Janet Baker, John Shirley-Quirk, Graham Sheen, Johann Sebastian Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven, Hector Berlioz, Giovanni Bononcini, Benjamin Britten, Giulio Caccini, Antonio Caldara - Dame Janet Baker Philips and Decca Recordings, 1961-1979 (Limited Edition)
Facts
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Dame Janet Baker Philips and Decca Recordings, 1961-1979 (Limited Edition)
Music Price: You save 38%! As of Oct 15 22:52 EDT (details)
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| Artist(s) | Janet Baker, John Shirley-Quirk, Graham Sheen, Johann Sebastian Bach, Ludwig van Beethoven, Hector Berlioz, Giovanni Bononcini, Benjamin Britten, Giulio Caccini and Antonio Caldara |
| Studio | Philips |
| Release Date | November 25, 2003 |
| UPC Code | 028947516125 |
| Buy this item | $24.97 at Amazon.com As of Oct 15 22:52 EDT (details) 5 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Box set |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Essential Performances from a Great & Beloved Singer |
This wonderful compilation is complementary to EMI's 2-CD "The Very Best of Janet Baker" -- no overlap of repertoire whatsoever. Unlike that set, which focused on concert repertoire (with orchestra or piano) there's a generous sampling here of Baker's operatic roles including Handel, Mozart, Purcell, Rameau, Gluck, and Britten. Also welcome is "Phaedra," one of Britten's strongest late works. And it's good to have the Berlioz: "Cleopatre" and "Herminie" complete, the big aria from "Beatrice et Benedict." (Why EMI included nothing from her recording of the last 2 scenes of "Les Troyens" is unfathomable.) The wide time-span allows us to hear Baker's voice in all its youthful, "sappy" warmth, as well as in its artistic maturity (though truth to tell she was pretty much a complete artist from the start). There are a few signs of wear in later items, nothing serious, in fact rather less than I remembered. I could have done with fewer of the "Arie Amorose" in favor of more cuts from her Gluck LP, which I believe has never been issued complete on CD, but that's just personal preference. The focus here is entirely on orchestrally accompanied works (or, in the case of the marvelous early disc of Ravel, Chausson & Delage songs, with chamber ensemble) so for Baker the supreme interpreter of English, German and French song you'll need to go elsewhere (the EMI has a fair sampling, especially of her Schubert). But everything here is indispensible. January 9, 2004
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