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Melba's Farewell
Dame Nellie Melba
Melba's Farewell
Genre: Classical
 
The farewell performance of Dame Nellie Melba, world-famous prima donna of her day, on the stage of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where she had sung hundreds of times over an unprecedented span of 40 years, remains...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Dame Nellie Melba
Title: Melba's Farewell
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Imports
Release Date: 8/18/2017
Album Type: Import
Genre: Classical
Style: Symphonies
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 028948280933

Synopsis

Product Description
The farewell performance of Dame Nellie Melba, world-famous prima donna of her day, on the stage of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where she had sung hundreds of times over an unprecedented span of 40 years, remains a justly famous occasion, of which recorded extracts have been reissued previously. What makes the present release unique? Firstly, it presents everything that the experimental electrical recording process captured on that evening of 8 June 1926: excerpts from the roles of Desdemona and Mimì, and speeches by Lord Stanley and Dame Nellie herself, ending in tears. Secondly, the original sources are as reliable and clear as may be found today, supplied by the Historic Singers Charitable Trust. Thirdly, those sources have been newly remastered for the first time at the 'French' pitch which Melba herself used, rather than the slightly higher concert pitch which is now ubiquitous both in live performances and on record. The 'Farewell' portion of this Eloquence release is complemented by both Melba's last recording, made six months later, and by the fascinating comparison which may then be made with some of her earliest studio recordings from 1904-10. If nothing else, these arias and songs bear out the astonishment of many listeners, both at the time of Melba's farewell and ever since, at the remarkable preservation of her voice and of it's sovereign qualities of steadiness, purity and beauty. Gramophone's principal vocal critic at the time was Herman Klein, who was apt to compare the recordings of singers with their vocal performance on stage, and often unfavourably. Yet when the first records of the 'Farewell' were issued, in October 1931, he was unequivocal: they were 'a remarkably true and faithful reproduction of the voice and method of the last of the Victorian prima donnas; and as such they are bound for all time to command grateful appreciation'. The presentation of this reissue includes several rarely seen photographs of Melba, and a detailed note by the historian of voices Roger Neill, who co-compiled the recent 4CD Eloquence set of 'From Melba to Sutherland: Australian Singers on Record' (482 5892). That set was widely acclaimed for the excellence of both recordings and documentation: 'magnificently curated' (Limelight); 'an absolute must-have' (Gramophone); 'an astonishing and enthralling cavalcade' (Opera magazine). 'Melba's Farewell' is sure to attract the same accolades.