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Lebendige Vergangenheit - Graziella Pareto

Artist Graziella Pareto
Title Lebendige Vergangenheit - Graziella Pareto
Release Date Monday, September 4, 2006
Genre Classical > Choro
Composers Luigi Arditi, Giuseppe Verdi, Gaetano Donizetti, Vincenzo Bellini, Georges Bizet, Manuel Marìa Ponce, Sibella, Guetary
Songwriters Graziella Pareto, Lamberto Bergamini / Graziella Pareto, Graziella Pareto / Ferdinando Ciniselli, Graziella Pareto / Matteo Dragoni, Graziella Pareto / Giovanni Manuritta, Matteo Dragoni / Graziella Pareto
Copyright © Preiser Records
Country AUSTRIA

Promotion Text

Lebendige Vergangenheit

The Eighties and Nineties of the past century have produced an impressive number of first rate Spanish coloratura-sopranos: Maria Galvany, Maria Barrientos, the more lyric Lucrezia Bori, Elvira de Hidalgo, Mercedes Capsir and Graziella (Graciela) Pareto born in Barcelona on May 15th 1889. Her mother encouraged her daughter's obvious talent from a very early age on and arranged singing lessons for her in their hometown. At the age of fifteen Pareto moved to Milan where she studied with Melchiorre Vidal, also teacher of Francisco Vifias, Rosina Storchio, Elvira de Hidalgo and Lucrezia Bori. As early as 1906 she gave her inofficial debut as Micaela in „Carrnen" at the Teatro Liceo in Barcelona but her real break-through can be dated with 1908 at the Teatro Real in Madrid as Amina in "La Sonnambula" and little later as Gilda and Lucia. For the following year she again chose Amina for her Italian debut at the Teatro Regio di Parma and appeared for the first time as Ophelia together with Titta Ruffo in "Hamlet" at the Opera House of Rome in 1909. In the same year she repeated Ophelia at the Teatro San Carlo before she went to South America where she was engaged at the Teatro Colon. During the seasons of 1909 and 1910 she was celebrated as Ophelia, Gilda, Adina in "L'Elisir d'amore" and Rosina in a company which included the names of Bonei, Anselmi, Ruffo, De Luca and Didur. In St. Peters­ burg she was heard in "Fra Diavolo" and "Martha" and 1912 at the Teätro Regio in Turin she was Gilda, Lakme, the Queen in "Gli Ugonotti" and Juliette. Her debut at the Scala of Milan in 1914 as Gilda (with Galeffi and Lazaro) was a highly successful one as was her first "Traviata" in Madrid with Stracciari. At the Opera House of Monte Carlo in the years between 1915 and 1921 Pareto became a great favourite in "I Pagliacci" and ' Lucia" with Caruso, in "Rigoletto" and "La Traviata" with Battistini, in "Il Barbiere di Siviglia" (with McCormack, Badini and Vanni-Marcoux) and, again, "Rigoletto" with Smirnov. Pareto's performances in "Don Pasquale" and "La Traviata" at Covent Garden in 1920, her debuting role in the same year was Leila in "Les Pecheurs de perles" conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham, were received with mixed feelings. Beecham himself calls her voice one of "exquisite beauty and flawless purity" and recalls her "Traviata" as "easily the most attractive and satisfying in my recollection". There was unanimous praise for her Violetta. Most critics were füll of enthusiasm about her youthful freshness and the bewitching sweetness of her voice but had some reservations concerning the voice's relatively small size and light weight which, except for the top notes, was too easily covered by the orchestra. Wherever Pareto appeared and in London, too, her moderate and unaffected, not at all primadonna-like character, on and off stage, easily won the public's hearts. When Chicago's Opera House was on the look-out for a new coloratura to replace Galli Curci in the early Twenties Pareto established herself there during the seasons of 1923/24 and 1924/25. She was heard in "Lucia", "Lakme", "Fra Diavolo", "L'Elisir d'amore", "II Barbiere di Siviglia" (with Schipa, Rimini and Chaliapin), "II segreto di Susanna", "Romeo et Juliette", "Martha" an "La Traviata". After a long absence Pareto retumed to the Teatro Colon in 1926/27 for "Rigoletto", "Barbiere", "Don Pasquale" and as Ophelia with Ruffo. In one of his immensely valuable books Giacomo Lauri Volpi, her Duca di Mantova on this occasion, recalled how "sad" it was when not a single hand moved to applaud her "Caro nome" although the tenor himself was very impressed with both her singing and her acting: "Woe to the artist who does not encounter the right public - one capable of listening and understanding." From the mid-Twenties on Paretos performances became less and less and her second marriage in 1926 might have been the cause for her early retirement while still at the top. During the summer of 1931 she did return, however, for some performances as Carolina in ''II Matrimonio segreto" at the Festival in Salzburg and later lived happily with her second husband in Rome. Graziella Pareto died on September 1st 1973 in Naples. Over the years Pareto's voice gained warmth and expressiveness without loosing any of its purity. (lt would be interesting how her voice would have developed in the future but unfortunately she made no more recordings later than 1926.) Especially the higher middle range had a lovely soft and silky texture, the top notes usually come without great effort, but do sound a little hard at times and tend to have a slight metallic touch, as Spanish and French voices often do. Her coloraturas cannot compete with Tetrazzini's verve and accuracy and she was not perfect as far as sufficient breath-support and correct intonation was concemed - but then the latter also considerably troubled Galli Curci, as she openly confessed. In comparison with Lucrezia Bori Pareto has the rounder tone and her timbre is the colourfully more intense one of the two but she is lacking much of Bori's depth of feeling and her irresistable and bewitching charme. When discussing interpretation and stilistic refinement one must, again, give preference to Bori. As Norina, Leila and "light-weight" Violetta Pareto is enchanting (what a pity that we have no recordings of her as Ophelia) and so are her song-recordings performed with touching simplicity and elegant understatement.