Andrew Garland , Christopher Schaldenbrand , Fabio Maria Capitanucci :: Puccini: La Bohème - KOMPLETNA OPERA
Date of Recording:
| Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta, GA (09/27/2007/09/29/2007) |
Telarc Releases American Recordings of Puccini's Classic La Boheme
Two-disc set with full libretto.
Telarc International and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra will release a brilliant recording of Puccini’s much-loved opera, La Bohème. The 2-disc recording features a full 88-page libretto !
Composer: Giacomo Puccini
Performer: Georgia Jarman, Kevin Glavin, Fabio Capitanucci, Christopher Schaldenbrand, ...
Conductor: Robert Spano
Orchestra/Ensemble: Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony Chorus
Notes and Editorial Reviews
Full libretto with English translation included.
"In some ways, this new Telarc recording could hardly be more different from my benchmark versions, which are larger-than-life traversals that play to the back row. Unless you keep a close eye on the opera world, you might not know many of Telarc’s singers. That doesn’t mean that they won’t be very familiar ten years from now. Most if not all of them are on the way up.
Two things in particular make this recording noteworthy, and Woods identified both of them in my interview with him: the ensemble spirit, and the dramatic veracity. For this, he and Spano probably should share the honors. What creates the veracity is detail, Read more and this recording is filled with it. Try, for example, the start of act III. I love the slightly annoyed tone of the Customs Official’s “Vengo!,” the earthy “Hopplà!” of the milkmaids and carters, the apparent tipsiness of the revelers inside the tavern, and, upon Mimì’s entrance, her breathlessness. No other recording paints as complete a picture as this. Another moment: in act IV, Marcello’s response “Ah, miseria!” (“Ah, poverty”) when asked by Musetta if there is any coffee or wine in the garret is heartbreaking, to the point that I am fogging up just thinking about it...
You’ll probably wait a long time before you hear a chorus and orchestra better prepared for La bohème than Atlanta’s. It is good to know that the late Robert Shaw’s legacy lives on. Spano is a non-interventionist conductor, but that’s not to say that the conducting here is dull or routine. As I hope is clear from what I already have written, his personality comes through in the conscientiousness and subtlety of this recording, not through a Karajan-like superimposition of ego on the score.
Telarc’s engineering team has captured the “being there” feeling that audience members must have had. Indeed, entrances and exits, offstage effects, and the use of props are audible without creating distraction. There are many well-engineered recordings of this opera on the market, but I think this one is unique for the splendid way in which the live setting has been preserved.
The verdict: keep your favorite recording(s) of La bohème by all means, but if you love this score, Telarc’s new recording puts a fresh spin on it, so it deserves a high recommendation."
-- Raymond Tuttle, Fanfare
Wydanie amerykańskie.
Piękne wydanie, zawierające 88-stronicową książeczkę-libretto.
Płyta kompaktowa-orginalna. WYDAWNICTWO 2-PŁYTOWE w klasycznym grubym-podwójnym pudełku, tzw. "fat boy"
KLASYKA Opera
TELARC Records numer katalogowy 80697 z 2008 roku. Made in USA.
Stan płyty: całość w idealnym stanie ! tylko w tylnej wkładce, minimalna dziurka, w lewym górnym rogu (patrz zdjęcie nr.5)
SPIS UTWORÓW: jeśli masz chwilę czasu, to kliknij TUTAJ(otwórz w nowym oknie),
i już możesz posłuchać samplii !
Track Listings
| 1. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 1. Questo Mar Rosso |
| 2. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Pensier profondo! |
| 3. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Abbasso l'autore! |
| 4. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Si può? |
| 5. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Al Quartiere Latin |
| 6. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Non sono in vena |
| 7. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Si sente meglio? |
| 8. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Che gelida manina |
| 9. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Sì. Mi chiamano Mimì |
| 10. La bohème, opera: Act 1. Ehi! Rodolfo! |
| 11. La bohème, opera: Act 1. O soave fanciulla |
| 12. La bohÃ..me, opera: Applause - Act 1 |
| 13. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Aranci, datteri! Caldi i marroni. |
| 14. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Chi guardi? |
| 15. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Questa è Mimì |
| 16. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Viva, Parpignol! |
| 17. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Allegri e un toast! |
| 18. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Quando me'n vo |
| 19. La bohème, opera: Act 2. Caro! |
| 20. La bohÃ..me, opera: Applause - Act 2 |
| 1. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 3. OhÃ.., là , Le guardie! |
| 2. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Ohè, là, Le guardie! |
| 3. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Sa dirmi, scusi |
| 4. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Mimì! - Speravo di trovarti qui |
| 5. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Marcello. Finalmente! |
| 6. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Mimì è una civetta |
| 7. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Mimì è tanto malata! |
| 8. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Mimì di serra è fiore |
| 9. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Donde lieta uscì |
| 10. La bohème, opera: Act 3. Dunque è proprio finita! |
| 11. La bohème, opera: Act 4. In un coupe? |
| 12. La bohème, opera: Act 4. O Mimì, tu più non torni |
| 13. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Che ora sia? |
| 14. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Gavotta. - Minuetto. |
| 15. La bohème, opera: Act 4. C'è Mimì |
| 16. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Vecchia zimarra, senti |
| 17. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Sono andati? |
| 18. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Oh Dio! Mimì! |
| 19. La bohème, opera: Act 4. Che ha ditto il medico? |
| 20. Applause |
| 21. La bohÃ..me, opera: Applause - Act 3 |
| 22. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. In un coupe? |
| 23. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. O Mimì, tu più non torni |
| 24. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Che ora sia? |
| 25. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Gavotta. - Minuetto. |
| 26. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. C'Ã.. Mimì |
| 27. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Vecchia zimarra, senti |
| 28. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Sono andati? |
| 29. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Oh Dio! Mimì! |
| 30. La bohÃ..me, opera: Act 4. Che ha ditto il medico? |
Works on This Recording
1. La Bohème by Giacomo Puccini
Performer: Georgia Jarman (Soprano), Kevin Glavin (Bass), Fabio Capitanucci (Baritone),
Christopher Schaldenbrand (Baritone), Denis Sedov (Bass), Fabio Maria Capitanucci (Baritone),
Marcus Haddock (Tenor), Norah Amsellem (Soprano)
Conductor: Robert Spano
Orchestra/Ensemble: Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony Chorus
Period: Romantic
Written: 1896; Italy
Venue: Live Live Atlanta, Georgia
Length: 101 Minutes 38 Secs.
Telarc Releases American Recordings of Puccini's Classic La Boheme
Telarc International and the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra will release a brilliant recording of Puccini’s much-loved opera, La Bohème. The 2-disc recording features a full 88-page libretto.
As even the casual opera fan knows, La Bohème is the story of friendship, love and loss in a community of bohemians in 19th century Paris. For its time, the story was the antithesis of the usual elements of melodrama (intrigue, violence, jealous rage, assassinations, etc.). Instead, La Bohème is an intimate view of the intertwined lives of a colorful group of young individuals.
“Like the characters themselves, the singers on our recording are young, and that freshness is apparent in their voices,” says Telarc President Robert Woods, co-producer of the recording. “I am continually taken by the sincerity and vitality of this cast. When it was decided to perform and record the opera at the opening of the ASO’s 2007-08 season, conductor Robert Spano knew that he wanted his Bohème to be youthful, theatrical, and most importantly, believable. We at Telarc could not agree more, and we knew that we had to come up with a listening experience that exceeded the expectations of live recording. It needed to sound as good as – or better than – if we had done it in sessions.”
Woods adds: “Each singer is vocally and dramatically different, yet at the same time complimentary, as are their personalities. This enhances the development and interaction of their characters, and is an asset in the many places where Puccini has them singing different texts simultaneously. We had to hear those distinctions, so it was crucial to capture the voices in as clear and tactile a way as possible. We also wanted them moving on stage to support the theatricality and flow of the music. Opera is, after all, about singing – and the communication of the story as the words ride on the voice. And Bohème in particular is about ensemble.”
Indeed, the singers faced high expectations. “This recording was never intended to be about superstars. It’s about breathing life into this spectacular opera,” says co-producer Elaine Martone. “As for the recording, to have captured in live performance all the details and subtleties that allow the words and music to come alive so movingly is very gratifying.”
Lending support to the performances is the high standard of audio engineering to which Telarc has committed itself throughout its 30-year history. The miking is virtually invisible, and creates the truest possible representation of what’s actually happening onstage. Singers can be heard entering and exiting – moving on stage just as an audience would hear live. “This recording is completely organic,” says chief engineer Michael Bishop. “There is no compression, equalization or processing. We had the opportunity to remix later, but we didn’t. It simply came out too well to warrant any modification or enhancement.”
Critic Pierre Ruhe of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, on hand for the performance, had high praise for the performance in general, and especially for the final minutes of Act III, wherein lovers Mimi and Rodolfo bicker and reconcile, then reveal to each other the universal human fear of being alone. “It’s a ravishing few minutes of hope and pathos,” noted Ruhe in his review, “although the orchestra has already confirmed that the worst scenario is inevitable, for we’ve already heard Mimi’s music run through with the icy shiver of death. Here soprano Norah Amsellem, as the tubercular seamstress [Mimi], sang exquisite pianissimos, throbbing with expression yet hushed to a whisper.” Ruhe later noted that “orchestrally, as everyone anticipated, the performance was a revelation…Spano revealed every nuance of Puccini’s glittery, embroidered score – every bit of it amplified in our consciousness, a performance not soon forgotten.”
The cast of La Bohème is a dynamic group of talented performers. Soprano Norah Amsellem (Mimi) has sung La Traviata’s Violetta at the Vienna State Opera, Turandot’s Liù at the Metropolitan Opera. Soprano Georgia Jarman’s (Musetta) has performed at the New York City Opera and Cincinnati Opera, and has been engaged by the Caramoor Festival, Glimmerglass Opera and Dallas Opera, among others. Tenor Marcus Haddock (Rodolfo), who has performed at the Paris Opera, La Scala, Metropolitan Opera and Lyric Opera of Chicago, is known for both dramatic intensity and technical brilliance. At age 23, baritone Fabio Maria Capitanucci (Marcello) won the Singing Competition of the Teatro Lirico in Spoleto Italy. A regular guest at La Scala, Capitanucci has performed La Bohème’s Marcello, Un giorno di regno’s Cavalier Belfiore, Manon’s Lescaut and Cosi fan tutte’s Guglielmo. Other cast members include baritone Christopher Schaldenbrand (Schaunard), bass Denis Sedov (Colline) and basso buffo Kevin Glavin (Benoit/Alcindoro).
Given the mass appeal of Puccini’s La Bohème, this new recording is being offered at 2-for-1 pricing in order to make this popular work available to the broadest possible audience. This recording is made possible in part through a deeply appreciated gift from Catherine Warren Dukehart.
This season marks the 30-year association of Telarc and the Atlanta Symphony orchestra. During that time, the ASO has recorded almost 100 albums – a body of work that has been recognized with 26 GRAMMY® Awards.
Now in his seventh season as music director of the ASO, Robert Spano has enriched and expanded the orchestra’s repertoire through his characteristically innovative programming. As a result, he has elevated the ensemble to new levels of international prominence and acclaim. Since he began his tenure with the ASO, he has conducted the orchestra in 10 recordings, winning six GRAMMY® Awards in the process.
Now in its 63rd season, the ASO is considered one of America’s leading orchestras, well known for its impressive list of GRAMMY® Award-winning recordings, its renowned choruses, and for the excellence of its live performances.
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