The Art of the Prima Donna
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Average customer review:Product Description
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Genre: Classical Music
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 10-OCT-2000
Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Artaxerxes, opera in 3 acts: The soldier tir'd
- Samson, oratorio, HWV 57: Let the bright Seraphim
- Norma, opera: Sediziose voci... Casta diva... Ah! bello
- I Puritani, opera: Son vergin vezzosa
- Semiramide, opera: Bel raggio lusinghier
- I Puritani, opera: O rendetemi la speme... Qui la voce... Vien, diletto
- La sonnambula, opera: Care compagne... Come per me sereno... Sovra il sen
- Faust, opera: Ô Dieu! que de bijoux!... Ah! je ris de me voir
Disc 2:
- Roméo et Juliette, opera: Ah! Je veux vivre
- Otello, opera: Mia madre aveva una povera ancella... Piangea cantando
- Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio), opera, K. 384: Martern aller Arten
- La Traviata, opera: E'strano... Ah, fors'è lui... Sempre libera
- Hamlet, opera in 5 acts: À vos jeux, mes amis
- Lakmé, opera: Ah! Où va la jeune Indoue
- Les Huguenots, grand opera in 5 acts: Ô beau pays de la Touraine!
- Rigoletto, opera: Gualtier Maldè... Caro nome
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #59654 in Music
- Brand: SUTHERLAND,JOAN
- Released on: 2000-10-10
- Number of discs: 2
- Format: Original recording remastered
- Dimensions: .27 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
In February 1959, an unknown (well, comparatively) Australian singer appeared at Covent Garden in Franco Zeffirelli's new production of Lucia di Lammermoor and took the world by storm. The following year, Joan Sutherland went into the studio to record this reissued tribute to prima donnas of previous generations, illustrating along the way the bel canto tradition of which she was to become a leading exponent. The 16 excerpts on this digitally remastered double CD include several roles she had already sung or was on the verge of singing, from Gilda in Rigoletto, which she had sung at Covent Garden before her Lucia debut, to Norma. What a performance! The voice is fresh, remarkable in its beauty, and she makes it all sound so effortless, tossing off Handel's "Let the bright Seraphim" or the Jewel aria from Gounod's Faust as if they're the easiest things in the world. This sparkling selection of glorious singing demonstrates just why Sutherland was to remain at the top of her profession for the next 30 years and join those to whom she here pays tribute as one of the great singers of all time. --Richard Fawkes
Customer Reviews
the recital of a lifetime
This recital by a very young Joan Sutherland, was one of her earliest, and by far her best. It has been beautifully remastered, showing the Sutherland sound in all her past splendor.
The condition of Sutherland's golden voice here is indescribably gorgeous. The ring in her soprano is thrilling. The trills are just about as good as it can get ( Remember, there are two notes in a trill, a phenomenon that only La Stupenda can accomplish ). The scales and arpeggios are so accurate that it is simply a marvel! But it is the enormous size of the voice, especially at the top half of the stratosphere that makes Dame Joan beyond comparison.
The highlights here are - everything! A two cd set that sets the standard for all coloratura sopranos of the past, present, and future. First, the difficulty of the program. I read that Sutherland recorded all of these arias in one take in a time frame of two days. I don't remember ever hearing so many extreme high notes in one sitting ( up to E natural, and there are three of these in Semiramide's "Bel raggio" alone ) . Another several high E in the "Bell song". If you think that Sutherland's singing of the "Bell Song is super in her recording of Lakme, you should listen to this one." The staccato is fast. In bel canto, the shorter a staccato is, the more precise the technique. Meaning, that when she attacks a staccato, she releases it in the split of a second. Of the coloraturas of the last century, Only Amelita Galli-Curci has a better staccato than Sutherland ( but of course Galli-Curci did not have nearly the voice or trill as Sutherland ).
The aria from Les Hugenots is a shere technical achievement that is so stunning that words can't describe. Let's just say, in that aria ( and all the other arias in this recording, as well ), she attacks every trill, scale, and high notes with such ease that you would think that she was an instrument like a flute, not a human being.
The great aria "Marten alle arten" is a concerto for soprano and orchestra. And it is thrilling to hear the aria sung as Mozart would have envisioned - with its long phrases taken without any breaths. ( Beverly Sills also sings this aria extremely well ).
The mad scene from Il Puritani is glorious! Sutherland sounds so sad and convincing, which was something that she was not known for. The high E flat that crowns the end of the aria is one of her very best.
Now, if you want to hear what a trill is supposed to sound like, I suggest the "Jewel Song".Now, that's what a trill is suppose to sound like - its two notes completely separate from each other. A trill is the most difficult element in coloratura singing, and having a great trill can make a great coloratura soprano a legend. Of the opera singers of the last century, only the following had a "real" trill: Joan Sutherland, Beverly Sills, Maria Tetrazinni, and Nellie Melba.
Finally, let me comment on the vast improvement of Decca's state of the art remastering of this classic recording. Decca's engineers have basically restore the true Sutherland sound. And in doing so, future opera fans will hear what a true coloratura is supposed to sound like.
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FIVE STAR POWER!
Joan Sutherland's voice is not one of those typically fruity, bird-like sopranos that goes up to stratospheric notes that only dogs can hear. Sutherland does have the agility and rock-solid technique and grace and magnificent talent to reach those notes that seem to reach the heavens, but she has body and warmth and strength too. Hers is truly a once-in-a-lifetime voice and this set of two cd's is the perfect way to either be introduced to her talents or to share your fond memories of her. She sings arias from Verdi, Mozart, Gounod, etc. and, of course, coloratura favorites from Bellini and Rossini. The sound on this set from 1960 is superb. Sutherland's singing is never anything less than glorious.
Joan was never better
This album is a bittersweet experience. In 1959, Joan Sutherland, a friendly, down-to-earth Aussie, burst onto the scene as Lucia di Lammermoor. She became an overnight sensation, her bright, bell-like voice and seemingly perfect technique wowing everyone. The record companies quickly noticed. This album, a 'tribute' to past prima donnas, came out in 1960 and demonstrates what the fuss was all about. Joan had ARRIVED -- she was now a great Prima Donna. The clear, silvery, bell-like voice, the incredible upper range, the amazing trills, and, most of all, a freshness and youth that made listening to her like drinking a glass of bubbles. Of all the selections I am particularly fond of the Sonnambula scene. I really felt like I was possibly listening to Jenny Lind. But all of the selections are wonderful. A particularly lovely moment is her top B-flats in Casta diva (sung in original key for once). The brightness and radiance of her voice is truly like listening to a bunch of singing diamonds. There is perhaps not much deep characterization, but the purity and sumptuousness of her singing is valuable enough in itself.
Then, in 1961, something happened. Her technical wizardry remained untouched, but it was a different singer. The voice became much darker, lost all its silvery sheen, and she developed rather annoyingly 'droopy' mannerisms. She started to slack behind the conductor's beat, as if she were a perpetual turtle following a hare. Worst of all, her diction became atrocious (for anyone who thinks she started out with bad diction just listen to this album, where it is fine). The consonants (particularly 'b'and 'd', which are for all intents and purposes indistinguishable) became soft and mushy, the vowels distorted (everything became 'aw' and 'ooo'). Diction hit rock bottom in her 1964 recording of Norma, which is completely incomprehensible. By the 1970's she got some of the consonants back, but the lovely, youthful sounding, bell-like voice heard in 1959-60 was gone forever. People speculate on the reasons, but most people think it was some sort of health crisis that prompted her to rework her voice.
For this reason listening to this album is bittersweet. Joan just wasnt the same after this. But GET THIS ALBUM! Even for non-Joan fans, this is a must for great singing.




