Gioacchino Rossini, Patrick Summers, Orchestra of St. Luke's - RenA©e Fleming: Bel Canto
Facts
| Artist(s) | Gioacchino Rossini, Patrick Summers and Orchestra of St. Luke's |
| Studio | Decca |
| Release Date | August 27, 2002 |
| UPC Code | 028946710128 |
| Buy this item | $16.98 at Amazon.com As of Dec 4 20:08 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Bellini/La sonnambula: "Ah!..se una volta sola"
- Bellini/La sonnambula: "Ah!..non credea mirarti"
- Bellini/La sonnambula: "Ah! non giunge uman pensiero"
- Donizetti/Maria Padilla: "Abbracciami"
- Donizetti/Maria Padilla: "Il piu tenero suon d'arpa morende"
- Donizetti/Maria Padilla: "Ah! non sai qual prestigio si cela"
- Rossini/Semiramide: Introduzione
- Rossini/Semiramide: "Bel raggio lusinghier"
- Rossini/Semiramide: "Dolce pensiero di quell'istante"
- Bellini/Il pirata: Introduzione
- Bellini/Il pirata: "Ah! s'io potessi dissipar le nubi"
- Bellini/Il pirata: "Col sorriso d'innocenza"
- Bellini/Il pirata: "Oh sole! ti vela di tenebre oscure"
- Rossini/Armida: "D'Amor al dolce impero"
- Rossini/Armida: "Gli augei tra fronde e fronde"
- Rossini/Armida: "La fresca eta sen fugge"
- Rossini/Armida: "Ah! si, godete amanti"
- Donizetti/Lucrezia Borgia:"M'odi, ah m'odi, io non t'imploro"
- Donizetti/Lucrezia Borgia: "Figlio!...Figlio!...Ola, qualcuno!"
- Donizetti/Lucrezia Borgia: "Era desso il figlio mio"
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Dove sono Elvino e Gennaro? |
My sole complaint with the disc is missing personnel. Kristine Jepson was engaged to sing with Fleming in the Maria Padilla scene, but sadly, no Gennaro or Elvino appear in the Lucrezia Borgia or La sonnambula excepts respectively (the absence of Rodolfo and Teresa is only a minor annoyance). I feel similarly annoyed when sopranos record the Act I finale of La traviata without an Alfredo. Though I realize this is through no fault of the artists, and is most likely the result of recording studios cutting corners, the absence of these roles to interact in the drama leaves the Borgia and Sonnambula scenes sorely lacking for this listener.
February 29, 2008
| Yes, she DOES sing a High G! |
| Intriguing and powerful voice |
This CD begins with a scene from Bellini's "La Sonnambula." Her version of "Ah! Non giunge uman pensiero" is nicely done. She displays an agile voice. She hits the high notes well. Other versions feature trills; hers does not. However, later cuts on this CD surely show that her trill is one of the better ones today. I had never heard even small selections from Donizetti's "Maria Padilla" before. However, Fleming does a very good job. In the final part of the scene that she sings, "Ah, non sai qual prestigio si cela," she trills wonderfully. I have been acquiring CDs and listening to contemporary bel canto singers lately and, to this point of those to whom I have listened, she has one of the best trills around.
"Bel raggio lusinghier" from Rossini's "Semiramide" is nicely sung. Again, she is agile, can hit the high notes, and displays good coloratura technique. The high notes are wonderfully wrought; appoggiaturas well crafted. A number of other reviewers comment on her high note to conclude the cut from Donizetti's "Lucrezia Borgia." She nailed it pretty well, as those others noted.
And so on. No need to go through each cut one by one. All in all, a very good CD. Her darker, heavier voice combined with her vocal agility and coloratura technique make for a very interesting work. She clearly has some of the better coloratura technique among sopranos working in the vineyards of opera today.
January 21, 2007
| A beautiful voice, but the wrong stylistic approach... |
The voice itself is a miracle. It is one of the beautiful voices of this age. But increasingly, I have become disenchanted with the WAY in which Renee Fleming uses her voice. Endowed with such a lovely voice, with a rich and even legato quality throughout, one would think that bel canto repertoire would suit Ms Fleming perfectly. And I think potentially it does... If you do not already possess the full opera recordings of Rosmonda d'Inghilterra (Donizetti) and Armida (Rossini), with Fleming in the title roles, I would like to recommend that you purchase them. They are very beautiful - stunningly so.
A small digression... My CD collection, I should mention (just casually), is nearly 3000 CDs strong, all of which are classical, and the majority of which are vocal (opera, oratorio, Lieder, operetta, early music, French chansons, etc.). The bel canto portion of my collection is substantial. I am also a bel canto singer myself. I speak, thus, with a knowledge of bel canto style, with particular reference to the ways in which the composers would have expected singers to handle their works.
So I hope readers will understand that when I say that Ms Fleming isn't performing on this CD with appropriate bel canto style, I am not speaking out of ignorance, malice, or uninformed opinion. The liner notes shed light on Renee Fleming's approach: she mentions that "like the great singers who premiered these works, we must use our own musical intelligence and imagination to make this music come alive. For someone like myself, trained as a jazz singer, this comes as a liberating reveltion."
Yes. That puts the finger on the major difficulty here. Of course the arias and scenas need to give interpretation and wonderful ornamentation in the repeats of cabalettas, etc. - but NOT, please God, with jazz in mind. The two fields are completely different. This explains to me why Ms Fleming's later recordings fail to satisfy me as much as her earlier ones. I was surprisingly enchanted by her Schubert album, in which I thought a lot of careful interpretative work had gone, and those two earlier full recordings of bel canto operas were superb. How had that wonderful bel canto technique gone astray in this recording? I think - I may be wrong - but I think that Renee Fleming is now relying almost entirely upon her own idea of how bel canto should be sung, rather than being given detailed guidance from an experienced conductor who's both au fait with the requirements and not intimidated by Ms Fleming's very beautiful voice and star billing.
I did buy this CD with great anticipatory pleasure, and I was disappointed because I had such high hopes. I am sorry, because I adore Ms Fleming's voice, but the swoops and the bathos of the interpretations are not moving to me. I so much want Ms Fleming to record bel canto in the future with a great conductor guiding her to avoid the mannerisms that may seem very expressive to Ms Fleming, but strike many listeners as only detracting from the creamy and lovely tone.
Three stars from me, because the voice is unquestionably beautiful.
I do hope that Renee Fleming decides to follow the guidance of some bel canto specialists.
For more authentic bel canto soprano singing, I recommend the peerless Edita Gruberova (still singing wonderfully), the beautiful Sumi Jo, and the great classic recordings of Callas, the young Caballe, and the young Joan Sutherland. November 16, 2005
| The Voice God |
September 8, 2005
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