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Franco Corelli - A Perfect (Italian) Tenor
Giuseppe VERDI (1813 – 1901)
Arias from Aida, Ernani, I Lombardi, La
forza del destino, Il trovatore
Umberto GIORDANO (1867 – 1948)
Arias from Andrea Chenier, Fedora
Pietro MASCAGNI (1863 – 1945)
Arias from Cavalleria rusticana, Lodoletta
Francesco CILEA (1866 – 1950)
Aria from Adriana Lecouvreur
Giacomo PUCCINI (1858 – 1924)
Arias from La fanciulla del West, Madama Butterfly,
Tosca, Turandot
Franco Corelli (tenor)
Loretta di Lelio (soprano) (6), Orchestra of RAI, Torino/Arturo
Basile
rec. 1954-1957
REGIS RRC 1315 [73:53]
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Born in Ancona in 1921, Franco Corelli initially intended to
follow in his father’s footsteps and become a shipbuilder. While
studying at the University of Bologna he took part in a singing
contest and was encouraged by the judges to study singing. Thus
he entered the Conservatory of Music in Pesaro. He was however
dissatisfied with his voice teachers and decided to be his own
teacher, listening to recordings of great singers of the past
and imitating them. In 1951, when he was already 30, he won
a singing competition in Florence and the same year he made
his stage debut at Spoleto as Don José in Carmen. During
the next few years he rose to fame in Italy, appearing in many
smaller houses but from 1953 to 1958 he was a leading tenor
at the Rome Opera, where he also sang opposite Maria Callas
for the first time in Norma. Guest appearances followed,
in Italy as well as internationally: La Scala for the first
time in 1954, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino and Arena di Verona
in 1955, Vienna State Opera and Covent Garden in 1957. It was
during these years that he made the recordings on the present
disc for Cetra. For that company he also recorded his first
complete opera, Aida, in 1956. In the late 1950s he was
signed by EMI and during the next decade he recorded a number
of complete operas and recitals. Highlights from those years
are available in a 4-CD box at super budget price (see review).
Together with this Regis disc we get a fairly full picture of
Corelli from the fifteen years when he was at the height of
his powers. During this period his voice was remarkably intact
and I don’t believe that it is possible with certainty to decide
in a blindfold test which recordings are from the beginning
and which from the end of the period. In those cases where he
recorded arias several times the interpretations are usually
very similar.
He made three studio recordings of Celeste Aida. The
earliest one is the opening number on the present disc, recorded
in 1955. The voice is in glorious shape; he holds the climactic
high notes seemingly forever and scoops up to them. Other tenors
have been more tasteful but few as brilliant – and he has nuance
as well. On the complete recording a year later his delivery
is beefier, more forceful but basically very similar. In both
cases he disobeys Verdi’s morendo marking on the final
B flat. A dozen years later when he recorded the opera complete
again, with Birgit Nilsson as his Aida, he had matured stylistically
and makes a superb diminuendo. Corelli was an exhibitionist,
whether showing off his volume or his diminuendo, but in that
particular case his artistic sense had deepened – and the voice
is just as glorious.
The Verdi arias were new to me and they are valuable even though
one misses the stylishness of Bergonzi. He is on his best behaviour
in the Forza aria, one of Verdi’s greatest tenor arias.
Manrico in Il trovatore was one of his greatest roles
on stage – he recorded it for EMI under Schippers in the early
1960s. Here Ah, si ben mio is full of light and shade
but it is marred by sobs and other ‘dramatic’ effects. Di
quella pira has generously held high notes. There is also
a very good comprimario tenor as Ruiz and a serviceable Leonora,
his wife-to-be Loretta di Lelio.
Corelli’s larger-than-life approach is better suited to the
verismo repertoire and the two arias from Andrea Chenier
are among the best, impressively stylish and with that typical
thrill and wholehearted involvement. The Fedora arias
are also well executed but even more engaging is the excerpt
from Cavalleria rusticana. The intensity and identification
is certainly tangible and a few sobs near the end are only part
of the style. The remaining items by Mascagni, Cilea and Puccini
are just as engaging. The Tosca and Turandot arias
are good to have in these early versions for comparison with
his complete recordings a decade later, both incidentally opposite
Birgit Nilsson. The very last number, Nessun dorma, is
afflicted by some distortion. Otherwise the sound is fully acceptable.
Cetra were not famous for hi-fi sound in those days.
Some years ago all these verismo arias were issued on
the Urania label, plus two arias from Pagliacci and as
a bonus three substantial excerpts from the complete Aida.
Those who invested in that issue may probably want the present
disc for the Verdi numbers but the best proposition is to keep
the Urania disc and buy the EMI box.
In spite of some misgivings for stylistic reasons, Corelli is
still one of the most glorious tenors who ever set foot in a
recording studio. He will without doubt be remembered for many
years to come. These early offerings are as valuable for the
knowledge of his art as were Caruso’s 1902 records for the appreciation
of his art. Both singers grew considerably in maturity.
Göran Forsling
Full track listing:
Giuseppe VERDI (1813 – 1901)
Aida
1. Se quel guerrier io fossi … Celeste Aida [4:55]
Ernani
2. Merce diletti amici … Come rugiada al cespite [3:54]
I Lombardi
3. La mia letizia infondere [2:34]
La forza del destino
4. La vita inferno … O tu che seno in angeli [6:53]
Il trovatore
5. Deserto sulla terra [1:49]
6. Ah, si ben mio … Di quella pira [8:36]
Umberto GIORDANO (1867 – 1948)
Andrea Chenier
7. Improvviso: Un di all’azzuro spazio [5:48]
8. Come un bel di di maggio [3:22]
Fedora
9. Amor ti vieta [3:23]
10. Mia madre, la mia vecchia madre … Vedi io piango
[7:06]
Pietro MASCAGNI (1863 – 1945)
Cavalleria rusticana
11. Mamma quell vino e generoso [4:00]
Lodoletta
12. Se Franz dicesse il vero [5:03]
Francesco CILEA (1866 – 1950)
Adriana Lecouvreur
13. La dolcissima effige [2:16]
Giacomo PUCCINI (1858 – 1924)
La fanciulla del West
14. Una parola sola! … Or son sei mesi [3:49]
Madama Butterfly
15. Addio fiorito asil [1:51]
Tosca
16. E lucevan le stele [2:56]
Turandot
17. Non piangere Liů [2:37]
18. Nessun dorma [3:00]
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