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Joan Sutherland (soprano)
In Performance 1957-1960
Donizetti’s Emilia di Liverpool & Scenes and Arias by Donizetti, Verdi, Handel & Bellini
ADD mono
CAMEO CLASSICS CC9133 [68:58 + 45:46]

Although she had made her stage debut in Australia in 1951 (in Goossens’ Judith) and sang her first major role at Covent Garden in 1952 (Amelia in Ballo in Maschera), these recordings can reasonably be regarded as early Sutherland. It was only after her marriage to, and re-training by, Richard Bonynge from 1953, that she found her true métier in the bel canto repertoire, displaying this for the first time in 1957 with performances of Handel’s Alcina in March and the Emilia di Liverpool included on these CDs in September. All the recordings here are fascinating, especially to those like myself who only heard her towards the end of her career. I heard her first in Trovatore in 1981, then Esclarmonde, the wonderful “Darby and Joan” Lucias with Bergonzi and Anna Bolena in 1988. Her last public performance was in the New Year’s Eve Fledermaus at ROH in 1990. The voice that I remember from all these performances was radically different from that on these CDs.

The first performance of Emilia di Liverpool since the first half of the 19th century was given as part of the celebrations to mark the 750th anniversary of Liverpool’s charter in June 1957 with Doreen Murray as Emilia, and three months later the BBC broadcast the same heavily cut edition that had been prepared by Fritz Spiegl in the recording here. I must confess that it is not an opera that I know, so I wanted to get an idea of how much had been cut. I therefore attempted to follow the performance with a libretto I found on the internet, but found it simply impossible. There is less than an hour’s music in total, and not only had all the recitative been cut and replaced by an English narration, but the remaining numbers had been trimmed and re-ordered. All I can say with certainty is that merely the bones of the opera are given here.

The performance starts with an introduction by Fritz Spiegl about the history of the opera and its resurrection for the Liverpool anniversary. I had never heard Spiegl speak, and had expected a heavy German accent and slow, ponderously academic style, but I could not have been more mistaken - he sounds the very epitome of the understated, amused English gentleman of the period, and he has a delightfully urbane sense of humour. I was not quite so happy with the narration written and delivered by Bernard Miles. Here the humour seems to me to cross the line into a somewhat sneering condescension towards this foreign tosh. Perhaps I’m being oversensitive.

The other members of the cast were all well-known parts of the British musical scene in the 1950s and 60s, the most well-known being April Cantelo, who was singing well into the 1970s or beyond. It must be said that not one of them sounds remotely Italianate or shows much of a feeling for the bel canto style. The first voice we hear is that of Hervey Alan, who really does sound as though he would be far happier singing Merry England or some G&S. The others are all considerably better than this, especially Cantello and William McAlpine, who sings very sweetly in a Heddle Nash sort of style, but there is no doubt that this performance would just be historical curiosity without the presence of Sutherland. Her voice is quite a surprise to those of us used to her later style. It is much brighter and lighter than it became, and far closer to what had long been the more traditional sound of an Italian lyric soprano that we can hear in Carosio or dal Monte, to take two singers from the immediately preceding generation. Although she was certainly no Callas in her use of the text, Sutherland here has much better enunciation than she was to have just a few years later - the Dissolution of the Consonants was yet to happen. The vocal line is often beautifully moulded and dynamically varied, as in “Confusa č l’alma mia” in the finale, the florid technique is already superb and the high notes are spectacular, as the top E flat at the very end of the opera demonstrates. Incidentally, there seems to have been some speed drift over the original tape recording, and the final scene is noticeably sharp, as I discovered when I checked the pitch of that last note.

The two arias which conclude the first CD are from a BBC studio concert a year and a half later, and it is interesting to hear how the voice had already begun to change and become closer to the later sound. The first are “Regnava nel silenzio” and “Quando rapita” (Lucia), and were recorded about three months after her eruption into international stardom with the Covent Garden Lucias. The timbre of the middle register is noticeably darker than in the Emilia performance. The top notes remain bright and full, however. The second is the Bolero from Vespri Siciliani. This aria has some very tricky passages which often lead to sopranos taking a distinctly stately tempo, going against the whole character of the piece. Unsurprisingly, Sutherland is not among them, and gives a really splendid, truly celebratory performance ending in a superb top E. George Hurst’s conducting is unexpected fine in both arias; I had never associated him with opera, but he gets the feel of both arias very convincingly.

The second CD includes the items that Sutherland sang at her final Proms appearances on 1 and 13 August 1960 (for some reason, they are put in reverse chronological order on the CD). Incidentally, on her previous appearance at the Proms on 11 September 1957, she had sung Eva in a performance of Act 3 of Meistersinger - I wonder if that is included in the Itter Collection; it would make fascinating listening. The second CD begins with “Di cor mio” and “Tornami a vagheggiar” from Handel’s Alcina under Sargent. This role was her first stage performance in a bel canto opera (if I may call Handel bel canto), so she had internalised the role, and this comes over in the performance. Right from the beginning we can hear that the darkening of the tone has continued, and the middle register has attained a positively mezzo-ish richness. This is a long way from the sort of Dora Labbette or Isobel Baillie type of soprano sound that was expected in Handel at the time (and, of course, is also expected today). The fioriture in “Tornami a vagheggiar” is faultless. The next track is another performance of “Regnava nel silenzio” and “Quando rapita”, a further year and a half from the Emilia recording, and displays a greater dramatic involvement. Most unusually for a Proms audience, the applause begins before the music stops - a sure sign of the excitement that the performances generated.

Between the two Proms evenings is sandwiched the Mad Scene from one of the Covent Garden Lucias of February 1959. I think all that needs to be said is that it lives up to its legendary status. One fascinating thing that will appeal to nerds such as me concerns the key of the Mad Scene. In 2006, the Royal opera House issued the whole performance in its Heritage CD series, and in his review in Gramophone magazine John Steane came to the conclusion that the performance had been transferred a semitone too high, and that Sutherland had not used the original score key of E, but had made the usual transposition down a semitone into E flat. The ROH actually re-transferred the second CD with the transposition and offered to exchange the original CD of anyone who agreed with Steane, though as far as I recall they never admitted to its being a mistake. The key of the transfer here is E flat, which would tend to support Steane’s view. Unless the Cameo’s engineers have consciously put it into E flat, this seems conclusive evidence.

The final track on the CD is of “Qui la voce” and “Vien, diletto” (Puritani), from the 1 August Prom, under Basil Cameron, where we hear her again in top form. Her moulding of the opening recitative approaches the depth of Callas, and the aria itself is most sensitively and delicately sung. The cabaletto,“Vien diletto”, is a tour de force and absolutely deserves the ovation it gets from the Proms audience.

The quality of the recordings on this issue is superlative for their date and provenance. Even if the BBC’s in-house recordings still exist, I cannot believe that they can be substantially better than these. Mr Itter clearly had top-of-the-range equipment, and real expertise in gaining the best out of it. Only in the Covent Garden Lucia is there any distortion through over-recording, and this is slight. The Emilia performance has been issued at least once before by Myto, but I have not heard that. However, I cannot believe that it could be in better sound that this. I have not encountered any of the other items before, but cannot guarantee that there is not some small company out there that has issued them, but, again, it is impossible to believe that the sound could be better than this. This is a fascinating and rewarding issue.

Paul Steinson

Footnote from Adrian Farmer

Regarding the key of the Mad Scene from one of the Covent Garden Lucias of February 1959. I can confirm that the transfer was made from an original acetate, at the original cutting speed, and no 'key' adjustment was applied. My conclusion - undoubtedly John Steane was correct, as those who of us who knew him would not doubt for a moment.

You may quote me!

Adrian Farmer
Music Director - Nimbus, Lyrita, Cameo



Previous review: Ralph Moore

Contents
Donizetti, Gaetano (1797-1848) - Emilia di Liverpool - abridged performance
Joan Sutherland (soprano) - Emilia
April Cantelo (soprano) - Candida and Bettina
William McAlpine (tenor) - Colonel Tompson
Hervey Alan (bass) - Count Asdrubale
Denis Dowling (baritone) - Claudio
Bernard Miles (narrator)
Fritz Spiegl (introductory talk)
Singers of the Liverpool Music Group
Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra/John Pritchard
BBC studio recording 8 Sept 1957

Donizetti, Gaetano (1797-1848)
Lucia di Lammermoor - Regnava nel silenzio...Quando rapito in estasi
Verdi, Giuseppe (1813-1901)
I vespri siciliani - Merce, dilette amiche
London Symphony Orchestra/George Hurst
BBC studio recording 24 May 1959

Handel, George Frideric (1685-1759)
Alcina, HWV34 - Di, cor mio, quanto t'amai
Alcina, HWV34 - Tornami a vagheggiar
Donizetti, Gaetano (1797-1848)
Lucia di Lammermoor - Regnava nel silenzio...Quando rapito in estasi
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Malcolm Sargent
BBC Proms recording 13 Aug 1960

Donizetti, Gaetano (1797-1848)
Lucia di Lammermoor - Mad scene
Covent Garden Orchestra and Chorus/Tullio Serafin
Live, Royal Opera House, 26 Feb 1959

Bellini, Vincenzo (1801-1835)
I Puritani - O rendetemi la speme ...Qui la voce sua soave ...Vien, diletto
London Symphony Orchestra/Basil Cameron
BBC studio recording 8 Sept 1957

All recordings are from the Itter Broadcast Collection





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