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Product details
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| Disc: 1 | |||
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| 1. Peter Grimes: Prologue: 'Peter Grimes!' (Hobson) | |||
| 2. Peter Grimes: Prologue: 'You Sailed Your Boat Round The Coast' (Swallow) | |||
| 3. Peter Grimes: Prologue: 'Peter Grimes, I Here Advise You!' (Swallow) | |||
| 4. Peter Grimes: Prologue: 'The Truth...The Pity...And The Truth' (Peter) | |||
| 5. Peter Grimes: Prologue: Interlude I | |||
| 6. Peter Grimes: Act I, Scene 1: 'Oh! Hang At Open Doors The Net, The Cork' | |||
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| Disc: 2 | |||
| 1. Peter Grimes: Act II: Interlude III | |||
| 2. Peter Grimes: Act II, Scene 1: 'Glitter Of Waves And Glitter Of Sunlight' (Ellen) | |||
| 3. Peter Grimes: Act II, Scene 1: 'Let This Be A Holiday' (Ellen) | |||
| 4. Peter Grimes: Act II, Scene 1: 'The Unrelenting Work' (Ellen) | |||
| 5. Peter Grimes: Act II, Scene 1: 'Fool To Let It Come To This!' | |||
| 6. Peter Grimes: Act II, Scene 1: ' What Is It?' | |||
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| Disc: 3 | |||
| 1. Peter Grimes: Act III: Interlude V | |||
| 2. Peter Grimes: Act III, Scene 1: 'Assign Your Prettiness To Me' (Swallow) | |||
| 3. Peter Grimes: Act III, Scene 1: Pah! Ahoy!' (Swallow) | |||
| 4. Peter Grimes: Act III, Scene 1: 'Come Along, Doctor!' | |||
| 5. Peter Grimes: Act III, Scene 1: 'Embroidery In Childhood Was A Luxury Of Idleness' (Ellen) | |||
| 6. Peter Grimes: Act III, Scene 1: 'Mister Swallow! Mister Swallow!' | |||
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This opera, like others of the 20th century really marries theater and music. Unlike Puccini or Verdi where appalling librettos are made acceptable by wonderful music (can you get any worse than the words to "Che gelida mannina"?), Peter Grimes is a full blooded story, and the music accompanies it wondefully.
The atmospheres of fear (the storm) or complacency (the final dawn) are depicted in the music in a way difficult to match.
Britten is one of those underrated allrounders who builds the sounds to match the action and the feelings like few people do.
This rendition is impeccable and well rehearsed and the sound bears the Decca quality of the 50s which is really hard to find.
Pears gives a heartbreaking rendering of a misunderstood and isolated man who finds himself the victim of his own ambition to prove himself worthy of the society that despises him.
Vickers' more recent version is very good. But get the real masters and see what they really wanted. This recording will make your hairs stand on end and make you regret that you weren't in Saddler's Wells back in the 50s.
As for the cast on this recording, they are quite fine, even if Peter Pears' voice was more solid and more beautiful on the 1946 excerpts conducted by Reginald Goodall (EMI). At the time this recording was issued, several critics jumped on Claire Watson, knowing that she was a last-minute substitute for Britten's preferred Ellen of the time, Heather Harper (who sings so beautifully opposite Vickers); but with digital remastering, Watson's voice sounds far less shrill here than it did on LP, and she has the advantage of really clear and distinct English diction....something that cannot be taken for granted even in English-speaking singers (just think of Leontyne Price or Frederica von Stade). As a result of this (mostly) hand-picked cast and Britten's perfectionism, you get a performance that sounds both "live" in the theatrical sense and beautiful in the superb balance of soloists, chorus and orchestra. In short, this is not a performance to be missed, and I highly recommend it to all opera-lovers but especially those who enjoy Grimes.
On the only other major recording of this opera (with Jon Vickers in the title role), this stunning sequence is bizarrely interrupted between CDs; although this set is considerably more expensive, its more proper distribution among CDs makes it infinitely preferable. Also, although the other set has a superbly romantic Grimes in Vickers, the role nonetheless was specifically written for Peter Pears, who sings here with great purity of tone. This is a famous historic recording: no 20th-century opera buff's collection is complete without it.
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