- Audio CD (May 24, 1994)
- Number of Discs: 2
- Label: Classics for Pleasur
- ASIN: B000003X6Y
- Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
- Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #867,355 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
Product Details
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| Disc: 1 | |||
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| 1. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Prelude | |||
| 2. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Sur la grève en feu | |||
| 3. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Amis, interrompez vos danses | |||
| 4. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Mais qui vient là? | |||
| 5. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Demeure parmi nous, Nadir | |||
| 6. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: C'est toi, qu'enfin je revois | |||
| 7. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Au fond du temple saint | |||
| 8. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Amotié sainte | |||
| 9. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Que vois-je? | |||
| 10. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act One: Sois la bienvenue | |||
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| Disc: 2 | |||
| 1. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Me voilà seule dans la nuit | |||
| 2. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: De mon amie, Fleur endormie | |||
| 3. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Leïla! Leïla! Dieu puissant, le voilà! | |||
| 4. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Ton coeur n'a pas compris le mein | |||
| 5. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Ah! revenez à la raison | |||
| 6. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Dans cet asile sacré | |||
| 7. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Two: Arrâtez! Arrâtez! | |||
| 8. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Three: Part One; L'orage s'est calmé | |||
| 9. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Three: Part One; O Nadir, tendre ami de mon jeune âge | |||
| 10. Les Pêcheurs de perles, opera in 3 acts: Act Three: Part One; Je frémis | |||
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Rushed.,
By Jeffrey Connell (Fremont, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bizet: Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) / Cotrubas, Vanzo, Soyer, Sarabia; Prêtre (Audio CD)
This recording comes in about 25 minutes shorter than the others I own, and it shows: every movement feels like the conductor truly does not know the meaning of such terms as "largo", "andante", etc. The chorus is also quite muffled, which ruins a few of the movements -- L'ombre descend des cieux in particular. The principals are, by and large, suited for their roles, with the exception of Guillermo Sarabia as Zurga. His voice is far too thick and heavy, and his range is not up to some of the more demanding parts of the score.This is the only opera that I truly love, and this recording does not do it justice. Of the recordings I own, I would recommend the Hendricks, Aler, Quilico, and Courtis recording on the same label, conducted by Michel Plasson. Hendricks is quite possibly the best Léïla I've ever heard. If you're looking for the "edited" 1893 version of the opera (as opposed to this, the original 1863 version), EMI Classics also has yet another recording with Micheau, Gedda, Blanc, and Mars, conducted by Dervaux. Janine Micheau's Léïla is perhaps a trifle too heavy, but good nonetheless.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Cotrubas and Vanzo are good in the dreary 1863 version,
By
This review is from: Bizet: Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) / Cotrubas, Vanzo, Soyer, Sarabia; Prêtre (Audio CD)
Source: Analog studio recording from 1978.
Text: Based on the 1975 critical text which purports to restore the original version of 1863, as written by Bizet. Cast: Nadir - Alain Vanzo; Zurga - Guillermo Sarabia; Leila - Ileana Cotrubas; Nourabad - Roger Soyer. Conductor: Georges Pretre. In 1863, the 25 year-old Bizet composed a piece of oriental exoticism under the name, "Les Pecheurs de perles." (He wrote most of it under the impression that the opera was to be set in pre-Columbian Mexico but, hey, exotic is exotic, right?) The opera achieved a pallid success with eighteen performances and then was dead in France for the remainder of the composer's life, although it managed to hang on--barely--in other countries. In 1893, well after Bizet's death, practical people of the theater put together a performing version which struck the paydirt that Bizet had missed, so that "The Pearlfishers" is now a member of the standard operatic repertory to a degree that certainly exceeds "Werther," "Louise," "Mignon," "Hamlet" and probably even "Manon." The 1893 version was until 1975 the only performed version and the one to which most people are still accustomed. This is because of the many changes, one of the biggest and definitely the most obvious involved the best known number in the show, the big tenor-baritone duet, "Au fond du temple saint." In fact the concert version of the duet, with its almost classical symmetry, is from 1893. To hear the asymmetric 1863 version for the first time is a shock, a quite unpleasant one, like taking an additional and unnecessary step at the end of a stairway. I am always dubious about reconstructions of so-called original texts. They are usually the work of academics who are almost by definition not true men--or women!--of the theater. Academics have been responsible for such strange beasts as the reborn Prague version of "Don Giovanni" in which "Dalla sua pace" is relegated to a footnote, to revivals of the original version of "Tannhaeuser," to a recording of the pre-Boito version of "Simon Boccanegra." The main reason to acquire this performance is Ileana Cotrubas. She sings very well. Cotrubas brings more sheer voice to the part of Leila than Pierette Alarie in the 1953 recording, although she does not match the vocal agility of her fine French Canadian predecessor. Cotrubas sounds younger than Jeanine Micheau, who made an admirable recording in 1959 and again in 1960. Of the three, I think Cortubas was the most effective in communicating the distress felt by the emotionally torn priestess. Nadir is a role that has always attracted tenors who specialized in elegance: Leopold Simoneau, Nicolai Gedda, Alfredo Krauss. The excellent and scandalously under-recorded Alain Vanzo was among their number. He had recorded the part nineteen years before. In comparing the two recordings, it is remarkable to find how few changes almost two decades had wrought. In 1978, Vanzo was just a shade less vocally brilliant, but also just a shade stronger. His dramatic commitment, I think, had also increased to a small degree. As Zurga, hardy warrior, noble king, betrayed friend, frustrated lover and firebug, the fuzzy-voiced Guillermo Sarabia is a complete waste of time. Nourabad is a thankless role whose function is to keep the plot, such as it is, moving. All that I could recall of Roger Soyer in the part five seconds after he finished singing is that he was neither memorably bad nor good. Georges Pretre's conducting is four-square, moderately propulsive and largely indifferent. Three stars.
3.0 out of 5 stars
bizet's masterpiece,
By michael ronayne (emu heights, new south wales Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Bizet: Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) / Cotrubas, Vanzo, Soyer, Sarabia; Prêtre (Audio CD)
Although having only listened to the available samples from this album (on your web page), I am inclined to agree with much of the criticism made by your first reviewer, Jeffrey Connell, but I would be a little less harsh, because a lot of the sound problems can be attributed to the age of the original recording.I am fortunate to own a CD of the highlights of The Pearl Fishers; the 1959 Paris recordings, made under the direction of Manuel Rosenthal, and starring Alain Vanzo, Jeanne Micheau and Gabriel Bacquier. (available on the Award label, as CD No. AWCD 28176). This presentation was widely regarded in Europe as being the finest ever recording of Bizet's great opera, and Vanzo's rendition of "Je crois entendre encore" has to be the definitive version. I would very much like to get hold of the complete disc set of that particular production, but as far as I know, it is unobtainable worldwide.
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