San Francisco Opera Gems: Volume 2 
                CD 1 
                Jacques François 
                HALÉVY (1799-1862) 
                La Juive, Act 2 complete. 
                
                Rachel, Elisabeth Rethberg (sop); Eleazer, 
                Giovanni Martinelli (ten) 
                Conducted by Gaetano Merola. Recorded 
                October 30th 1936 
                Richard WAGNER 
                (1813-1883) 
                Die Walküre, Act 
                3 scene 3 
                Wotan, Friedrich Schorr (bar); Brünnhilde, 
                Kirsten Flagstad (sop) 
                Conducted by Gaetano Merola. Recorded 
                November 1936 
                CD 2
                Umberto 
                GIORDANO (1867-1948)
                Andrea Chenier, Act 
                1 scene
                Chenier, Beniamino Gigli (ten); Madeleine, 
                Elisabeth Rethberg (sop) 
                Conducted by Gaetano Merola. Recorded 
                October 7th 1938 
                Ruggero LEONCAVALLO 
                (1858-1919) 
                Pagliacci 
                Nedda, Licia Albanese (sop); Canio. 
                Raoul Jobin (ten); Tonio, Francesco 
                Valentino (bar); Silvio, Mack Harrell 
                (bar); Beppe, Alessio de Paolis (ten) 
                
                Conducted by Gaetano Merola. Recorded 
                October 7th 1945 
                CD 3 
                Georges BIZET 
                (1838-1870) 
                Carmen, excerpts 
                Carmen, Risë Stevens (mez); Don 
                Jose, Charles Kullman (ten); Micaëla, 
                Eleanor Steber (sop) 
                Conducted by Georges Sebastian. Recorded 
                October 21st 1945 
                Richard STRAUSS 
                (1864-1949) 
                Der Rosenkavalier, Act 
                3 complete 
                Marschallin, Lotte Lehmann (sop); Octavian, 
                Risë Stevens (mez); Sophie, Nadine 
                Conner (sop); Baron Ochs, Lorenzo Alvary 
                (bass) 
                Conducted by Georges Sebastian. Recorded 
                October 18th 1945 
                Chorus and Orchestra of the Opera House, 
                San Francisco 
              
 
              
This second volume 
                of ‘San Francisco Opera Gems’ seems 
                to serve much the same function as volume 
                1. The San Francisco Opera often 
                provided opportunities for singers on 
                the Met roster to sing roles and leads 
                not offered them at the premier house. 
                There was also the matter of repertoire. 
                One of the most interesting items in 
                this collection is the 1936 recording 
                of act 2 of La Juive with Elisabeth 
                Rethberg as Rachel and Giovanni Martinelli 
                as Eleazer. Eleazer was Caruso’s last 
                appearance on the stage when he sang 
                the role at the Met on Christmas Eve 
                1920. In great pain he never really 
                recovered and died the following summer. 
                (see Life 
                of Caruso on Naxos). It is a role 
                which, as London Green notes in the 
                booklet (p.8), requires a genuine heroic 
                voice. Giovanni Martinelli sang the 
                role at the Met in its first revival 
                there three years after Caruso’s death. 
                By the time of this recording there 
                are signs of vocal wear. He does not 
                sing the part with the open-throated 
                freedom of his great predecessor as 
                can be heard on the final disc of Naxos’s 
                Caruso survey (Vol. 
                12) The portrayal of Rachel by Elisabeth 
                Rethberg provides the real pleasure. 
                Her full even tone and superb legato 
                are a joy to hear. Her introduction 
                to Il va venir and the following 
                music (CD1 trs. 6-9) are the highlights. 
                It is a great pity that the recording, 
                derived from four sixteen-inch transcription 
                discs, has so much surface noise. 
              
 
              
Rethberg makes a brief 
                contribution to the scene from Andrea 
                Chénier (CD2 trs. 1-4). The 
                notable performance here is by Beniamino 
                Gigli. The 1938 series of performances 
                at San Francisco, from which this recording 
                is taken, marked Gigli’s return to the 
                American opera stage after the contretemps 
                of his departure from the Met six years 
                earlier (see my review The 
                Life of Gigli on Naxos). His studio 
                version is well known and admired. It 
                is good to know from this live recording 
                that his essentially lyric voice could 
                hit the high notes with full tone and 
                no strain in the theatre too (tr. 4). 
                The remainder of the second disc features 
                act 1 of Pagliacci. The recording 
                derives from four transcription discs 
                made for the featured tenor Raoul Jobin. 
                The sound quality is variable. The interest 
                for me is the Nedda of Licia Albanese. 
                She is richer and warmer of tone than 
                de los Angeles in the recently re-issued 
                studio recording (see 
                review) and her characterisation 
                is good (CD 2 trs. 12-14). I am no more 
                impressed by Raoul Jobin’s Canio than 
                I was by his Don José in volume 
                1 of the series. His phrasing lacks 
                grace and he substitutes volume for 
                subtlety (trs. 8-9 and 19-20). Francesco 
                Valentino as Tonio introduces the work 
                well (tr. 5), but at the end of the 
                day one can hear why he was pushed into 
                smaller parts at the Met after the arrival 
                of Warren and Merrill. 
              
 
              
On the third CD Risë 
                Stevens makes a thoroughly vibrant, 
                secure-toned and sexy Carmen (CD 3 trs. 
                2 and 4). Charles Kullman as Don José 
                sings tastefully if without any distinctive 
                beauty of tone (tr. 3). The American 
                soprano Eleanor Steber is a vocally 
                secure Micaëla (tr. 5). The recording 
                quality of this 1945 performance is 
                amongst the best in this collection. 
                The act 3 from Der Rosenkavalier 
                from the same year, and which follows 
                the Carmen, is of much poorer 
                quality (trs. 6-20). The best singing 
                comes from Risë Stevens as Octavian, 
                although I agree with the booklet note 
                that she overdoes the Mirandel episode. 
                Lotte Lehmann, born 1888, is here past 
                her considerable best. Although her 
                artistry is still there so too is thin 
                tone and downward transposition. 
              
 
              
I haven’t mentioned 
                the Die Walküre extract. 
                Frankly, Schorr and Flagstad have had 
                excessive exposure on the various ‘Immortal 
                Performance’ issues on Guild. Volume 
                1 of ‘San Francisco Opera Gems’ included 
                a whole disc of act 2 of Die Walküre 
                conducted by Reiner and featuring 
                these artists plus Melchior and Lehmann; 
                this was recorded the same year. London 
                Green justifies these further extracts 
                on the basis of the freshness of Flagstad’s 
                manner, caught here in the earlier years 
                of her Wagnerian career. Certainly the 
                forward placing of the voices helps 
                appreciation of the purity and tonal 
                beauty of her singing (CD 1 tr. 13). 
                The downside is that we can too clearly 
                hear the worn parts of Schorr’s instrument. 
                Given the surface noise, pitch variation 
                and the necessity of interpolation for 
                the sake of dramatic continuity, the 
                time could have been better used. 
              
 
              
The main item of interest 
                in this collection is the extracts from 
                La Juive and Rethberg’s contribution 
                in particular. Otherwise this disc is 
                for those with a specialist interest 
                in particular singers from the past 
                and whose ears can tolerate the sonic 
                limitations. 
              
Robert J Farr