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Every Day we post 10 new Classical CD and DVD reviews. A free weekly summary is available by e-mail. MusicWeb is not a subscription site and it is our advertisers that pay for it. Please visit their sites regularly to see if anything might interest you. Purchasing from them keeps MusicWeb free.
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LE BELLE IMMAGINI
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)

La clemenza di Tito: Parto, ma tu, ben mio
Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714-1787)

Paride ed Elena: Le belle immagini d’un dolce amore
Josef MYSLIVICEK (1737-1781)

Abramo ed Isacco: Chi per pietà mi dice – Deh, parlate, che forse tacendo
MOZART

Le nozze di Figaro: Voi che sapete
MYSLIVICEK

Antigona: Sarò qual è il torrente
MOZART

Idomeneo: Ah qual gelido orror – Il padre adorato
GLUCK

Paride ed Elena: O del mio dolce ardor
MOZART

Lucio Silla: Dunque sperar poss’io – il tenero momento
La finta giardiniera: Va’ pure ad altri in braccio
MYSLIVICEK

L’Olimpiade: Dunque Licida ingrato – Più non si trovano
GLUCK

La clemenza di Tito: Se mai senti spirarti sul volto
MYSLIVICEK

L’Olimpiade: Che non mi disse dì!
MOZART

La clemenza di Tito: Deh, per questo istante solo
Magdalena Kozena (mezzo-soprano), Prague
Philharmonia/Michel Swierczewski
Recorded Sep. 2001, Dvorak Hall, Prague
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 471 334-2 [68.18]


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What is a mezzo-soprano? This is a question which has occupied a good many of my thoughts over the past year or so since an Italian soprano with whom I do much work changed teacher, was diagnosed as a mezzo-soprano and is now blossoming vocally in a way hitherto unimaginable. I have therefore witnessed the transformation stage by stage. But what are the signs? How can you tell what a singer’s real voice is?

I suppose I had vaguely presumed up till that time that a mezzo-soprano was a soprano voice pitched about a third down, but it doesn’t seem quite that simple. For one thing, the category hasn’t always been recognised, at least not explicitly. In Mozart’s C minor Mass, for example, there are parts for two sopranos (however, according to the edition you have, one of them may be labelled "mezzo-soprano"). But the big solo for the lower of the two, while it descends to a low A, is not suitable for all mezzo-sopranos since its coloratura passages lie fairly high, and it is sometimes taken by a "normal" soprano who can "manage" the lower notes. But an ability to "manage" the lower notes does not necessarily turn a soprano into a mezzo-soprano, for the part of Fiordiligi in Così fan Tutte also descends to a low A. But elsewhere a lot of the role goes extremely high and it has never been suggested that a mezzo-soprano might take it (well, recently there have been hints that Cecilia Bartoli might do so, but she is a special case; more of this later). There are also Mozartian parts which go neither particularly high nor particularly low (Cherubino, Dorabella) and which can be taken by either, and there are also some leading parts (Oktavian in Rosenkavalier, Rosina in Barbiere, Carmen) which have been taken by one or the other; the choice regards the tone-colour one wants to hear in the part (in the case of Rosina some of the decorations change according to which voice sings). So, while the actual label "mezzo-soprano" seems not to date back very far, there has always been a recognition by composers that voices all had their individuality and the strict definitions "soprano" and "contralto" ignored the reality that many singers were not wholly one or the other.

If you hear any female singer rehearsing, you will realise that women have a faculty which men do not have. When they sing a phrase over, not projecting the voice but to themselves, maybe to check word underlay or intonation, they mostly sing an octave down, at tenor pitch. Even a high soprano can get remarkably low when not singing "in voice". This of course has no practical application in classical music since the sound reaches no great distance (in light music, with a microphone, the technique is actually cultivated). Then they take a deep breath and project the music in their singing voice, which usually means an octave up. If the singer is a contralto then she might sing at the same pitch since she will have rich, natural tones which take her down to a G or even an F with little need to employ her "chest voice". Even a soprano can project her voice on these low notes, but she will have to use exclusively her chest voice. Singers of light music (those with what we call a "smoky" lower register) use this technique extensively and actually learn to carry their chest voice up quite high (think of Shirley Bassey, for example). Classical singers will tell you this hurts their voice and they avoid doing it. Occasionally you will hear a soprano doing what sounds like a Marlene Dietrich imitation as a stunt, by and large, though, a singer has to train as one or the other and any attempt to run parallel careers only ends in grief.

But there is also a way of catching some of the chest resonance to enrich the lower notes. If you listen to a singer like Christa Ludwig you will hear that even as high as the F above middle C she catches this resonance which then gives fullness to her timbre as she descends to her lower notes. This is a very different matter