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Leontyne Price (The Prima Donna Collection)
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Leontyne Price (The Prima Donna Collection)  (Audio CD) 
by Boris Martinovich

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Product Details:
Audio CD Release Date: August 11, 1992
Studio: RCA
Composer: Samuel Barber, Vincenzo Bellini, Hector Berlioz, Georges Bizet, Arrigo Boito, Benjamin Britten, Gustave Charpentier, Francesco Cilea, Claude Debussy, Antonin Dvorak, Friedrich von Flotow, Umberto Giordano, Christoph Willibald Gluck, George Frederick Handel, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Ruggero Leoncavallo, Pietro Mascagni, Jules Massenet
Number Of Discs: 4
Average Customer Rating: based on 10 reviews
Track Listing:
Disc: 1
1. Thy hand, Belinda...When I am laid in Earth (from 'Dido and Aeneas'), soprano aria, Z. 626/37: Act III: Thy hand, Belinda!
2. Thy hand, Belinda...When I am laid in Earth (from 'Dido and Aeneas'), soprano aria, Z. 626/37: Act III: When I am laid in earth
3. Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro), opera, K. 492: Act III: E Susanna non vien!
4. Le nozze di Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro), opera, K. 492: Act III: Dove Sono
5. La Traviata, opera: Act III: Teneste la promessa
6. La Traviata, opera: Act III: Addio del passato
7. L' Africaine, grand opera in 5 acts: Act II: Sur mes genoux, fils du sloeil
8. Manon, opera in 5 acts: Act II: Alons! il le faut!
9. Manon, opera in 5 acts: Act II: Adieu, notre, petite table
10. Otello, opera: Act IV: Era più calma?
11. Otello, opera: Act IV: Mia madre aveva una piovera ancella [Willow Song]
12. Otello, opera: Ave Maria
13. Adriana Lecouvreur, opera: Act I: Io son l'umile ancella
14. Louise, opera: Act III: Depuis le jour
15. Turandot, opera: Act II: In questa reggia
16. Die tote Stadt (The Dead City), opera, Op. 12: Act I: Marietta's Lied-Glück, das mir verblieb
17. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32: Act I: He has come, he has come!
18. Vanessa, opera, Op. 32: Act I: Do not utter a word
Disc: 2
1. Atalanta, opera, HWV 35: Act I: Care selve
2. Don Giovanni, opera, K. 527: Act I: Don Ottavio, son morta!
3. Don Giovanni, opera, K. 527: Act I: or sai chi l'onore
4. Der Freischütz, opera, J. 277 (Op. 77): Act II: Wie nahte mir der Schlummer
5. Der Freischütz, opera, J. 277 (Op. 77): Act II: Lesie, leise
6. Tannhäuser, opera, WWV 70: Act II: Dich, teure Halle
7. Macbeth, opera: Act II: La luce langue
8. Macbeth, opera: Act IV-Sleepwalking Scene: Vegliammo invan due notti
9. Macbeth, opera: Act IV-Sleepwalking Scene: Una macchia è qui tuttora
10. Mefistofele, opera in prologue, 4 acts & epilogue: Act III: L'altra notte in fondo al mare
11. Rusalka, opera, B. 203 (Op. 114): Act I: Sont to the moon-Mesícku na nebi hlubokém
12. L'Enfant prodigue, scène lyrique for voices & orchestra, L. 57: Air de Lia: L'année en vain
13. Andrea Chénier, opera: Act III: la mamma morta
14. Francesca da Rimini, opera: Act III: Paolo, datemi pace!
15. Suor Angelica, opera: Senza mamma, o bimbo, tu sei morto!
16. Amelia al ballo (Amelia Goes to the Ball), opera: While I waste these precious hours
Disc: 3
1. Alceste (French version), opera in 3 acts, Wq. 44: Act I: Divinités du Styx
2. Don Giovanni, opera, K. 527: Act II: Crudele? Ah, no, mio bene
3. Don Giovanni, opera, K. 527: Act II: Non mi dir
4. I Lombardi alla prima Crociata, opera: Act II: O madre, dal cielo
5. I Lombardi alla prima Crociata, opera: Act II: Se vanio è il pregare
6. Martha, opera: Act II: The Last Rose of Summer
7. Simon Boccanegra, opera: Act I: come in quest'ora bruna
8. La Périchole, operetta in 2 acts: Act III: Tu n'es pas beau
9. Die Walküre (The Valkyrie), opera, WWV 86b: Act I: Du bist der Lenz
10. Csárdás ('Klänge der Heimat'), for voice & orchestra (RV 503-6): Act II: Czardas-Klänge der Heimat
11. Carmen, opera: Act III: C'est des contrebandiers
12. Carmen, opera: Act III: Je dis que rien ne m'épouvante
13. Cavalleria rusticana, opera (melodramma) in 1 act: Voi lo sapete
14. Thaïs, opera in 3 acts: Act II: Ah! je suis seule
15. Thaïs, opera in 3 acts: Act II: Dis-moi que je suis belle
16. Gianni Schicchi, opera: O mio babbino caro
17. Dialogues des Carmélites, opera, FP 159: Act III: Mes filles, voilà s'achève
Disc: 4
1. Semele, oratorio, HWV 58: Act II: Where'er you walk
2. Idomeneo, rè di Creta, opera, K. 366: Act III: O smania! O Furie!
3. Idomeneo, rè di Creta, opera, K. 366: Act III: D'Oreste, d'Ajace!
4. La Damnation de Faust, for mezzo-soprano, tenor, baritone, bass, chorus and orchestra, ('légende dramatique') H. 111 (Op. 24): Part I
5. Oberon, opera, J. 306: Act II: Ozean, du Ungeheuer!
6. Norma, opera: Act I: Sediziose voci, vici di guerra
7. Norma, opera: Act I: Casta diva
8. Norma, opera: Act I: Ah! bello a me ritorna
9. Rigoletto, opera: Act I: Gualtier Maldè
10. Rigoletto, opera: Act I: Caro nome
11. Tristan und Isolde, opera, WWV 90: Act III: Liebestod-Mild und leise
12. Pagliacci, opera: Act I: Ballatella-Qual fiamma avea nel guardo!
13. Adriana Lecouvreur, opera: Act IV: Poveri fiori
14. Gloriana, opera, Op. 53: Act I, Scene 2, Soliloquy & Prayer: On Rivalries 'tis safe for kings
15. Gloriana, opera, Op. 53: Act I, Scene 2, Soliloquy & Prayer: O God, my kind, sole ruler of the
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:5.0
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5Pure beauty  Oct 15, 2009
Whenever I want to hear pure beauty at its most sublime, I play the first track on the first CD of this stunning 4-CD set: Dido's lament from Purcell's "Dido and Aeneas." And that is only the beginning! If I had only this one set with me on the proverbial desert island, I would never want to leave.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Leontyne Price Fans Rejoice!   Aug 30, 2008
ABOUT THE ALBUM: LEONTYNE PRICE THE PRIMA DONNA COLLECTION, 4-CD's set, RCA Victor Gold Seal BMG Classics, 4 LPs recorded individually between 1965-1979 by Red Seal/Gold Seal labels, Leontyne Price, soprano, Conductors Francesco Molinari-Pradelli, Edward Downes, Nello Santi, Henry Lewis.

Get this album for the incredible renditon of the Liebestod from Wagner's Tristan and Isolde. The pacing is right, the music swells with passion and so does Leontyne Price's voice, soaring and exultant, unlike any soprano has sung it before! It's the best version I've ever heard.

This 4-CD album is a must have for the most serious, hardcore fan of Leontyne Price, the first major black opera singer whose artistry influenced generations of black singers including Kathleen Battle and Jessye Norman among others. Her musicianship, queenly grace and beautiful voice was inspirational and the Metropolitan Opera and European opera houses loved her. Leontyne Price did have contemporaries -Martina Arroyo, Grace Bumbry and Shirley Verrett, all who enjoyed success in the world of opera but it was Leontyne who achieved iconic opera star status. Leontyne Price reigned supreme in the lyrico-spinto roles of Verdi and Puccini opera. These recordings show off what the operas of various other composers were missing in a voice like hers!These recordings were labors of love and cautious work by Leontyne, who between the years of 1965 and 1979, recorded them and released them individually, working with specific conductors - Francesco Molinari Pradelli and Edward Downes in the mid 1960's and Nello Santi and Henry Lewis in the 1970's. Leontyne's lush voice is showcased unlike any other recording had previously done, with attention to detail, beautiful orchestrations and just the right touch of the dramatic. What you hear here is snippets of various operas (key scenes) and arias which she sang in concert, arias of heroines she did not portray on the stage - Norma the Druid Priestess in Bellini's Norma and the Irish princess Isolde from Wagner's Tristan and Isolde, Lady Macbeth from the Verdi Macbeth, Gilda from Rigoletto, Puccini's Turandot, Andrea Chenier and Adriana Lecrouveur, Suor Angelica, Elsa from Tannhauser, Martha from Der Freischutz and Nedda from Pagliacci. While many of these repertoires are not suited to her vocal category, they are unbelievably beautiful, divine and unsurpassed in terms of vocal splendor and colorng. The results are too amazing to put into words.

DISC 1: The album opens (1-2) with the aria "Thy Hand Belinda/When I am Laid In Earth" from Purcell's English opera Dido and Aeneas. The role calls for a mezzo soprano, contralto or male soprano voice (at the time a castrato) but Leontyne Price uses her instrument to the most emotional effect with the touch of the spiritual, and this is a real treat for fans of hers. She proves withoutq question that Baroque opera was a repertoire that she could have attained incredible success with. Tracks 3-4 are the Countess' major aria "Dove Sono" from Mozart's Le Nozze Di Figaro. She's a very moving Countess with a regal voice and pitch-perfect Mozart soprano voice, a warm, sensuous and gifted interpretation that I love to hear time and again. It's a pity she did not sing the Countess on stage. Price did have a Mozart voice, but her Verdi and Puccini overshadowed this. She had recorded Cosi Fan Tutte under Leinsdorf (Fiordiligi, not showcased here) and she had sung both Donna Anna and Elvira from Mozart's Don Giovanni under Karajan, Edward Downes and under Leinsdorf. There is also a magnificent Mozart album she sang available with RCA and commercially available, (concert arias and Mozart opera heroines) that prove she indeed have a splendid Mozart voice.
Track 5-6 show a side of her no one expected - Violetta from Verdi's Traviata. Verdi opera she knew to a T but Violetta is a lyric-coloratura role that did not suit her voice. Still, her "Addio Del Passato" is masterfully accomplished and very poignant. Massenet's French opera "L'Africaine" (7)is another coloratura piece but she is able to make it honey in her vocal chords and the music is very exciting. Manon was another role not suited for her but when you hear 'Adieu Notre Petite Table"(8-9) again you wonder just how amazing a Manon she might have made. Tracks 10-12 are arias that belong to Desdemona in Verdi's Otello. Unfortunately, this is the lousy one. Although she sings very beautifully, it's too slow and too dull. 13-14 are from Adriana Lecrouveur and again, we find that, although sung beautifully, it lacks passion and becomes dull. It probably owes to the pacing of the conductor. 15 is equally dull, Charpentier's Louise Depuis Le Jour. But Turandot (16) "In Questa Reggia" is amazing! A dramatic and wondrous execution and there is a tenor portion to boot. Turandot was a role that Leontyne could never call her own, but her "In Questa Reggia" has got to be heard to believe. Here, she is also blessed with great sound quality and with great conducor/orchestra. The German aria from Korngold's DieTotte Stadt is impressive, wistful and the closing tracks from Barber's Vanessa are a tour de force.

DISC 2: The rare opera Atalanta has a fantastic aria "Care Salve" (1-2) and Leontyne, who championed modern works of opera (Barber, Britten, etc) is comfortable in music of this kind. Her voice is phenomenal. Donna Ana from Mozart's Don Giovanni (2-3) has a dramatic scene in Act 1 with the aria "Or Sai Chi L'Onore" perhaps the most taxing and difficult soprano piece Mozart ever composed. Few singers can maintain a regal quality and bearing like Leontyne who does not overdo the melodramatic moment and yet sails through the most fiendish portions of the music. It's an exceptional Donna Anna and we're lucky she did record a full length Giovanni for Karajan (for Gala record label). Martha's aria "Leise" from Webber's "Der Freischutz" is incredible. Not only is the music very stunning but Leontyne manages to produce gorgeous sounds even if the role is not in her league and her German diction is'nt precise. The same goes for Wagner's "Hall Aria". She sings it with superb intelligence and beauty and thankfully the aria isn't much of a challenge for her (when it ought to be!) and this one is a version I've come to really love. Tracks 7-9 are Lady Macbeth from Verdi's Macbeth. Again, this is a role that calls for a darker and heavier voice. Leontyne's voice did become edgier, darker and meatier in the 1970's, and even if she seemed poised to undertake the harder roles, she chose to sing only a few scenas and arias in concer to keep safe. She was wise to do so because when I hear her "Sleepwalking Scene" I can picture a very tragic heroine and indeed she did a marvelous job. That being said, there are many better interpretatins (Callas, Soliotis, Nilsson, Bumbry, Verrett) but Price is also very comfortable in the music and does a more than decent performance. The rest of the arias are well done and the music is very engaging but I don't recall being too impressed by a voice that after hearing it a long time begins to sound the same no matter what she is singing.

Discs 3 and 4: These are my favorites. Everything here shows Leontyne Price at her absolute best. Glucks's early Classical/late Baroque opera Alceste has the master aria "Divinites du Styx" sung in French. Leontyne is really "on" in this aria and a grander version youre hard-pressed to find. The music is on fire and her voice is too. She relaxes again in Donna Anna's "Non mi dir" from Mozart's Giovanni again (why didn't they just have her sing other Mozart arias besides Donna Anna's?) The rest of the stuff is well sung but again sounds somewhat dull and uniform except for - Micaela's aria "Je Dis" from Carmen. It's a miracle. This aria is supremely executed by Miss Price and interesting when noting that she recorded Carmen for Karajan to great acclaim. The aria from Massenet's Thais is also rich, vibrant and another instance in which Price is blessed with great conductor and orchestra as well as perfect flawless voice. Her French diction is excellent, even better than some would believe. Perhaps even better than her Italian. Disc 4 contains what is her best work on the album set "Casta Diva" and "Liebestod". The role of Norma would have ruined her career if she had sung it. The role is complex, difficult and calls for a heavier voice. But Casta Diva has always found a home in the throats of lyric sopranos and Price sings this with expert skill, passion, beauty and the touch of the spiritual, making this her best aria ever recorded as a "single". The same goes for her Liebestod, which has a sublime effect, with angelic and passionate glory unheard of. Few sopranos can imitate this quality. Caro Nome from Rigoletto is very interesting. It's a very beautiful version for a role that didn't fit her and not only that but she sang it as if she was in vocal bloom when in reality this is a 1979-1982 performance, when Price was nearing retirement!

Yes, these arias are a God-send to the Leontyne Price fan. Prices for this album are a lot more affordable now so get it while you can. I pray to God they never discontinue this album so that others can experience the rich splendor and beauty of Leontyne Price, the prima donna assoluta di universo.


3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5A brilliant collection from a great soprano  Apr 30, 2007
Leontyne Price was much admired and this 4CD collection shows her outstanding vocal gifts to the best advantage. Numerous reviewers have commented on the wide-ranging styles present and I can agree wholeheartedly with them. You would be hard-pressed to find a greater compilation of Ms Price, showcasing her amazing gifts as a great singer!

1 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5If I could have only one collection......  Nov 12, 2006
....it would be this. Such fine singing in so many periods, languages, and styles. She is truley a great artist and this set helps you see just HOW GREAT she is. I won't go thru all the tracks but will say Cara Selve drives me wild. "When I am Laid in Earth..." comes across very nicely. There are some rare exerpts too like Gloriana, Menotti's Amelia goes to the Ball. Overall most tracks are inspired. The musicianship is to the highest standards. I JUST lOVE IT!

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Yes this is great!  Oct 14, 2006
But "When I am Laid in Earth" was written by PURCELL! Handel's "Care Selve", however, is also on this set, and it is GORGEOUS!!! I love just about everything on here. A few items from the fourth CD are a bit telling of her age (D'oreste d'ajace!")- but even they are fabulous. THe price of this set is unfortunate - however, it has dropped a little! :) I originally purchased it from BMG in 1994, for next-to-nothing, then "gave" it to my best friend! Two years ago, she lost hers to Hurricane Ivan, and paid a LOT for a new set!

 
 
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