TodOpera : Música y Mas Música! – Página 1067

Puccini. Manon Lescaut. 1968. Met. Renata Tebaldi. John Alexander. Frank Guarrera. Raymond Michalski, Charles Anthony Dir.: F. Molinari Pradelli
http://www.mediafire.com/?bbsuubb627zezue
http://www.mediafire.com/?rrzoztmo3xji72c

Beethoven.Fidelio. 1958.Buenos Aires. T. Colon.  Gre Brouwenstijn. Hans Hopf. Paul Schöffler. Arnold Van Mill. Olga Chelavine. Murray Dickie. Angelo Mattiello Dir.: Thomas Beecham.
http://www.mediafire.com/?yxwjtbook7m58r6
http://www.mediafire.com/?aai6nu52dnfjrq9

Reinhard Keiser.Der blutige und sterbende Jesus.Cantus & Capella Thuringia. Dir.:Bernhard Klapprott

Gaston Micheletti. Recital.
http://rapidshare.com/files/454193371/Gaston_Micheletti.rar

Gaston Micheletti

Verdi. Aida. 1982. Roma.Mara Zampieri. Mariana Paunova (Amneris). Cornelio Murgu (Radames). Carlo Zardo (Ramfis). Luigi de Corato (Amonasro). Dir.: Peter Maag.




Moussorgksy. Kovanshina. 1950 (en ingles) .Lawrence Tibbett. Brian Sullivan. Risë Stevens (Marfa). Jerome Hines (Sodifei). Charles Kullman (Golisin). Robert Weede. Leslie Chabay. Anne Bollinger. Polyna Stoska. Dir.: Emil Cooper




Verdi. Un Ballo in Maschera.  1966. Met. Regine Crespin. Carlo Bergonzi. Sherrill Milnes. Ruza Baldani (Ulrica). Jeanette Scovotti. Lorenzo Alvary. Louis Sgarro. Robert Goodle Dir.: F. Molinari Pradelli




Wagner.Tristan und Isolde.1952.Bayreuth. Martha Mödl. Ramon Vinay. Ludwig Weber. Ira Malaniuk. Hans Hotter. Hermann Uhde. Gerard Stolze
http://hotfile.com/dl/112777492/bd1ee44/Tristan_Karajan52.rar.html

Massenet.Werther. 1946. Paris. Georges Thill.Ninon VallinGeraldine Feraldy (Sophie). Marcel Rocque (Albdert).Dir.: Elie Cohen. Con fragmentos de: Cid, Herodiades, Mnon y Sapho  por Till entre 1930 y 1937
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=0B0O06DEhttp://www.megaupload.com/?d=1ISI6T0Q

Beethoven. Fidelio. 1944. Rose Bampton. Herbert Janssen. Jan Peerce. Nicola Moscona. Eleonor Steber. Joseph Laderoute. NBC. Dir.: A. Toscanini. Incluye fragmentos del festival de Salzburgo de 1936 con Lotte Lehmann, Hermann Gallos, Luise Helletsgruber, Anton Baumann(Fil. de Viena)
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=0WI7F2BQhttp://www.megaupload.com/?d=RP5791DN

Jan Peerce

Before Jan Peerce became one of the world’s most revered singers, he was Jacob Perelmuth who, as Pinky Pearl, performed at Jewish weddings in New York City. The man Arthur Toscanini called “his” tenor bisected the realms of dance halls, concert stages, opera houses and musical comedy theaters.
Peerce was as comfortable singing Bach as he was the “Bluebird of Happiness,” and at the age of 67 he was delighting Broadway audiences as Tevye in “Fiddler on the Roof.”.He attended medical school briefly but dropped out to marry Alice Kalmanowitz, a neighbor.In 1932 Peerce was discovered by impresario Samuel L. (Roxy) Rothafel who heard him sing “Yours Is My Heart Alone” at the Hotel Astor.
In the nine years between his discovery by Rothafel and his Metropolitan debut in 1941, he sang on local and national radio shows, and appeared regularly at Radio City Music Hall and the Paramount Theater in New York.Peerce was heard by Toscanini who auditioned him and pronounced: “He has the beautiful voice.” Thus developed an association that began on Feb. 6, 1938, at Carnegie Hall with Beethoven’s 9th Symphony and did not end until shortly before the maestro’s death in 1957. The pair produced some of the best recorded opera music of the 1940s and ’50s.
Peerce came to sing 19 carefully chosen roles at the Met in the next two decades but turned down Toscanini, who wanted him for “Aida.” He also rejected “Il Trovatore” and “Siegfried,” realizing that the heavier tenor roles could limit a career that was late out of the starting gate.
He sang Pinkerton in “Madama Butterfly,” Cavaradossi in “Tosca,” the title role in “Faust,” Edgar in “Lucia di Lammermoor,” Don Alvaro in “La Forza del Destino” and a perennial Don Jose opposite Rise Stevens’ “Carmen.”
He became America’s own tenor—the self-effacing “favorite uncle” who dropped into your hometown regularly to sing. He also toured the world, becoming in 1956 the first American to perform at Moscow’s Bolshoi Opera after World War II.
If he never generated the wild acclaim of a Pavarotti or a Caruso, he was the steady, ready-to-sing, faithful-to-the-music performer who almost always filled the concert hall.
His concert appearances were a melding of music from Italy, Germany, America and the Hebraic tradition. “Bluebird of Happiness,” which was also the title of his 1976 biography, sold more than a million records. Late in life he became a late-night favorite with appearances on the Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin shows.
— Burt A. Folkart in the Los Angeles Times Dec. 17, 1984

Aporte de Lele El Veneciano:

Monteverdi. L´incoronazione di Poppea. 1967. Milan. Grace Bumbry. Giuseppe di Stefano. Leyla Gener. Alberto Rinaldi. Carlo Cava. Gloria Lane. Anna Novelli. Maria Casula.  Regolo Romani. Mirella Fiorentini. Lorenzo Testi.l Alfredo Giacomotti. Edith Martelli. Piero de Palma. Mario Carlin. Dir.: Bruno Maderna
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=MJI3ZGTX