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             Victoria from the Heart - Love Songs.  
                
              Victoria de los Ángeles Victoria de los Angeles (soprano)  
              Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (baritone) (2, 7, 13), Giuseppe Campora 
              (tenor) (19), Carlo del Monte (tenor) (20); pianists include Gerald 
              Moore and Geoffrey Parsons; conductors include Rafael Frühbeck de 
              Burgos, Georges Prêtre, André Cluytens, Pierre Monteux and Tullio 
              Serafin  
              rec. 1951–1990  
              Texts enclosed but no translations  
                
              COLUMNA MUSICA 1CM0252 [73:14]   
              Full track listing below  
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                  Love songs! Who was more suited to sing them than Victoria de 
                  los Angeles – the loveliest of sopranos? Many of the songs on 
                  this disc evoke pleasant memories from late night listening 
                  sessions in a distant past and it is once again confirmed that 
                  whatever she touches is turned into gold. No sensational revelation 
                  of course, at least not to listeners who, like me, have come 
                  of age ... What this disc definitely shows is the consistency 
                  of her singing. Listen to Brahms’s Wie Melodies zieht es 
                  mir (tr 8). It was recorded in 1990, on 3 May to be more 
                  precise, and she was 66. Who can believe that when hearing the 
                  remarkable freshness and, yes, youthfulness in her voice? Maybe 
                  her portamenti are a bit more pronounced than in younger years 
                  – but truth to tell this is not what I hear, it is what I expect 
                  to hear! The venue was Wigmore Hall and Geoffrey Parsons was 
                  at the piano. There were two recitals, possibly on two consecutive 
                  days. I attended the first one and it was the second one that 
                  was recorded by Collins Classics. I can still feel the atmosphere, 
                  see in my mind’s eye her gentle and relaxed appearance, and 
                  hearing her voice in this beautiful Brahms song I recall the 
                  sounds on that magical evening.  
                   
                  Go then to the next track, Der Nussbaum from Schumann’s 
                  Myrthen and we hear the same characteristics: the beauty 
                  of the voice, the lightness, the freshness. It was recorded 
                  in 1951! Almost 40 years separate these two recordings but without 
                  knowing the dates I could have sworn that they were more or 
                  less contemporaneous. And on the next track, the wonderful Hahn 
                  song A Chloris, we are again in 1990, but now in Tokyo. 
                  The sound is a bit dimmer but it is fully acceptable and one 
                  can enjoy her singing immensely. She was very often at her best 
                  in French repertoire and a couple of the gems on my Wigmore 
                  Hall recital were her Hahn readings.  
                   
                  She wasn’t always on that exalted level. There were times when 
                  she was less than steady and her tone started to deteriorate, 
                  but she continued to give recitals. And so beloved she was that 
                  audiences flocked whenever she appeared, no doubt remembering 
                  her heydays and forgiving her deficiencies. But her Indian summer 
                  around 1990 is truly remarkable. This compilation concentrates 
                  on the 1950s and -60s when she was more or less beyond criticism. 
                   
                   
                  The three duets with Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau are relative rarities, 
                  I am not sure they have ever been reissued complete on CD. The 
                  LP was issued in 1961 and Gerald Moore is at the piano. On The 
                  dream (tr. 13) they are also joined by violinist Eduard 
                  Drolc and cellist Irmgard Poppen, Fischer-Dieskau’s first wife, 
                  who died in 1963 at the birth of their third son.  
                   
                  Going back to the beginning of the disc Plaisir d’amour 
                  is a true gem. It has probably never been better sung. It comes 
                  from a mid-60s LP entitled A World of Song with popular 
                  and not so well known songs. From the same collection comes 
                  Hahn’s exquisite L’enamourée with a delicate orchestral 
                  arrangement by Douglas Larter. All the French numbers are in 
                  fact delicious, Fauré represented by no less than four pieces. 
                  The Ravel song, expertly orchestrated by Manuel Rosenthal, shimmers 
                  in sundry colours and her voice blends beautifully with the 
                  instruments. She also championed Canteloube’s Songs of Auvergne. 
                  The two LPs she issued were recorded as late as 1973 and her 
                  voice may have lost some of its lustre but gained in volume. 
                   
                   
                  Her operatic repertoire is also well represented. Donde lieta 
                  usci from the third act of La Bohème is not from 
                  the legendary Beecham recording with Björling but from a recital 
                  set down in Rome the previous year, 1955. Though the conductor 
                  here, Giuseppe Morelli is more anonymous than Sir Thomas it 
                  is vocally a divine reading, surpassed by none, equalled by 
                  few. She is also a noble Contessa in Le nozze di Figaro 
                  and the Marguerite of one’s dreams in the Ballade du roi 
                  de Thulé from Faust. This is from the stereo remake 
                  of the opera, made in 1959, with André Cluytens conducting. 
                  The mono version from 1953 is, if possible, even fresher, but 
                  her interpretation has undoubtedly deepened in 1959. A classic 
                  on a par with La Bohème is the Paris made Manon with 
                  veteran Pierre Monteux conducting.  
                   
                  She sang very little Verdi but here we have duets from the only 
                  two Verdi operas she recorded. Neither of her tenor partners 
                  are that well known today but Giuseppe Campora, who sings Gabriele 
                  opposite her Amelia in Simon Boccanegra, was one of the 
                  finest Italian tenors of the 50s and 60s, especially successful 
                  in Puccini. He left a rather large recorded legacy which included 
                  both Madama Butterfly and Tosca with Tebaldi. 
                  His Gabriele Adorno is manly and stylish but it is most of all 
                  Victoria de los Angeles who stands out in this excerpt, one 
                  of the most beautiful moments in the entire opera. Carlo del 
                  Monte had a more limited gramophone career: besides this classic 
                  Traviata he also participated in Gianni Schicchi, 
                  again opposite de los Angeles.  
                   
                  The two bonus tracks are very special. After some encores Victoria 
                  de los Angeles used to return to the stage, guitar in hand, 
                  and the audience knew that this marked the end of the evening. 
                  In this case there is no information about where and when the 
                  recordings were made but we encounter a soprano who has left 
                  her well schooled classical voice far behind and adopted a chanson 
                  singing style in the manner of, say, Edith Piaf. It is charming 
                  and delightful, as is the whole disc. “Victoria from the heart!” 
                  So true!  
                   
                  Göran Forsling  
                   
                  Full track listing 
                  Jean Paul Egide MARTINI (1741 – 1816)  
                  1. Plaisir d’amour [3:10]  
                  Franz SCHUBERT (1797 – 1828)  
                  2. Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt [4:07]  
                  Gabriel FAURÉ (1845 – 1924)  
                  3. Les Roses d’Ispaham [2:55]  
                  Maurice RAVEL (1875 – 1937)  
                  Cinq Mélodies populaires grecques:  
                  4. Chanson des cueilleuses [2:21]  
                  Reynaldo HAHN (1874 – 1947)  
                  5. L’énamourée [3:32]  
                  Joseph CANTELOUBE, Arr. (1879 – 1957) 
                   
                  6. Baïlèro [4:48]  
                  Gabriel FAURÉ  
                  7. Pleurs d’or [3:06]  
                  Johannes BRAHMS (1833 – 1897)  
                  8. Wie Melodien zieht es mir [2:51]  
                  Robert SCHUMANN (1810 – 1856)  
                  Myrthen, Op. 25:  
                  9. Der Nussbaum [3:27]  
                  Reynaldo HAHN  
                  10. A Chloris [3:16]  
                  Johannes BRAHMS  
                  11. Dein blaues Auge [2:10]  
                  Gabriel FAURÉ  
                  12. Claire de lune [2:49] Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770 
                  – 1827)  
                  13. The Dream [3:39]  
                  Gabriel FAURÉ  
                  14. Chanson d’amour [2:16]  
                  Giacomo PUCCINI (1858 – 1924)  
                  La Bohème:  
                  15. Donde lieta usci al tuo grido [3:11]  
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756 – 1791)  
                  Le nozze di Figaro:  
                  16. Porgi, amor [4:34]  
                  Charles GOUNOD (1818 – 1893)  
                  Faust:  
                  17. Je voudrais bien savoir ... Il était un roi de Thulé 
                  [4:55]  
                  Jules MASSENET (1842 – 1912)  
                  Manon:  
                  18. Je ne suis que faiblesse ... Adieu, notre petite table 
                  [3:50]  
                  Giuseppe VERDI (1813 – 1901)  
                  Simon Boccanegra:  
                  19. Vieni mirar la cerula [2:56]  
                  La Traviata:  
                  20. Parigi o cara [4:47]  
                  Bonus Tracks  
                  21. Defaite [1:46]  
                  22. Aveu [1:21]  
                 
                                    
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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