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Leopold Simoneau &
Pierrette Alarie - Vol. 1 CD 1 Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART
(1756-1791) Duets for Soprano
and Tenor 1. Cosi fan tutte, K588:
Fra gli amplesi [5:49] 2. Spiegarti non poss'io,
K489 [3:26] 3. Die Entführung aus
dem Serail, K384: Welch ein Geschick [8:18] 4. La finta giardiniera,
K196: Tu mi lasci [7:19]
Pierrette Alarie (soprano), Leopold Simoneau (tenor) Arias for Tenor 5. Misero! o sogno,
K431 [9:08] 6. Per pietà, non ricercate,
K420 [5:59] Leopold Simoneau Arias for Soprano: 7. Mia speranza adorata,
K416 [8:56] 8. No, no che non sei
capace, K419 [4:20] Pierrette Alarie Amsterdam Philharmonic
Orchestra/Walter Goehr rec. 1959 Die Entführung aus dem
Serail, K384: 9. Ach ich liebte
[5:10] 10. Traurigkeit
[8:09] 11. Martern aller Arten
[8:16] Le nozze di Figaro: 12. Deh vieni non tardar
[4:38] Pierrette Alarie, Hamburg
Philharmonic Orchestra/Albert Bittner rec. 1952 CD 2 Johann Sebastian
BACH (1685-1750) Mass in B Minor, BWV 232,
beginning CD 3 Johann Sebastian
BACH 1 - 10: Mass in B Minor,
BWV 232, cont. Pierrette Alarie (soprano),
Catherina Delfosse (soprano), Grace Hoffman (contralto), Léopold
Simoneau (tenor), Heinz Rehfuss (bass), Amsterdam Philharmonic Chorus
and Orchestra/Walter Goehr rec. 1959 Wolfgang
Amadeus MOZART Lieder 11. Ridente la calma,
K152 [3:38] 12. Männer suchen stets
zu naschen, K433 [2:02] 13. Un moto di gioia
mi sento, K579 [1:35] Pierrette Alarie, John
Newmark (piano) 14. Oiseaux, si tous
les ans, K307 [1:38] 15. An Chloe, K524
[2:40] 16. Abendempfindung,
K523 [5:09] Léopold Simoneau, John
Newmark (piano) 11 - 16 rec. 1956 Robert SCHUMANN
(1810-1856) Duets
17. Er und Sie, Op. 78, No. 2 [3:24]
18. Liebhabers Ständchen, Op. 34, No. 2 [2:18]
19. Ich denke dein, Op. 78, No. 3 [2:43]
20. In der Nacht, Op. 74, No. 4 [4:49]
21. Unterm Fenster, Op. 34, No. 3 [1:29]
22. Wiegenlied, Op. 78, No. 4 [2:33]
23. Liebesgarten, Op. 34, No. 1 [3:53]
24. Tanzlied, Op. 78, No. 1 [2:12]
25. Die tausend Grüsse, Op. 101, No. 7 [1:44]
Pierrette Alarie, Léopold Simoneau, John Newmark (piano)
rec. 1962 CD 4 Ludwig van
BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
1. Ode to Joy (Finale of Symphony No. 9, Op. 125) [27:18] Pierrette Alarie (soprano), Maureen Forrester (contralto),
Léopold Simoneau (tenor), Joseph Rouleau (bass), Chorus and Orchestre
Symphonique de Montreal/Wilfried Pelletier
rec. live (radio broadcast) from the opening concert of the International
1967 Expo in Montreal, 29 April 1967 Igor STRAVINSKY
(1882-1971)
2-3. Oedipus Rex, Opera-Oratorio after Sophocles (Text: Jean
Cocteau) Léopold Simoneau /tenor) - Oedipus; Eugenia Zareska
(mezzo) - Jocasta; Bernard Cottret (bass) - Creon; George Abdoun
(bass) - Tiresias; Gérard Serkoyan (bass) - Messenger; Michel Hamel
(tenor) - Messenger; Jean Cocteau (narration);
Orchestre National de France & Choeur de Radio-France/Igor Stravinsky
rec. live (radio broadcast) at Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Paris,
19 May 1952 DOREMI DHR79169
[79:46 + 78:32 + 79:41 + 78:09]
Soprano Pierrette Alarie, born 1921, and tenor Léopold Simoneau,
born 1916, died in 2006. They were two of the foremost Canadian
singers ever. From the 1940s - they were married in 1946 - until
1970, when they both retired, they had highly successful careers
on both sides of the Atlantic, most of all in Mozart operas, for
which they had perfectly suited voices. Pierrette Alarie had a
light, agile, glittering, effortlessly produced soprano, ideal
for the soubrette roles but she was also a good Konstanze, as
we can hear on CD 1 in this box. She had the same attractive timbre
as Rita Streich, who was born just a year before Ms Alarie. As
for Léopold Simoneau he was the most mellifluous and stylish Mozart
tenor of the 1950s, and in saying this I take into the reckoning
names such as Anton Dermota and Ernst Haefliger. The only one
seriously to challenge him was the young Nicolai Gedda, but he
soon developed into the lirico spinto fach, while Simoneau
remained a lirico, even though he sang roles as heavy as Don José
and Hoffmann. In connection with the Mozart celebrations in 1956
he recorded all the big tenor roles for a variety of record companies.
In this box are collected recordings that
have been hard to get track down. This is the commercial debut
of the finale from Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9. Two of the recordings
were originally issued by Concert Hall in the early 1960s:
Bach’s B minor Mass and an LP which contained
the first eight tracks on CD 1. This was one of my earliest
LPs - it carries No. 24 in my chronological catalogue - and
it is still, after 45 years, one of my favourite Mozart records.
Since then I have heard many versions of most of these arias
and duets but Alarie and Simoneau remain top contenders.
I must admit that I was rather disappointed
when I played the CD transfer. Not with the singing, which
is just as marvellous as I remembered it, but with the presentation.
On the LP the four duets and the four concert arias were mixed
to give a satisfying recital to listen to without interruption.
A live recital with the two singers would probably have been
arranged that way. Here we get the duets first and then the
arias. With programming facilities this is easy to correct
but it takes some time. What really worried me was the quality
of the transfers. I don’t know if Doremi have had the master tapes
available but I doubt it. The sound is, to be honest, bad
- especially afflicting the orchestral sound. All right, Concert
Hall were not famous for the highest of fi but my old LP pressing
sounds a lot more ‘modern’ than this. There is heavy distortion on the voices in forte
passages, which makes me wonder if a worn LP has been used
as ‘master’. But even then modern technique could easily have eliminated
such noise. I have, for personal use, transferred several
hundred LPs, in various conditions, to CD and the results
have been a good deal better than this - and my equipment
is far from sophisticated. So a black mark to Doremi and a
warning to intending buyers. The first CD is completed with
four arias that Pierrette Alarie recorded for Telefunken as
early as 1952 and there the sound is as good as one could
wish.
The characteristics of Alarie’s and Simoneau’s voices and styles as described in the first paragraph can
be applied to each and every number here. The brilliance of
Pierrette Alarie’s voice is paired with considerable warmth,
which is not always the case with light sopranos. Simoneau
starts the Così duet hesitantly and there is even some
strain but his honeyed soft singing is as apt as ever. It
is difficult to imagine more stylish Mozart singing. As Konstanze
and Belmonte in Die Entführung they are ideal. The
other two duets are more of a rarity. Spiegarti non poss’ io was composed on 10 March 1786 - while he
was working on Le nozze di Figaro - for a private performance
of Idomeneo three days later. It is lovely music: Contino’s and Sandrina’s duet
from La finta giardiniera, completed in January 1775,
is wholly delightful.
It is a pity that Mozart’s concert arias are not heard more frequently,
since many of them are real gems. Misero! o sogno has
an almost sacred tone in the opening recitative and Simoneau’s singing is unsurpassed. Per pietà was composed for
Valentin Adamsberger as inserts in Pasquale Anfossi’s opera Il curioso indiscreto for performances in Vienna
in 1783. It is dramatic and Simoneau is truly ardent - and
elegant.
For the same opera he also composed No,
no, che non sei capace for Aloysia Lange, to show off
her virtuoso technique. Pierrette Alarie sings it superbly
and she also invests it with feeling. Mia speranza adorata
was also composed for Aloysia, to a text from another
Anfossi opera, Zemira. The coloratura singing is faultless
and there is also dramatic flair. It is indeed a thousands
pities that the transfers are so amateurish. Walter Goehr
was a reliable conductor, one of Concert Hall’s Hauskapellmeister, and there
is little wrong with the Amsterdam orchestra, but the Hamburg
orchestra that accompanies Ms Alarie in the remaining arias
seems to be better and the conducting is vital. The recording
is closer and for a 1952 recording it is impressive. Just
listen to the introduction to Martern aller Arten.
Pierrette Alarie’s voice type should have made her more a natural choice for
Blonde, but she certainly has the measure for Konstanze too.
It is, to be honest, a hell of a role, with dramatic-tragic
outbursts as well as coloratura and requires brilliant top
as well as contralto bottom. Ms Alarie manages even the lowest
notes but they are undoubtedly rather sketchy. Anyway she
impresses greatly. She is even more in her natural element
as Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro, and the recording
also includes the recitative, even though the tracklist doesn’t say so. Lovely singing.
To include the complete B Minor Mass in a
box devoted to the soprano and the tenor might be regarded
as presumptuous, but it is not too bad a reading as a whole,
even though it feels a bit old-fashioned. Walter Goehr had
deep insight in both old and new music and in the early 1950s
he made the first - I believe - recording of Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea. I own a highlights disc and it
seems to me more authentic than the Glyndebourne version recorded
by EMI ten years later. Goehr also recorded a splendid Schöpfung
for Concert Hall - the last thing he did before his untimely
death in 1960. His Bach can appear as rather heavy and sometimes
plodding but his modern instrument orchestra play with some
sense of baroque style and there are some very good instrumental
solos. The chorus has power but is a bit uneven; there are
some squally sopranos sticking out here and there. The overall
impression is more than acceptable but I wouldn’t regard it as a recommended version
with such keep competition as there is today. Gloria in
excelsis with jubilant trumpets and a springy Cum sancto
spiritu are however well worth a listen.
Of the soloists Pierrette Alarie is splendid
in duets as well as in solos. Simoneau unfortunately is not
on best form in Benedictus. He is uncharacteristically
strained and uncomfortable. Grace Hoffman sings adequately
but is uninspired. Heinz Rehfuss, on the other hand, proves
once again that he was one of the best baroque singers of
the 1950s. He had a lightness and warmth that few others could
muster. Et in spiritum sanctum is probably the best
thing in the whole work. The sound is much better here than
in the Mozart, which was recorded at the same time - I guess:
they have adjacent catalogue numbers. The sound, though rather
flat, is much better than on the Mozart disc.
The Mozart songs are pure joy with a fresh
Ridente la calma and a humorous Männer suchen stets
zu naschen. Incidentally tracks 12 and 13 on CD 3 are
printed in the wrong order. The header to this review is correct.
Simoneau also stands out as a superb Lieder singer and his
Abendempfindung can challenge any version I have in
my collection. The singers, ‘joining
their voices for a duet for life’ as
Denis Alarie puts it in the liner notes, are truly well matched
in the Schumann duets, rarely heard but lovely. Just try Wiegenlied
and Liebesgarten and I’m sure you will be hooked. Unfortunately
there is some distortion here too. Both the Mozart and the
Schumann are CBC recordings.
The material on CD 4 is from live broadcasts,
as can be seen in the header. The finale of Beethoven’s Ninth gets a taut and vital reading in
more than acceptable sound. The timing, 27:18, might indicate
that it is slow but the length is due to extended applause
and a radio announcer afterwards, giving details of the performance
in both French and English. The chorus, un-credited in the
notes, is a well-drilled body and the soloists - at the time
possibly the four best Canadian singers - are well in the
picture. Maureen Forrester’s rounded voice is only briefly
heard. This solo part requires a top singer but at most performances
one only sees the world famous artist. Joseph Rouleau has
a tentative start to his solo - I suppose a microphone wasn’t on
- and he is a bit four-square. Simoneau is an ardent tenor
soloist, slightly strained at the top while his wife effortlessly
sails up to that high B on Flügel.
Fifteen years earlier Léopold Simoneau was
Oedipus in a broadcast concert performance of Oedipus Rex
in Paris. This is an historically interesting recording, with
the composer conducting and the author narrating. They recorded
it commercially for CBS a couple of years later with Peter
Pears as Oedipus, Marta Mödl as Jocasta and Heinz Rehfuss
as Creon, but here it is sung in French and hearing Simoneau
singing the title role in glorious voice is a real treat.
The supporting singers are good without being exceptional,
Zareska a bit throaty, and it is another treat to hear Cocteau’s lively and involved narration. The sound
is again, for such an early recording, quite remarkable.
There is a lot of valuable material here
and it is a pity that the quality of the transfers isn’t better. I hope volume two will be better in that respect.
There are still appetizing things to expect: from the Concert
Hall catalogue including a Carmen and a Les contes
d’Hoffmann, extensive highlights from Faust
and, if I am not mistaken, Handel’s Messiah.
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