<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>
<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>
<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>
<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>
<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>
<tc>Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)</tc>

Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor - Maria Callas & Herbert von Karajan (3LP, Mono, Coffret)

€235,00
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ORDER LIMITED TO ONE ITEM PER CUSTOMER

Gaetano Donizetti - Lucia di Lammermoor

Maria Callas, Lucia [click here to see more vinyl and CD featuring Maria Callas]

Giuseppe Di Stefano, Edgardo

Rolando Panerai, Enrico

Nicola Zaccaria, Raimondo

Giuseppe Zampieri, Arturo

Luisa Villa, Alisa

Mario Carlin, Normanno

RIAS Symphonie-Orchester

Chorus del Teatro alla Scala di Milano

Herbert von Karajan, Conductor


 

3 LPs, box set including a limited time 16-bit album download card and a 40 page booklet printed in Italy

Limited to 5,000 numbered copies

Original analog Master tape : YES

Heavy Press : 180g

Record color : black

Speed : 33RPM

Size : 12'’

Mono

Live

Record Press : Marciac Workshop Pressings, France

Label : The Lost Recordings

Original label : The Lost Recordings

Recorded 29th September 1955 at Städtische Oper Berlin

Remastered by The Lost Recordings

Lacquer cut by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio

Originally released in October 2023

 

Tracks:

LP 1 - Act I

Prelude
Percorrete... Percorriamo le spiagge vicine
Tu sei turbato!... E n’ho ben d’onde
Cruda, funesta smania
Il tuo dubbio è omai certezza... Come vinti da stanchezza
La pietade in suo favore
Ancor non giunse?
Regnava nel silenzio alta la notte e bruna
Quando rapito in estasi
Egli s'avanza... Lucia, perdona se ad ora inusitata
Sulla tomba che rinserra il tradito genitore
Qui di sposa eterna fede... Ah, soltanto il nostro foco
Ah, talor del tuo pensiero venga un foglio messaggero
Verranno a te sull'aure i miei sospiri ardenti

 

LP 2 - Act II

Lucia fra poco a te verrà... Tremante l’aspetto
Appressati, Lucia... Il pallor funesto, orrendo
Soffriva nel pianto... Un folle t’accese
Che fia?... Suonar di giubilo
Se tradirmi tu potrai... Tu che vedi il pianto mio
Per te d’immenso giubilo... Per poco fra le tenebre sparì lavos tra stella
Dov’è Lucia?... Qui giungere or la vedrem
Piange la madre estinta
Chi mi frena in tal momento
T’allontana, sciagurato... Rispettate in me di Dio
Sconsigliato! In queste porte chi ti guida?
Esci, fuggi, il furor che mi accende

 

LP 3 - Act III

D’immenso giubilo s’innalzi un grido
Dalle stanze ove Lucia tratta avea col suo consorte
Oh! Qual funesto avvenimento!
Il dolce suono mi colpì di sua voce!...
Ardon gli incensi
Spargi d'amaro pianto
Tombe degli avi miei
Fra poco a me ricovero darà negletto avello
Oh, meschina! Oh, fato orrendo!
Tu che a Dio spiegasti l’ali

     

    Reviews :

    “In May 2022, while we were working in the archives of the Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg (RBB), we came across the original tapes of this mythical recording made in 1955. It was certainly one of the most significant testimonies of the lyric art of the twentieth century: Lucia di Lammermoor, recorded during the performance of 29 September 1955 at the Städtische Oper Berlin, with a cast that included Di Stefano, Panerai, Karajan and Callas.

    Despite the fact that the first forty seconds of the first tape had deteriorated, when we listened to the minutes of the recording that followed, we heard timbres with a richness and a dynamic that bore no comparison to other recordings that have been known until the present.

    It took four months of painstaking work to restore all the brilliance to the orchestra, to the Scala choir and to the legendary voices of this poignant slice of history and of music.

    We wanted to be able to release our first vinyl edition of the opera in a limited number of 5,000 on the occasion of the centenary of the birth of Maria Callas.

    Kevin Gray made the cutting and the three records were pressed in our very own workshop in the south of France, MWP, to our usual stringent standards.

    We are very grateful to the RBB for their trust in us. We would also like to thank the Callas Foundation, which safeguards and promotes Callas’s legacy, and especially Tom Volf, for their help, as well as for the photographs they provided.” Frédéric D'Oria-Nicolas, Founder and Director of The Lost Recordings

    I have a very personal connection with Callas’s Lucia, for it is the first recording I heard of hers, more precisely the mad scene; hearing Callas’s voice and interpretation was like falling in love at first sight. This live recording is a wonderful example of what it felt like to hear Callas on stage, in a performance that became legendary.

    Maria Callas said she “hated” recording for commercial (studio) releases and used to say that only live performances could convey her artistry in its full spectrum. In the later years of her life, she would collect her own pirate recordings and would often listen to performances such as this one. The best account of that comes from Robert Sutherland, her pianist during the last tour of concerts in 1973-74, who recalled the evenings spent at Callas’s apartment at Avenue Georges Mandel:

    “We listened to a pirate recording of the Berlin Lucia. She remembered how Karajan angered the soloists by repeating the sextet without warning them. As we listened to the encore she said ‘You can hear how angry I was! And I still had the mad scene to sing! I told him afterwards at dinner that he dare not do that again on me or there would be trouble!’ We listened to the mad scene, an amazing performance. She was visibly impressed. ‘I don’t now how I did it. I just don’t know how - and to think that I wept after that performance because I thought I was so far off my aim.’ I had difficulty in expressing my reaction. Such a combination of controlled technical brilliance and artistic imagination was astounding. I attempted it with, ‘It’s marvellous singing…’ ‘Marvellous? Marvellous?’ She pulled herself up in the sofa. ‘It isn’t marvellous, it’s bloody miraculous!’”

    Back at that time, pirate recordings circulated among avid admirers in the form of homemade LP’s, such as those released by the BJR label which is probably the one that Callas was listening to that night with Robert Sutherland. Today, however, we have to commend Frédéric D’Oria-Nicolas and The Lost Recordings for retrieving the original tapes in Berlin and meticulously restoring them to a quality of sound which surpasses any previous release, thus providing us with the most authentic rendition of that historical performance. Therefore it was only natural for the Callas Foundation to be associated with this publication, providing texts and images to illustrate the booklet and honour the memory of Maria Callas through this magnificent edition celebrating her 100th anniversary.” Tom Volf, President of the Maria Callas Foundation


     

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