Sullivan (The) Yeomen of the Guard
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Arthur (Seymour) Sullivan
Genre:
Opera
Label: Duo
Magazine Review Date: 11/1993
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 115
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 438 138-2PH2

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(The) Yeomen of the Guard (or The Merryman and his |
Arthur (Seymour) Sullivan, Composer
Academy of St Martin in the Fields Academy of St Martin in the Fields Chorus Anne Collins, Dame Carruthers, Contralto (Female alto) Anthony Michaels-Moore, Second Yeoman, Baritone Arthur (Seymour) Sullivan, Composer Bryn Terfel, Shadbolt, Bass Jean Rigby, Phoebe, Mezzo soprano Judith Howarth, Kate, Soprano Kurt Streit, Colonel Fairfax, Tenor Neil Mackie, First Yeoman, Tenor Neil Mackie, Leonard, Tenor Neville Marriner, Conductor Robert Lloyd, Sir Richard Cholmondeley, Baritone Stafford Dean, Sergeant Meryll, Baritone Sylvia McNair, Elsie, Soprano Thomas Allen, Jack Point, Baritone |
Author: Andrew Lamb
The most readily distinguishing feature of this second new Yeoman within the year is the inclusion of dialogue for the first time on disc. Before admirers of Gilbert get too excited, though, it should be stated that it is given in much abridged form. From a musico-dramatic point of view this must surely be the most sensible way to present Gilbert and Sullivan on disc, and Philips are to be commended for being the first company to take the plunge. However, the pruning of dialogue to a minimum means that what is deleted is inevitably Gilbert's more discursive, more idiosyncratic, more essentially Gilbertian contributions.
Musical virtues indeed are what are uppermost in the recording. In the choral numbers, in the substantial orchestral passages, and in ensemble numbers such as ''When a wooer goes a wooing'', the result is sheer delight and has the edge over the recent TER version. The qualities of vocalism throughout the set are predictably high. Especially agreeable are Bryn Terfel's softly etched, richly sung gaoler Shadbolt and Thomas Allen's deftly humourous jester. Their ''Here at once we're both agreed'' is quite splendid, though Allen's spoken accent tends at times to become a shade distracting.
It is indeed in the way the text is spoken and the way that this new recording comes across as a dramatic whole that doubts must rest. The disguised Fairfax may claim that he loves Elsie madly, passionately, but he might almost as well be saying that the Tower of London closes to the public at 6pm. It is the same in the musical numbers. Phoebe's ''When maiden loves'' seems too quick to bring out the essence of her lovesick sighing; and, richly sung as Anne Collins's Dame Carruthers is, it misses out on verbal expression to the TER version. Indeed the curious paradox is that the TER, which excludes the dialogue, sounds more convincingly theatrical than this new Philips, which includes it.
The good news is that the catalogue now includes three excellent Yeoman, each with its own claim to precedence. The TER offers a musically more than complete, dramatically convincing version; the ageing, but admirable Decca version under Sargent has Trial by Jury as a generous fill-up; and this new Philips, as well as offering at least some of the dialogue, also offers perhaps unparalleled qualities of musicianship as well as excellently clear sound.'
Musical virtues indeed are what are uppermost in the recording. In the choral numbers, in the substantial orchestral passages, and in ensemble numbers such as ''When a wooer goes a wooing'', the result is sheer delight and has the edge over the recent TER version. The qualities of vocalism throughout the set are predictably high. Especially agreeable are Bryn Terfel's softly etched, richly sung gaoler Shadbolt and Thomas Allen's deftly humourous jester. Their ''Here at once we're both agreed'' is quite splendid, though Allen's spoken accent tends at times to become a shade distracting.
It is indeed in the way the text is spoken and the way that this new recording comes across as a dramatic whole that doubts must rest. The disguised Fairfax may claim that he loves Elsie madly, passionately, but he might almost as well be saying that the Tower of London closes to the public at 6pm. It is the same in the musical numbers. Phoebe's ''When maiden loves'' seems too quick to bring out the essence of her lovesick sighing; and, richly sung as Anne Collins's Dame Carruthers is, it misses out on verbal expression to the TER version. Indeed the curious paradox is that the TER, which excludes the dialogue, sounds more convincingly theatrical than this new Philips, which includes it.
The good news is that the catalogue now includes three excellent Yeoman, each with its own claim to precedence. The TER offers a musically more than complete, dramatically convincing version; the ageing, but admirable Decca version under Sargent has Trial by Jury as a generous fill-up; and this new Philips, as well as offering at least some of the dialogue, also offers perhaps unparalleled qualities of musicianship as well as excellently clear sound.'
Discover the world's largest classical music catalogue with Presto Music.

Gramophone Digital Club
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £8.75 / month
Subscribe
Gramophone Full Club
- Print Edition
- Digital Edition
- Digital Archive
- Reviews Database
- Full website access
From £11.00 / month
Subscribe
If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.