Enrique GRANADOS 
                (1867–1916) 
                Colección de Tonadillas: [8:18] 
                
                1. El mirar de la maja (No. 5) 
                [3:06] 
                2. La maja dolorosa (No. 11) 
                [3:38] 
                3. El majo discreto (No. 3) [1:34] 
                
                Joaquin VALVERDE 
                (1846–1910) 
                4. Clavelitos [1:53] 
                Jesús GURIDI 
                (1886–1961) 
                Canciones Castellanas: 
                5. No. 4: No quiero tus avellanas 
                [3:41] 
                6. No. 5: Cómo quieres que 
                adivine [2:24] 
                Joaquin NIN (1879–1949) 
                
                7. El vito [1:58] 
                8. Paño Murciano [1:53] 
                
                Joaquin TURINA 
                (1882–1949) 
                Triptico: 
                9. Farruca [3:21] 
                Ernesto FUSTÉ 
                (1884–1972) 
                10. Háblame de amores 
                [2:57] 
                Amadeo VIVES (1871–1932) 
                
                11. El retrato de Isabela [2:12] 
                
                12. El amor y los ojos [2:13] 
                
                Manuel de FALLA 
                (1876–1946) 
                Siete canciones populares Españolas: 
                [12:35] 
                13. I El paño moruno [1:12] 
                
                14. II Seguidilla murciana [1:20] 
                
                15. III Asturiana [2:33] 
                16. IV Jota [2:50] 
                17. V Nana [1:39] 
                18. VI Canción [1:10] 
                
                19. VII Polo [1:51] 
                Traditional Songs of Spain 
                (arranged by Graciana Tarragó): 
                
                20. El Rossinyol(The Nightingale)(Catalonia) 
                [2:18] 
                21. El Testament d’Amelia (Amelia’s 
                Will)(Catalonia) [3:30] 
                22. Adiós meu homiño! 
                (Goodbye, my dearest)(Galicia) [1:50] 
                
                23. Miña nay por me casare 
                (The Dowry) (Galicia) [1:12] 
                24. Tengo que subir, subir (I 
                must go to the mountain) (Asturias) 
                [2:57] 
                25. Ahí tienes mi corazón 
                (Here is my heart) (Castilian Fandango) 
                [1:47] 
                26. La ví llorando (I 
                saw her crying) (Old Castile-Santander) 
                [1:32] 
                27. Ya se van los Pastores (The 
                shepherds are singing) (Old Castile-Soria) 
                [1:54] 
                28. Campanas de Belén 
                (Bells of Bethlehem) (Andalusia) [1:06] 
                
                29. Jaeneras (Songs of Jaen) 
                (Andalusia) [2:22] 
                30. A dormer ahora mesmo (Cradle 
                Song) (Murcia) [2:54] 
                31. Granadinas (Songs of Granada) 
                (Andalusia) [2:44] 
                32. Hincarse de rodillas (Prayer) 
                (Andalusia) [3:18] 
                33. Canción de trilla 
                (Song sung at haymaking) (Majorca) [1:40] 
                
                34. Parado de Vallemosa (Bolero) 
                (Majorca) [1:40] 
                35. Nik Baditut (My possessions) 
                (Basque Province) [2:03] 
                36. Andregaya (The betrothed) 
                (Basque Province) [0:50] 
                Victoria de los Angeles (soprano) 
                Gerald Moore (piano)(1–19), Renata Tarragó 
                (guitar) (20–36) 
                rec. 6 and 7 May 1949 (1, 4, 9, 10), 
                21 and 22 June 1950 (2, 3, 5, 6), 30 
                May 1953 (7, 8, 11, 12), 12 September 
                1951 (13–19), 12–14 September 1950 (20–36) 
                
              
              Having been enormously 
                fond of Victoria de los Angeles from 
                the earliest years of my record collecting, 
                it was something of a slap in the face 
                to receive, a couple of months ago, 
                two discs with late recordings by her. 
                The sound quality on one of them was 
                atrocious, the other was only awful 
                and their qualities were the greatest 
                hindrance to enjoy her singing. It also 
                seemed that the singing per se 
                was less than consistently good with 
                poor intonation in places and some strain 
                on higher-lying passages. What was never 
                in question was the warmth of the voice, 
                the musical phrasing and the care for 
                words. 
              
 
              
These are also the 
                qualities that immediately catch the 
                ear on these early recordings; of drawbacks 
                there are none. The purity and beauty 
                of the voice, the intonation and the 
                sheer love of what she is singing are 
                all one could wish for and the recorded 
                sound, excellent for its time, leaves 
                nothing to be desired. 
              
 
              
Skimming through my 
                notes I see two words recurring. One 
                is ‘lovely’, the other is ‘delicate’. 
                They both appear in connection with 
                the first three delectable songs from 
                Granados’ Tonadillas and oh how 
                I wished more of them had been included! 
                These are among the finest songs, not 
                only in Spanish but in the total oeuvre 
                of songs, and no one – a personal view 
                of course – has ever sung them better. 
                Not even Montserrat Caballé on 
                her all-Granados RCA recording from 
                the mid-1960s – but she is on the same 
                level. She sings them with orchestra 
                though and Victoria de los Angeles is 
                even more intimate when being accompanied 
                by Gerald Moore’s ‘guitar’. Guitar? 
                Yes, the accompaniment to, especially, 
                La maja dolorosa, is so ‘guitaristic’ 
                and Moore avoids any tendency to percussiveness, 
                stroking the ivory so gently as though 
                caressing nylon strings. 
              
 
              
There is so much to 
                admire in this recital and I can only 
                touch upon some personal favourites. 
              
Clavelitos, 
                for instance, light and bouncy and with 
                a little chuckle of pleasure in the 
                voice. Jesús Guridi, a composer 
                I have ‘discovered’ lately, has produced 
                a couple of gems that are sung with 
                both brilliance and warmth – not a self-evident 
                combination. Nin, with some bolder harmonies, 
                is also fascinating and the little known 
                Fusté’s Háblame de 
                amores is a – yes – lovely song. 
                Vives is better known but still no household 
                name and the two songs here are just 
                as attractive. 
              
 
              
The title of de Falla’s 
                famous song cycle has sometimes been 
                translated "Seven Popular Spanish 
                Songs" which is a misinterpretation, 
                since "populares" means "of 
                the people". They are folksongs 
                and as such they could do with a degree 
                of ‘earthiness’: they come from the 
                Spanish soil. This is perhaps the only 
                characteristic that was missing in Victoria 
                de los Angeles’ armoury. Her Carmen, 
                to which she came late in life on stage, 
                was arguably too civilized a woman. 
                She need not be portrayed as a snarling 
                tigress but she needs some soil under 
                her nails. Concerning de Falla’s song 
                cycle one could, with some justification, 
                raise the objection that it is, after 
                all, a collection of art songs, ‘based 
                on’ songs of the people and I believe 
                that there is room for more than one 
                attitude. Victoria de los Angeles’ great 
                predecessor, Conchita Supervia, was 
                a little more down to earth in her legendary 
                recording (once available – at least 
                in Sweden – on Parlophone PO 153/55), 
                but she was a mezzo-soprano. On the 
                other hand the greatest Spanish mezzo-soprano 
                of the second half of the 20th 
                century, Teresa Berganza, recorded the 
                songs with guitar accompaniment – Narciso 
                Yepes no less – and this also automatically 
                lends a more intimate atmosphere to 
                the readings. True, she applies some 
                meaty chest-notes to the concluding 
                Polo but in the main hers is 
                also a civilized interpretation. They 
                have long been my favourites, even though 
                I have a, possibly, perverse affection 
                for José Carreras’s Philips recording 
                – the only one I know of with a male 
                singer. 
              
 
              
For the remainder of 
                the disc there is absolutely no reason 
                for objections. These seventeen traditional 
                songs from all over Spain form a cornucopia 
                of beautiful melodies, of rhythms and 
                flavour that is irresistible. The careful 
                arrangements, the discreet accompaniments 
                and – once again – the lovely singing 
                make this a collection to return to 
                over and over again, to get inspiration 
                from and to spend endless hours of fruitful 
                comparison of regional styles. Victoria 
                de los Angeles singing is so pure, so 
                natural and there is nothing of the 
                artificiality one can sometimes feel 
                when classically schooled singers take 
                on traditional material. Most of all 
                one feels that she sings from the depth 
                of her heart. Just listen to El Rossinyol 
                and I bet no one – except those 
                few who have hearts of stone – can avoid 
                being trapped. The simple innocence 
                of Ya son van los Pastores is 
                another, and Campanas de Belén 
                (Bells of Bethlehem) also goes direct 
                to the heart. A couple of the songs 
                have long introductions by the guitar, 
                where Renata Tarragó shows what 
                a fine player she is and this also reminds 
                me that Victoria de los Angeles used 
                to accompany herself on the guitar in 
                the encores. The marching bolero Parado 
                de Vallemosa, from Majorca, is a 
                true vitamin injection and the short 
                and lively Basque song Andregaya 
                is a perfect encore. 
              
 
              
The booklet has a long 
                and comprehensive biography by Alan 
                Bilgora, there is a bibliography and 
                also synopses for the traditional songs, 
                while there is a reference to a website 
                for the texts and translations of the 
                other songs. 
              
 
              
Summary: Lovely! 
              
 
              
Göran Forsling