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SKU: ae0050c | see all opera disks
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In Stock
The above item ae0050c is only available as cdr replica. This may have problems reading on older machines.
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Comment
The first half of the 20th century was graced with an extraordinary range of singers of many sorts, just in time...
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The first half of the twentieth century was graced with an extraordinary range of
singers of many sorts - just in time to be captured on records. Eduardo Gabarra has
collected well over 350 recordings by fifty Italian baritones to provide this volume
of the Audio Encyclopedia.
To complement the audio recordings, brief video clips are included of some
of the singers; those selections should be seen as supplementary to the
purpose of the disc since their operation on the full range of computer systems
has not been verified. While we hope that the video adds to your pleasure, it
is not the purpose of the disc and cannot be guaranteed to work on your system.
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- Pasquale Amato
- Mario Ancona
- Ernesto Badini
- Aristide Baracchi
- Mario Basiola
- Mattia Battistini
- Gino Bechi
- Giuseppe Bellantoni
- Armando Borgioli
- Sesto Bruscantini
- Giuseppe Campanari
- Francesco Cigada
- Antonio Cotogni
- Giuseppe Danise
- Raffaele De' Falchi
- Giuseppe De Luca
- Cesare Formichi
- Benvenuto Franci
- Carlo Galeffi
- Emilio Ghirardini
- Eugenio Giraldoni
- Tito Gobbi
- Apollo Granforte
- Giovanni Inghilleri
- Giuseppe Kaschmann
- Antonio Magini-Coletti
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- Enzo Mascherini
- Enrico Molinari
- Luigi Montesanto
- Carlo Morelli
- Enrico Nani
- Ettore Nava
- Giuseppe Pacini
- Taurino Parvis
- Afro Poli
- Antenore Reali
- Giacomo Rimini
- Titta Ruffo
- Mario Sammarco
- Ugo Savarese
- Antonio Scotti
- Paolo Silveri
- Mariano Stabile
- Riccardo Stracciari
- Giuseppe Taddei
- Carlo Tagliabue
- Umberto Urbano
- Giuseppe Valdengo
- Gino Vanelli
- Domenico Viglione-Borghese
- Gaetano Viviani
- Renato Zanelli
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Clips with Descriptions
The first volume of the Audio Encyclopedia devoted to a single class of
voice offers artists as familiar as Giuseppe Taddei - still singing in 2000 -
and inexplicably unknown. For illustration, I've chosen "Vision
fugitive" from Massenet's Hérodiade. The three baritones
here are among those who will surprise most listeners; why are they not all
among the household names? While the others singing the aria on the disc - such
as the three Giuseppes: de Luca, Danise and Taddei - are better known, they are
not necessarily better artists or singers.
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