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John Gay: The Beggar's Opera
List Price: $45.98Our Price: $12.53You Save: $33.45 (73%)Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Category: Music CD See more CD details
CD DetailsPerformer: John Gay Performer: Roger Bryson Performer: Ian Caddy Performer: Charles Daniels Performer: Anne Dawson Orchestra: Ian Honeyman Conductor: Richard Jackson Edition: Music CD Format: Import CD Release Date: 1992-09-10 Music Label: Hyperion UK Soundtracks: Music CD 1- Introduction. If poverty be a title to poetry
- Overture
- Act 1. Air 1. Through all the employments of life
- Act 1. Dialogue. Sir, Black Moll hath sent word
- Act 1. Air 2. 'Tis woman that seduces all mankind
- Act 1. Dialogue. But 'tis now high time to look about me
- Act 1. Dialogue. What of Bob Booty, husband?
- Act 1. Air 3. If any wench Venus's girdle wear
- Act 1. Air 4. If love the virgin's heart invade
- Act 1. Dialogue. Never was a man more out of the way
- Act 1. Air 5. A maid is like the golden ore
- Act 1. Dialogue. Come hither Fitch
- Act 1. Dialogue. I know as well as any of the fine ladies
- Act 1. Air 6. Virgins are like the fair flower in its lustre
- Act 1. Air 7. Our Polly is a sad slut!
- Act 1. Air 8. Can love be control'd by advice?
- Act 1. Air 9. O Polly, you might have toy'd and kissed
- Act 1. Air 10. I like a ship in storms was tossed
- Act 1. Dialogue. Dear wife, be a little pacified.
- Act 1. Air 11. A fox may steal your hens, sir
- Act 1. Dialogue. 'Twas only Nimming Ned.
- Act 1. Air 12. O, ponder well! Be not severe
- Act 1. Air 13. The turtle thus with plaintive crying
- Act 1. Dialogue. The thing, husband, must and shall be done.
- Act 1. Dialogue. Now I'm a wretch, indeed.
- Act 1. Air 14. Pretty Polly, say
- Act 1. Air 15. My heart was so free
- Act 1. Air 16. Where I laid on Greenland's coast
- Act 1. Air 17. O what a pain it is to part!
- Act 1. Air 18. The miser that a shilling sees
- Act 1. Dialogue. But pr'ythee, Matt, what is become of thy brother Tom?
- Act 2. Air 19. Fill ev'ry glass, for wine inspires us
- Act 2. Dialogue. Gentlemen, well met.
- Act 2. Air 20. Let us take the road
- Act 2. Dialogue. What a fool is a fond wench!
- Act 2. Air 21. If the heart of a man is deprest with cares
- Act 2. Dialogue. Dear Mrs Coaxer, you are welcome.
- Act 2. Air 22. Youth's the season made for joys
- Act 2. Air 23. Before the barn door crowing
- Act 2. Air 24. The gamesters and lawyers are jugglers alike
- Act 2. Dialogue. I seize you, sir, as my prisoner.
- Act 2. Air 25. At the Tree I shall suffer with pleasure
- Act 2. Dialogue. Look ye, Mrs Jenny...
- Act 2. Dialogue. Noble Captain, you are welcome.
- Act 2. Air 26. Man may escape from rope and gun
Music CD 2- Act 2. Dialogue. You base man, you!
- Act 2. Air 27. Then when a good huswife sees a rat
- Act 2. Air 28. How cruel are the traitors
- Act 2. Air 29. The first time at the looking-glass
- Act 2. Dialogue. In this last affair, brother Peachum...
- Act 2. Air 30. When you censure the age
- Act 2. Dialogue. Whence come you, hussy?
- Act 2. Air 31. Is then his fate decreed, sir?
- Act 2. Air 32. You'll think e'er many day ensue
- Act 2. Dialogue. Though the Ordinary was out of the way to-day,
- Act 2. Air 33. If you at an office solicit your due
- Act 2. Dialogue. Where is my dear husband?
- Act 2. Air 34. Thus when the swallow seeking prey
- Act 2. Air 36. I'm bubbled
- Act 2. Air 37. Cease your fuming
- Act 2. Air 38. Why how now, Madam Flirt?
- Act 2. Dialogue. Where's my wench?
- Act 2. Air 39. No power on earth can e'er divide
- Act 2. Dialogue. I am naturally compassionate...
- Act 2. Air 40. I like the fox shall grieve
- Act 2. Dialogue. To be sure, wench...
- Act 3. Air 41. When young at the bar you first taught me to score
- Act 3. Dialogue. Peachum then intends...
- Act 3. Air 43. Thus gamesters united in friendship are found
- Act 3. Dialogue. Why, boy, thou lookest...
- Act 3. Dialogue. I am sorry, gentlemen...
- Act 3. Air 44. The modes of the court so common are grown
- Act 3. Dialogue. The coronation account...
- Act 3. Air 45. What gudgeons are we men!
- Act 3. Dialogue. Dear Mrs Dye, your servant.
- Act 3. Air 46. In the days of my youth
- Act 3. Air 47. I'm like a skiff on the ocean tossed
- Act 3. Dialogue. Dear madam, your servant.
- Act 3. Air 48. When a wife's in her pout
- Act 3. Air 49. A curse attends that woman's love
- Act 3. Air 50. Among the men, coquets we find
- Act 3. Air 51. Come, sweet lass
- Act 3. Dialogue. All this wheedling...
- Act 3. Dialogue. Come, Miss Polly.
- Act 3. Dialogue. Set your heart to rest...
- Act 3. Air 53. Which way shall I turn me?
- Act 3. Air 54. When my hero in court appears
- Act 3. Air 55. When he holds up his hand
- Act 3. Air 56. Ourselves, like the great, to secure a retreat
- Act 3. Air 57. The charge is prepar'd
- Act 3. Dialogue. Follow them, Filch...
- Act 3. Air 59. O cruel, cruel, cruel case! / Air. 60. Since I must swing / Air. 61. But now again m
- Act 3. Air 67. Since Laws were made for ev'ry degree
- Act 3. Dialogue. For my having broke prison...
- Act 3. Dialogue. My dear Lucy, my dear Polly...
- Act 3. Air 68. Would I might be hang'd!
- Act 3. Dialogue. But, honest friend...
- Act 3. Dialogue. So, it seems, I am not left...
- Act 3. Air 69. Thus I stand like the Turk
Music reviews of John Gay: The Beggar's OperaMusic Review: 'Back to Basics' for John Gay's 1728 hit ballad opera Rating: 3 StarsThis recording seeks to give us a 'Beggar's Opera' uncut, undapted & unexpurgated. That presents big hurdles for modern performers & listeners. A complete performance is roughly 50/50 song & spoken dialogue, which poses a challenge whether one uses actors-who-sing (as in 1728) or singers-who-act (as here) - after all, the piece was conceived as a play punctuated by popular songs with 'parodied' lyrics. Unabridged, the text is full of obsolete words & local references, both geographical & political. Furthermore, there's a whole layer of satire in the musical numbers no longer accessible to us: the original audience would have been tickled by Gay's purloining a famous march from a heroic Italian opera - Handel's 'Rinaldo' - for a chorus of highwayman setting off to rob a coach, just as they would have been titillated to hear the text of Purcell's 'If Love's a Sweet Passion, why does it torment?' replaced by 'When young at the bar you first taught me to score.' But for us, other than 'Greensleeves' none of the tunes - lovely as they are - carries any particular associations.
Back in 1981, Jeremy Barlow & a handful of players from The Broadside Band joined 2 fine singers (Patrizia Kwella & Paul Elliot) in a charming CD that juxtaposed a few of the original songs with Gay's versions (Harmonia Mundi HMA 1951071). This ambitious 1994 follow-up, though well-performed & full of enjoyable moments, is frankly disappointing, & I can't help feeling here & there that everyone has bit off a bit more than they can chew. True, all the singers have been well coached in the dialogue, & all have their good moments - I like Richard Jackson's clenched-teeth Lockit very much - but to my ears only Sarah Walker has the size of personality & technical expertise to nail every single one of her lines square on its head easily. Elsewhere the effort shows, especially in Adrian Thompson's Macheath, which though hardworking lacks charm & charisma - he seems miscast. Sometimes one feels that the cast are treating Gay's text as if it were a serious slice-of-life view of the seamy side of London life, rather than a huge, cynical put-on (like its illustrious descendant, the Kander/Ebb/Fosse musical 'Chicago').
Musically, things are solid, as one would expect, yet even here I would question Barlow's decision to double the vocal line in almost every solo number with violins. To my ears it puts everyone in a metrical strait-jacket. This may have historical precedent, but surely a cast of professional singers, unlike actors, hardly needs the help? Again & again I felt that the few songs accompanied only by continuo - Polly's 'O ponder well' for one - gave the performers far more room for expressiveness.
Maybe I'm being too harsh, & certainly anyone interested in the history of the English popular musical theater will want to hear this, since at the very least it's a valuable reference edition. But I'm not sure it's going to come off my shelf as often as the Sargent/Austin version (Classics for Pleasure) or Benjamin Britten's genuinely operatic adaptation (Argo & Pearl); 'inauthentic' they may be, but expertly performed & full of gusto, fun & fierceness as well.
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