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Of the fifty or so stage works written
by Lecocq he is best remembered for
his contribution to opéra-comique.
It is to this genre that this disc is
dedicated. Of the stage works La
Fille de Madame Angot is the most
famous and was the most popular.
The Parisian, Charles
Lecocq grew up surrounded by the theatre
life of Paris. He studied under Auber
and was a contemporary of Bizet and
Saint Saëns at the conservatoire
there. His music is at times characteristic
of Offenbach but with more inventive
and less monotonous orchestrations:
Lecocq was a first class melodist.
Madam Angot,
occupies ten numbers on the disc. (SEE
THE EMI
REVIEW FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE
PLOT). Each act has a string
of good numbers and some of the best
are represented here.
Of the singers, Michel
Dens and Lina Dachary are the best known
and need no introduction as both featured
in EMI operetta recordings in the ’fifties
and ’sixties. The quality of singing
is very acceptable though the interest
in this disc will undoubtedly focus
on the rarities. That said, I find Lina
Dachary has a raw edge to certain high
notes in the Legend of Angot. However
in her Jadis les rois, she radiates
an endearing warmth. Michel Dens is
a robust high baritone with wide register
and good control of long phrases. Joseph
Peyron is a very capable tenor whilst
Solange Michel has an enjoyably soft
tone that marries well in her duet with
Dens. The clarity is excellent and although
there is an improved change in equalisation
after the second track, the recording
under Jules Gressier's direction is
highly acceptable.
The Angot is
a reissue of earlier released LPs. The
tapes have transferred well to CD and
do not appear to have deteriorated.
The historical numbers
are of course taken from electric 78
recordings. Their sound is understandably
thinner but they have transferred well
and most sections of the orchestras
are discernible. The opening to the
Chanson du petit bossu accelerates
over the first five seconds and this
could have been corrected. Some of the
tracks have different characteristics
and were either transcribed on different
equipment or there was poor continuity
kept with the settings.
Malibran might have
made an attempt at compiling some notes.
Only a track list is provided with this
directly burnt CD. Some background to
the historical tracks would have been
particularly welcome. All we are given
is an incomplete list of Pathé
matrix numbers. I suspect that they
were recorded in the late 1920s/early
1930s.
Raymond Walker