Prepping for this great work. Am I alone in thinking that Verdi had learned much from Wagner by this late stage - but his great innovation was to compress it all into a fraction of the time.
Glyndebourne will this time have the OAE in the pit. Wonder how that will change the sound world. They will doubtless have researched instruments, how they were set up, performance practice etc.
But will they have listened to early recordings?
There's a very strange recording from 1903 of Verdi's original Falstaff, Victor Maurel. They were experimenting with how to make this new-fangled medium work. Then there's the engaging Antonio Magini-Coletti from 1905; the Big Voice - Titta Ruffo from 1922; and Lord Harewood's nomination as the finest Falstaff he ever heard, Mariano Stabile, recorded in the 1920s and 40s.
The only early female recordings I have are of the bewitching Frances Alda in 1910 as Nannetta/Queen of the Fairies and of the lovely Toti Dal Monte in the same aria in 1929.
How lucky we are to have all these. Will any of the singers at Glyndebourne have studied them?
Glyndebourne will this time have the OAE in the pit. Wonder how that will change the sound world. They will doubtless have researched instruments, how they were set up, performance practice etc.
But will they have listened to early recordings?
There's a very strange recording from 1903 of Verdi's original Falstaff, Victor Maurel. They were experimenting with how to make this new-fangled medium work. Then there's the engaging Antonio Magini-Coletti from 1905; the Big Voice - Titta Ruffo from 1922; and Lord Harewood's nomination as the finest Falstaff he ever heard, Mariano Stabile, recorded in the 1920s and 40s.
The only early female recordings I have are of the bewitching Frances Alda in 1910 as Nannetta/Queen of the Fairies and of the lovely Toti Dal Monte in the same aria in 1929.
How lucky we are to have all these. Will any of the singers at Glyndebourne have studied them?
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