By now, so much ink, actual and virtual, has been spent arguing 
                pro and con Maria Callas that there's little point 
                in prolonging the discussion. So this review will offer the not-quite-random 
                thoughts and reactions engendered and provoked by this album - 
                which, by the way, I enjoyed immensely.  
              
The voice was huge. One understands this intellectually if one knows 
                    the history - how Serafin convinced Callas to step into Puritani 
                    while she was in Italy to sing the Walküre Brünnhilde. 
                    Since recording engineers compress the sound of big voices, 
                    to avoid overloading, record listeners have to take the size 
                    and amplitude of Callas's voice somewhat on faith. For the 
                    alert listener, it's the color changes that give the game 
                    away. The sense of a sudden upsurge of overtones as the soprano 
                    reaches the top of the staff - which happens only with large, 
                    well-produced voices - is almost visceral, even heard through 
                    the monaural recording. The downward transition, into the 
                    chest voice - and it is a real transition, not the squawking 
                    register break perpetrated by some would-be spintos 
                    - brings a subtler but still striking enrichment and darkening 
                    of the tone. 
                  
              
And Callas did know how to sing. This shouldn't 
                need to be spelled out, but one finds 
                the opinion circulating in various quarters 
                that the rapid erosion of the voice 
                was caused by poor technique. Lord knows 
                that's so, frequently enough, but in 
                this case, the Délibes and Meyerbeer 
                arias - sung by Callas in Italian translation 
                as listed above - should put paid to 
                that idea. It isn't just the way she 
                sails through the coloratura, moving 
                fluidly in and out of the topmost range 
                with ample reserves of tone, though 
                that's wonderful enough. Listen to her 
                dynamic control, alternating fortes 
                and firmly supported pianos for 
                the echo effects of Ombra leggera, 
                attacking the Bell Song's first note 
                strongly and diminishing to a gentler 
                mix. The CD is worth having, I think, 
                just for the two French pieces.  
              
Yes, there were technical irregularities, not yet full-blown problems 
                    in 1954. One wonders at the busy vowel formations; Callas 
                    pulls some bright "e" and "i" vowels into 
                    a dark "pocket," which doesn't particularly help 
                    either with intelligibility - Callas's is generally excellent 
                    - or with maintaining a consistent legato. Then there's that 
                    peculiarly bright, lifted "ah", particularly on 
                    sustained tones in the upper-middle, perhaps intended to keep 
                    the tone light. I suspect it was this formation - which tends 
                    also to lift the voice off its physical support - that would 
                    ultimately lead to the wiry, "flapping" high notes 
                    of later years, such as we hear in the 1955 recordings here. 
                    There's some unsteadiness, too, in the earlier recordings, 
                    and not on the highest notes. The top A-flat on "atroce" 
                    in Adriana Lecouvreur's first aria, the first "mai 
                    più" (a G) in La Wally, the high As in L'altra 
                    notte all betray varying degrees of unsteadiness; but 
                    the full-voiced climactic high Bs of the Chenier and 
                    Wally arias are firm. 
                  
Even admirers of Callas's acting didn't always realize how much the 
                    music of each role was the vehicle for her stage persona. 
                    More than most singers, Callas understood how the music complemented 
                    and extended the sense of the bald text, so that her musical 
                    discipline enhanced the dramatic side of her performances. 
                    The recitatives and arioso passages, where one can't 
                    hide behind a beautiful melody, make this more clearly evident 
                    than the arias, though you can sense the same involvement 
                    there. She brings immediacy to the opening lines of La 
                    mamma morta, simply by pacing them naturally, in the narrative 
                    rhythms of Italian. Similarly, the single recitative line 
                    that sets up Adriana Lecouvreur's first aria is spacious: 
                    not self-indulgent in the "aimless diva" manner 
                    of some students - and some divas! - but weighting the statement 
                    with care. 
                  
And Callas was more versatile than her renown in the big, tragic roles 
                    might suggest - she could play comedy, and she could sing 
                    "Classically." The care and musicianship she brought 
                    to her dramatic roles stood her in equally good stead for 
                    comedy, as this Una voce poco fa reveals. She sings 
                    the aria in Rossini's original mezzo key of E major, where 
                    most leggiero sopranos transpose it up. In this slightly 
                    lower range, the soprano's full timbral palette comes into 
                    play, making for a substantial character: the descending runs 
                    suggest, not a merely foxy Rosina, but a formidable one. 
                  
The Cherubini and Spontini performances, despite the occasional strain 
                    - the Medea lies a bit high for Callas's full voice 
                    - are models of how to realize the expressive capacity of 
                    music built on formal, contained structures and emotional 
                    reserve. (We get some of this in the Rossini as well, which 
                    after all isn't that far removed from the Classical style.) 
                    And, where the reserve itself is the point - as in the gently 
                    rocking pastoral rhythms of Caro oggetto - it is impeccably 
                    rendered. 
                  
              
Serafin's conducting is mostly excellent, save for the inexplicably 
                droopy interlude in Una voce poco fa. The sound is plausible. 
                There's a grainy tone to the Philharmonia in mono, especially 
                noticeable when they play out. But Callas's voice reproduces well, 
                only occasionally threatening to overwhelm the equipment, as it 
                did in the Puccini aria recital.
                
                Stephen Francis Vasta