CD 1
                  Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) Rigoletto, La donna e mobile (16.03.1908, 
                  New York) Aida, Se quel guerrier io fossi .. 
                  Celeste Aida (27.12.1911, New York) Macbeth, O figli, O figli miei .. Ah, 
                  la paterna mano (23.02.1916, Camden) Il Trovatore, Ah, si ben mio (16.03.1908, 
                  Camden) Il Trovatore, Di quella pira (11.02.1906, 
                  New York) Un Ballo in Maschera, Forse la soglia 
                  attinse .. Ma se m'e forza perderti (27.12.1911, Camden)
                  Jacques HALÉVY (1799-1862) La Juive, Rachel, quand du Seigneur 
                  (14.09.1920, Camden)
                  Giacomo MEYERBEER (1791-1864) L’Africaine, Mi batte il cor.. O paradiso! 
                  (20.02.1907, New York)
                  Jules MASSENET (1842-1912) Manon, Je suis seul.. Ah, fuyez, 
                  douce image (27.12.1911, Camden) Le Cid, Ah! Tout est bien fini! .. 
                  O Souverain, O juge, O Père! (05.02.1916, Camden)
                  Friedrich von FLOTOW (1812-1883) 
                  Martha, M' appari tutt' amor (11.02.1906, 
                  New York)
                  Amilcare PONCHIELLI (1834-1886) La Gioconda, Cielo e mar (14.03.1910, New 
                  York)
                  Ruggiero LEONCAVALLO (1857-1919) 
                  I Pagliacci, Recitar! .. Vesti la giubba 
                  (17.03.1907, New York)
                  Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924) Tosca, Recondita armonia (06.11.1909, 
                  Camden)
                  Gioachino ROSSINI (1792-1868) Petite Messe Solennelle, Domine Deus (16.09.1920, 
                  Camden) La danza (Tarantella neapolitana) (13.02.1912, New York)
                  COMPARISON TRACK- original version I Pagliacci, Recitar!... Vesti la giubba 
                  (17.03.1907 New York)
                  CD 2 CANZONI ITALIANE
                  Traditional Fenesta che lucive (10.04.1913) Vieni sul mar (08.09.1919) 
                  Santa Lucia (20.03.1916)
                  Eduardo Di CAPUA (1865-1917) O sole mio (05.02.1916)
                  Ernesto DE CURTIS (1875-1937) Tu ca nun chiagne (08.09.1919) Senza nisciuno (11.09.1919)
                   Gaetano Enrico PENNINO Pecche (07.01.1915)
                  Francesco Paolo TOSTI (1846-1916) L'Alba separa dalla luce I'ombra (15.04.1917) Ideale (30.12.1906) 
                  Luna d'estate (05.02.1916) A Vucchella (08.09.1919)
                  Emanuele NUTILE (1862-1932) Mamma mia che vo' sape (06.11.1909)
                  Stanislao GASTALDON (1861-1939) Musica proibita (15.04.1917)
                  Salvatore CARDILLO (1874-1947) Core 'ngrato (19.11.1911)
                  Stefano DONAUDY Vaghissima sembianza (15.09.1920)
                  De CRESCENZO Tarantella sincera (19.01.1912)
                  Teodoro COTTRAU (1827-1879) Addio a Napoli (09.09.1919)
                  CD 3 GREAT OPERA ARIAS
                  Umberto GIORDANO (1867-1948) Fedora, Amor ti vieta (30.11.1902, 
                  Milan) The original recording is accompanied by the composer on the 
                  piano Andrea Chenier, Un di all'azzurro spazio (17.03.1907, 
                  New York)
                  Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797-1848) L'elisir d'amore, Una furtiva lagrima 
                  (01.02.1904, New York)
                  Ruggiero LEONCAVALLO (1857-1919) 
                  I Pagliacci, No! Pagliaccio non son (28.12.1910, 
                  Camden)
                  Giuseppe VERDI (1813-1901) Otello, Ora per sempre addio (28.12.1910, 
                  Camden) La Forza del Destino, O tu che in seno 
                  agl'angeli (6.11.1909, Camden) Rigoletto, Questa e quella (16.02.1908, 
                  Camden) Rigoletto, Ella mi fu rapita (24.02.1913, 
                  New York)
                  Charles GOUNOD (1818-1893) Faust, Salut, demeure chaste et pure 
                  (11.02.1906, New York)
                  Giacomo PUCCINI (1858-1924) Tosca, Recondita armonia (1.02.1904, 
                  New York) Tosca, E lucevan le stelle (1.02.1904, 
                  New York) La Boheme, Che gelida manina (11.02.1906, 
                  New York) Manon Lescaut, Donna non vidi mai (24.02.1913, 
                  New York)
                  Georges BIZET (1838-1875) Carmen, La fleur que tu m'avais jetée 
                  (7.11.1909, Camden)
                  Arrigo BOITO (1842-1918) Mefistofele, Dai campi, dai prati (12.11.1902, 
                  Milan)
                  Ruggiero LEONCAVALLO (1857-1919) Mattinata (8.04.1904, Milan) (The original recording 
                  is accompanied by the composer on the piano) 
                There comes a time in a 
                  reviewer’s week when the listening has to stop and the serious 
                  business of writing start. I say serious writing to differentiate 
                  the review itself from the notes made in the listening phase. 
                  In the case of these three discs I am in some danger of having 
                  to utilise a computer programme to sort out the mass of often-contradictory 
                  notes. There is also the matter of fearing the burn-out of the 
                  transport of my recently purchased CD player if I do any more 
                  quick comparisons between tracks on this ‘Digital Comeback’ 
                  issue with those on RCA’s recently issued 12 CD set titled ‘The 
                  Complete Caruso Collection’ and samples of the Naxos volumes 
                  of Caruso’s recorded legacy. Such is the challenge presented 
                  by this collection of three previously issued single CDs which 
                  has involved the ‘lifting’ of Caruso’s voice from 78rpm discs 
                  and the addition of a modern orchestral backing to his singing; 
                  technological manipulation of a high order. 
                In my review of RCA’s ‘The 
                  Complete Caruso Collection’ (Link) 
                  I was at pains to point out some of the difficulties of early 
                  recording procedures, particularly in respect of the speed at 
                  which the original wax was cut and which could vary considerably. 
                  If a shellac disc recorded at 72 or 82 rpm was then played at 
                  the standard 78 rpm the results would not truly reflect the 
                  singer’s voice or the orchestral sound. I implied that on RCA’s 
                  ‘Complete Collection’, unlike on the Naxos series, no 
                  effort had been made to correct any such variation. Such variations 
                  of cutter speed were most pronounced on the earliest recordings. 
                  As well as listening, I also compared timings here with those 
                  from the ‘Complete Caruso Collection’ and the Naxos. Not surprisingly 
                  there are differences with this digital remake being nearer 
                  to the Naxos. This indicates 
                  that in the process of preparing for the addition of a modern 
                  orchestra, efforts were made by the engineers regarding the 
                  voice pitch of the source issues used. In some of the original 
                  recordings the tempi were governed by the restriction of the 
                  length of a 78 rpm side. There is no such restriction here, 
                  and I particularly welcome the addition of full orchestral introductions 
                  to some arias such as in Rachel, quand du Seigneur from ‘La Juive’ 
                  (CD 1 tr. 7) recorded in 1920, where the introduction has another 
                  minute of music. The same applies, in a smaller way, in the 
                  Aida aria (CD 1 tr. 2) and the Ballo in Maschera extract (CD 
                  1 tr. 6) and elsewhere. Incidentally the venue of the Aida aria 
                  is shown as New York when the sessions of December 
                  27th 1911 
                  were at Camden.  
                The next question I must 
                  address is how the total package of modern orchestra and sound 
                  fits with the often limited and more constricted sound and ambience 
                  of the voice. The orchestra is well recorded and conducted with 
                  flair by Gottfried Rabl. The conductor has adapted his tempi 
                  to suit the original, even in the inordinately slow Una 
                  furtiva lagrima originally accompanied by piano (CD 3 tr. 2). Here Caruso’s 
                  heady half tones and Italianate squilla are heard to good effect. 
                  As the voice enters the orchestra takes a more recessed seat 
                  allowing the voice to be heard to best advantage. How do the 
                  two fit? It depends on the quality of the original source record 
                  and the apparatus used for listening. Played on a personal stereo, 
                  with its restricted frequency range, all seems relatively smooth 
                  and one barely notices the difference in recorded ambience. 
                  With good headphones the differences become more apparent. Listening 
                  via my large reference speakers the differences are considerably 
                  more apparent. But so much seems to depend on the quality of 
                  the original from which the voice has been taken. At the very 
                  beginning of the vocal entry to La donna e mobile (CD 1 tr. 1), 
                  recorded in 1908, the orchestral introduction blends easily 
                  into Caruso’s singing. Yes the singing is slightly boxed, but 
                  then suddenly in the second verse the voice becomes more occluded. 
                  In both verses there is some distortion on the high note whilst 
                  there is none on the concluding note of Di quella pira (CD 
                  1 tr. 5) recorded two years earlier. This of course brings me 
                  back to the quality of the source pressings used. In my review 
                  of the Complete Collection I expressed doubts about the pressings 
                  used by RCA who, after all, must own the originals. In this 
                  collection, an unedited original of the famous tenor aria Recitar! 
                  .. Vesti la giubba from Pagliacci (CD 1 tr 17) is provided 
                  for comparison with the digital version (CD 1 tr. 13). What 
                  is clear from listening is that whatever source pressing was 
                  used here, it is different from that used in Vol. 3 of the Complete 
                  Collection. Whatever source is used it is certainly true that 
                  the quality of the later recordings, say post-1912, is distinctly 
                  better than those of the earlier period. I noted in my reviews 
                  of the later volumes of the Naxos issues as well as those on the Complete 
                  Collection, with the overall sound and balance between voice 
                  and orchestra being significantly better. It is therefore disappointing 
                  to find that on some of the 1919 recordings of Italian Songs 
                  on CD 2 the sound varies so much. Vieni sul mar (tr. 
                  2) of 1919 is distinctly harsh in the treble whilst O sole 
                  mio (tr. 2) of 1916 and Pecche (tr. 5) of 1915 are 
                  much easier on the ear. There are a number of occasions where 
                  treble tizz, for want of a better word, particularly on high 
                  notes and forte passages intrudes on enjoyment. 
                What these recordings do 
                  enable the listener to hear, perhaps more clearly than before, 
                  because of both the clarity and proximity of the tracks, is 
                  the changes in the timbre of Caruso’s voice over time and particularly 
                  after the operation for the removal of nodules on his vocal 
                  chords in 1908. The heroic tenor voice rendering of Mi batte 
                  il cor.. O paradiso! recorded in 1907 (CD 1 tr. 8) 
                  becomes the more baritonal tenor voice of Recondita armonia 
                  of 1909 (CD 1 tr. 10). Better examples are to be found in the 
                  two arias from Pagliacci, Vesti la giubba (CD 1 tr. 13) 
                  recorded in 1907 and No! Pagliacci non son (CD 3 tr. 
                  3) recorded in 1910. The characterisation is the same, the beauty 
                  of tone and depth of expression likewise, but the timbre has 
                  become more mahogany than teak. That deepening of the tone reached 
                  its apotheosis on record in the 1920 recording from La Juive 
                  included here (CD 1 tr. 7) and the aria from Samson and Dalila 
                  recorded in 1919. Two particularly interesting tracks not mentioned 
                  previously are contained on the third CD engineered by Robert 
                  Pavlecka. The first is of Giordano’s Fedora (CD 3 tr. 1). The 
                  composer accompanied the original recording, made by Fred Gaisberg 
                  in Caruso’s hotel in November 1902, on the piano. It is the 
                  only example of the original Milan recordings 
                  included here. This digital version is with orchestra. The quality 
                  of the source used in Vol. 1 of the Complete Caruso was very 
                  poor indeed with very noisy surfaces. Here the voice comes over 
                  clearly, albeit with added bloom, a quality more prevalent on 
                  CD 3 than the other two discs. But this is the voice that Fred 
                  Gaisberg heard over 100 years ago and which convinced him that 
                  Caruso and the gramophone were made for each other. That original 
                  recording, and this issue, prove Gaisberg to have been a very 
                  far-sighted man indeed. This issue allows for a far greater 
                  enjoyment of Caruso’s formidable voice than many other previous 
                  issues from his parent company. On that basis I view the enterprise 
                  as a success. My only regret is that the collection does not 
                  include any example of Caruso together with colleagues in say 
                  one of the recordings he made of the Lucia sextet or Rigoletto 
                  quartet. Maybe that omission is for technical reasons but Caruso 
                  was a renowned team player and both sparked colleagues and was 
                  in turn lifted to greater vocal heights by them. 
                Robert J Farr 
                 
                