Marcltesi, and made her debut at the in 1904. -
Toscanini IV – La Scala and the Metropolitan Opera
Toscanini IV – La Scala and the Metropolitan Opera Trying to find a balance between what the verbal descriptions of Toscanini’s conducting during the period of roughly 1895-1915 say of him and what he actually did can be like trying to capture lightning in a bottle. Since he made no recordings before December 1920, and instrumental recordings at that, we cannot say with any real certainty what his conducting style was like during those years. We do know, from the complaints of Tito Ricordi, some of which reached Giuseppe Verdi’s ears, that Italian audiences hated much of what Toscanini was doing: conducting operas at the written tempos, not allowing most unwritten high notes (but not all, at least not then), refusing to encore well-loved arias and ensembles, and insisting in silence as long as the music was being played and sung. In short, he instituted the kind of audience decorum we come to expect today, although of course even now (particularly in Italy and America, not so much in England) we still have audiences interrupting the flow of an opera to inject their bravos and bravas when they should just let well enough alone. Ricordi complained to Verdi that Toscanini was ruining his operas, which led Verdi to ask Arrigo Boïto, whom he trusted, for an assessment. Boïto, as a friend and champion of the conductor, told Verdi that he was simply conducting the operas pretty much as he wrote them and not allowing excess high notes, repeats or breaks in the action. Verdi was pleased to hear this; it is well known that he detested slowly-paced performances of his operas and, worse yet, the interpolated high notes he did not write. -
Operaharmony
#OPERAHARMONY CREATING OPERAS IN ISOLATION 1 3 WELCOME TO #OPERA HARMONY FROM FOUNDER – ELLA MARCHMENT Welcome to #OperaHarmony. #Opera Harmony is a collection of opera makers from across the world who, during this time of crisis, formed an online community to create new operas. I started this initiative when the show that I was rehearsing at Dutch National Opera was cancelled because of the lockdown. Using social media and online platforms I invited colleagues worldwide to join me in the immense technical and logistical challenge of creating new works online. I set the themes of ‘distance’ and ‘community’, organised artist teams, and since March have been overseeing the creation of twenty new operas. All the artists involved in #OperaHarmony are highly skilled professionals who typically apply their talents in creating live theatre performances. Through this project, they have had to adapt to working in a new medium, as well as embracing new technologies and novel ways of creating, producing, and sharing work. #OperaHarmony’s goal was to bring people together in ways that were unimaginable prior to Covid-19. Over 100 artists from all the opera disciplines have collaborated to write, stage, record, and produce the new operas. The pieces encapsulate an incredibly dark period for the arts, and they are a symbol of the unstoppable determination, and community that exists to perform and continue to create operatic works. This has been my saving grace throughout lockdown, and it has given all involved a sense of purpose. When we started building these works we had no idea how they would eventually be realised, and it is with great thanks that we acknowledge the support of Opera Vision in helping to both distribute and disseminate these pieces, and also for establishing a means in which audiences can be invited into the heart of the process too . -
Enrico Caruso
NI 7924/25 Also Available on Prima Voce ENRICO CARUSO Opera Volume 3 NI 7803 Caruso in Opera Volume One NI 7866 Caruso in Opera Volume Two NI 7834 Caruso in Ensemble NI 7900 Caruso – The Early Years : Recordings from 1902-1909 NI 7809 Caruso in Song Volume One NI 7884 Caruso in Song Volume Two NI 7926/7 Caruso in Song Volume Three 12 NI 7924/25 NI 7924/25 Enrico Caruso 1873 - 1921 • Opera Volume 3 and pitch alters (typically it rises) by as much as a semitone during the performance if played at a single speed. The total effect of adjusting for all these variables is revealing: it questions the accepted wisdom that Caruso’s voice at the time of his DISC ONE early recordings was very much lighter than subsequently. Certainly the older and 1 CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA, Mascagni - O Lola ch’ai di latti la cammisa 2.50 more artistically assured he became, the tone became even more massive, and Rec: 28 December 1910 Matrix: B-9745-1 Victor Cat: 87072 likewise the high A naturals and high B flats also became even more monumental in Francis J. Lapitino, harp their intensity. But it now appears, from this evidence, that the baritone timbre was 2 LA GIOCONDA, Ponchielli - Cielo e mar 2.57 always present. That it has been missed is simply the result of playing the early discs Rec: 14 March 1910 Matrix: C-8718-1 Victor Cat: 88246 at speeds that are consistently too fast. 3 CARMEN, Bizet - La fleur que tu m’avais jetée (sung in Italian) 3.53 Rec: 7 November 1909 Matrix: C-8349-1 Victor Cat: 88209 Of Caruso’s own opinion on singing and the effort required we know from a 4 STABAT MATER, Rossini - Cujus animam 4.47 published interview that he believed it should be every singers aim to ensure ‘that in Rec: 15 December 1913 Matrix: C-14200-1 Victor Cat: 88460 spite of the creation of a tone that possesses dramatic tension, any effort should be directed in 5 PETITE MESSE SOLENNELLE, Rossini - Crucifixus 3.18 making the actual sound seem effortless’. -
Contents Price Code an Introduction to Chandos
CONTENTS AN INTRODUCTION TO CHANDOS RECORDS An Introduction to Chandos Records ... ...2 Harpsichord ... ......................................................... .269 A-Z CD listing by composer ... .5 Guitar ... ..........................................................................271 Chandos Records was founded in 1979 and quickly established itself as one of the world’s leading independent classical labels. The company records all over Collections: Woodwind ... ............................................................ .273 the world and markets its recordings from offices and studios in Colchester, Military ... ...208 Violin ... ...........................................................................277 England. It is distributed worldwide to over forty countries as well as online from Brass ... ..212 Christmas... ........................................................ ..279 its own website and other online suppliers. Concert Band... ..229 Light Music... ..................................................... ...281 Opera in English ... ...231 Various Popular Light... ......................................... ..283 The company has championed rare and neglected repertoire, filling in many Orchestral ... .239 Compilations ... ...................................................... ...287 gaps in the record catalogues. Initially focussing on British composers (Alwyn, Bax, Bliss, Dyson, Moeran, Rubbra et al.), it subsequently embraced a much Chamber ... ...245 Conductor Index ... ............................................... .296 -
Democratising Opera: Opera North and the Access Agenda in Action Part of the AHRC Project ‘Opera As Adaptation’
Democratising Opera: Opera North and the access agenda in action Part of the AHRC project ‘Opera as Adaptation’ Jennifer Susan Daniel Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Leeds School of Performance and Cultural Industries School of Music March 2016 2 The candidate confirms that the work submitted is her own and that appropriate credit has been given where reference has been made to the work of others. This copy has been supplied on the understanding that it is copyright material and that no quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement. © 2016 The University of Leeds and Jennifer Susan Daniel The right of Jennifer Susan Daniel to be identified as Author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. 3 Acknowledgements My thanks go out to all those at Opera North (past and present) who have been so welcoming and helpful in facilitating this study, particularly Jane Bonner, Dominic Gray, Rebecca Walsh, Timothy Burke, Jo Bedford, Stuart Leeks, Peter Restall, Jacqui Cameron, and the inspirational Martin Pickard. It was also a great privilege to have Richard Farnes as my supervisor at Opera North, who facilitated so much of this study and whose musical vision, humility and leadership I have greatly admired. I am grateful to the AHRC, to Opera North Futures and to the Fund for Women Graduates for generous funding, without which I would certainly not have been able to complete this thesis. My most profound thanks are offered to my excellent academic supervisors Kara McKechnie and Rachel Cowgill, for the opportunity to work on this project, and for the inspiration, encouragement and education. -
6 November 2009 Page 1 of 44
Radio 3 Listings for 31 October – 6 November 2009 Page 1 of 44 SATURDAY 31 OCTOBER 2009 15 instruments Canadian Chamber Ensemble SAT 01:00 Through the Night (b00nhmx5) Raffi Armenian (conductor) 1.00am Ferguson, Howard (1908-1999): Overture for an Occasion 4.42am Ulster Orchestra Bridge, Frank (1879-1941): Miniature No 2 in G minor Kenneth Montgomery (conductor) (Hornpipe) Moshe Hammer (violin) 1.09am Tsuyoshi Tsutsumi (cello) Elgar, Edward (1857-1934): Cello Concerto in E minor, Op 85 William Tritt (piano) Paul Watkins (cello) BBC Symphony Orchestra 4.45am Jiri Belohlavek (conductor) Vaughan Williams, Ralph (1872-1958): Romance for viola and piano 1.36am Steven Dann (viola) Brahms, Johannes (1833-1897): Symphony No 4 in E minor Bruce Vogt (piano) City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Sakari Oramo (conductor) 4.52am Liszt, Franz (1811-1886): Hungarian Rhapsody No 6 2.17am Jeno Jando (piano) Gluck, Christoph Willibald (1714-1787), arr Kempff, Wilhelm: Orpheus' Lament; Dance of the Blessed Spirits (Orfeo ed 5.01am Euridice) Goldmark, Karoly (1830-1915): Scherzo in E minor for Angela Hewitt (piano) orchestra, Op 19 Hungarian Radio Orchestra 2.22am Adam Medveczky (conductor) Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus (1756-1791): Ch'io me scordi di te? - recitative and rondo for soprano, piano and orchestra, K505 5.07am Veronique Gens (soprano) Trad Hungarian: Dances from Csiksomelyo Lars Vogt (piano) Csaba Nagy (tarogato) Salzburg Mozarteum Orchestra Viktoria Herencsar (cimbalom) Ivor Bolton (conductor) 5.11am 2.32am Ravel, Maurice (1875-1937): Chants populaires -
A Strenuous Operatic Season in New York
A Strenuous Operatic Season in New York cult still, to make the claim of the enor¬ power than any opera or combination of invite«* to the competition then in progresa mous losses suffered the managers due singers, thut the management decided that among American authors and composers The Performances Were Given at Three by lan¬ Metropolitan Company Brought to increase in the cost of it could throw artistic integrity and prom¬ for an original opera in the English giving opera been agree with certain well-known facts. Least ises to the winds, even in the department guage, for which a prize of $10,000 had a in Houses, at Cost of Two of all does it seem wise or righteous to on which it had laid considerable stress In offered by the Metropolitan company Forward Many Novelties and charge this increase to the rapacity of the prospectus. The ballet programme December, 1908. The story of that compe¬ to relate Million Dollars singers, Mr. Grau made money enough in went largely by the board. "Vienna tition and the award I purpose Revived Gluck's "Orfeo" where it can bo the last three or four years of his admin- Waltzes," which had figured in the pre¬ in a subsequent chapter, other ii"-<- istration to retire with a fortune, though liminary announcement, was performed but brought into perspective with vernacular Jean do Reszke at the last cost him as once, and then only because the German dents in the campaign for is as old in New By H. E. KREHBIEL much as Caruso has ever cost the Metro¬ Press Club, which had bargained for it for opera, a campaign that "Orfeo" is the oldest opera in the current panionship with Mascagni's. -
Irving Ritterman Collection of Autographs and Musical Memorabilia
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt9m3nd0xq No online items Finding Aid for the Irving Ritterman Collection of Autographs and Musical Memorabilia 1901-1961 Processed by Performing Arts Special Collections staff. UCLA Library, Performing Arts Special Collections University of California, Los Angeles, Library Performing Arts Special Collections, Room A1713 Charles E. Young Research Library, Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 Phone: (310) 825-4988 Fax: (310) 206-1864 Email: [email protected] http://www2.library.ucla.edu/specialcollections/performingarts/index.cfm ©2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 112-M 1 Descriptive Summary Title: Irving Ritterman Collection of Autographs and Musical Memorabilia, Date (inclusive): 1901-1961 Collection number: 112-M Creator: Ritterman, Irving Extent: 2 boxes Repository: University of California, Los Angeles. Library. Performing Arts Special Collections Los Angeles, California 90095-1575 Abstract: The majority of the collection consists of autographs and autographed photographs of famous composers, conductors, and vocalists from the early 20th century. Language of Material: Collection materials in English Restrictions on Access Open for research. STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact UCLA Library Special Collections for paging information. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UC Regents. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright. -
Over 100 Opera Makers
#OPERAHARMONY CREATING OPERAS IN ISOLATION 1 3 WELCOME TO #OPERA HARMONY FROM FOUNDER – ELLA MARCHMENT Welcome to #OperaHarmony. #Opera Harmony is a collection of opera makers from across the world who, during this time of crisis, formed an online community to create new operas. I started this initiative when the show that I was rehearsing at Dutch National Opera was cancelled because of the lockdown. Using social media and online platforms I invited colleagues worldwide to join me in the immense technical and logistical challenge of creating new works online. I set the themes of ‘distance’ and ‘community’, organised artist teams, and since March have been overseeing the creation of twenty new operas. All the artists involved in #OperaHarmony are highly skilled professionals who typically apply their talents in creating live theatre performances. Through this project, they have had to adapt to working in a new medium, as well as embracing new technologies and novel ways of creating, producing, and sharing work. #OperaHarmony’s goal was to bring people together in ways that were unimaginable prior to Covid-19. Over 100 artists from all the opera disciplines have collaborated to write, stage, record, and produce the new operas. The pieces encapsulate an incredibly dark period for the arts, and they are a symbol of the unstoppable determination, and community that exists to perform and continue to create operatic works. This has been my saving grace throughout lockdown, and it has given all involved a sense of purpose. When we started building these works we had no idea how they would eventually be realised, and it is with great thanks that we acknowledge the support of Opera Vision in helping to both distribute and disseminate these pieces, and also for establishing a means in which audiences can be invited into the heart of the process too . -
Download Booklet
SOLOISTS /OPERA NORTH/ RICHARD FARNES CHAN 3162(3) GIUSEPPE VERDI: DON CARLOS CHANDOS Giuseppe Verdi (1813 – 1901) DON CARLOS Opera in four acts Libretto by Joseph Méry and Camille du Locle, after Schiller English translation by Andrew Porter © Lebrecht Music & Arts Photo Library Photo & Arts Music © Lebrecht Philip II, King of Spain Alastair Miles bass Don Carlos, Infante of Spain Julian Gavin tenor Rodrigo, Marquis of Posa William Dazeley baritone The Grand Inquisitor John Tomlinson bass Elisabeth de Valois, Philip’s Queen Janice Watson soprano Giuseppe Verdi Giuseppe Princess of Eboli Jane Dutton mezzo-soprano Thibault,Elisabeth de Valois’ page Julia Sporsén soprano Countess of Aremberg silent Count of Lerma Stephen Briggs tenor An old Monk Clive Bayley bass Voice from Heaven Rebecca Ryan soprano Royal Herald Campbell Russell tenor Flemish Deputies Julian Close bass Grant Doyle baritone Stephen Richardson bass Riccardo Simonetti baritone A. Galloway Bell bass Stephen Dowson baritone Chorus of Opera North Timothy Burke chorus master Orchestra of Opera North David Greed leader Alexander Ingram assistant conductor Giuseppe Verdi Richard Farnes 3 Time Page Time Page compact disc one 11 ‘Carlos my friend, hope of our future’ 4:27 [p.47] Act I Rodrigo, Eboli, Elisabeth Scene 1: At the tomb of Charles V in the Monastery of San Juste 12 ‘I come before the Queen and I ask for a favour’ 7:57 [p.48] 1 Prelude 2:17 [p.40] 13 ‘Here where I stand let the earth crack asunder’ 1:46 [p.50] 2 ‘Charles the Fifth, our mighty Lord’ 4:01 [p.40] Don Carlos, -
Calumet Baking MISSIONARY SOCIETY to HAVE F
SOCIETY iND HOME TOPICS FOR WOMEN Matters Patriotic and ---q. Social INTRODUCING MISS CAMPBELL, THE SOME HELPING HAND Artistic Interest Society CONTRALTO OF THE SAN CARLO OPERA HINTS FOR THE HOME -------| Prospective Events—Mrs. T. 0. Smith to Give a Luncheon in By DOLLY DALBVMPLB • BY MARION HARLANI> mere is no sucli thing as luck any Children’s cd. Shake to Mrs. Fascinating Story gently and repeat the pro- Bertram Pike—Mrs. Seals Will En- more. cess. Compliment •‘About a hundred years ago a travel- Leave the second supply on the Did know that? lace for two you ing thinker told a story. The ending of days, shutting it up In o tertain for Mrs. Albert Bush of nox to Mobile—Bridge. Luck is as fickle as favors exclude dust. Shake and brush that go each ‘Well. I must be tin part was, ganging lace then. If by kissing! yoh wish to have the wab and Other Matters from the crown of my foot to the sole ot cleaned Showers of Moment. whole, send to a professiona There is no such thing as luck. •• my head.’ It was a fascinating story to cleaner. Instead— Announcements—Personals children, and I would like to see it in There is success! print. It was too good to be lost. I write Marshmallow' Frosting And— Boil together in that some one may be able to two cups of sugar, hope naif one-] By MYRTLE MILES Anybody can be successful if they only cup of water, and one teaspoon oi supply it. H. E.” inpSar.