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Teresa Berganza - The Art of Teresa Berganza (2020)

Teresa Berganza - The Art of Teresa Berganza (2020)

BAND/ARTIST: Teresa Berganza

  • Title: The Art of Teresa Berganza
  • Year Of Release: 2020
  • Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 5:36:14
  • Total Size: 1.26 GB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Suite populaire Espagnole : El Paño moruno
02. Los hombres con gran plazer
03. El majo timido
04. El Amor Brujo - Ballet by G. Martinez Sierra : Canción del fuego fátuo
05. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : La Tarara
06. Pulcinella - Revised Version of 1947 : 7. Allegretto "Contento forse vivere"
07. Rosa das rosas
08. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Los reyes de la baraja
09. El majo discreto
10. Santa María
11. Triste estaua el rey David
12. El sombrero de tres picos / Pt. 2 : Danza della molinera
13. Saeta en forme de Salve a la Virgen de la Esperanza
14. Stabat Mater, P. 77 : 4. Quae moerabat
15. Se tu m'ami, se sospiri (Arr. by Alessandro Parisotti)
16. Nuevas te traygo, carillo
17. La Maja dolorosa : 2. Ay! majo de mi vida
18. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : "Paco! Paco!" / "Mi Salud!"
19. "Piango, gemo sospiro" - Cantata (Arr. by Felix Lavilla)
20. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Nana de Sevilla
21. Pérdida de Antequera
22. Madama Butterfly / Act II : Chi sia?
23. No, non si speri (Arr. by Arne Oddvar Dorumsgaard)
24. Dime, triste corazón
25. Ysabel, perdiste la tu faxa
26. Seis canzones castellanas : 5. Cómo quieres que adivine
27. De dónde venis, amore?
28. Si me llaman a mí
29. Pámpano verde
30. Stabat Mater, P. 77 : 10. Fac ut portem
31. Stabat Mater : 5. Quis est homo
32. Suite populaire Espagnole : Polo
33. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Salud! / Qué pasa?
34. Carmen, WD 31 / Act 2 : "Les tringles des sistres tintaient"
35. Dindirindin
36. Dínos, madre del donsel
37. Carmen, WD 31 / Act 1 : Chanson et Duo: "Près des remparts de Séville"
38. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Vivan los que rien!
39. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Anda, jaleo
40. Carmen, WD 31 / Act 1 : "L'amour est un oiseau rebelle" (Havanaise)
41. Suite populaire Espagnole : Asturiana
42. Madama Butterfly / Act 2 : "Scuoti quella fronda di ciliegio"
43. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Los mozos de Monleón
44. El Fantasma
45. Con amores, la mi madre
46. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Ande la tarea, que hay que trabajar!
47. Romerico
48. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Mi querer es como el hierro
49. Il barbiere di Siviglia / Act 2 : No.11 Aria: "Contro un cor che accende amore"
50. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Abuela, no viene!
51. Claros y frescos ríos
52. Stabat Mater : 3. O quam tristis
53. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : Carmela mía!
54. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : Danza (II)
55. En la fuente del rosel
56. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Ah! ... Ah! ... Ande la tarea ...
57. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Romance de Don Boyso
58. Cantares
59. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : Allí está! Riyendo, junto á esa mujer
60. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Las morillas de Jaén
61. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Sevillanas del siglo XVIII
62. Alma, sintamos
63. Seis canzones castellanas : 3. Llámale con el panuelo
64. Canciones negras : Canción de cuna para dormir a un negrito
65. El tra la la y el Punteado
66. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : Qué gracia! Qué buscan ustedes aquí?
67. Canciones negras : Canto negro
68. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : No te dije? La vés?
69. Canciones negras : Cuba dentro de un piano
70. Canciones negras : Punto de Habanera
71. Pulcinella Ballet in one Act - Revised Version of 1947 : 10. Largo (Trio) "Sento dire no'ncè pace" - Allegro "Chi disse cà la femmena" - Presto (Duetto) "Ncè sta quaccuna po'"/"Una te fa
72. La vida breve - original version / Act 1 : Intermedio
73. Canciones negras : Chévere
74. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : "Olé! Olé ya!" / "Ay! Yo canto por soleares!"
75. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : Danza (I)
76. La vida breve - original version / Act 2 : (Intermedio)
77. La Maja dolorosa : 1. Oh! muerte cruel
78. La Maja dolorosa : 3. De aquel majo amante
79. Seis canzones castellanas : 4. No quiero tus avellanas
80. Il barbiere di Siviglia / Act 1 : "Una voce poco fa"
81. Il barbiere di Siviglia / Act 1 : No. 7 Duetto: "Dunque io son... tu non m'inganni?"
82. La clemenza di Tito, K.621 / Act 1 : "Parto, ma tu ben mio"
83. Madama Butterfly / Act 2 : Io so che alle pene - Excerpt
84. Suite populaire Espagnole : Seguidilla murciana
85. Suite populaire Espagnole : Jota
86. Suite populaire Espagnole : Nana
87. Suite populaire Espagnole : Cancion
88. La Didone - Arranged by Raimond Leppard / Act 1 : Lamento di Cassandra: L'alma fiacca svanì
89. Son ancor pargoletta - Arranged by Arne Oddvar Dorumsgaard
90. Vittoria, mio core! (Arr. by Luigi Dallapiccola)
91. Se Florindo è fedele (from "La donna ancora è fedele")
92. Se delitto è l'adorati (from Il Pompeo) - Arranged by Alessandro Parisotti
93. Il Flavio - Arranged by: Felix Lavilla : Chi vuole innamorarsi
94. Le violette - Arranged by Alessandro Parisotti
95. Selve amiche - Arranged by Luigi Dallapiccola
96. Come raggio di sol - Arranged by Alessandro Parisotti
97. L'Ateneide - Arranged by Alessandro Parisotti : Un certo non so che
98. Confusa, smarrita (spurious, attrib. L.Vinci) - Arranged by: Max Spicker
99. Toda mi vida os amé
100. Vos me matastes
101. Con qué la lavaré
102. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Los cuatro muleros
103. El gato montés - Rev. Miguel Roa / Act 1 : Salú p'a la gente güena! - Excerpt
104. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Las tres hojas
105. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : El café de Chinitas
106. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Los pelegrinitos
107. Trece canciones espanolas antiguas : Zorongo
108. La clemenza di Tito, K.621 / Act 2 : "Deh per questo istante solo"
109. La Cenerentola / Act 2 : "Nacqui all'affanno e al pianto"
110. Aquel caballero, madre

Mezzo-soprano Teresa Berganza's career always had something of a Spanish flavor to it, even though she excelled in Mozart and Rossini roles and other elements of the traditional repertory. She consistently championed Spanish music, from zarzuela (the Spanish musical theater genre), to the songs of Granados and Falla. She also sang the title role of Carmen frequently, bringing her own unique sense of the character (as well as extensive research, much of it in Spain, observing Spanish gypsy women) to both stage and recordings. A musician of unusual breadth and ability, Berganza was an accomplished pianist and organist, and even studied conducting and composition. Her voice, which had an impressive upper extension, managed to cross boundaries as well: in 1960 she was offered the role of Violetta -- a mainstay of the soprano repertory -- in Verdi's La traviata at La Scala in Milan.

Berganza studied at the Madrid Conservatory, under Lola Rodriguez Aragon, who herself studied with Elisabeth Schumann. She credits her teacher with the complete process of her development, from a raw talent to a polished artist; throughout her career, she continued to study with Aragon, developing interpretations or working out minor vocal problems. Berganza made her professional debut in 1956 at the Madrid Athenaeum in Schumann's song cycle Frauenliebe und -Leben, and made her operatic debut at the Aix-in-Provence Festival as Dorabella in Così fan tutte. She made her Glyndebourne debut in 1958 as Cherubino.

In the same year, she made her U.S. debut in Dallas, singing the comprimario role of Neris in a production of Medea. The Medea was Maria Callas, and Berganza later declared that she never learned as much about musical drama and stage discipline as from Callas, who treated her "like a younger sister," even insisting that Berganza be allowed to portray Neris as a young woman close to Medea's own age, rather than an older, matronly figure, as was customary. Berganza made her Covent Garden debut as Rosina in 1960; throughout the 1960s and early 1970s she sang mostly Rossini and Mozart. She made her Met debut as Cherubino in 1967.

Berganza first sang Carmen in 1977, and described it later as a deeply liberating experience -- personally as well as musically. In preparing the role, she visited Seville to observe gypsy women, read the original novel by Prosper Merimee, and studied the score deeply. She developed her own perceptions of Carmen: she was a free spirit within a restrictive culture, but far from being a prostitute or a tramp, and even possessing a certain sweetness. While many critics applauded her presentation, others found it lacking in blood and guts -- too "ladylike." (Berganza countered this with her observation that, far from being the flamboyant, hand-on-the-hip, promiscuous creatures of popular thinking, real Spanish gypsy women in fact follow a fairly rigid standard of decorum.) She brought the same kind of original thinking to the role of Zerlina in Don Giovanni, and in the famous Joseph Losey film, she sang her as a fully mature and sensual young woman, rather than a simple and bedazzled girl.

Berganza was also a prominent recitalist, specializing in Spanish song. Among her recordings, her Rosina (one of the most beautiful on record), and her collection of Spanish songs on Claves are both outstanding. ~ Anne Feeney


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