It seems that Mirella Freni has always been around, even to those 
                of us who started listening to opera in the early 1960s. She remains 
                a relative youngster, born in 1935. But she set out early, making 
                her stage debut before she turned 20 – as Micaëla in Carmen 
                at Modena. This was for many years one of her signature roles 
                and she sang it in opera houses for almost 25 years and then recorded 
                it three times plus taking part in Karajan’s film of the opera. 
                She bade farewell to the stage only three years ago, aged 70. 
                Longevity as an opera singer is often a result of clever husbandry 
                of the vocal resources, and Mirella Freni was wise. After her 
                initial successes she took time out for four years, marrying her 
                singing teacher and giving birth to her only child, a daughter 
                named Micaela. After resuming the career she was very careful 
                to accept only roles that suited her lyric soprano. It was not 
                until she was well past forty that she gradually took on some 
                lirico-spinto roles, three of which are featured in this collection. 
              
She recorded extensively, 
                    initially for EMI, a company with which she had a long relationship. 
                    There were also a number of highly successful operas for Decca 
                    in the 1970s – La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, 
                    Mefistofele and Guglielmo Tell, all of them 
                    with her childhood friend Luciano Pavarotti.  Freni later 
                    also recorded several sets for DG.
                  
The present selection 
                    spans almost 25 years and there are few signs of aging. One 
                    should bear in mind that when she recorded La forza del 
                    destino with Muti she was already past 50. Her DG Butterfly 
                    and a Decca recital from even later are just as fresh.
                  
What we have in 
                    this box is material from three solo recitals from the 1960s, 
                    conducted by her first husband, Leone Magiera and by Antonino 
                    Votto and Franco Ferraris. There are also a couple of excerpts 
                    from a contemporaneous duet record with Nicolai Gedda. The 
                    rest is material culled from various complete opera sets. 
                    All of it seems to have been fed into a food processor and 
                    mixed into a hotchpotch. There is no discernible logic about 
                    the programming, neither chronological nor thematic. Maybe 
                    the object was to make every one of the four discs as varied 
                    as possible. Thanks to the utter consistency of Mirella Freni’s 
                    voice we never get a feeling of jumping back and forth through 
                    a career. I would still have preferred a more evidently thought-through 
                    design. The comparable Icon portrait of Giuseppe Di Stefano, 
                    which I reviewed recently, was much better in that respect.
                  
On the other hand 
                    this is practically the only criticism I can pose against 
                    this issue. With very well filled discs - more than five hours 
                    playing time - we get as rounded a portrait of Ms Freni’s 
                    repertoire and career as is possible from one company’s archives. 
                    It is also good to hear her in duets. The Karajan Aida 
                    in particular gives us opportunities to hear her in true dramatic 
                    situations with an almost complete Nile scene and the entire 
                    tomb scene.
                  
The earliest recordings 
                    here are the two arias from La bohème, recorded in 
                    1962 and 1963. I have always regarded this as one of the best 
                    recordings of this opera. Freni makes a truly lovely Mimi. 
                    I have a number of outstanding versions of La bohème 
                    and, together with Victoria de los Angeles, Freni is the most 
                    enchanting seamstress of them all. Her Rodolfo was Nicolai 
                    Gedda and of him we hear only Si in the first aria. 
                    They got together again a few years later in L’elisir d’amore, 
                    another top contender, and together they also recorded duets 
                    at about the same time. Sonnambula and Lucia di 
                    Lammermoor are represented here and these are the only 
                    excerpts from these operas by Freni. Gedda is his usual keen 
                    and sensitive self in all this. Freni, though no coloratura 
                    virtuoso, is more attractive than some mechanical nightingales. 
                    They sound well together and Gedda has openly declared that 
                    Mirella Freni was his favourite soprano.
                  
There is more 
                    bel canto repertoire in Don Pasquale, and this 
                    is still another set that has claims to be a first choice. 
                    Sesto Bruscantini’s flexible voice has dried out a bit, compared 
                    to his early Cetra recording from 1950, but his expressivity 
                    and timing are as good as ever and Freni seems to enjoy herself 
                    unabashedly. Another Swedish tenor, the late lamented Gösta 
                    Winbergh, is among the most mellifluous of Ernestos in Tornami 
                    a dir, a duet Mirella Freni also recorded with Gedda on 
                    the aforementioned duet record.
                  
Mirella Freni 
                    was a highly accomplished Mozart singer, sang Zerlina and 
                    Susanna at Glyndebourne and Salzburg and recorded both roles 
                    with Colin Davis on Philips. Zerlina she also sang at Covent 
                    Garden under Georg Solti and a live recording 
                    from 1962 was issued not so long ago. A few years later she 
                    was also Klemperer’s Zerlina on his monumental recording. 
                    We hear both her arias – and few have sung them better. She 
                    is also heard in the duet La ci darem la mano, where 
                    she is partnered by her second-husband-to-be, the Bulgarian 
                    bass Nicolai Ghiaurov. He is a virile but none too subtle 
                    Don Giovanni. From her earliest recital (1964) we also get 
                    an aria from Le nozze di Figaro; not Susanna’s however, 
                    but the Countess’s Dove sono from act III. This recital 
                    also included Qui la voce from I puritani and 
                    Violetta’s big scene from the first act of La traviata. 
                    As Elvira she can’t quite compete with Sutherland or Sills 
                    or present day star Natalie Dessay but she is worth hearing 
                    anyway. Her Violetta is human and vulnerable but the jubilant 
                    final note of Sempre libera reveals that here was already 
                    a spinto in the making. From the same recital also comes a 
                    fine Depuis le jour from Louise and a delicious 
                    Senza mamma from Suor Angelica, the latter curiously 
                    squeezed in between extended excerpts from Karajan’s Don 
                    Carlo and Aida.
                  
With her husband 
                    Magiera she recorded Puccini arias from operas that she hadn’t 
                    sung at the time and so far as the stage is concerned never 
                    would. Even so, she made complete recordings of Madama 
                    Butterfly and Tosca. There was also a Manon 
                    Lescaut which she actually did on stage later – and also 
                    tackled some real ‘light’ Puccini arias from Gianni Schicchi 
                    and La rondine. On this set we also find Liù’s two 
                    arias from Turandot. They are from a 1977 recording 
                    under Alain Lombard, also starring Montserrat Caballé and 
                    José Carreras. They are by far the best things on that recording 
                    (see review 
                    of highlights disc).
                  
The third recital 
                    from the 1960s, conducted by Antonino Votto, included a couple 
                    of verismo arias from Adriana Lecouvreur and Mascagni’s 
                    Lodoletta; the latter remembered today only through 
                    Flammen, perdonami. Mirella Freni invests these with 
                    a glow that more than compensates the possible lack of spinto 
                    weight. On this recital there were also some French arias. 
                    Even though her French wasn’t ever wholly idiomatic she was 
                    one of the foremost sopranos in this repertoire. As Micaëla 
                    she was exemplary but Leila’s aria from Les Pêcheurs des 
                    perles is a lovely performance and Manon’s act II aria 
                    is beautifully sung with appropriate frail timbre.
                  
Still in French 
                    repertoire we hear her in excerpts from three complete sets. 
                    The waltz aria from Roméo et Juliette has a youthful 
                    elegance and innocence that gives the essence of Juliet – 
                    there are few better. With Franco Corelli as an ardent Romeo 
                    in the second act duet O nuit divine there is glow 
                    aplenty but also a coarseness of style from the tenor that 
                    jars against the slender-limbed music. To hear an idiomatic 
                    version we have to go to the duet from Mireille, where 
                    Alain Vanzo stands out as the superior French tenor of the 
                    period. On the third set, Faust, she was partnered 
                    by Placido Domingo, who was in splendid voice. It is a pity 
                    that their garden scene couldn’t be included. As it is Marguerite’s 
                    Thule-ballad and jewel song are splendid samples, though one 
                    misses the heavenly lightness of Victoria de los Angeles.
                  
There remain five 
                    late-18th century Italian operas to be assessed. 
                    The latest as composition but the earliest as recording is 
                    the enchanting recording of Mascagni’s L’amico Fritz. 
                    This constituted the first collaboration on records with Luciano 
                    Pavarotti. The opera may not be an immortal masterpiece but 
                    it offers a lot of lovely music and the two Modena-born star 
                    singers have rarely been better. (See review 
                    of complete set, included in a recent memorial issue of Pavarotti’s 
                    complete EMI recordings.) Karajan’s second Otello from 
                    1973 - his first recording from a good decade earlier was 
                    on Decca – recently reissued - may be quirkily balanced but 
                    besides Mirella Freni’s vulnerable Desdemona we also get to 
                    hear arguably the greatest Otello from the last 50 years. 
                    A recent correspondent called attention to Ramon Vinay. Many 
                    regard the bronze-toned Mario del Monaco as superior. Placido 
                    Domingo has dominated the world’s stages for thirty years 
                    and recorded it three times plus some pirates and DVDs. I 
                    am of the opinion that no one surpasses Giuseppe Giacomini, 
                    who unfortunately, to my knowledge at least, never recorded 
                    the role complete; at least there are some central solos on 
                    a Bongiovanni recital. Anyway, Jon Vickers is so self-exposed 
                    and tangibly neurotic even in the first act love duet, which 
                    normally is only a preamble to the destructive mental turmoil 
                    that follows, that the listener is already clinging firmly 
                    to the arm-rests before the aural curtain is down. His way 
                    of squeezing the tone isn’t always attractive but he, like 
                    Giacomini who also squeezes sometimes, works primarily with 
                    soft nuances and understatements, only to overwhelm with fortissimo 
                    outbreaks that seem to reveal an untamed wild beast within 
                    his human frame. Mirella Freni, without the spinto tones of 
                    a Renata Tebaldi, balances this with innocence and frailty.
                  
From Muti’s La 
                    forza del destino, we hear three excerpts 
                    and in the first of them Placido Domingo, in glorious form 
                    impresses greatly as Alvaro. Freni in 1986 is slightly more 
                    vibrant than in the earlier recordings, as befits a lirico 
                    spinto, but she retains her ability to sings a ravishing pianissimo. 
                    In the Karajan-conducted Don Carlo, she sings opposite 
                    José Carreras in the duet Io vengo a domandar from 
                    act I (Karajan opts for the four act version). He is as involved 
                    as ever in the Giuseppe Di Stefano manner, sensitive to nuances, 
                    never afraid of scaling down to pianissimo but tending to 
                    press too hard in the climactic moments, where his voice is 
                    a size too small for the role. Karajan does nothing to make 
                    it easier for him. With a recording that at the time was record 
                    breaking in wide dynamics, Carreras tends to emerge as second 
                    best while Freni’s brighter tones more easily ride the orchestra. 
                    Her last act aria  is winning more through the exquisite lyrical 
                    singing than for dramatic power and Karajan’s rather expansive 
                    tempos also seem to hamper her.
                  
The final opera, 
                    and further represented in the last excerpts on CD 4, is Aida, 
                    also under Karajan. Here EMI generously bestow 49 minutes 
                    of music: from act I O Patria mia; from act III the 
                    whole Nile scene, bar the opening orchestral prelude and the 
                    priests’ chorus; and from act IV all of the tomb scene. There 
                    is a lot of gain in having a mainly lyric soprano for this 
                    Ethiopian slave-girl and both arias are exquisitely sung. 
                    In the Nile scene she first encounters her father Amonasro 
                    in the shape of the formidable Piero Cappuccilli, who may 
                    not have had the most beautiful baritone voice in the world 
                    but certainly had few if any superiors when it came to singing 
                    long Verdian phrases. The father-daughter duet is a chilling 
                    experience and when Amonasro has hidden, José Carreras appears 
                    as a full-throated and expressive Radamès. His duet 
                    with Aida is just as chilling – we know the outcome – but 
                    even though we deplore Aida’s treachery to the one who loves 
                    her, we admire the way she traps him. Una novella patria 
                    is sung with such innocence and bewitching simplicity that 
                    not even Domingo could have resisted. The tomb scene is rather 
                    scaled down and performed in a kind of resigned gloom. Karajan’s 
                    reading has become somewhat slower since he first recorded 
                    it for Decca with Tebaldi and Bergonzi twenty years earlier, 
                    but not extremely so.
                  
Not following 
                    the layout of the CD-set under consideration I may be accused 
                    of making even more of a hotch-potch out of it. At least I 
                    found, more or less, a structure of my own that made it easier 
                    to find connections within the set. Whatever reservations 
                    I have had have been rather unimportant in relation to all 
                    this excellence. This remains a splendid introduction to the 
                    art of Mirella Freni for a younger generation of opera lovers. 
                    For all her old admirers it is also a glowing résumé of her 
                    achievements during the first 25 years of her career. She 
                    was one of the loveliest sopranos during the second half of 
                    the last century and at this super-budget price no one can 
                    afford not to buy it.
                  
Göran Forsling 
                  
              
see also Review 
                by Robert Farr
                
                Full Tracklist 
                CD 1 
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756 – 1791) 
                Don Giovanni 
                1. La ci darem la mano [3:16] 
                2. Batti, batti, o bel Masetto [4:44] 
                
                3. Vedrai, carino [3:47] 
                Vincenzo BELLINI (1801 – 1835) 
                La sonnambula 
                4. Son geloso del zefiro errante [6:41] 
                Gaetano DONIZETTI (1797 
                – 1848) 
                Don Pasquale 
                5. Quel guardo il cavaliere [2:09] 
                6. So anch’io la virtù magica [3:58] 
                7. Signorina, in tanta fretta dove va [2:42] 
                
                8. È finita, Don Pasquale [3:05] 
                9. Via, caro sposino [2:47] 
                10. Tornami a dir che m’ami [3:29] 
                L’elisir d’amore 
                11. Chiedi all’aura lusinghiera [6:06] 
                12. Eccola … Oh! Quale accresce [1:24] 
                13. Prendi. Prendi, per me sei libero 
                [3:48] 
                14. Ebben, tenete. Poiché non sono 
                amato [1:54] 
                Giacomo PUCCINI (1858 
                – 1924) 
                La bohème 
                15. Si. Mi chiamano Mimi [4:54] 
                16. Addio … Donde lieta uscì al tuo grido [3:19] 
                Charles GOUNOD (1818 
                – 1893) 
                Mireille 
                17. La brise esr douce et parfumèe [4:36] 
                
                Roméo et Juliette 
                18. Voyons, nourrice, on m’attend! Parle vite! [1:23] 
                19. Je veux vivre dans ce rêve [3:36] 
                20. O nuit divine! Je t’emplore [8:22]
                CD 2
                Giuseppe VERDI (1813 – 1901) 
                Otello 
                1. Già nella notte densa [2:48] 
                2. Quando narravi l’esule tua vita … Ed 
                io vedea le tue tempie … Venga la morte! 
                [8:10] 
                3. Mia madre aveva una povera ancella … Piangea 
                cantando nell’arma landa [8:29] 
                4. Ave Maria, piena di grazia [4:57] 
                
                Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART 
                
                Le nozze di Figaro 
                5. E Susanna non vien! … Dove sono [6:42] 
                
                Vincenzo BELLINI 
                
                I puritani 
                6. O rendetemi la speme … Qui la voce … Vien, 
                diletto [7:38] 
                Giuseppe VERDI 
                La traviata 
                7. È strano! … Ah! Fors’è lui … Sempre libera 
                [7:34] 
                Pietro MASCAGNI (1863 – 1945) 
                L’amico Fritz 
                8. Son pochi fiori! [3:32] 
                9. Bel cavaliere, che vai per la foresta 
                [2:22] 
                10. Suzel, buon di [4:11] 
                11. Non mi resta che il pianto ed il dolore [2:39] 
                Gaetano DONIZETTI  
                
                Lucia di Lammermoor 
                12. Ah! talor del tuo pensiero … Verranno 
                a te sull’aure I miei sospiri ardenti [5:31] 
                Francesco CILEA (1856 
                – 1950) 
                Adriana Lecouvreur 
                13. Ecco! Respire appena … Io son l’umile ancella [3:30] 
                
                14. Poveri fiori [2:46] 
                Giacomo PUCCINI 
                Madama Butterfly 
                15. Un bel di, vedremo [4:26] 
                16. Tu, tu piccolo iddio! [2:28]
                CD 3
                Georges BIZET (1838 – 
                1875) 
                Carmen 
                1. C’est des contrebandiers … Je dis que rien 
                ne m’épouvante [5:56] 
                Les Pêcheurs des perles 
                2. Me voilà seule … Comme autrefois [6:28] 
                Jules MASSENET (1842 
                – 1912) 
                Manon 
                3. Allons! Il le faut pour lui-même … Adieu, notre petite table 
                [4:07] 
                Charles GOUNOD 
                Faust 
                4. Je voudrais bien savoir … Il était un roi 
                de Thulé [5:49] 
                5. Un bouquet! … Ô Diey! Que de bijoux … Ah! Je ris [5:28] 
                
                Giuseppe VERDI 
                La forza del destino 
                6. Ah, per sempre, o mio bell’angiol … Pronti destrieri … Ah! 
                Seguirti fino agl’ultimi [7:00] 
                7. Sono giunta! … Grazie, O Dio [1:36] 
                8. Madre, pietosa Vergine [4:44] 
                9. Pace, pace, mio Dio [5:09] 
                Giacomo PUCCINI 
                Gianni Schicchi 
                10. O mio babbino caro [2:47] 
                La rondine 
                11. Chi il bel sogno di Doretta [2:37] 
                Gustave CHARPENTIER (1860 
                – 1956) 
                Louise 
                12. Depuis le jour [5:55] 
                Pietro MASCAGNI 
                
                Lodoletta 
                13. Ah! Il suo nome! … Flammen, perdonami! 
                [4:50] 
                Giacomo PUCCINI 
                Tosca 
                14. Vissi d’arte, vissi d’amore [3:40] 
                
                Manon Lescaut 
                15. In quelle trine morbide [2:38] 
                Turandot 
                16. Signore, ascolta! [2:50] 
                17. Tu, che di gel sei cinta [5:07] 
                
                CD 4
                Giuseppe VERDI 
                Don Carlo 
                1. Io vengo a domandar [11:24] 
                2. Tu che le vanità [12:06] 
                Giacomo PUCCINI 
                Suor Angelica 
                3. Senza mamma [5:08] 
                Giuseppe VERDI 
                Aida 
                4. Ritorna vincitor! [6:52] 
                5. Qui Radamés verrà! [1:50] 
                6. O Patria mia [6:07] 
                7. Ciel! Mio padre [1:14] 
                8. Rivedrai le foreste imbalsamate [7:12] 
                
                9. Pur ti riveggo, mia dolce Aida [1:28] 
                
                10. Nel fiero anelito di nuova guerra [1:46] 
                
                11. Fuggiam gli ardori inospiti … La, tra foreste 
                vergini [6:50] 
                12. Ma dimmi; per qual via [3:21] 
                
                13. La fatal pietra sovra me sì chiuse … Immenso Fthà [7:02] 
                14. O terra addio [5:17]