ANONYMOUS 
                (Folk Song) Vieni 
                sul mar 
                Adolphe-Charles 
                ADAM (1803 – 1856) Cantique de 
                Noel 
                Fermin Maria ALVAREZ 
                (?-1898) A Granada; La Partida 
                
                Anton y MICHELENA 
                A la luz de la luna 
                Colombino ARONA 
                (b. 1885) La Campana di San Giusto 
                
                Richard BARTHELEMY 
                Trise ritorno 
                Richard BARTHELEMY 
                and Enrico 
                CARUSO Adorables tourments (Valse 
                Lente) 
                James Carroll 
                BARTLETT (1850 – 1929) A Dream 
                
                Vincenzo BILLI 
                (1869 – 1938) Campane a sera 
                
                Georges BIZET 
                (1838 – 1875) Agnus Dei; La fleur 
                que tu m’avais jetée (Carmen); 
                Parle-moi de ma mère (Carmen); 
                Au Fond du temple saint (Les 
                Pecheurs de Perles); Je crois entendre 
                (Les Pecheurs de Perles); De mon 
                amie, fleur endormie (Les Pecheurs 
                de Perles) 
                Arrigo BOITO 
                (1842 – 1918) Dai campi, dai 
                prati (Mefistofele); Giunto sul 
                passo estremo (Mefistofele). 
                C. A. BRACCO (fl. 
                1885) Serenata 
                Arturo BUZZI-PECCIA 
                (1856 – 1943) Lolita 
                Salvatore CARDILLO 
                (1874 – 1947) Core ’ngrato 
                Enrico CARUSO 
                (1873 – 1921) Dreams of Long 
                Ago; Tiempo antico; 
                Ruperto CHAPI 
                (1851 – 1909) Flores Purisimas 
                (El Milagro de la Virgen) 
                Vincenzo Legrenzio 
                CIAMPI (1719 – 1762) Nina 
                Francesco CILEA 
                (1866 – 1950) No, piu nobile 
                (Adriana Lecouvreur) 
                M. S. CIOCIANO 
                Cielo turchino 
                George M. COHAN 
                (1878 – 1942) Over There 
                Mario P. COSTA 
                Sei morta ne la vita mia 
                Guglielmo COTTRAU 
                Fenesta che lucive 
                Teodoro COTTRAU 
                (1827 – 1879) L’addio a Napoli; 
                Santa Lucia 
                Guy D’HARDELOT 
                (Mrs. W.I. Rhodes) (1838 – 1936) 
                Because 
                Vincenzo de CRESCENZO 
                (b. 1875) Guardanno a luna; Premiere 
                caresse; Tarantella sincera; Uocchie 
                celeste; 
                Ernesto de CURTIS 
                (1875 – 1937) Canta pe’me; Senza 
                nisciuno; Tu ca nun chiagne; 
                Luigi DENZA (1846 
                – 1922) Non t’amo piu; Si vous l’aviez 
                compris; 
                Eduardo di CAPUA 
                (1865 – 1917) O sole mio 
                Stefano DONAUDY 
                (1879 – 1925) Vaghissima sembianza 
                
                Gaetano DONIZETTI 
                (1797 – 1848) Com’e gentil 
                (Don Pasquale); Deserto in terra 
                (Don Sebastiano); Angelo casto e 
                bel (Il Duca d’Alba); Una furtiva 
                lagrima (L’Elisir d’Amore); Venti 
                Scudi! (L’Elisir d’Amore); Spirito 
                genril, ne’sogni miei (La Favorita); 
                Chi mi frena in tal momento? (Sextet) 
                (Lucia di Lamermoor) 
                Jean-Baptiste 
                FAURÉ (1830 – 1914) Crucifix; 
                Les rameaux; Sancta Maria; 
                Friedrich von 
                FLOTOW (1812 – 1883) Ma’appari 
                tutt’amor (Marta); Presto, presto 
                andiam (Marta); Solo profugo 
                reietto (Marta); Dormi Pur - 
                Goodnight Quartet (Marta) 
                Alberto FRANCHETTI 
                (1860 – 1942) Ah, vieni qui 
                (Germania); Studenti! Udite! 
                (Germania); 
                César FRANCK 
                (1822 – 1890) La procession 
                Salvatore FUCITO 
                (1875 – 1929) Scordame; Sultanto 
                a te; 
                Clarence G. GARTNER 
                Love is Mine; Trusting Eyes 
                Stanislao GASTALDON 
                (1861 – 1939) Musica proibita 
                
                Henry Ernest GEEHL 
                (1881 – 1961) For you Alone 
                Giuseppe GIOE 
                (1890 – 1957) L’m’arricordo ’e 
                Napule 
                Umberto GIORDANO 
                (1867 – 1948) Come un bel di 
                di maggio (Andrea Chenier); Improvviso 
                (Andrea Chenier); Amor ti vieta 
                (Feodora); 
                Benjamin GODARD 
                (1849 – 1895) Chanson de Juin 
                
                Karl GOLDMARK 
                (1830 – 1915) Magiche Note (Die 
                Königin von Saba) 
                Carlos GOMES 
                (1836 – 1896) Sento una forza 
                indomita (Il Guarany); Quando 
                nascesti tu (O Escravo); Mia 
                piccirella (Salvator Rosa) 
                Charles GOUNOD 
                (1818 – 1893) Eh! quoi! toujours 
                seule? (Faust); Eternelle! O 
                nuit d’amour (Faust); Alerte! 
                ou vous êtes perdues (Faust); 
                A moi les plaisirs (Faust); Salut 
                demeure chaste et pure (Faust); 
                Seigneur Dieu; que vois-je (Faust); 
                Inspirez mois, race divine (La 
                Reine de Saba); 
                Jules GRANIER 
                Hosanna 
                J.F. Fromental 
                HALÉVY (1799 – 1862) Rachel, 
                quand du Seigneur (La Juive) 
                George Frideric 
                HANDEL (1685 – 1759) Ombra mai 
                fu (Serse) 
                Percy B. KAHN 
                Ave Marie 
                Ruggero LEONCAVALLO 
                (1857 – 1919) No! Pagliaccio 
                non son (I Pagliacci); Vesti 
                la giubba (I Pagliacci); Io no 
                ho che una povera stanzetta (La 
                Boheme); Testa adorata (La Boheme); 
                Lasciati amar; Les Deus serenades; 
                Mattinata
                Jean-Baptiste 
                LULLY (1632 – 1687) Bois epais 
                (Amadis de Gaule) 
                Pietro MASCAGNI 
                (1863 – 1945) Brindisi (Cavalleria 
                rusticana); Addio alla madre 
                (Cavalleria rusticana); Siciliana 
                (Cavalleria rusticana); Serenata 
                (Iris); 
                A MASCHERONI Eternamente 
                
                Jules MASSENET 
                (1842 – 1912) Elégie; 
                O Souverain, O Juge, O Père 
                (Le Cid); Chiudo gli occhi (Manon); 
                Ah, fuyez, douce image (Manon); 
                On l’appelle Manon (Manon) 
                Giacomo MEYERBEER 
                (1791 – 1864) Bianca al par di 
                neve (Les Huguenots); Qui sotto 
                il ciel (Les Huguenots); Deh 
                ch’io ritorni (L’Africaine); 
                O Paradiso (L’Africaine) 
                Louis Abraham 
                NIEDERMEYER (1802 – 1861) Pieta 
                Signore 
                Emanuele NUTILE 
                Mamma mi ache vo sape 
                Geoffrey O’HARA 
                (1882 – 1967) Your Eyes have 
                told me what I did not know 
                Alessio OLIVIERI 
                Inno di Garibaldi 
                Gaetano Enrico 
                PENNINO Pecche 
                Antonio PINI-CORSI 
                (1859 – 1918) Tu non mi vuoi 
                piu ben 
                Robert PLANQUETTE 
                (1848 – 1903) Le Régiment 
                de Sambre et Meuse 
                Amilcare PONCHIELLI 
                (1834 – 1886) Cielo e mar 
                (La Gioconda) 
                Guillermo POSADAS 
                Noche Feliz 
                Giacomo PUCCINI 
                (1858 – 1924) Addio, Dolce sveliare 
                all mattina (La Boheme); Che 
                gelida manina (La Boheme); O 
                Mimi, tu piu non torni (La Boheme); 
                O soave fanciulla (La Boheme); 
                Vecchi zimarra, senti (La Boheme); 
                Amore or grillo no saprei (Madama 
                Butterfly); Addio fiorito asil 
                (Madama Butterfly); O quanti occi 
                fisi (Madama Butterfly); Donna 
                non vidi mai (Manon Lescaut); 
                E lucevan le stele (Tosca); Recondita 
                armonia (Tosca); 
                V. RICCIARDI 
                Amor mio 
                Sir Landon RONALD 
                (1873 – 1938) Serenade espagnole 
                
                Gioachino ROSSINI 
                (1792 – 1868) La danza (Les 
                soirees musicales); Crucifixus 
                (La Petite Messe Solennelle); Domine 
                Deus (La Petite Messe Solennelle); 
                Cujus animam (Stabat Mater) 
                Augusto ROTLOI 
                (1847 – 1904) Mia sposa sara 
                la mia bandiera 
                Anton RUBINSTEIN 
                (1828 – 1894) Oh! Lumiere du 
                jour (Neron) 
                Camille SAINT-SAËNS 
                (1835 – 1921) Je viens celebrer 
                la victoire (Samson et Dalila); 
                Vois ma misere (Samson et Dalila) 
                
                Matteo SALVI Angelo 
                casto e bel 
                A. SECCHI 
                Love me not 
                Sir Arthur SULLIVAN 
                (1842 – 1900) The Lost Chord 
                
                Josef Zygmunt 
                SZULC (1875 – 1956) Hantise d’amour 
                
                Piotr Ilyich 
                TCHAIKOVSKY (1840 – 1893) Pour 
                mi ce jour est tout mystere (Evgeny 
                Onegin); Pimpinella; Pourquoi; 
                Serenade de Don Juan 
                Sir Francesco 
                Paolo TOSTI (1846 – 1912) A Vucchella; 
                Addio; Ideala; L’Alba separa dalla luce 
                l’ombra; La mia canzone; Luna d’estate; 
                Parted; Pour un baiser 
                Rocco TRIMARCHI 
                (1861 – 1936) Un bacio ancora 
                
                Vincenzo VALENTE 
                Manella mia 
                Giuseppe VERDI 
                (1813 – 1901) Celeste Aida 
                (Aida); Aide a me togliesti (Aida); 
                La fatal pietra (Aida); O 
                Terra addio (Aida); Dio, che 
                nell’alma infondere (Don Carlo); 
                Qual volutta trascorrere (I Lombardi); 
                Ah si, ben mio (Il Trovatore); 
                Di quella pira (Il Trovatore); 
                Mal reggendo all’aspro assalto (Il 
                Trovatore); Miserere (Il Trovatore) 
                Ai nostril monti (Il Trovatore); 
                O tu che in seno agl’angeli (La 
                forza del destino); Le minaccie, 
                I fieri accenti (La Forza del Destino); 
                Sleale! il segreto fu dunque violato? 
                (La Forza del Destino); Solenne in 
                quest’ora (La Forza del Destino); 
                Brindisi (La Traviata); Ah la 
                paterna mano (Macbeth); Ingemisco 
                (Messa da Requiem); Ora e per sempre 
                addio (Otello); Si, pel ciel 
                (Otello); Quartet (Rigoletto); 
                Parmi veder le lagrime (Rigoletto); 
                La donna e mobile (Rigoletto); 
                Questa o quella (Rigoletto); 
                La rivedra nell’estasi (Un ballo 
                in maschera); E’scherzo od e follia 
                (Un ballo in maschera); Di tu se 
                fedel (Un ballo in maschera); 
                Ma se m’e forza perderti (Un ballo 
                in maschera);  
                Redento ZARDO 
                Luna Fedel 
                ENRICO CARUSO (tenor) 
                Bessie Abott (soprano) 
                Francesca Alda (soprano) 
                Amelita Galli-Curci (soprano) 
                Emmy Destinn (soprano) 
                Geraldine Farrar (soprano) 
                Johanna Gadski (soprano) 
                Alma Gluck (soprano) 
                Frieda Hempel (soprano) 
                Dame Nellie Melba (soprano) 
                Marcella Sembrich (soprano) 
                Luisa Tetrazzini (soprano) 
                Louise Homer (mezzo-soprano) 
                Gina Ciaparelli-Viafora (mezzo-soprano) 
                
                Maria Duchene (mezzo-soprano) 
                Minnie Egener (mezzo-soprano) 
                Josephine Jacoby (mezzo-soprano) 
                Gabrielle Lejeune-Gilibert (mezzo-soprano) 
                
                Flora Perini (mezzo-soprano) 
                Ernestine Schumann-Heink 
                Gina Severina (mezzo-soprano) 
                Angelo Bada (tenor) 
                Pasquale Amato (baritone) 
                Mario Ancona (baritone) 
                Francesco Daddi (baritone) 
                Emilio de Gorgoza (baritone) 
                Giuseppe de Luca (baritone) 
                Titta Ruffo (baritone) 
                Antonio Scotti (baritone) 
                Marcel Journet (bass) 
                Leon Rothier (bass) 
                Andres de Segurola (bass) 
                Vincenzo Belleza (piano) 
                Francesco Cilea (piano) 
                Salvatore Cottone (piano) 
                Umberto Giordano (piano) 
                Percy B. Kahn (piano) 
                Ruggero Leoncavallo (piano) 
                Gaetano Scognamiglio (piano) 
                Mischa Elman (violin) 
                Francis J. Lapitino (harp) 
                A. Regis-Rossini (harp) 
                Bianculli (mandolin) 
                Rosario Bourdon (cello, celesta) 
                ? Adams (oboe) 
                Metropolitan Opera Chorus 
                Metropolitan Orchestra 
                Josef Pasternack (conductor) 
                Walter B. Rogers (conductor) 
                Gaetano Scognamiglio (conductor) 
                Giulio Setti (conductor) 
                Recorded 1902-1920 
                RCA RED SEAL /BMG CLASSICS 82876-60396-2 
                [12 CDs: 71.58 + 70.07 + 69.08 + 
                69.00 + 72.44 + 71.12 + 71.44,71.55 
                + 72.26,72.37 + 67.08 + 73.10]  
              
First a few statistics: 
                this set comprises 12 CDs, 14 hours 
                12 minutes of recorded music, 239 items 
                with music by 81 different composers 
                ranging from Lully and Handel to Rubinstein 
                and Tchaikovsky, taking in a great deal 
                of music by Verdi, Puccini, Leoncavallo 
                and Mascagni. The interesting omissions 
                from this list are notably Mozart and 
                Beethoven. The most recorded composer 
                is Verdi (29 different items from ten 
                operas and the Requiem). The most recorded 
                aria is ‘Celeste Aida’, which Caruso 
                recorded seven times. 
              
 
              
It is important, too, 
                to remember that all of these were recorded 
                without the benefit of a microphone; 
                Caruso never made an electrical recording, 
                all were acoustic. 
              
 
              
RCA have repackaged 
                their Caruso re-masterings, putting 
                each CD into a cardboard slipcase and 
                including them all, plus a booklet, 
                in a (relatively) slim cardboard box. 
                The booklet is pared to the bone, just 
                CD listings, a composer/aria/opera index, 
                a short article on Caruso’s career and 
                a chronology. But here we hit a slight 
                problem: though the discs are organised 
                chronologically there is no date/time 
                information for individual tracks. This 
                means that I can only refer to individual 
                items by their disc and track number 
                in this set. This might prove annoying 
                for those knowledgeable about Caruso’s 
                recorded output. For this I apologise 
                but refer you to BMG-RCA. 
              
 
              
Nor do RCA list dates 
                of birth/death for any of the composers 
                (those on this review are the results 
                of our own research). This is a particular 
                loss, as one of the fascinating things 
                about this set is the large amount of 
                music by contemporary composers that 
                Caruso recorded. Granted much of this 
                is in the popular ballad vein, but a 
                balanced view of his repertoire can 
                only really be achieved if we can have 
                a clearer idea of the composers that 
                he recorded. 
              
 
              
The recordings are 
                important because Enrico Caruso was 
                the first opera singer to have his career 
                defined by the gramophone recording. 
                Unlike many later singers, in Caruso’s 
                case his relationship with the gramophone 
                record was a two way one – the gramophone 
                companies needed him almost more than 
                he needed them. Caruso would have been 
                a super-star tenor even without the 
                benefit of his recordings. But those 
                recordings helped make his career reach 
                a level almost unheard of previously. 
                The fledgling gramophone industry needed 
                Caruso to help transform their scientific 
                novelty into a genuinely musical mass 
                medium. It was Fred Gaisberg’s genius 
                to recognise that Caruso’s voice was 
                perfect for the medium. Thanks to Gaisberg 
                we have a substantial number of recordings 
                of Caruso captured in his prime. 
              
 
              
Disc 1 - April 1902 
                to April 1903 
              
This disc includes 
                the twenty items which Caruso recorded 
                in the Milan hotel. What strikes one 
                first, on encountering these arias with 
                their rather clangy piano accompaniment, 
                is the immediacy of the voice. Despite 
                the limited acoustic technology, Caruso’s 
                voice still has a remarkable vitality 
                and directness and a robustness of tone. 
                Even today you feel you are directly 
                in the presence of the singer, not just 
                hearing something through a veil as 
                can happen with some early singers. 
                The early recording technology seems 
                to have captured Caruso well, rather 
                better than some of his soprano contemporaries. 
                Imagine putting this disc on in 1902 
                and hearing someone, who you could never 
                hope to hear live, singing directly 
                to you. 
              
 
              
But of course the recording 
                process means that not every item is 
                perfect; these are live recordings par 
                excellence. The first ‘Celeste Aida’ 
                (Verdi: ‘Aida’) has an indifferent final 
                top note, the second one has no final 
                phrase at all. But there are compensations. 
                Despite his sometimes rather baritonal 
                timbre, ‘Una furtiva lagrima’ (Donizetti: 
                ‘L’Elisir d’amore’) has a surprising 
                flexibility. ‘E lucevan le stelle’ (Puccini: 
                ‘Tosca’) feels definitive, even if Caruso 
                does indulge in an outrageous sob. Some 
                of these items are interesting historical 
                documents, Francesco Cilea plays the 
                accompaniment for ‘No, piu nobile’ from 
                his ‘Adriana Lecouvreur’, Giordano plays 
                for ‘Amor ti vieta’ from his ‘Fedora’ 
                and Leoncavallo plays for his song ‘Mattinata’. 
                (In fact the Cilea item is actually 
                a duet, Caruso never recorded the tenor 
                arias from the opera). 
              
 
              
On the first two discs 
                we are hearing the singer directly with 
                no conductor to intervene. The result 
                can be highly histrionic with sobs, 
                long held top notes and rather too many 
                aspirates. 
              
 
              
Disc 2 - October 
                1903 to February 1906. 
              
From track 4 of this 
                disc ‘Questa o quella’ (Verdi: ‘Rigoletto’), 
                the recordings seem to improve, the 
                piano accompaniment starts almost to 
                sound like a piano. And ‘Questa o quella’ 
                seems subtler than it did on disc 1. 
                Self-indulgence shows in the stunning 
                sounding, but very slow version ‘Una 
                furtiva lagrima’ (Donizetti: ‘L’elisir 
                d’amore’). Lightness and flexibility 
                are on display in ‘Mi par d’udir ancora’ 
                (Bizet: ‘Les Pecheurs de perles’) and 
                in ‘Cielo e mar’ (Ponchielli: ‘La Gioconda’) 
                Caruso displays a stunning sense of 
                line. 
              
 
              
On track 20 we encounter 
                an orchestra of sorts for the first 
                time. This is of great benefit in ‘Che 
                gelida manina’ (Puccini: ‘La Boheme’). 
                And on track 22, Caruso ventures outside 
                his native shores, singing ‘Salut demeure 
                chaste et pure’ (Gounod: ‘Faust’) in 
                its original French and giving us some 
                beautifully shaded high notes. 
              
 
              
Disc 3 (February 
                1906 – March 1908) 
              
This disc introduces 
                us to some of Caruso’s fellow singers 
                with rather varied results. The Quartet 
                from ‘Rigoletto’ with Bessie Abbott 
                and Louise Homer is pretty forgettable 
                and ‘O Soave Fanciulla’ (Puccini: ‘La 
                Boheme’) with Nellie Melba is very disappointing 
                with the two singers rather ill-balanced. 
                But ‘Addio, dolce svegliare alla mattina’ 
                (Puccini: ‘La Boheme’) with Marcella 
                Sembrich, Gina Severina, and Antonio 
                Scotti is like a snapshot from a real 
                opera; entirely lacking the stiffness 
                which troubles some of these recordings, 
                you can get beyond the recording’s limitations. 
                These ensemble recordings often suffer 
                from strange balances, probably due 
                to the rather limited nature of the 
                acoustic process. But over and above 
                this, the technique does not seem to 
                have been kind to the women’s voices; 
                time and again I was struck how much 
                more vividly the men’s voices come over. 
              
 
              
Also noticeable on 
                this disc is the way that Caruso’s voice 
                develops a new firmness; this is very 
                noticeable in the two recordings of 
                ‘Deserto in terra’ (Donizetti: ‘Don 
                Sebastiano’). 
              
 
              
Disc 4 (March 1908 
                to January 1910) 
              
This opens with a vividly 
                sung pair of items from Verdi’s ‘Rigoletto’, 
                ‘Questa o quella’ and ‘La donna e mobile’. 
                But the duet from ‘Il Trovatore’, ‘Ai 
                nostri monti’, which is sung with mezzo-soprano 
                Louise Homer, is rather dim and sounds 
                very careful. This disc sees the repertoire 
                of arias continuing to expand; besides 
                another ‘Celeste Aida’ (Verdi: ‘Aida’) 
                there are two further items from the 
                opera with Johanna Gadski (soprano), 
                ‘O terra addio’ and ‘La fala pietra’. 
                Again they come over as rather careful, 
                but both singers exhibit fine control 
                in the quiet passages. A novelty for 
                us today is an aria from Goldmark’s 
                ‘Die Königin von Saba’, sung in 
                Italian translation; at the end Caruso 
                inserts two remarkable high falsetto 
                notes, something he rarely seems to 
                do on disc. There are two versions of 
                the Miserere from Verdi’s ‘Il Trovatore’, 
                both recorded with soprano Frances Alda, 
                but one includes the chorus of the Metropolitan 
                Opera. Alda’s soprano voice is well 
                caught by the recording, particularly 
                her lower register and the resulting 
                duets are more vivid dramatically than 
                some of the earlier duets on this disc. 
              
 
              
Disc 5 (January 
                1910 to December 1910) 
              
This disc opens with 
                six tracks from Gounod’s ‘Faust’ sung 
                by Geraldine Farrar (soprano), Gabrielle 
                Lejeune-Gilibert (mezzo-soprano), Marcel 
                Journet (bass), Antonio Scotti (baritone), 
                conducted by Walter B. Rogers. Here 
                we have just over thirty minutes of 
                excerpts from the opera, with a group 
                of singers who managed to project the 
                drama even within the limits of the 
                recording technology. Whatever the limitations 
                of the performances, they give us a 
                magical window into what ‘Faust’ at 
                the Met might have been like. 
              
 
              
Caruso sang in the 
                premiere of Franchetti’s ‘Germania’ 
                in 1902, so it is not surprising that 
                he returned to the opera in his recordings. 
                Here we have another version of ‘Studenti! 
                Udite’ along with another aria from 
                the opera; I wish I could be more enthusiastic. 
                But Puccini’s ‘Madam Butterfly’ is another 
                thing entirely. In two items from the 
                opera, with Antonio Scotti (baritone), 
                Caruso gives us an impassioned Pinkerton. 
                But his tone is starting to sound a 
                little mature for the role, so it is 
                no surprise that he recorded ‘Ora e 
                per sempre addio’ (Verdi: ‘Otello’). 
                ‘Otello’ was a role that he was constantly 
                considering doing; here we have just 
                a pale reflection of what might have 
                been. The disc concludes with a wonderfully 
                dramatic ‘No! Pagliaccio non son’ (Leoncavallo: 
                ‘I Pagliacci’) and a slightly disappointing 
                pair of items from ‘Il Trovatore’, notable 
                mainly for Louise Homer’s mezzo-soprano 
                again. 
              
 
              
Disc 6 (December 
                1910 to January 1912) 
              
Homer re-appears on 
                the opening item of this disc, ‘Aida 
                a me togliesti’ (Verdi: ‘Aida’). Here 
                again one notes that Caruso’s voice 
                seems to be getting darker. His version 
                of ‘Una Furtiva Lagrima’ (Donizetti: 
                ‘L’Elisir D’amore’) is notable for how 
                much lightness and grace he can bring 
                to a voice which has strengthened and 
                darkened since he first recorded the 
                piece. This dark, dramatic power is 
                noticeable in the duet, ‘Le minaccie, 
                I fieri accenti’ (Verdi: ‘La Forza del 
                Destino’) recorded with baritone Pasquale 
                Amato. 
              
 
              
Two items of musicological 
                interest on the disc are a pair of arias 
                from Leoncavallo’s ‘La Boheme’, an opera 
                which has been all but eclipsed by Puccini’s 
                version. Another novelty is an aria 
                from ‘O Esclavo’ by Gomes, the Brazilian 
                composer who has undergone a small revival 
                recently thanks to Placido Domingo. 
              
 
              
Caruso’s final version 
                of ‘Celeste Aida’ (Verdi: ‘Aida’) is 
                notable for the new power which he brings 
                to the aria, but the ending is louder 
                and rather less subtle than on some 
                of the earlier versions. In ‘Ah, fuyez, 
                douce image’ (Massenet: ‘Manon’) I was 
                rather surprised that he had recorded 
                the aria at this stage in his development 
                and not earlier when his voice was lighter. 
                Still, though Caruso does not give the 
                melodic line the Gallic elegance it 
                needs, he replaces it with a remarkable 
                verismo commitment. 
              
 
              
Disc 7 (January 
                1912 to February 1913) 
              
There are a significant 
                number of lighter items here, either 
                serious music requiring a lighter technique 
                or music from the lighter repertoire. 
                These range from the two charming ensemble’s 
                from Flotow’s ‘Marta’ recorded with 
                Frances Alda (soprano), Josephine Jacoby 
                (mezzo-soprano) and Marcel Journet (bass) 
                and Tchaikovsky’s ‘Pimpinella’ to real 
                parlour music such as Sullivan’s ‘The 
                Lost Chord’ (sung in pretty decent English) 
                and d’Hardelot’s ‘Because’ (sung in 
                French). 
              
 
              
The disc features Caruso’s 
                second version of the sextet from Donizetti’s 
                ‘Lucia di Lammermoor’, this time with 
                Tetrazzini. Unfortunately this suffers 
                because of the limited recording technology 
                of the day. The men’s voices come over 
                as very immediate, but Tetrazzini sounds 
                as if she is in a different room. Balance 
                is better in the Quartet from Verdi’s 
                ‘Rigoletto’ with Luisa Tetrazzini (soprano), 
                Josephine Jacoby (mezzo-soprano) and 
                Pasquale Amato (baritone). It is a tad 
                careful at times, but is certainly stylish 
                and well balanced. Whereas in ‘On l’appelle 
                Manon’ (Massenet: ‘Manon’) Caruso and 
                Geraldine Farrar (soprano) have quite 
                differing approaches: he is quite thrilling 
                whereas Farrar is rather stylish. I 
                was not fond of Farrar’s rather white-toned 
                voice in ‘O Soave Fanciulla’ (Puccini: 
                ‘La Boheme’), but the result is charming 
                if lacking in freedom. 
              
 
              
With the duet ‘Dio 
                che nell’alma infondere’ (Verdi: ‘Don 
                Carlos’), recorded with Antonio Scotti, 
                we are securely back in the correct 
                style. This is a wonderful track and 
                displays the richer, darker tones that 
                have developed in Caruso’s voice. This 
                new depth is apparent in ‘Parmi veder 
                le lagrime’ (Verdi: ‘Rigoletto’), but 
                Caruso still manages to retain his admirable 
                flexibility. 
              
 
              
Disc 8 (February 
                1913 to April 1914) 
              
The items on this disc 
                continue to explore hitherto unrecorded 
                repertoire, though this means that again 
                there are a significant number of parlour 
                ballads and songs. In these one can 
                appreciate Caruso’s artistry and watch 
                his vocal development, even if the material 
                is not always something to which you 
                would choose to listen. 
              
 
              
The more familiar items 
                include a rather laboured ‘Cujus animam’ 
                (Rossini: ‘Stabat Mater’) and a fine 
                ‘Donna no vidi mai’ (Puccini: ‘Manon 
                Lescaut’). More unfamiliar repertoire 
                is charted with a robust ‘Serenade de 
                Don Juan’ (Tchaikovsky) and Landon Ronald’s 
                charming ‘Sérénade Espagnole’. 
                A highlight is Caruso’s second recorded 
                excerpt from Verdi’s ‘Otello’; the duet 
                ‘Si, pel ciel’, recorded with Tita Ruffo. 
                The two knock sparks off each other 
                and create a remarkable four minute 
                drama. 
              
 
              
The disc concludes 
                with two ensembles from Verdi’s ‘Un 
                Ballo in Maschera’, ‘La rivedra nell’estasi’ 
                and ‘E scherzo ed e follia’, recorded 
                with Frieda Hempel (soprano), Maria 
                Duchene (mezzo-soprano), Andres de Seguora 
                (bass), Leon Rothier (bass). Here the 
                record producers have managed to capture 
                the wonderful sense of ensemble generated 
                by the cast. 
              
 
              
Disc 9 (April 1914 
                to February 1916) 
              
The disc opens with 
                two items sung in Spanish, including 
                an aria from Chapi’s zarzuela ‘El Milagro 
                de la Virgen’. 
              
 
              
In the Brindisi from 
                ‘La Traviata’, soprano Alma Gluck is 
                vividly captured by the recording and 
                for once the soprano line successfully 
                balances Caruso’s tenor. This was his 
                first and only recording of an excerpt 
                from the opera and his contribution 
                is notable for the continued flexibility 
                of his voice. 
              
 
              
These later discs all 
                display a similar mix of items, with 
                Caruso generally extending his repertoire, 
                mixing popular songs, Neapolitan songs 
                with arias and ensembles from familiar 
                operas with the occasional unfamiliar 
                opera. The number of popular and Neapolitan 
                songs on the discs often made me question 
                the general appeal of such a complete 
                edition as this. But then I would surprised 
                by an item; indeed some of the lighter 
                items on this disc, such as Tosti’s 
                ‘La mia canzone’ receive beautifully 
                sung performances, with Caruso displaying 
                his fine vocal technique. 
              
 
              
Unfortunately, in the 
                more familiar ‘Ingemisco’ from Verdi’s 
                ‘Requiem’ he sounds a little laboured 
                and rather lacking in fire, but ‘Parle 
                moi de ma mère’ (Bizet: ‘Carmen’) 
                receives a touching reading with Frances 
                Alda (soprano). 
              
 
              
Amongst the operatic 
                novelties on this disc are a fine version 
                of ‘O Souverain, O Juge, O père; 
                (Massenet: ‘Le Cid’) and ‘Inspirez moi, 
                race divine’ (Gounod: ‘La Reine de Saba’). 
                This latter is rather hackneyed but 
                in Caruso’s committed performance comes 
                over as immense fun. 
              
 
              
Disc 10 (February 
                1916 to April 1917) 
              
We start with two more 
                familiar novelties. First a lovely rendition 
                of ‘Ah, la paterna mano’ (Verdi: ‘Macbeth’) 
                and then a baritone aria, Colline’s 
                farewell to his overcoat from Puccini’s 
                ‘La Boheme’. Here Caruso displays a 
                creditable baritone technique. 
              
 
              
A version of Tchaikovsky’s 
                ‘Pourquoi’, which captures the song’s 
                haunting melancholy, is followed by 
                Lensky’s aria (in French) from ‘Eugene 
                Onegin’. Caruso starts it at a remarkably 
                swift tempo; the result is shapely and 
                expressive without ever quite capturing 
                the essence of the aria. 
              
 
              
Caruso is on more familiar 
                territory with ‘Come un bel di maggio’ 
                (Giordano: ‘Andrea Chenier’) which receives 
                a beautifully melancholic performance. 
                Another new role is Samson in Saint-Saëns 
                eponymous opera, an assumption which 
                indicates the more dramatic roles that 
                Caruso was starting to perform. In ‘Voi 
                ma misere, hélas’ (Saint-Saëns: 
                ‘Samson et Dalila’) Caruso brings out 
                the noble and tragic qualities without 
                every quite sounding sufficiently heroic. 
                In ‘De mon amie, fleur endormie’ (Bizet: 
                ‘Les pecheurs de perles’) Caruso displays 
                an admirably good sense of line in an 
                aria which would nowadays be sung by 
                a lighter voice. This illustrates one 
                of the fascinating aspects of these 
                later CDs: singers in the early part 
                of the 20th century were 
                able to mix roles in a way which is 
                less common today; apparently retaining 
                an admirable flexibility of technique 
                when the voices darkened and deepened. 
              
 
              
In the final version 
                of the quartet from ‘Rigoletto’, recorded 
                with Amelita Galli-Curci (soprano), 
                Flora Perini (mezzo-soprano) and Giuseppe 
                de Luca (baritone), Caruso’s opening 
                solo comes over as rather effortful. 
                But the Sextet from Donizetti’s ‘Lucia 
                di Lammermoor’ with Galli-Curci, Minne 
                Egener (mezzo-soprano), Angelo Bada 
                (tenor), Giuseppe de Luca (baritone) 
                and Marcel Journet (bass) is the most 
                satisfying version yet, even if it does 
                have a few rough edges. 
              
 
              
Disc 11 (April 1917 
                – February 1919) 
              
The 1st 
                World Ward now makes some impact; besides 
                a lively version of Cohan’s ‘Over There’, 
                sung in heavily accented English, there 
                is Olivieri’s bombastic ‘Inno di Garibaldi’ 
                and Planquette’s ‘Le Régiment 
                de Sambre et Meuse’. 
              
 
              
But there are also 
                some other more interesting novelties; 
                ‘O lumière du jour’ from Rubinstein’s 
                ‘Neron’ is a sighting of an opera which 
                has nowadays entirely fallen from sight. 
                ‘Sleale! il segreto fu dunque violato?’ 
                (Verdi: ‘La Forza del Destino’) finds 
                Caruso and Giuseppe de Luca in highly 
                dramatic form. A further excerpt from 
                ‘Samson et Dalila’, ‘Je viens célébrer 
                la victoire’ has Caruso’s noble Samson 
                partnered by the fine Dalila of Louise 
                Homer. 
              
 
              
The final item on the 
                disc is a return to lighter Donizetti, 
                ‘Venti Scudi’ from ‘L’elisir d’amore’, 
                where Caruso duets with Giuseppe de 
                Luca. The baritone is inclined to be 
                untidy and the result is an impressive 
                achievement if a trifle more robust 
                than it would have been earlier in Caruso’s 
                career. 
              
 
              
Disc 12 (September 
                1919 to September 1920) 
              
This final disc contains 
                few mainstream items, an indicator perhaps 
                that Caruso was running out of arias 
                that he wanted to record. But the disc 
                does include some fascinating rarities 
                along with a single valuable testament. 
              
 
              
The rarities include 
                some more Gomes, ‘Mia piccirella’ (Gomes: 
                ‘Salvator Rosa’), ‘Ombra mai fu’ (Handel: 
                ‘Serse’), ‘Bois epais’ (Lully: ‘Amadis 
                de Gaule’) and ‘Deh, chi’io ritorni’ 
                (Meyerbeer: ‘L’Africaine’). The two 
                baroque items are performed in a manner 
                which would be thought stylistically 
                appropriate at the time. The Lully aria 
                is sung with some care but sounds too 
                careful. The Handel aria Caruso seems 
                to imbue with a sort of Italian operatic 
                swagger. But the notable item on this 
                disc is ‘Rachel, quand du Seigneur’ 
                (Halévy: ‘La Juive’) a powerful 
                performance which is a notable witness 
                to Caruso’s final new role. The disc 
                is completed by two items from Rossini’s 
                ‘Petite Messe Solonelle’, ‘Domine Deus’ 
                and ‘Crucifixus’; Caruso performs them 
                powerfully, but in a manner which seems 
                to overlook the pieces’ charm and irony. 
              
 
              
In Conclusion 
              
Caruso’s recorded legacy 
                does chart the gradual development of 
                his voice, but its coverage of his repertoire 
                is distinctly patchy. We have nothing 
                of his early triumph in Bellini’s ‘Il 
                Pirata’, the opera he used to help develop 
                his bel canto style, nor do we have 
                anything from his early triumph in Cilea’s 
                ‘Arlesiana’. Nor, thanks to Ricordi, 
                do we have anything relating to the 
                premiere of Puccini’s ‘La Fanciulla 
                del West’ at the Met. Not surprisingly, 
                we have no hint of his short brush with 
                Wagner (a ‘Lohengrin’ in South America). 
                But we have, thankfully, records of 
                the other more dramatic roles (Samson, 
                Eleazar in ‘La Juive’) which he was 
                starting to take on, though unfortunately 
                we have no record of his singing in 
                the title role in Meyerbeer’s ‘La Prophète’. 
              
 
              
Besides the items by 
                well known operatic composers, each 
                of the discs also contains songs and 
                arias by composers now forgotten; the 
                most notable of these is perhaps Tosti 
                who wrote a number of ballads for the 
                English court. They are often sung with 
                great affection, but I did find that 
                their faded charms palled after a while. 
                But before we get too sniffy about them, 
                it is worth bearing in mind that many 
                of these were the popular music of their 
                day; in fact it is remarkable how much 
                music by living composers Caruso recorded. 
                We must also add to this the rather 
                special place that Neapolitan song played 
                in his repertoire; born in Naples to 
                a poor family, these were the songs 
                of his youth so it was only natural 
                that he would want to record them. Just 
                think how different the lighter repertoire 
                for an Italian tenor might be if Caruso 
                had been born a Venetian! 
              
 
              
In the end, I am not 
                sure that I would be tempted to invest 
                in a complete Caruso edition; for me 
                many of the tracks are not essential 
                listening and I would probably be content 
                with potted highlights on 2 or 3 CDs. 
                And even these would be something to 
                dip into, rather then listen to continuously. 
              
 
              
If I was going to go 
                for a complete Caruso edition then cost 
                would come into it. Naxos’s recent edition, 
                in Ward Marston’s excellent transfers, 
                seems to come in at around £20 to £25 
                cheaper than the RCA set, which seems 
                excellent value. (On the web-sites that 
                I consulted the Naxos box came in at 
                £44 or £50 and the RCA box at £72 or 
                £70). The issue of the transfers from 
                78rpm records might also sway people 
                towards the Naxos box. After all, Marston’s 
                transfers for Naxos were done more recently 
                than those on the RCA set and they are 
                Marston’s second go; he had previously 
                done the transfers for Pearl. I found 
                that the Naxos versions of the arias 
                had an immediacy and clarity that was 
                sometimes lacking in the RCA disc; the 
                orchestra also seemed to come over a 
                little better. But to me the difference 
                is not huge, though opinions will always 
                differ. 
              
 
              
I must confess that 
                I would be quite tempted by just 2 or 
                3 of the Naxos discs bought singly. 
                What I would really like, though, would 
                be a Caruso download site where we could 
                select our own tracks and have them 
                burned onto CD for us; how about that 
                anyone? 
              
 
                Robert Hugill