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Volume 27 Issue 2 - November 2021

Live events on the up and up while creative live-and livestreamed hybrids continue to shine. October All-star Sondheim's Follies at Koerner Hall headlines the resurgence; Zoprana Sadiq brings MixTape to Crow's Theatre; Stewart Goodyear and Jan Lisiecki bring piano virtuosity back indoors; Toronto Mendelssohn Choir's J-S Vallee in action; TSO finds itself looking at 60 percent capacities ahead of schedule. All this and more as we we complete our COVID-13 -- a baker's dozen of issues since March 2020. Available here in flipthrough, and on stands commencing this weekend.

Live events on the up and up while creative live-and livestreamed hybrids continue to shine. October All-star Sondheim's Follies at Koerner Hall headlines the resurgence; Zoprana Sadiq brings MixTape to Crow's Theatre; Stewart Goodyear and Jan Lisiecki bring piano virtuosity back indoors; Toronto Mendelssohn Choir's J-S Vallee in action; TSO finds itself looking at 60 percent capacities ahead of schedule. All this and more as we we complete our COVID-13 -- a baker's dozen of issues since March 2020. Available here in flipthrough, and on stands commencing this weekend.

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Old Wine, New Bottles<br />

Fine Old Recordings Re-Released<br />

BRUCE SURTEES<br />

It seems so long ago that the world was<br />

introduced to The Three Tenors. It has<br />

been 30 years since the concert starring<br />

three great tenors of the day made entertainment<br />

history. The original concept was<br />

to have a concert of popular opera arias<br />

sung by a lone artist. How the simple idea<br />

developed into The Three Tenors – José<br />

Carreras, Plácido Domingo and Luciano<br />

Pavarotti – singing before a capacity audience<br />

in the site of the old Roman baths of<br />

Caracalla is told here in a brilliant, informative<br />

bonus feature, supplementing the original concert footage. The<br />

documentary, From Caracalla to the World, lets us into the evolution<br />

of the three-man show – actually four men including conductor Zubin<br />

Mehta. After that first performance, as seen on this disc, their impresario<br />

offered the show to record companies who declined, arguing that<br />

the “songs” were too old and the public would not be interested. Only<br />

Decca saw the future and immediately signed them. The documentary<br />

is 88 minutes in duration including contemporary videos of the<br />

principals and other familiar faces and names as they were 30 years<br />

ago; also, the plans for and scenes from the subsequent 1994 concert<br />

in Los Angeles that was the most watched musical event in history.<br />

More than one and a half billion viewers watched the concert via 100<br />

national television networks. It’s all there and more in the revealing<br />

documentary.<br />

In the concert itself there are 15 arias plus an extended 20-minute<br />

medley. The arias and songs are familiar or soon will be. Rather than<br />

pick and choose I listened and watched right through as each singer<br />

came and sang his heart out whether it be an aria or a song or a<br />

familiar piece and then left the stage to await his next turn. Not once<br />

was there the slightest inclination to skip ahead. Track 14 is an entertaining<br />

medley of a variety of material, romantic, sentimental, recognizable<br />

songs like Amapola, O Sole Mio and from Broadway like<br />

Maria, Memory, Tonight, La vie en rose. Each tenor and Mehta is<br />

clearly having a contagiously good time shared by those in the audience.<br />

The Original Three Tenors in Concert, Rome 1990 plus a new<br />

documentary (C major 758804 Blu-ray video naxosdirect.com/<br />

search/758804).<br />

SOMM has issued a collection of eight<br />

recordings made by George Szell and the<br />

Cleveland Orchestra. Only one of these<br />

performances has been issued previously, by<br />

Columbia, on CD. In 1946 Szell became only<br />

the fourth music director of the orchestra<br />

since its founding in 1918. He took the<br />

appointment promising to transform the<br />

orchestra, as excellent as it was, into one of<br />

the finest in the land. He succeeded. On the second disc of the two-CD<br />

set there are stirring performances of four favourites from his repertoire:<br />

Brahms’ Academic Festival Overture and Variations on a Theme<br />

by Haydn (previously released); Schumann’ Symphony No. 4 in D<br />

Minor; then Stravinsky’s 1919 suite from The Firebird. These stereo<br />

recordings were made in the Masonic Auditorium in Cleveland in<br />

October, 1955 and sound as fresh and real as yesterday – flawless and<br />

excitingly present.<br />

The first starts off with Bach’s Orchestral Suite No.3, then Smetana’s<br />

The Moldau and from Strauss, Till Eulenspiegel’s Merry Pranks all<br />

New Release/ Nouveauté 11.05.<strong>2021</strong><br />

www.leaf-music.ca<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>November</strong> <strong>2021</strong> | 55

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