I'm going to see this opera at the 2011 Buxton Festival, so I thought that I would whet my appetite by buying a CD of a work which I did not know at all and which is rarely performed these days. Actually, I realised that that I was in fact familiar with quite a few of the musical numbers; not just the celebrated "Connais-tu le pays?", which feature on the recital discs of so many eminent mezzos and which is a setting of Goethe's famous Wilhelm Meister poem (settings by Schubert, Schumann and Hugo Wolf are also well-known, albeit in the original German, but are not quite as evocative of this wonderful aria), but also the splendid arias for Wilhelm, Frédéric and, especially, Philine. So what we have here is a work, and a substantial one at that, spread over three CDs, which boasts some well-known arias encased in what is a largely unfamiliar score. I have to say that I love it and the score has no real longueurs, but many delights. The libretto, I hasten to add, seems pretty preposterous and I await the production with baited breath! Recordings of the work are few and far between, but I doubt whether it could ever be as starrily cast as in this version conducted by Antonio de Almeida. The great Marilyn Horne is in glorious voice in the title role and she receives magnificent support from that criminally under-recorded tenor Alain Vanzo, who is, incidentally, the only native French speaker to take a main role here. The veteran bass, Nicola Zaccaria (who was, I believe, married to Miss Horne at the time) sings movingly as Lothario, while Ruth Welting copes well with the coloratura pyrotechnics of Philine. The role of Frédéric is sometimes taken by a buffo tenor, but here we have the wonderful Frederica von Stade, who sings beautifully and whose mezzo contrasts well with that of Miss Horne. No libretto is included with this re-issue (it was first released in the 70s), but this is easily accessible online and these Sony opera recordings are excellent value for money. In addition, the recording offers alternative versions and revisions as an addendum. Lovers of French opera should snap this up without delay.