Geraldine Farrar in French Opera

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Jules (Emile Frédéric) Massenet, Georges Bizet, Charles-François Gounod, (Charles Louis) Ambroise Thomas, Jacques Offenbach

Genre:

Vocal

Label: Prima Voce

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 79

Mastering:

Mono
Acoustic
ADD

Catalogue Number: NI7872

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Manon, Movement: ~ Jules (Emile Frédéric) Massenet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Jules (Emile Frédéric) Massenet, Composer
Mignon, Movement: Connais-tu le pays? (Charles Louis) Ambroise Thomas, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
(Charles Louis) Ambroise Thomas, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Mignon, Movement: ~ (Charles Louis) Ambroise Thomas, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
(Charles Louis) Ambroise Thomas, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Roméo et Juliette, 'Romeo and Juliet', Movement: Je veux vivre (Waltz) Charles-François Gounod, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Charles-François Gounod, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Roméo et Juliette, 'Romeo and Juliet', Movement: ~ Charles-François Gounod, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Charles-François Gounod, Composer
Edmond Clément, Tenor
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Thaïs, Movement: Te souvient-il Jules (Emile Frédéric) Massenet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Jules (Emile Frédéric) Massenet, Composer
(Les) Contes d'Hoffmann, '(The) Tales of Hoffmann', Movement: Belle nuit, ô nuit d'amour (Barcarolle) Jacques Offenbach, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Antonio Scotti, Baritone
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Jacques Offenbach, Composer
Carmen, Movement: L'amour est un oiseau rebelle (Habanera) Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Carmen, Movement: ~ Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Carmen, Movement: Halte-là! Qui va là? Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Giovanni Martinelli, Tenor
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Carmen, Movement: Si tu m'aimes, Carmen Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Giovanni Martinelli, Tenor
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Carmen, Movement: C'est toi! (Finale). Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
Giovanni Martinelli, Tenor
Walter B. Rogers, Conductor
Carmen, Movement: Je dis que rien ne m'épouvante (Micaëla's aria Georges Bizet, Composer
(Anonymous) Orchestra
Georges Bizet, Composer
Geraldine Farrar, Soprano
This is a lovely, if perhaps predictable, addition to the Prima Voce series, complementing their recital of Farrar in Italian opera (10/94) which included excerpts from Madama Butterfly, the opera in which she is most widely and affectionately remembered. In several respects, this French selection shows her to still better advantage. She was hardly Italianate in either voice or temperament, but the Manon and Mignon recordings are delightful, and if her tones have not the thickly lipsticked sensuality that some have thought obligatory for a Carmen or a Thais, others will be happy in its absence.
Her Carmen, which at one stage in her career seems to have run into excess, here appears as a model of effectiveness within the restraints of good musical and dramatic behaviour. There is indeed probably more restraint than effectiveness about the “Habanera”, which is mildly flirtatious and in no way dangerous. But the “Seguedille” is sheer enchantment (irresistible promise in that breathed “je l’aimerai” and the dreamily provocative reprise of “Pres des remparts”), while in the “Chanson boheme” we catch the energy of her personality as well as the carrying power of her by no means robust lyric soprano. That is heard at its best in Micaela’s aria recorded in 1908, when she sang this role to the far more Latin Carmen of Maria Gay. But how good it is then to come back to her own Carmen and find such conviction and vividness as she and Martinelli achieved without recourse to vulgarities of chest voice on her part or tearful self-pity on his. Martinelli’s Flower song is also something to hear, the passion finely contained within its unhurried lyric flow; and Amato’s Toreador has superb panache, with tense wide-eyed evocations of the bullring in the second verse and a suavely stylish pride in the refrain.
These are all (or nearly all, for I don’t much enjoy the Hoffmann Barcarolle duet with Scotti) cherishable records, of the kind that on some pleasant desultory evening with the gramophone (too few of those) one will feel a prompting to take down from the shelves. Seasoned collectors should not necessarily assume that they already have everything on the disc: there is, for instance, the unpublished “Je veux vivre” (Romeo et Juliette) from 1911, a performance of surprising delicacy and charm. The Prelude to Act 4 is there, too, in a recording from 1921 said to be by the orchestra of La Scala conducted by Toscanini, one of those legendary sessions which put him off the gramophone for a decade. If he had heard the results as cleanly defined as they are here, he might have thought again.'

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