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Carmen-Comp Opera
 
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Carmen-Comp Opera

~ Georges Bizet (Composer), Maria Callas (Performer), Jane Berbie (Performer), Claude Cales (Performer), Nicolai Gedda (Performer), et al.
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (43 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 31.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca. Gift-wrap available.

16 new from CDN$ 28.12 5 used from CDN$ 28.49

Frequently Bought Together

Carmen-Comp Opera + Boheme-Comp Opera + Madama Butterfly
Price For All Three: CDN$ 96.97

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  • This item: Carmen-Comp Opera ~ Georges Bizet

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  • Boheme-Comp Opera ~ Giacomo Puccini

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  • Madama Butterfly ~ Giacomo Puccini

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Product Details


Disc: 1
1. Carmen: Prelude - (Orchestre)
2. Carmen: Act One: Sur la place - (Choeur/Morales/Micaela)
3. Carmen: Act One: Avec la garde montante - (Choeur d'enfants/Morales/Jose)
4. Carmen: Act One: C'est bien la, n'est-ce pas
5. Carmen: Act One: La cloche a sonne... Dans l'air, nous suivons des yeux la fumee - (Choeur)
6. Carmen: Act One: Quand je vous aimerai ?... L'amour este un oiseau rebelle - (Carmen/Choeur)
7. Carmen: Act One: Carmen ! sur tes pas, nous nous pressions tous ! - (Choeur/Carmen/Jose)
8. Carmen: Act One: Quels regards ! Quelle effrontere !
9. Carmen: Act One: Parle-moi de ma mere !
10. Carmen: Act One: Reste la, maintenant, pendant que je lirai - (Jose/Micaela)
See all 21 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. Carmen: Act Two: Mais qui donc attends-tu? - (Le Dancaire/Carmen/Le Remendado)
2. Carmen: Act Two: Halte-là! - (Jose/Carmen/Frasquita/Mercedes/Le Dancaire/Le Remendado)
3. Carmen: Act Two: Enfin c'est toi! ...Tout doux, Monsieur, tout doux
4. Carmen: Act Two: La fleur que tu m'avais jetée ...Non, tu ne m'aimes pas - (Carmen/Jose)
5. Carmen: Act Two: Holà Carmen! Holà! Holà! - (Zuniga/Jose/Carmen/Le Dancaire/Le Remendado)
6. Carmen: Entr'acte - (Orchestre)
7. Carmen: Act Three: Écoute, ecoute, compagnon, ecoute - (Choeur/Le Dancaire/Remendado/Jose/Carmen/Mercedes/Frasquita)
8. Carmen: Act Three: Reposons-nous une heure ici, mes camarades - (Le Dancaire/Carmen/Jose)
9. Carmen: Act Three: Mêlons! Coupons! - (Frasquita/Mercedes/Carmen)
10. Carmen: Act Three: Eh bien? - (Carmen/Le Dancaire/Frasquita)
See all 18 tracks on this disc


Product Description

Amazon.com essential recording

This recording was made near the end of Maria Callas's career. It is a role she never sang onstage, but it suited her almost perfectly, and she gives a deep, compelling performance on this recording. The mezzo-soprano tessitura was comfortable for her voice, and the role did not call for a pretty sound. Nor did the recording studio require the kind of huge vocal power expected in an opera house. And furthermore, the character of a strong-willed, capricious, sexually compelling woman who thinks exclusively of herself was close to the offstage personality that made Callas so famous. --Joe McLellan


Chronique amazon.fr

Georges Prêtre aura marqué son siècle. Il a dirigé les plus grands orchestres, les plus grands chanteurs, aux quatre coins du monde. Dans Carmen, le chef français est un peu dans son jardin. Avec Maria Callas en tête de distribution, c'est l'auditeur qui se frotte les mains. Même si la Callas est à la fin de sa carrière, elle enflamme la scène ! Tragédienne hors pair, elle nous donne à entendre une des plus dramatiques Carmen de l'histoire. Un disque époustouflant ! --Pierre Graveleau

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Customer Reviews

43 Reviews
5 star:
 (32)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (43 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Callas' Carmen as seductive as Circe, May 20 2004
There are so many Carmen-recordings, every mezzo, contralto and even sopranos attempted it, even coloratura-sopranos like Patti (The only flop in her illustrious career) and Sills (Sadly miscast, she was better in Massenet) tackled the role. Yet the truly great Carmens can be counted on one, well, maybe two hands. The earliest recording, featuring dramatic soprano Emmy Destinn is amazing but not in great sound (Obviously). The next great Carmen would be Rise Stevens, in a rather unknown studio-recording. I prefer her live-recording by a long shot. A seductive, dark mezzo of rarely matched beauty. After this Victoria de los Angeles takes the crown. The Spanish Falcon-soprano, who was also a sublime Charlotte (Only Vallin was even greater) was an elegant, velvet-like, seductive gypsy with cold elegance. A very refined portrait of a character that has been portrayed as a slut way too often. The most fabulous Italian Carmen is without a doubt Giulietta Simionato whose live-recordings with di Stefano and Corelli thrill, excite and seduce with their fire, lust and passion. And then came Maria Callas, a Greek soprano whose repertoire was that of a true soprano sfogato, anything from belcanto to Wagner's Isolde and Brünnhilde could be found there. She had been approached to do Eboli, Carmen, Dalilah, Marie (!) and other roles she sadly never sang on stage. Callas describes Bizet's Carmen vs. the original Carmen as described in Prosper Merimee's novel. Her Carmen has elements of both. The independent lust for freedom, the way she drives men to insanity cruelly, how she uses and manipulates them with her charms only to abandon them after a short time. Escamillo, her last lover clearly states that Carmen's "love" is short-lived. And that is what we hear in Callas' portrayal. When obeyed she oozes charm and sexual energy, when opposed or held she breathes fire. Her Carmen finds her man's weakness and thrusts her vocal dagger into it without mercy and when she has won him over at last she purrs like a kitten. Her habanera is not a song for men, it is the philosophy of her life without a care in the world. She defies life and death and Callas, who sounded so light and tender as Amina sounds dark, luscious and haunting here. Her segeduilla has the nature of the heartless seductress. For her freedom she is willing to do anything. As she says later when someone askes her why she's in love with him: "He's a pretty boy and he pleases me!". In the gypsy song we hear one of the hottest scene ever recorded in the studio. Callas' fierce "Tralala!" is almost orgasmic. Imagine her, the dark beauty that she was, dancing this scene! In the love-scene she first toys with him, when he has to obey the bugle-call she mocks him, tortures him. This is responded to with Don José's flower-song, one of the sweetest arias imaginable. But Carmen is not satisfied. He must come with her! Notice how Callas' sounds dangerously fierce, yet warm and smooth on "La libérté!". As we hear the third act only a shadow of her desire remains. She sounds positively annoyed with him and when Escamillo comes her voice blooms to new beautiful heights despite the forlorn, even sad tone of the card-aria before where Carmen sees her own death in the cards. Act four contains some of the most glorious singing Callas ever recorded. Observing the tenderness in the short love-duet with Escamillo I assume that Carmen is truly in love for the first time. There is no danger in her voice, just love. But the confrontation with Don José who went with his former friend and fiance to console his dying mother had to come. In this duet we hear Callas at her wildest, proudest and most defying. She treats him coldly, the only time we hear a glint of feeling is in her confession of loving Escamillo. The more Don José begs, threatens or cries, the colder and distant Callas' Carmen becomes. When he kills her after Carmen throwing the ring into his face there is a void, everything sounds so forlorn and tragic with Carmen gone forever. Callas may not be a natural mezzo like Stignani, Cossotto or Baltsa but she, like Price after her and Ponselle before her brought a unique, fatally charming character to life. Being surrounded not only by the best Don José on records, Nicolai Gedda, but also by the shamefully underrated Giuot as Michaela whose warm, sweet and innocent soprano is made for Michaela and the brilliant Massard, the fabulous Rigoletto and Athanael from the Rigoletto and Thais recordings with the divine Renee Doria nothing can go wrong. Pretre conducts with verve and elegance, the sound is absolutely glorious. Do not miss this Carmen, it's an amazing experience!
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5.0 out of 5 stars I love this Carmen, May 27 2004
I don't get the previous review. Honestly I think this is one of the greatest Carmens ever recorded. My favourite is still the one with Tatyana Troyanos but the Callas-Carmen definitely has her charms. And with Gedda and Pretre every operalover's dream for Carmen was fulfilled. Enjoy!
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5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning Carmen, May 19 2004
By A Customer
Well, what else can you expect from Maria Callas? She's always great! My favourite Carmen always!
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Made to sing Carmen
All this controversy about one of the greatest singers that ever lived is really amusing. When I heard her singing this I thought she was made to sing Carmen. Read more
Published on May 19 2004 by Tooske van Vaarlen

5.0 out of 5 stars The Callas-Carmen
As a singer myself I have to say that I am sick of this constant, unmusical and tasteless Callas-bashing. Callas' Carmen is her only complete recording of a mezzo-part. Read more
Published on May 19 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars The Callas-Carmen
As a singer myself I have to say that I am sick of this constant, unmusical and tasteless Callas-bashing. Callas' Carmen is her only complete recording of a mezzo-part. Read more
Published on May 19 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars The Callas-Carmen
As a singer myself I have to say that I am sick of this constant, unmusical and tasteless Callas-bashing. Callas' Carmen is her only complete recording of a mezzo-part. Read more
Published on May 19 2004 by Emilia

5.0 out of 5 stars Great Carmen
This Carmen is absolutely HOT. And Callas sounds great as a mezzom her middle NEVER wobbled. She is the best Carmen ever. And Gedda is just as fabulous. Read more
Published on May 19 2004 by Clara Rothinton

5.0 out of 5 stars Red-Hot!
No other Carmen is as enticing, as seductive and as brutally charming! Gedda sounds awesome, his diction is a role-model (Or should be) to other tenors! Love it, it's the best!
Published on May 16 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars A hot, sexy Carmen!
I have to say that Callas' Carmen is the most alluring, sexy and seductive operatic chick ever! She sounds fabulous as a mezzo, Carmen suited her well in this time of her career... Read more
Published on May 5 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing end of a great career!
This Carmen was one of Callas' last recordings plus her only recording of a mezzo-part. The manager of the Covent Garden Opera said that he'd pay ANY price to the person who'd... Read more
Published on Mar 16 2004 by Ramona

5.0 out of 5 stars Carmen
This San Diego person abused Yahoo's guidelines once again. But of course Carmen isn't a pop opera, what Theo meant is that it is so POPular, therefore the calling. Read more
Published on Mar 15 2004 by Georgiana

5.0 out of 5 stars Carmen: The pop opera
This is an opera I never liked and I never considered a true opera but more like the gret ancestor of Hollywood Musicals. Read more
Published on Mar 12 2004 by T

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