Attila: Santo Di Patria... Allor Che I Forti Corrono - Joan Sutherland
Lakme: Viens, Mallika... Dome Epais Le Jasmin - Joan Sutherland/Jane Berbie
Les Contes D'Hoffmann: Les Oiseaux Dans La Charmille - Joan Sutherland
Die Zauberflote: O Zittre Nicht, Mein Lieber Sohn... Zum Leiden Bin Ich Auserkoren - Joan Sutherland
Linda Di Chamounix: Ah! Tardai Troppo... O Luce Di Quest'anima - Joan Sutherland
Semiramide: Serbami Ognor Si Fido - Joan Sutherland/Marilyn Horne
Beatrice Di Tenda Bellini: Eccomi Pronta... Deh, Se Un'urna - Joan Sutherland/Ambrosian Singers
La Fille Du Regiment Donizetti: Pour Ce Contrat Fatal... Ah! Salut A La France - Joan Sutherland/Chor Of The ROHCG
La Traviata: Un Di Felice - Joan Sutherland/Carlo Bergonzi
The Bohemian Girl: I Dreamt I Dwelt In Marble Halls - Joan Sutherland
Home Sweet Home - Joan Sutherland
Casanova: Nuns' Chorus - Joan Sutherland/Ambrosian Light Opr Chor
Lucia Di Lammermoor: (O Giusto Cielo!)... Il Dolce Suono Mi Colpi Di Sua Voce!... Ardon Gl'incensi.. - Joan Sutherland/Chor De L'Opera De Paris/Rene Duclos
Track Listings (14) - Disc #2
Norma: Sediziose Voci... Casta Diva - Joan Sutherland/Chor Of The ROHCG/Douglas Robinson
Alcina: Tornami A Vagheggiar - Joan Sutherland
Con For Coloratura Soprano, Op.82: Andante - Joan Sutherland
Con For Coloratura Soprano, Op.82: Allegro - Joan Sutherland
Lucia Di Lammermoor: Sulla Tomba... Ah! Verranno A Te Sull'aure - Joan Sutherland/Luciano Pavarotti
Rigoletto: Gualtier Malde... Caro Nome - Joan Sutherland/Riccardo Cassinelli/Christian Du Plessis/John Gibbs/Ambrosian Opr Chor
Esclarmonde Massenet: Esprits De L'air! Esprits De L'onde! ... Roland! Roland! Roland! - Joan Sutherland/Huguette Tourangeau/John Alldis Chor
Operette: Where Are The Songs We Sung? - Joan Sutherland
The Boys From Syracuse: Falling In Love With Love - Joan Sutherland/Ambrosian Light Opr Chor
I Puritani: Son Vergin Vezzosa - Joan Sutherland/Margreta Elkins/Pierre Duval/Ezio Flagello
Turandot: In Questa Reggia - Joan Sutherland/Luciano Pavarotti/John Alldis Choir/Wandsworth School Boys' Choir/Russell Burgess
Tristan Und Isolde: Mild Und Leise Wie Er Lachelt - Joan Sutherland
Adriana Lecouvreur: Poveri Fiori - Joan Sutherland
La Sonnambula: Ah! Non Giunge Uman Pensiero - Joan Sutherland/London Opr Chor/Terry Edwards
"Listen to the aria from Esclamonde - an "Wagnerian" style of orchestratal writing written for a true dramatic coloratura, which was exactly the type of singer that Joan Sutherland was. No one today or yesterday can touch this. That aria alone is worth the cost of this two cd collection. In the beginning, after extremely fast staccati, she hits and holds two of the most powerful high D's I can recall hearing. Other highlights are the Lucia mad scene, the Puritani polanaise, and the "Santo di Patria" from Verdi's Attila - which must be heard to believe. In this aria, Sutherland attacks her cabelettas the way Callas would have - extremely aggressive! Another big highlight is the unbelievably difficult concerto for coloratura and orchesta - another gem that only La Stupenda could sing. You have to hear it to believe it."
I don't think there is a better title than "La Stupenda"
Trevor Gillespie | San Jose, California United States | 01/03/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I love Ms. Joan Sutherland. I discovered her unique voice in a compilation recording that I bought on the Opera Gala label (a London/Decca sub-label). It was just one piece that she was on, but it started a love of her voice and singing. I've since bought a number of Joan Sutherland CDs, but this compilation is the tops. The concerto for coloratura soprano sounds like it must be a grueling piece for a singer, but Ms. Sutherland makes it sound like it's a magic carpet ride. Her voice floats, soars, and radiates with seemingly ease. Definitely, this is the highlight of the two CD set, but all of it is great stuff."
Beautiful
Trevor Gillespie | 12/14/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"simply beautiful singing. what makes this unique is that this collection contains recordings anywhere from 1958 to as late as the 80's. there are two cds, which makes it a good value. most of the materials are from her stupendous period, but there are one or two from her droopy period. but 90% of the items here are beautiful indeed. the highlights: the queen of the night aria, duet with horne from semiramide that is out of print, the coloratura concerto, the fabulous duet from traviata (wow!), and the very first recording of the mad scene done by sutherland (1958) that even supercedes her first complete lucia with tenor cioni(1960). to give you the importance of this mad scene, it was recorded before her legendary debut as lucia at covent garden in 1959! at this period, sutherland did not scoop, or droop, or whatever. she follows maestro tullio serafin, who insisted on pure coloratura precision ( he also coached callas ) and he insisted that sutherland will surpass callas as a coloratura, and he was right. not to put down the fantastic contribution by perhaps an even more important diva than la stupenda. the two divas are the greatest contribution to the annals of opera than all other divas combine. i love them both dearly. but perhaps i am even more prone to callas because she is the complete package, both voice, technique, and artistry. but sutherland is impressive because of complete control of everything that rossini, donizetti, and bellini ever wrote. just how she is able to achieve vocal lines that are nearly impossible with ease is perhaps god's gift to her. she is superhuman when she opens her mouth. yes, unfortunately, she is not that that convincing when she needs to act, but the level of bravura is so high, that one leaves her performances in disbelief. and for that alone, she is in the same caliber as callas. of course, these days, we have no callas and sutherland. we don't even have roberta peters or renata scotto. so we have these recordings. so we are lucky that the recording studio left us with these fabulous excerpts. this very first recording of the mad scene from lucia is not available anymore, and it is, by far superior to both of sutherland's takes of the same mad scene from two complete recordings of lucia di lammermoor, sutherland/cioni(1960), and sutherland/pavarotti(1971). this mad scene, about 1958 or early 1959 is the most magnificent one that sutherland has put on records. i mean it, i would have paid a hundred dollars just to get this, it's that good. she attacks all the high notes and holds them. and the voice is so girlish, and so at east at the highest of notes. and at this period, the high e flats are huge, they explode. even my best friend, who hates opera reacted by, "oh, my gosh", when he heard this in my car stereo when we were heading to the mall. i mean it, if you think that the complete recording in 1960 of lucia is special, this one is that much better. in fact, i don't think as perfect singing of this mad scene will ever be heard again. sorry i keep going on, but i really feel that this take of the lucia mad scene is even more stupendous than her singing in general of various taxing arias from "art of the prima donna". the reason, she attacks everything from the top, and mammoth high notes (especially high e flats) that are twice or three times the size of her high notes later in her career. i don't think in our life time, we'll ever hear such perfection again. alas."
Great Singing
Alberto Velez Grilo | Funchal, Portugal | 12/03/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is why Dame Joan Sutherland is called La Stupenda. It's all here. The usual and the unusual. From the spectacular cabaleta Santo di Patria from Atilla to Mild und leise wie er lachet from Tristan und Isold. I must refer the Concerto for Coloratura Soprano and agree with the music fan from New York - Only Sutherland can do this with such technique and cristal clear voice. This is a must have."
I have just worn this CD out!
Alberto Velez Grilo | 04/21/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I think I have just worn this CD out! Almost everything on here I just can't get enough of. Joan is absolutely amazing! I really highly recommend buying this. It showcases some of her best work. An unusually great collection!!!Tornami a vagheggiar, from Alcina, is so amazingly fun. She has such artistry and musicianship. This is certainly a pleasure to hear over and over again. "In questa reggia," from Turandot, is a nice piece for her. It shows off her power and tonation. It's really the role for Joan and I'm glad they've included it. The Concerto for Coloratura Soprano pieces are nice to hear -- wonderful show-off pieces. The duet from Esclarmonde shows her sheer wonderfulness that explains it all. The technique to jump two octaves like that -- from D to D - and she doesn't even have to slide. WOW! That is one of reasons why Dame Joan became so famous. She has that dramatic voice that can sing so high and stay there forever and ever! (Look at what the very first reviewer said about this song.) When I listened the duet it I thought, why haven't I heard of this before, it's excellent composing. Then I realized why. Dame Joan is the only soprano that can handle this! There is just none like her (Well, June Anderson does have the high notes). Sutherland is too young in this particular recording of "Casta diva". In a couple more years she will own this role, but this one I feel is a poor example to show. If you want to hear the ULTIMATE Casta diva, check out the recording with Horne and Alexander. It out does this one by far! It shows the power and strength of those amazing vocal chords. The Queen of the Night aria is not Joan at her best. Again, maybe she was too young, The high F is just not pleasurable to hear. She peeps it out with a great deal of work, and singing is not suppose to sound like it's that much work. The rest of the aria sounds nice. It sits well in her range, her acting is nice and she doesn't drag on forever in the recitative like so many singers do. Dramatic coloratura is what the role called for but Queen of the Night just isn't a Joan role. I very much salute her for her try but...I don't know. Now, in gerneral, Joan's English is not understandable, period! You can't understand a word she's saying because she's being too much of an opera singer. The "I dreamt I dwelt in marble halls" and the Nun's chorus one, I do have to admit are pretty, but they're just a bunch of pretty sounds gurkled and murmured into this big pie of sounds. Now I see why people complain so much about her diction. The Boys from Syracuse one, "Falling in love with love," is a joke. Why on Earth is she singing musical theatre. She sounds ridiculous. But enough with the silly criticism, there never was one before her and there never will be one like after her. Thank God we have her preserved in recordings. She has absolutely changed the course of opera and the whole art form in general. Everyone should own this collection. It's almost all you need."