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Nicolai Gedda - Lyric
Poet of the Tenor Voice
With various orchestras, choirs, conductors and pianists, including
Georges Prêtre, Otto Klemperer, André Cluytens, Giuseppe
Patané, Herbert von Karajan and Alceo Galliera; Aldo Ciccolini,
Jan Eyron and Gerald Moore.
rec. 1952 - 1977. ADD
Fulll tracklist at end of review
EMI CLASSICS ICON 4560952 [11 CDs: 831:59]
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Nicolai Gedda turned 85 on 11 July this year (2010) and this
jumbo box is a well-timed and fitting tribute to the aristocrat
among singers. He had a long and glorious career, making his
debut at the Royal Opera in Stockholm in April 1952 - as Chapelou
in Adam’s Le Postillon de Lonjumeau - and as late
as 2003 he took part in a recording of Mozart’s Idomeneo.
By an act of providence EMI’s producer Walter Legge heard
him in Stockholm and immediately signed him up for a recording
of Boris Godunov, the first in an almost uncountable
number of recordings. Some sources say that he is the most recorded
tenor in history and without doubt one of the most versatile
singers ever. Blessed not only with a marvellous voice, superb
musicality and sense of style, but also with stunning linguistic
capacity, he was able to perform a wide repertoire in the vernacular.
The late lamented Sir Charles Mackerras, quoted in the booklet
to this issue, recalls the rehearsals of Faust in Paris
in 1975, where ’he spoke English to me, Italian to Mirella
Freni (as Marguérite), Finnish to Tom Krause, who was
singing Valentin, Russian to Nicolai Ghiaurov who was Mephisto
and French to all the resident musicians’. I am a little
hesitant as to his knowledge of Finnish and suspect that Krause
and Gedda spoke Swedish, which for ages has been the second
language to most educated Finns - but you never know. Having
spent parts of his childhood in Germany he was fluent in German
as well. On this issue we can hear him singing all those mentioned
languages (except Finnish) and also in Latin, Norwegian and
Danish (Grieg’s I love but thee is a setting of
an H.C. Andersen poem) and even Spanish!
The bulk of his recorded output is in EMI’s archives but
he occasionally recorded also for RCA, Philips, DG, Decca, CBS
and a number of Swedish labels, notably a valuable series of
Swedish songs (Sjögren, Peterson-Berger) for Bluebell.
He was also lucky to preserve his voice in mint condition -
not least through intelligent choice of repertoire. In the mid-1960s
the Stockholm Opera persuaded him to take on the title role
in Lohengrin. I heard the premiere on the radio, even
taped it, and it was a magnificent achievement, far superior
to any of the contemporaneous recorded efforts - bar that of
Sandor Konya - but Gedda backed out after the premiere and said
’No more Wagner!’, well aware that a whole operatic
world would demand him to sing Lohengrin. The two excerpts he,
after all, recorded in 1967 (CD 2 trs. 16-17) amply demonstrate
what Wagnerians missed but all lovers of great singing will
be eternally grateful that he took this decision. When I heard
in a retrospect programme at the Stockholm opera in 1992, celebrating
40 years of association with the house, there were few or no
signs of ageing, singing with a beauty of tone and a steadiness
that most star tenors half his age should be envious of - he
was 67 at the time!
Most of the items here have been issued before in various compilations
and I suspect that many readers may feel that a purchase involves
too many duplicates but on the other hand there must be numerous
gems here that are new and fascinating acquaintances. My advice
is: give away your old discs to someone who is in the beginning
of his/her collector’s career and buy this one. You won’t
regret it!
All the items here are from the first half of Gedda’s
career as a recording artist (1952 - 1977), and there are no
weak numbers. Having been a great fan of Gedda since the early
1960s I have to admit that I have rarely heard an unsatisfactory
recording with him. There was an RCA LP, set down in the mid-1960s
with Swedish songs, that I played only a few times but that
wasn’t Gedda’s fault, it was the conductor’s.
He was Nils Grevillius, a well known name to all collectors
of Jussi Björling’s recordings, but who by then had
reached quite an advanced age and his tempos were impossibly
slow. One can feel Gedda struggling through the songs with the
unspoken comment ’Dear Nils, could you speed up just a
mite!’ To my knowledge it has never been reissued.
If I have any objection at all it is the layout of the contents.
I can see the point in grouping the material, by and large,
according to composers. But this is not consistently done and
it also means that material from several of his solo LPs is
split up and sprinkled about, being juxtaposed with material
from recording sessions decades apart. I would have liked, for
instance, the tracks from the Mozart-LP with Cluytens from 1957
to be put together, those from the French recital with Prêtre
to be released together and so on. In a corresponding box with
Tito Gobbi that I reviewed recently the material was presented
strictly chronologically and that was the ideal concept. To
continue on a negative note it seems a waste of space to duplicate
some items on the 11th disc, the interview with Gedda.
Or rather: since that interview with music illustrations was
already an entity, the producers could have chosen other versions
of arias in the new compilation. Just one example: the famous
aria from Le Postillon de Lonjumeau is heard on both
CD 3 and CD 11 in the 1961 recording with Prêtre. It was
seminal to Gedda’s career, but there do exist other versions.
Shortly after the premiere in 1952 it was commercially recorded
in Swedish and that version should have been available to EMI,
since I have it on an old LP-compilation from the company. Let
me also mention that the aria is (or at least was) available
in an even earlier recording, live from the Stockholm Opera
on 10 April 1952 on a Gala compilation entitled ’Famous
Swedish Opera Singers’ (Gala GL333). Recorded, I believe,
at the second performance of the work this is indeed an historical
document!
Apart from the criticism above I only have praise for this issue.
Gedda is a stylish Bach singer in the three cantatas - accompanied
on period instruments by the Schola Cantorum Basiliensis - and
the two arias that open CD 2, with the more monumental Otto
Klemperer at the helm. The Gluck arias are delivered with fine
sense for line and insight - his enunciation of the texts always
a model of its kind. He was a great Mozart singer, challenging
even Leopold Simoneau with suave, yet ardent readings. The German
arias are also masterly and few singers have Hüon’s
arias from Oberon with such brilliance and at the same
time elegance. Max’s aria from Der Freischütz,
is from a complete recording, conducted by veteran Robert Heger.
That was also the only recording Gedda made with Birgit Nilsson.
The well known Ach so fromm from Martha is beautifully
sung in a recording from 1953.
The French arias are just as outstanding as the German ones
and particularly impressive is Arnold’s aria from Guillaume
Tell with its notorious high-lying tessitura. He was arguably
the best Faust ever, challenged only, in my opinion, by Jussi
Björling, and the Pearl Fisher duet and romance are classics
with Ernest Blanc a superb partner in the duet. The Flower Song
from Carmen is another highlight and here we get the
opportunity to compare the one he recorded in 1964 under Prêtre
(with Callas as Carmen) with the Beecham version (with Victoria
de los Angeles as Carmen) on CD 11, where he also recalls the
recording sessions in the interview. The Massenet arias are
also true delights and it is especially valuable to have an
excerpt from Werther - which was one of Gedda’s
favourite roles.
He had a special feeling for Russian repertoire, having learnt
Russian in parallel with Swedish during his infancy. The excerpt
from Boris Godunov, his first international recording,
had to be included. He took part in two later recordings of
the opera but here, in his first professional year, he is fresh
as paint. Lenski in Eugene Onegin, was another favourite
role, which he didn’t record complete until late in his
career, but in this 1969 recording of the aria, he was at the
height of his powers.
In Italian repertoire he may not have been quite as idiomatic
as he was in French, German and Russian and there have been
more elegant readings of Ecco ridente from Il barbiere
di Siviglia. On the other hand the arias from L’elisir
d’amore (from the complete 1966 recording) are among
the top contenders and it is thrilling to hear him in operas
like Aida and Turandot, roles one thought would
be beyond his capacity. He was a great Rodolfo and few
other singers have sung Che gelida manina so lovingly.
He was without peer as operetta singer and the excerpts here
demonstrate his superiority. Just as suave as Tauber and with
a brilliance at the top that outshines anything else in the
world of operetta. Fritz Wunderlich was his only serious contender
among post-war tenors in this field, but not even he had that
glorious ring. Just listen to Ich hab’ kein Geld
from Der Bettelstudent (CD 6 tr. 10) to hear what I mean.
Nicolai Gedda was also a superb interpreter of French melodies.
The 21 songs with Aldo Ciccolini at the piano (CD 7 tr. 1-21)
are exquisite and I am very happy about the inclusion of four
Hahn songs. L’Heure exquise is to me one of the
finest French songs. The Beethoven songs, with his frequent
accompanist Jan Eyron, are further evidence of his versatility
also in the Lieder field and the five Strauss songs, which have
been reissued on many occasions, are perfect examples of how
to marry music and words, so essential in Lieder.
Arguably the very finest singing in this box is to be found
on CD 8, where Gedda is so deeply involved in the Russian and
Scandinavian repertoire. Few if any recordings or live performances
I have heard of the Glinka, Mussorgsky and Tchaikovsky songs
can compete with Gedda’s readings and the Scandinavian
gems are even better. Flagstad in Grieg and Björling in
the Swedish songs are outstanding but for true romans
(the Swedish word for Lieder) interpretation Gedda is unbeatable.
Let me point out that Swedish, Norwegian and Danish are so closely
related that most Scandinavians with some coaching can be quite
idiomatic in each other’s languages, at least when it
comes to singing them. Just one correction: the booklet gives
Svante Leonard Sjöberg (1873-1935) as composer of the well
known Tonerna. I can’t understand where EMI got
that name from. In the header I have given the correct facts:
Carl Leopold Sjöberg (1861-1900). He was an amateur composer
and his profession was doctor, for some years working in Hedemora,
a town only 40 kilometres from Jussi Björling’s birthplace
Borlänge.
I must also mention Gedda’s marvellous singing of the
four Rachmaninov songs on this disc. His complete Die schöne
Müllerin on CD 9 may not be quite in the same class
as Schreier’s or my current favourite Jan Kobow’s
recordings but Gedda’s intelligence and musicality reaps
laurels even so.
He lets his hair down in a number of popular songs on the remainder
of CD 9 and the first half of CD 10. Rossini’s La danza,
Denza’s Funiculì-Funiculà or Lara’s
Granada have been sung by most great tenors in the past
and present and those who count Mario Lanza’s beefy bestseller
recording of Granada as their ideal may lack something
in Gedda’s more aristocratic renderings. There is room
for both approaches. Really lovely are the four Robert Stolz
songs, recorded in 1968 and 1969 with the almost 90-year-old
composer conducting.
Heartfelt are also the Russian folksongs, recorded in New York
in 1961 with a Russian male chorus and Gedda as soloist. Monotonously
rings the little bell (CD 10 tr. 17), sung with that marvellous
half-voice, which was Gedda’s distinguishing mark, is
almost worth the price of the box.
Finally it is also with great pleasure that one listens to Nicolai
Gedda reminiscing about his life and career on the bonus disc.
It is, besides a lot of valuable information, a way of getting
closer to the person behind the voice that everyone knows so
well.
This box is a must for every lover of refined and ardent singing
and will give endless pleasure for years to come.
Göran Forsling
Full Tracklist
CD 1 [77:43]
Johann Sebastian BACH (1685 - 1750)
Cantata: Meine Seele rühmt und preist, BWV 189
1. Aria: Meine Seele rühmt und preist [7:22]
2. Rezitativ: Denn seh' ich mich [1:10]
3. Aria: Gott hat sich hoch gesetzet [3:35]
4. Rezitativ: O was vor große Dinge treff' ich an
[0:57]
5. Aria: Deine Güte, dein Erbarmen [3:18]
Cantata: Ich armer Mensch, ich Sündenknecht, BWV 55
6. Aria: Ich armer Mensch, ich Sündenknecht [5:06]
7. Rezitativ: Ich habe wider Gott gehandelt [1:13]
8. Aria: Erbarme dich! Laß die Tränen [4:48]
9. Rezitativ: Erbarme dich! Jedoch nun tröst' ich mich
[1:10]
10. Choral: Bin ich gleich von dir gewichen [1:20]
Cantata: Ich weiß, daß mein Erlöser lebt, BWV
160
11. Aria: Ich weiß, daß mein Erlöser lebt
[4:07]
12. Rezitativ: Er lebt und ist von den Toten auferstanden!
[3:25]
13. Aria: Gott Lob, daß mein Erlöser lebt
[2:28]
14. Rezitativ: So biet' ich allen Teufeln Trutz! [1:14]
15. Aria: Nun, ich halte mich bereit [1:42]
Christoph Willibald GLUCK (1714 - 1787)
16. Bannis la crainte et les alarmes (Alceste) [3:21]
17. Unis des la plus tendre enfance (Iphigénie
en Tauride) [4:17]
18.Divinités des grandes âmes (Iphigénie
en Tauride) [1:49]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
19. Konstanze! (Die Entführung aus dem Serail) [4:46]
20. In Mohrenland gefangen war (Die Entführung aus
dem Serail) [2:22]
21. Un’ aura amorosa (Così fan tutte) [4:23]
22. Se all’impero (La clemenza di Tito) [5:02]
23. Per pieta, non ricercate K420 [8:08]
CD 2 [76:22]
Johann Sebastian BACH
1. Aria: Geduld, wenn mich falsche Zungen stechen (St
Matthew Passion) [4:56]
2. Benedictus (Mass in B minor) [5:43]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART
3. Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön (Die Zauberflöte)
[4:10]
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
4. Recitative: Jehova, du mein Vater - [4:00]
5. Aria: Meine Seele ist erschüttert (Christus am
Ölberge) [4:43]
Carl Maria von WEBER (1786 - 1826)
6. Nein, länger trag’ ich nicht die Qualen -
[1:16]
7. Durch die Wälder, durch die Auen (Der Freischütz)
[6:09]
8. Von Jugend auf (Oberon) [6:54]
9. Vater! Hör mich fleh’n zu dir (Oberon)
[2:57]
Albert LORTZING (1801- 1851)
10. Lebe wohl, mein flandrisch Mädchen (Zar und
Zimmermann) [4:40]
Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809 - 1847)
11. Ye people, rend your hearts - [0:56]
12. If with all your hearts (Elijah) [2:35]
Otto NICOLAI (1810 - 1849)
13. Horch, die Lerche singt im Hain! (Die lustigen Weiber
von Windsor) [5:16]
Friedrich von FLOTOW (1812 - 1883)
14. Jungfrau Maria (Alessandro Stradella) [3:27]
15. Ach, so fromm (Martha) [3:19]
Richard WAGNER (1813 - 1883)
16. In fernem Land (Lohengrin) [5:22]
17. Mein lieber Schwan (Lohengrin) [5:04]
Karl GOLDMARK (1830 - 1915)
18. Magische Töne (Die Königin von Saba) [3:44]
CD 3 [76:57]
Jean-Jacques ROUSSEAU (1712-1778)
1. Je vais revoir ma charmante maitresse … Quand on
sait aimer et plaire [4:30]
Christoph Willibald GLUCK
2. Quel nouveau ciel (Orphée et Eurydice) [5:08]
3. J’ai perdu mon Eurydice (Orphée et Eurydice)
[4:03]
Daniel Francois Esprit AUBER (1782 - 1871)
4. Du pauvre seul ami fidèle (La Muette de Portici)
[4:26]
Giacomo MEYERBEER (1791 - 1864)
5. Beauté divine enchantresse (Les Huguenots)
[7:29]
(with Mady Mesplé)
6. Ô Paradis (L’Africaine) [3:00]
Gioachino ROSSINI (1792 - 1868)
7. Asile héréditaire … Amis, amis
[Guillaume Tell) [7:14]
Adolphe ADAM (1803 - 1856)
8. Mes amis, écoutez l’histoire (Le Postillon
de Lonjumeau) [3:44]
Hector BERLIOZ (1803 - 1869)
9. Un heure encore … La gloire était ma seule
idole (Benvenuto Cellini) [5:44]
10. Seul pour lutter (Benvenuto Cellini) [6:31]
Ambroise THOMAS (1811 -1896)
11. Adieu, Mignon, courage! (Mignon) [2:25]
12. Elle ne croyait pas dans sa candour naïve (Mignon)
[3:31]
Charles GOUNOD (1818-1893)
13. Salut! demeure chaste et pure (Faust) [4:38]
14. Anges du paradis (Mireille) [3:36]
15. L’amour, l’amour! … Ah! lève-toi,
soleil (Romeo et Juliette) [4:32]
Jacques OFFENBACH (1819 - 1880)
16. Va pour Kleinzach! (Les Contes d’Hoffmann)
[5:18]
CD 4 [79:52]
Georges BIZET (1838 - 1875)
1. Zurga, quand tous deux … Au fond du temple saint
(Les Pêcheurs de perles) [6:25]
(with Ernest Blanc)
2. À cette voix … Je crois entendre encore
(Les Pêcheurs de perles) [5:00]
3. La fleur que tu m’avais jetée (Carmen)
[3:48]
Édouard LALO (1823 - 1892)
4. Puisqu’on ne peut pas fléchir … Vainement,
ma bien aimée (Le Roi d’Ys) [3:17]
Léo DELIBES (1836 - 1891)
5. Lakmé! Lakm´w! Ah! Viens dans la forêt
profonde (Lakmé) [2:09]
Jules MASSENET (1842 - 1912)
6. Instant charmant … En fermant les yeux (Manon)
[2:55]
7. Je suis seul … Ah! fuyez, douce image (Manon)
[4:14]
8. Un autre est son époux! … J’aurais
sur ma poitrine (Werther) [2:49]
9. Toute mon âme est là! … Pourquoi me
réveiller (Werther) [2:38]
(with Victoria de los Angeles)
Mikhail GLINKA (1804 - 1857)
10. Brother! in the darkness (A Life for the Tsar) [6:18]
Modest MUSSORGSKY (1839 - 1881)
11. At midnight, in the garden, by the fountain(Boris
Godunov) [3:08]
12. That wily Jesuit has firmly seized me(Boris Godunov)
[3:18]
13. Why cry and lament, my poor heart? (Sorochintsy Fair) [5:48]
Pyotr TCHAIKOVSKY (1840 - 1893)
14. Where, where, where have you gone? (Eugene Onegin) [7:17]
15. Forgive me, loveliest of creatures (The Queen of Spades)
[3:31]
16. What is our life? A game! (The Queen of Spades) [2:19]
Nikolai RIMSKY-KORSAKOV (1844 - 1908)
17. The sun sinks low (May Night) [3:13]
18. How calm, how peaceful (May Night) [5:54]
19. Oh, you dark, little wood (Sadko) [4:32]
CD 5 [77:30]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART
1. Dalla sua pace (Don Giovanni) [4:12]
2. Il mio tesoro (Don Giovanni) [4:43]
Gioachino ROSSINI
3. Ecco ridente in cielo (Il barbiere di Siviglia) [4:58]
Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797 - 1848)
4. Quanto è bella (L’elisir d’amore)
[2:34]
5. Una furtive lagrima (L’elisir d’amore)
[4:51]
6. Tombe degl’avi miei … Fra poco a me ricovero
(Lucia di Lammermoor) [7:33]
7. Povero Ernesto! … Cercherò lontana terra
(Don Pasquale) [4:33]
8. Tornami a dir (Don Pasquale) [3:36]
(with Mirella Freni)
9. Favorita del re! … Spirto gentil (La favorita)
[5:14]
Vincenzo BELLINI (1801 - 1825)
10. Prendi! L’anel ti dono (La sonnambula) [5:26]
(with Mirella Freni)
Giuseppe VERDI (1813 - 1901)
11. Ella mi fu rapita! … Parmi veder (Rigoletto)
[4:55]
12. La donna e mobile (Rigoletto) [2:18]
13. Di tu se fedele (Un ballo in maschera) [3:10]
14. Forse la soglia attinse … Ma, se m’è
forza (Un ballo in maschera) [5:22]
15. Se quel guerriero io fossi! … Celeste Aida
(Aida) [4:29]
16. Ingemisco (Requiem) [3:45]
Amilcare PONCHIELLI (1834 - 1886)
17. Cielo e mar (La Gioconda) [4:39]
CD 6 [76:06]
Giacomo PUCCINI (1858 - 1924)
1. Donna non vidi mai (Manon Lescaut) [2:19]
2. Che gelida manina (La bohème) [4:27]
3. Recondita armonia (Tosca) [2:29]
4. E lucevan le stelle (Tosca) [2:54]
5. Bimba degli occhi pieni di malia (Madama Butterfly)
[11:00]
(with Maria Callas)
6. Nessun dorma (Turandot) [3:03]
Francesco CILEA (1966 - 1950)
7. È la solita storia (L’Arlesiana) [4:20]
Johann STRAUSS II (1825 - 1899)
8. Komm in die Gondel (Eine Nacht in Venedig) [1:57]
9. Als flotter Geist - Ja, das alles auf Ehr’ (Der
Zigeunerbaron) [2:54]
Carl MILLÖCKER (1842 - 1899)
10. Ich hab’ kein Geld, bin vogelfrei (Der Bettelstudent)
[1:52]
Oscar STRAUS (1870 - 1954)
11. Ich hab’ mit Freuden angehört (Ein Walzertraum)
[4:07]
Franz LEHAR (1870 - 1948)
12. Gern hab’ ich die Frau’n geküsst
(Paganini) [3:17]
13. Allein, wieder allein … Es steht ein Soldat am
Wolgastrand (Der Zarewitsch) [4:47]
14. O Mädchen, mein Mädchen (Friederike) [3:42]
15. Dein ist mein ganzes Herz! (Das Land des Lächelns)
[3:58]
Imre (Emmerich) KALMAN (1882 - 1953)
16. Tanzen möchte’ ich … Tausend kleine
Engel singen (Die Csardasfürstin) [3:43]
(with Anneliese Rothenberger)
17. Wenn es Abend wird … Grüss mir die süssen
(Gräfin Maritza) [6:30]
18. Auch ich war einst … Komm, Zigany (Gräfin
Maritza) [4:02]
19. Heut’ Nacht hab’ ich geträumt von dir
(Das Veilchen vom Montmartre) [3:22]
CD 7 [74:11]
Gabriel FAURÉ (1845 - 1924)
1. Nell, Op. 18 No 1 [1:56]
Poème d’un jour, Op. 21:
2. Rencontre [2:20]
3. Toujours [1:18]
4. Adieu [2:09]
5. Après un rêve Op. 7 No. 1 [2:33]
6. Ici-bas! Op. 8 No. 3 [1:28]
7. Fleur jetée Op. 39 No. 2 [1:16]
Francis POULENC (1899 - 1963)
8. Paganini from Métamorphoses [0:56]
9. Air champêtre [1:01]
10. Air grave [2:11]
11. À sa guitare [2:28]
Banlités:
12. Voyage à Paris [0:50]
13. Hôtel [1:30]
Claude DEBUSSY (1862 - 1918)
14. Romance [2:07]
15. Fleur des blés [2:02]
16. Mandoline [1:22]
17. Beau soir [2:06]
Reynaldo HAHN (1875 - 1947)
18. D’une prison [2:28]
19. Paysage [2:37]
Chansons grises:
20. L’allée est sans fin [1:53]
21. L’Heure exqiuse [2:21]
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN
22. Adelaide, Op 46 [5:41]
An die ferne Geliebte, Op. 98:
23. Auf dem Hügel sitz’ ich spähend [2:24]
24. Wo die Berge so blau [1:35]
25. Leichte Segler in den Höhen [1:39]
26. Diese Wolken in den Höhen [1:11]
27. Es kehret der Maien, es blühet die Au’
[2:20]
28. Nimm sie hin denn, diese Lieder [3:54]
Richard STRAUSS (1864 - 1949)
29. Heimliche Aufforderung, Op. 27 No. 3 [3:20]
30. Ständchen, Op. 17 No. 2 [2:15]
31. Die Nacht, Op. 10 No. 3 [2:28]
32. Befreit, Op. 39 No. 4 [5:15]
33. Liebeshymnus, Op. 32 No. 3 [1:51]
CD 8 [79:39]
Mikhail GLINKA
1. Doubt [4:11]
2. Ah, my sweetheart, thou art a beautiful maiden [1:20]
3. I recall a wonderful moment [3:22]
Modest MUSSORGSKY
4. Where art thou, little star? [3:22]
5. The garden by the Don [1:53]
6. The he-goat: a worldly story [2:19]
Pyotr TCHAIKOVSKY
7. In this moonlight, Op. 73 No. 3 [1:32]
8. Amid the din of the ball, Op. 38 No. 3 [3:01]
9. Legenda - When Jesus Christ was but a child, Op. 54 No. 5
[3:07]
10. Don Juan’s Serenade, Op. 38 No. 1 [2:39]
Edvard GRIEG (1843 - 1907)
11. Dulgt Kjaerlighed (Hidden Love), Op. 39 No. 2 [3:32]
12. Jeg elsker Dig, (I love but thee), Op. 5 No. 3 [2:53]
13. En svane (A Swan), Op. 25 No. 2 [2:45]
14. En drøm (Ein Traum) Op. 48 No 6 [2:14]
Hugo ALFVÉN (1872 - 1960)
15. Skogen sover (The forest sleeps), Op. 28 No. 6 [3:10]
Wilhelm PETERSON-BERGER (1867 - 1942)
16. När jag för mig själv I mörka skogen
går (When I walk alone in the dark forest) [2:06]
17. Bland skogens höga furustammar (Among the fir-trees
in the forest) [1:11]
Carl Leopold SJÖBERG (1861 - 1900)
18. Tonerna [1:29]
Jean SIBELIUS (1865 - 1957)
19. Säv, säv, susa (Woe, woe, reed), Op. 30
No. 4 [2:29]
20. Svarta rosor (Black Roses), Op. 36 No. 1 [2:04]
Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873 - 1943)
21. Oh, do not sing to me, Op. 4 No. 4 [4:26]
22. Spring waters, Op. 14 No. 11 [1:53]
23. How beautiful it is here, Op. 21 No. 7 [1:40]
24. Look how beneath the distant vault (from Aleko) [1:09]
Francesco VERACINI (1690 - 1768)
25. Meco verrai [2:26]
Ottorino RESPIGHI (1879 - 1936)
26. Notte [4:15]
27. Stornellatrice [1:22]
Joaquin TURINA (1882 - 1949)
28. Poema en forma de canciones, Op. 19 [10:05]
CD 9 [76:45]
Franz SCHUBERT (1797 - 1828)
1-20. Die schöne Müllerin, D795 [60:17]
Anon
21. Tiritomba [2:48]
Gioachino ROSSINI
22. La danza [3:11]
Luigi DENZA (1846 - 1922)
23. Funiculi-Funiculà [2:26]
Benjamin GODARD (1849 - 1895)
24. Berceuse (from Jocelyn) [4:50]
Erik MEYER-HELMUND (1861 - 1932)
25. Gute Nacht, mein holdes, süsses Mädchen
[2:43]
CD 10 [73:16]
Ernesto De CURTIS (1875 - 1937)
1. Non ti scordar de me [3:27]
Osman PEREZ-FREIRE (1880 - 1930)
2. Schlaf ein, mein blond Engelein [3:17]
Hans MAY (1886 - 1958)
3. Ein Stern fällt von Himmel [2:45]
Richard TAUBER (1891 - 1948)
4. Du bist die Welt für mich (Der singende Traum)
[2:45]
Cesare BIXIO (1900 - 1978)
5. Mamma [3:49]
Agustin LARA (1900 - 1969)
6. Granada [3:25]
Fritz ROTTER (1900 - 1984)
7. Ich küsse ihre Hand, Madame [2:37]
Robert STOLZ (1880 - 1975)
8. In Wien hab’ ich einmal ein Mädel geliebt
[4:13]
9. Ob blond, ob braun, ich liebe alle Frau’n [2:45]
10. Das Lied ist aus [4:07]
11. Ich liebe die Welt [3:45]
Trad.
Russian Folk Songs
12. Evening bells [3:44]
13. Troika [3:43]
14. The weeping willow’s dream [3:31]
15. The snow storm [2:25]
16. Snow covered Russia [3:52]
17. Monotonously rings the little bell [3:55]
18. The young peddler [2:20]
19. O could I express in song [2:03]
20. Grey foggy morning [2:41]
21. The soldier’s farewell [1:25]
22. Caucasian Melody [4:41]
CD 11 [73:38]
Bonus documentary: Nicolai Gedda recalls his career
(incl. the following musical excerpts)
Giuseppe VERDI
La donna è mobile (Rigoletto) [6:15]
Adolphe ADAM
8. Mes amis, écoutez l’histoire (Le Postillon
de Lonjumeau) [3:44]
Giacomo PUCCINI
Bimba dagli occhi (Madama Butterfly) [2:37]
Georges BIZET
La fleur (Carmen) [4:15]
Tu me dis de la suivre (Carmen) [2:12]
Franz LEHAR
O Mädchen (Friederike) [3:42]
Jules MASSENET
Pourquoi me réveiller (Werther) [2:44]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART
Dies Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön (Die Zauberflöte)
[4:11]
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