PACO071 - PUCCINI - Turandot Italian
Download

MP3 download

FLAC lossless download

Ambient Stereo FLAC

24 Bit mono FLAC download

  Birgit Nilsson Turandot
Anna Moffo
Liù
Franco Corelli
Calaf
For full cast see below
Choir and Orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera, New York
Leopold Stokowski, conductor

Broadcast performance, 1961

XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, January 2012
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Corelli, Nilsson & de Paolis in Turandot at the Metropolitan Opera

Total duration: 1hr 58:41
©2012 Pristine Audio.

Download ID: 1551361-64

For FLAC playback and conversion support see our Help pages

Download price category: Price CodePrice Code

PACO071

##title## ##time##

Not working? click here

 

Order CD





Stokowski's trimphant debut - aged 78 - at the New York Metropolitan Opera

Nilsson and Corelli fabulous in this knockout performance of Turandot!

 

  • PUCCINI Turandot [notes]
    Broadcast performance, March 4, 1961, with announcements by Milton Cross


    THE CAST
    (in order of vocal appearance)
    A Mandarin (baritone) - Calvin Marsh
    Liù, a young slave girl (soprano) - Anna Moffo
    Calaf, the Unknown Prince (tenor) - Franco Corelli
    Timur, his aged father, exiled king of Tartary (bass) - Bonaldo Giaiotti
    Prince of Persia (non-singing role) - Edilio Ferraro
    Ping, the Grand Chancellor (baritone) - Frank Guarrara
    Pang, the General Purveyor (tenor) - Robert Nagy
    Pong, the Chief Cook (tenor) - Charles Anthony
    Emperor Altoum of China (tenor) - Alessio de Paolis
    Princess Turandot, his daughter (soprano) - Birgit Nilsson

    Choir and Orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera, New York
    Production designed by Cecil Beaton
    Metropolitan Opera Chorus Master Kurt Adler
    Associate Chorus Master Thomas P Martin

    Leopold Stokowski
    conductor


CONTEMPORARY REVIEWS

"For Stokowski (the musical saviour of a situation jeopardized by Dimitri Mitropoulos's death last fall), this was more than the crown of his long musical career in New York - it was the corona. Because of a back injury sustained some weeks ago, he was barely able to reach the conductor's desk on crutches - a slow trek made to a rising clamor of applause and bravos - but, once in place, he was all authority and impulse, dominating the scene with the assurance that comes from complete command.

It should be emphasized that the sonorities Stokowski achieved, whether ear-pounding or gossamer, were always sonorities, not noise, which supported and blended with the strong voices at his command rather than opposing them. There was aural drama in Birgit Nilsson's deployment of her jet-like sound to cope with the inhumane range and power Puccini demands of Turandot.

In Anna Moffo, Liu had an interpreter of equal, if opposite, qualifications to Nilsson's Turandot, a figure of humility and tenderness whose vocal freshness and artistic response to Stokowski's shaping influence provided a touching balance to the Princess of "fire and ice."

How Franco Corelli might perform under a less resolute maestro than Stokowski may be proved soon enough; but this time his prodigious power was all at the service of the score.

The evening was a memorable theatrical experience ... It became a historic one, musically, through the pulsing splendor of vocalism sustained without flaw to the final ringing climax of Act III, when dawn broke on the scene and on Turandot's emotional life."

Saturday Review (11 March 1961) by Irving Kolodin

 

"When Turandot is as magnificently performed as it was at the Metropolitan Opera House, it is a breathtaking spectacle. The conducting of Leopold Stokowski, who got to the podium on crutches (he is still recovering from a serious accident to his hip), is extraordinarily dashing and vivid, and the cast is of such high quality that few opera houses in the world could touch it. Birgit Nilsson belts out her powerful tones with rare brilliance. Franco Corelli is an ideal Calaf - handsome, virile and vocally splendid. And Anna Moffo is a perfect Liu, touchingly lyric in voice and very beautiful to look at. The lesser characters are played with individuality and spirit, the chorus sings superbly, and all the trimmings are handled with polished artistry. Though Turandot may not be Puccini's greatest opera, its production at the Met is certainly one of the greatest shows to be seen currently on Broadway."

The New Yorker (4 March 1961) by Winthrop Sargeant

 

"Turandot is Puccini's most fascinating opera and the new production does it justice. Its master is Leopold Stokowski, who made a brilliant Met debut at 78 and on crutches (he is recovering from a broken hip). Having always been a theatrical conductor in the concert hall, he seemed completely at home in the theatre, drawing all the score's turbulence from the orchestra without trying to make it the star of the show at the singer's expense.

Newcomer Franco Corelli, as the prince who stakes his life on winning the cold Turandot, is as handsome as any tenor who ever walked the Met stage and has a big, bronze voice that he can fling forth most of the time without strain. Anna Moffo, as Liu, makes the part far more than the usual sweet rag doll: singing with impeccable beauty of tone but also with surprising force, she gives the character backbone, thus rendering plausible the scene in which she chooses to die rather than to betray Calaf. Beyond a doubt, it is soprano Nilsson who dominates the production. The famed second act aria, In questa reggia, and the whole scene that follows, is one of the most difficult half-hours in all opera. Nilsson's voice was unshakable. She was never shrill and her crystal voice was hard without harshness, cutting without hurting, thus embodying the ultimate paradox of Turandot."

Time (3 March 1961)

 

"As he slowly made his way on crutches down in the pit, the Metropolitan Opera House exploded into a standing ovation for Leopold Stokowski who was, at 78, finally making his debut as a Met conductor. As Turandot, Birgit Nilsson poured forth such a flood of soaring, stabbing top notes that the ear rang in disbelief. Franco Corelli, the company's handsome new 36-year-old Italian singer, looked like a prince who might sweep a lady off her feet, and he sang like one, too. When asked after the performance how he felt about the tumultuous evening, Stokowski replied: "Really great music, written from the heart. I felt it went to the hearts of those who were listening." Was he unduly tired after such an exacting ordeal? "No," he said softly, "conducting never tires. You give much, but you receive more.""

Newsweek (6 March 1961)



Notes on the recordings:

As I was writing the editorial for our newsletter of 6th January, 2012, I was listening through to the work-in-progess version of Stokowski's 1961 Met Opera Turandot. It was going on quite nicely in the background and, to be honest, my concentration was elsewhere.

Then the famous opening bars of Nessun Dorma began to play, and Franco Corelli began to sing. It was the first time I'd heard him sing this aria, and the performance completely overwhelmed me. My eyes filled with tears and the lump in my throat threatened to choke me. I had to stop what I was doing and leave the room to gather myself back together. Clearly the audience were also moved - to such adulation that Stokowski was forced to stop the orchestra and calm them down, before going back a line or two and picking up again.

I'm relieved that this hasn't happened to me before when remastering recordings for Pristine. It's a terrible handicap! When it came to working closely on that particular section I had to stop and start a good number of times, trying my best to tune out of the music and listen to the noise of clumping feet I was aiming to remove.

It is of course an aria that I know well - there can be few British males over the age of 30 who don't associate it equally with the Football World Cup of 1990, which took place in Italy and meant we heard Pavarotti singing it before every match on TV. But it's not the memory of yet another painful moment on the pitch for the England players which causes this reaction - other performances don't seem to have the same effect. But the magical combination of singer, conductor, orchestra and occasion in that Met Opera performance just seems to push the big button marked "blub" in me, and I don't know why.

How can a few lines of music be so immediately emotionally powerful?

Andrew Rose

Update to Disc 1, Track 18, 10 February 2012:

Shortly after the release of this recording it came to our attention that a minor glitch had occured in the preparation of our final master copy of Turandot, resulting in a momentary repeat at about 15s into track 18, "In questa Reggia" from Act 2, Scene 2. This sonic glitch affected all formats prepared from our master but was thankfully easily fixed by a very short edit, and all our downloads and CD masters have been updated as of 10 February 2012. For those who purchased this recording prior to this date we can now offer you an update for your recording:

FLAC downloaders can get a replacement for this track by clicking here (ZIP file containing all three FLAC formats). If you purchased the MP3 version of this recording prior to 10 February 2012 please contact downloadsupport@pristineclassical.com for a replacement MP3. If you purchased the CD version of this recording prior to 10 February 2012 please contact cdsupport@pristineclassical.com for a replacement CD.

 


Click here to view additional notes

 

Franco Corelli

notes from Wikipedia

 

Franco Corelli (8 April 1921 – 29 October 2003) was a famous Italian tenor who had a major international opera career between 1951 and 1976. Associated in particular with the spinto and dramatic tenor roles of the Italian repertory, he was celebrated universally for his powerhouse voice, electrifying top notes, clear timbre, a very elegant and passionate singing and remarkable performances. Dubbed the "Prince of tenors", Corelli possessed handsome features and a charismatic stage presence which endeared him to audiences. He had a long and fruitful partnership with the Metropolitan Opera in New York City between 1961 and 1975. He also appeared on the stages of most of the major opera houses in Europe and with opera companies throughout North America.

 

Biography

Early life and education: 1921-1950

Corelli was born Dario Franco Corelli in Ancona into a family many have thought to have little or no musical background. While his parents were not particularly musical, his paternal grandfather Augusto had actually quit working at 35 to establish a successful career as an operatic tenor. His older brother Aldo subsequently quit school to become an operatic baritone, and two of his uncles sang in the Teatro delle Muse chorus in Ancona. His father was a shipbuilder for the Italian navy and the family lived along the Adriatic Sea. Corelli loved the sea and initially decided to follow in the footsteps of his father by pursuing a degree in naval engineering at the University of Bologna. While studying there he entered a music competition under the dare of a friend who was an amateur singer. While he did not win the competition, he was encouraged by the judges to pursue a singing career and Corelli entered the Pesaro Conservatory of Music to study opera.

At the conservatory, Corelli studied under Rita Pavoni and Arturo Melocchi but was unhappy with the results, saying these lessons basically destroyed his upper register. After this Corelli decided to become his own teacher, and referred to voice teachers as "dangerous people" and a "plague to singers". At first he tried to turn himself into a baritone, but quickly abandoned that pursuit. He then pursued learning the tenor repertoire by imitating the style and vocal effects of the recordings of great tenors like Enrico Caruso, Giacomo Lauri-Volpi, Aureliano Pertile, and Beniamino Gigli. Opera News stated that Corelli's technique used "a manipulation of the larynx downward that resulted in his cavernous sound even in high-flying passages, where it gained brilliance. Regulating the breath pressure, the tenor was able to reduce this sound while retaining the core of the voice in a diminuendo, or even a morendo on a high B-flat, the effect requested by Verdi at the end of 'Celeste Aida'."

Early career: 1951-1960

In the summer of 1951, Corelli won the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in Florence, earning a debut at Spoleto the following fall. He was originally scheduled to sing Radames in Verdi's Aïda and spent three months preparing the role with conductor Giuseppe Bertelli. However, Corelli eventually switched to Don José in Bizet's Carmen, feeling that at this point he lacked the technical finesse and legato for the role of Radamès. In November 1951, he made his debut at the Rome Opera as Manrico in Il trovatore opposite Maria Caniglia as Leonora. The next year he appeared in operas with smaller opera houses throughout Italy and on the Italian radio. In 1953 he joined the Rome Opera's roster of principal tenors where he spent much of his time performing through 1958. His first role with the company in 1953 was that of Romeo in Zandonai's rarely heard opera Giulietta e Romeo. Later that season he sang Pollione in Bellini's Norma opposite Maria Callas in the title role. It was the first time the two sang opposite one another and Callas immediately became a fan of Corelli. The two performed frequently with each other over the next several years in a partnership that lasted to the end of Callas's career.

While singing at the Rome Opera, Corelli also made numerous appearances with other opera houses both in Italy and internationally. He made his first appearance at La Scala in Milan in 1954, as Licinio in Spontini's La vestale opposite Callas's Julia for the opening of the 1954-1955 season. He returned several more times to that house over the next five years, singing opposite Callas in productions of Fedora (1956), Il pirata (1958) and Poliuto (1960). He also notably portrayed the role of Dick Johnson in a highly celebrated performance of La fanciulla del West at La Scala in 1956, opposite Gigliola Frazzoni and Tito Gobbi, which was broadcast live on Italian radio. Other important debuts for Corelli soon followed, including his first appearances at: the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in Florence and the Arena di Verona Festival in 1955; the Vienna State Opera, as Radamès, and the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in London, as Cavaradossi, in 1957; the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos in Lisbon, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the San Francisco Opera in 1958; and the Berlin State Opera in 1961. Among the many triumphs of the decade for Corelli were two highly celebrated performances at the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples, a 1958 appearance as Don Alvaro in La forza del destino opposite Renata Tebaldi as Leonora and a 1959 performance of Maurizio in Adriana Lecouvreur opposite Magda Olivero in the title role.

During his early career, Corelli sang in a number of rare operas in which he triumphed including performances of Spontini's Agnese di Hohenstaufen, Handel's Giulio Cesare and Hercules, Prokofiev's War and Peace, and the world premiere of Guido Guerrini's Enea. By 1960 his active repertory included some 30 roles including the title role in Giordano's Andrea Chénier, Turiddu in Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana, Rodolfo in Puccini's La bohème, and the title roles in Verdi's Don Carlos and Ernani.

In 1957 Corelli met soprano Loretta di Lelio when she came backstage after one of his performances at the Rome Opera House to get his autograph. They began seeing each other romantically and married in 1958. After their marriage, Loretta gave up her fledgling opera career to serve as her husband's business manager, secretary, public relations agent, cook, and English translator. Their marriage ended upon Corelli's death forty-five years later.

The Metropolitan Opera years: 1961-1975

Corelli made his debut at New York's Metropolitan Opera on 27 January 1961 as Manrico in Il trovatore, opposite soprano Leontyne Price as Leonora who was also making her house debut at the Met that evening. He would sing to great acclaim at the Met until 1974 in roles such as Calaf (with Birgit Nilsson as Turandot), Cavaradossi, Maurizio, Ernani, Rodolfo and Edgardo. He also undertook French parts in new productions of Roméo et Juliette and Werther. He sang at a number of historic nights at the Met including: the closing gala at the old Met, the concert honoring Sir Rudolf Bing's retirement, and Callas's legendary comeback Tosca. His last performance at the Met was on December 28, 1974 as Calàf with Ingrid Bjoner, also singing her last performance at the Met, as Turandot. However, Corelli did tour extensively with the Metropolitan Opera in 1975, singing in performances in cities throughout the United States and in Japan.

While singing at the Met, Corelli continued to be a presence on the international stage. In 1961 he made his debut with the Deutsche Oper Berlin. He returned to La Scala in 1962, for a revival of Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots, opposite Joan Sutherland, and that same year appeared as Manrico in a lauded production of Il trovatore at the Salzburg Festival under Herbert von Karajan and opposite Leontyne Price, Giulietta Simionato, and Ettore Bastianini. Also in 1962 he made his first appearance with the Philadelphia Lyric Opera Company as Mario Cavaradossi. He returned to Philadelphia almost every year through 1971 portraying close to a dozen different roles. He made his debut at the Paris Opéra in 1964 opposite Callas in Tosca and Norma.

In the early 1970s, Corelli's voice began to show some signs of wear after years of hard use in a demanding repertory. As a result, the resultant nerves surrounding performances became increasingly difficult to handle for the tenor. He made his last opera appearance as Rodolfo in 1976 in Torre del Lago at the age of 55. Corelli later said of the decision, "I felt that my voice was a little tired, a little opaque, less brilliant than before. The singer's life cost me a great deal. I was full of apprehension and mad at everyone. I was a bundle of nerves, I wasn't eating or sleeping."

Later life: 1976-2003

After retiring from the stage, Corelli became a popular voice teacher in New York City, somewhat ironic for a man who himself disdained voice teachers for much of his life. Corelli briefly served as mentor to America's Got Talent finalist Donald Braswell II, who has played many of the same roles as Corelli. He was briefly coaxed out of retirement for concerts in 1980 and 1981. He died in Milan in 2003, aged 82, having suffered a stroke earlier that year. He was buried in Milan's Cimitero Monumentale.

Critical reception

With a rich and ringing spinto tenor voice and movie-star good looks, Corelli won a wide public following from early on his career. However, while the public was enthralled with the tenor, music critics were divided, with some complaining about what they perceived as self-indulgence of phrasing and expression. During the 1960s the anti-Corelli sentiment among critics was epitomized by Alan Rich of the The New York Herald Tribune in a 1966 article which, while acknowledged the vibrancy and white heat of his singing, considered Corelli a throwback to an earlier era when, from Mr. Rich's perspective, musical compromises were common and stylistic refinement lacking. Rich said that, Corelli is "not employed by an opera, but employs it to serve purposes it was not meant to serve." Also, many critics did not look favourably on his performances in French opera, owing to the tenor’s exotic French diction and style. However, Corelli also had his admirers among several highly respected and notable critics, including Harold C. Schonberg of The New York Times, who once defended the expressive liberties taken by Corelli as possessing "its own kind of logic".

 


Notes from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franco_Corelli

 

 

 

Extras  

CD covers to print:
(NB. Disable Page Scaling before printing)

PACO071 cover

CD-writing cuesheet (save as .cue):
(Use this to split MP3 files - see here)

Included with MP3 download

Download our Full Discography
Printable text listings of all Pristine Audio historic releases
XR remastering by Andrew Rose:
Pristine Audio


 

 

Google
 
Web Pristine Classical

 

 

Pristine Classical - DRM-free historic FLAC and MP3 downloads since 2005