As is well known, after the success of the premiere 
                of Rigoletto in March 1851 Verdi had Il Trovatore, premiered on 
                19th January 1853, and La Traviata, premiered six weeks 
                later on 6th March, contemporaneously on the compositional 
                drawing board. A few years later Gounod was to follow a similar 
                path when, after the successful and acclaimed first night of Faust 
                on March 19th 1859, he followed up with ‘Philémon 
                and Baucis’ on February 18th 1860 and ‘La Colombe’ 
                on August 3rd the same year. Performance history tells 
                us of a very different outcome than that ultimately enjoyed by 
                Verdi’s great middle period triumvirate. La Colombe was very different 
                than Faust being very much in the ‘comique’ tradition of music 
                interspersed with spoken dialogue. It was a triumph at its premiere 
                in Baden-Baden but took six years to attain a Paris performance 
                and was quickly withdrawn. The opera emerged again in the French 
                capital with greater success in 1912 and in 1923 it was performed 
                in Diagelev’s Monte-Carlo season but with scored recitatives by 
                the then young Francis Poulenc. Again it disappeared, emerging 
                in 1982 when it was presented at the Spoleta festival (Italy). 
              
 
              
This recording of the sung parts of the opera 
                gives a mere 38 minutes of pleasant light operetta type light 
                music as support to a trite plot. Compared with the ‘zing’ that 
                Paris was getting from Offenbach at the time of its Paris premiere 
                it is no wonder that it had so little success. The lack of musical 
                depth and inspiration is obvious when comparing the Juliette’s 
                and Mireille’s waltzes, of 1867 and 1864 respectively, which are 
                included in Janine Micheau’s arias on the second part of the disc 
                trs.10 and 13. Gounod was fulfilling a promise with minimum effort 
                and is said to have composed the work in two weeks! It is a musical 
                miniature that is only interesting for its connection with the 
                composer. That said, this is a well sung performance presented 
                with rather recessed sound. 
              
 
              
Janine Micheau was a light lyric coloratura who 
                made a number of 78s for the Decca label in the late 1940s. Her 
                coloratura is pin-point if a little breathy, whilst the middle 
                of the voice is not distinguished by a very wide palette of colours 
                or tonal depth. Her Mireille (tr.13) is not in the same league 
                as Freni in the complete opera (EMI). Similar comparisons of her 
                Juliette (tr.10) with later singers on complete recordings (Freni 
                again and Gheorghiu, both EMI) add further confirmation. Surface 
                noise is evident on some tracks. 
              
 
              
The leaflet is brief to the point of paucity. 
                There are no indications of the Act from which the items from 
                La Colombe derive. The English translation of the brief notes 
                is idiosyncratic. If it were not for the name of Gounod, La Colombe 
                would be instantly forgettable, whilst Janine Micheau’s singing 
                shows the weakness of much French singing talent at that time. 
              
Robert J Farr