November 1, 2006 RCA Living Stereo High-Resolution OperaWith all the classical titles that have been released on SACD and DVD-Audio, its surprising how few mainstream operas have been released in high resolution. Decca did a La Bohème, Harmonia Mundi The Marriage of Figaro, and DG both Don Giovanni and La Traviata, but most SACD opera releases have been of less-well-known titles from the Baroque period and the 20th century. BMGs recent foray into the opera catalog of RCA Living Stereo is quite welcome. It includes Turandot [82624], La Traviata [82623], La Bohème [82621], and Madama Butterfly [82622], all among the most beloved operas of all time. These were recorded in Italy, one per year from 1959 to 1962, using the forces of the Rome Opera and casts that included tried and true veterans such as Jussi Bjoerling, Richard Tucker, and Robert Merrill, and such dazzling newcomers as Anna Moffo and Leontyne Price. RCAs "house conductor," Erich Leinsdorf, led three of these recordings. Among BMGs first wave of RCA Living Stereo operas (I say that hoping for a second wave that will include Tosca, the most glaring omission here) are some landmark performances. Turandot featured as the icy princess Birgit Nilsson, who then only recently became a star, in a role that would become a signature for her. Anna Moffo and Leontyne Price, both new stars, were recorded in their own respective signature roles of Violetta and Cio-Cio San. Artistically, the best of these recordings are Turandot, Traviata, and Butterfly; Bohème seems to me a bit of a misfire -- nothing particularly wrong with it, but nothing memorable either. La Bohème is also the one that sounds less than great. The sound is weighted heavily toward the right channel, and the vocal-orchestral balance seems off at many points. All of these operas appear on SACD in three-channel mixes (left, center, right), which helps clarify things a lot. In early stereo opera recordings, producers often had singers change position to re-create the action onstage. RCA had its famous "checkerboard" grid, on which singers were moved about like chess pieces. The three-channel sound helps focus the location of each singer much better than in the two-channel versions. Because these are all hybrid multichannel SACD/CDs, you can compare by playing the new mixes with the two-channel SACD and CD tracks. Turandot is the best-sounding of the lot. The voices are clear and the sounds of the exotic percussion instruments are clean, with great presence. The stereo spread is excellent, and the singers and instruments are perfectly balanced. Except for a weak representation of the upper percussion instruments, Madama Butterfly, too, is excellent, as is La Traviata, in which the crowd scenes are particularly well handled. Each opera is packaged in a slimline two-disc case. In a sign of the times, there are no librettos, though a link is provided to a website from which you can download them. Its wonderful to have these magnificent voices and wonderful performances available in hi-rez, sounding better than ever. Now, on to Tosca, Otello, and La Forza del Destino! These RCA Living Stereo operas would make great gifts. Here are six more high-resolution discs to close out 2006 that could serve the same purpose: Conciertango Ah, the tango -- scintillating, elegant, undulating, and sensuous, a dance to involve the whole spirit, body, and soul of dancers and performers. Nowhere is it felt more strongly than in the music of Astor Piazzolla, whose name has become synonymous with tango. His Double Concerto on this engaging disc presents not only the solo guitar, but also the small accordion used for the tango, the bandoneón. Cacho Tiraos Conciertango Buenos Aires for guitar features the folk music of his native Argentina. The first two movements comprise gentle melodies and subtle rhythms, but in the last the tango demands to be heard, the music growing more strident and dissonant. The Italian composer Olivero Lacagninas Concerto Serenata has insistent, passionate tango rhythms that are a fitting tribute to Piazzolla. The soloists, orchestra, and conductor seem to have this music in their blood, and toss off its difficult passages with flair and ease. The readings sound natural and beguiling, and the engineering is first rate. The soloists are placed up front, the orchestra behind them, and all players are heard with a singular clarity, the sound also conveying the musics warmth. The soundstage is deep but narrow, though the rear-channel reverb seems just right. If youre looking for something new that will prove so ingratiating it quickly becomes familiar, this disc is it. Elgar: Enigma Variations In the past two decades, the Cincinnati Symphony has become a world-class orchestra. It is fitting, then, that it record Benjamin Brittens The Young Persons Guide to the Orchestra, originally composed for a 1946 educational film, Instruments of the Orchestra, when it was conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent. The work gives every section of the orchestra, and most of the first-chair players, chances to shine, and that is exactly what the Cincinnati players do here. Only Brittens own recording, with the London Symphony, is better. Conductor Paavo Järvi handles the Four Sea Interludes from Brittens Peter Grimes with dramatic flair and an ear for bringing out different orchestral colors. Elgars Enigma Variations is absolutely idiomatic and first rate until the finale, which is a bit slow and lacking in shape. The sound is what weve come to expect from Telarcs Cincinnati sessions: rich, warm, and full, with great clarity, a wide, deep soundstage, and just the right amount of reverb. The timpani in The Young Persons Guide are awesome, and the organ in the finale of the Elgar makes its presence known without sounding like a solo instrument. The Worlds Greatest Audiophile Vocal Recordings David Chesky has announced that, beginning in 2007, all Chesky recordings will be released as hybrid SACDs. If they all sound as good as this one, that will be fine by me -- theres no reason for record stores to have to stock double inventories; a single release including CD and SACD layers serves all needs. But however low this samplers price, it will prove expensive -- once these samples are heard, youll want the complete discs from which theyve been selected. My favorites here are Valerie Joyces sultry rendition of "Fever," Rosa Passos seductively swaying "Girl from Ipanema," and Kenny Rankins incredible "Round Midnight," accompanied by double bass alone. But theres not a bad track on the entire disc -- each is a winner. The sound? Chesky says, "We give you the purest, most natural recordings made today with a single-point microphone, using the worlds finest custom-made electronics," and I wont argue with that. No matter which of these singers youre listening to, the sound is entirely natural. Its like distinguishing among many different singers heard in as many live venues. Chesky doesnt believe in using a center channel -- these recordings are all 4.0 -- but the center-channel "ghost" image is solid. The many bass solos (the bassists include Ron Carter) on The Worlds Greatest Audiophile Vocal Recordings will let you know, depending on your systems low-bass crossover point, whether or not your subwoofer balance is right. My only complaint about this sampler is that it is short. Chesky also has a series of SACDs, called the New York Sessions, all recorded at St. Peters Church in Chelsea, Manhattan, in completely natural, unfettered sound. I find the George Mraz Trios breezy Manhattan [SACD310] the most accessible; try that and go from there. Gloryland: Folk Songs, Spirituals, Gospel Hymns of
Hope & Glory The four women who comprise Anonymous 4 are best known for their forays into medieval music, most importantly that of Hildegard von Bingen. But the talented quartet is ever on the lookout for good music suitable for them to perform, and the Anglo-American folk songs and gospel hymns provide fertile repertory. The disc begins with a three-part shape-note tune, one of three here, "Im on My Journey Home," which seems written for A4 to sing. They capture perfectly the vibrant, ringing nature of this deceptively simple song. One of the more interesting aspects of the disc is following a tune as it pops up in various guises. The melody of "Wayfaring Stranger" can be heard in "You Fair and Pretty Ladies" as well as in the mesmerizing "Parting Friends." Most of the songs are sung a cappella, but a few benefit from the additions of Darol Anger and Mike Marshall, who variously play fiddle, mandolin, mandocello, and guitar. The sound is sonorous and clean in two-channel stereo, while the multichannel tracks add warmth and detail without sacrificing the simplicity that makes this disc so appealing. Stanford: The Revenge: A Ballad of the Fleet; Songs
of the Sea; Songs of the Fleet Sir Charles Villiers Stanford (1852-1924) was no mariner, but, like many natives of his island nation of Great Britain, he was attracted to songs about the sea and the navy that sailed on it. The Revenge: A Ballad of the Fleet, scored for chorus and orchestra and the earliest composition on this generously filled SACD, was written on commission in 1886 to texts by Tennyson describing a mighty 1591 battle with the Spanish Fleet. After the turn of the century, Stanford came to know the poet Henry Newbolt and set many of his verses in two sets of songs for baritone, chorus, and orchestra. This stalwart material can bristle with prideful bravura: "Stand by to reckon up you battleships, / Ten, twenty, thirty there they go. / Brag about your cruisers like Leviathans / A thousand men apiece down below." It can also express noble consolation for the fallen: "Mother, with unbowed head / Hear thou across the sea / The farewell of the dead. / The dead who died for thee." Canadian baritone Gerald Finley is just the right artist to sing these songs -- his big, sonorous voice is also well-focused enough to convey the full meaning of the texts. The wonderful choral singing of the BBC National Chorus and Orchestra of Wales lets one know why Wales is known for its songsters, and the orchestra plays with precision and good tone. Richard Hickox guides these fine performers with a sure and knowing hand, capturing all the swagger and nobility of such favorites as "Drakes Drum" and "The Old Superb." The sound is big, bold, and clear, and the SACD tracks add just the right amount of reverb to give a clear impression of a largish hall. C.P.E. Bach: Symphonies 1-4; Cello Concerto in
A The symphonies of Carl Philip Emanuel Bach seem so brash and daring that one is surprised to find out he was 61 when he wrote them. Rapid dynamic changes, abrupt modulations, and fleet virtuoso passages for strings make this thrilling music, particularly in these incredibly bold readings by Andrew Manze and the English Concert. The violins play the many swirling figures as if they were the winter wind ripping down the last leaves of fall. The harpsichord is used to provide color, as are the flutes and oboes. But the music isnt all pounding pulses. The middle movement of each symphony gives the players a chance to provide lustrous tone for soulful moments of greater repose, and the cello concerto is more sedate than the symphonies while never lacking for imaginative passages of great energy. Alison McGillivray, principal cellist with the English Concert for three years, plays with finesse and controlled abandon. The sound is much like that of Manzes other recordings for Harmonia Mundi: rich, very big, yet highly detailed. The bass line is well defined, and the upper strings have power and punch while never sounding brittle. The harpsichord is balanced just right, and the rear channels contribute to a sense of presence and immediacy at which the two-channel version can only hint. ...Rad Bennett
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