Merry Widow

Dorothy Kirsten, Robert Rounseville - Merry Widow

Merry Widow
List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $6.33
You Save: $3.65 (37%)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $2.87 (click here)
Category: Music CD
See more CD details
Listen soundtracks from this album



(Click here)
Buy this Music CD at online store in your country
Canadian Music Store

CD Details

Artist: Dorothy Kirsten, Robert Rounseville
Brand: KIRSTEN,DOROTHY
Edition: Music CD
Format: Cast Recording, Original recording remastered
CD Release Date: 2002-09-24
Music Label: Drg
Soundtracks:
  1. Opening Chorus
  2. Duet: A Dutiful Wife
  3. Entrance Song and Chorus: In Marsovia
  4. Song: Maxim's
  5. Finale
  6. Opening Chorus And Song Vilia
  7. Duet: The Cavalier
  8. March-Septet: Women
  9. Duet
  10. Duet
  11. Romance: Love In My Heart
  12. Finale
  13. Song, Six Girls And Chorus: The Girls At Maxim's
  14. Valse Duet: I Love You So
  15. Finale

Music reviews of Merry Widow

Music Review: An all-American "Merry Widow" from Broadway in 1952
Rating: 5 Stars

SOURCE:
Studio production recorded on April 6-9, 1952. As was the practice in those days, the cast of a well-reviewed Broadway show would march off to a New York sound studio to record about an hour of their show. This performance was originally released on the Columbia Masterworks label as an LP and, if memory serves, also in a 45-rpm version.

SOUND:
Dedicated audiophiles will be appalled by the fact that the sonics of this recording are noticeably less than those of a digitally recorded piece from, say, last week. People possessing commonsense, on the other hand, will find the relatively closely recorded voices of the principal singers to be perfectly clear. The orchestral sound is slightly boxy, but still fully enjoyable to anyone listening with a little goodwill.

CAST:
Sonia, widow of the richest man in the Balkan kingdom of Marsovia - Dorothy Kirsten (soprano)
Count Danilo, a nobleman attached to the Marsovian Embassy in Paris and not doing very much to earn his salary. Once, long before, he had sought Sonia's love - Robert Rounseville (tenor)
Baron Popov, Marsovian ambassador to France - Unidentified (baritone)
Valencienne, Baroness Popov, a lady dangerously attracted to a good-looking Frenchman - Genevieve Warner (soprano)
Camille, a dashing young Parisian infatuated by the wife of the Marsovian ambassador - Wesley Dalton (tenor)
Baron Cascada, a Parisian would-be suitor for Sonia - Clifford Harvuot (baritone)
Nisch, a junior functionary of the Marsovian embassy, and the only one in the cast who knows what is going on from beginning to end - unidentified (comic baritone)
Count St. Brioche, a Parisian would-be suitor for Sonia - Unidentified (tenor)
Lead Grissette, a lady of negotiable virtue, a denizen of Maxim's - Betty Bartley (soprano, sort of)

CONDUCTOR:
Lehman Engel, with an unidentified orchestra.

TEXT:
As a Broadway production, this "Merry Widow" was obviously presented in English. The text used was the then universally used version penned by Adrian Ross, which held sway well into the 1970s.

Consistent with the time limitations imposed by the recording technology of those days, no dialogue was included in this recording.

My old, battered piano-vocal score has vanished for the moment, but it seems to me that the major numbers of the show are in place, although I think a few brief connective passages and a bit of extended dance music is missing. The ending is the correct ending for the operetta, not the finale of Lehar's "Paganini," that was torn in bloody hunks from that operetta to beef up "The Merry Widow's" too-short third act for the benefit of Joan Sutherland. Years after "The Merry Widow," had achieved world-wide success, Lehar transferred into it a comic song for Nisch, so that that untidy diplomatic gofer could preposterously claim to be the very last word in fashion. Sadly, the song was not included in this production.

In this performance, the big number for six Grisettes in Act III is presented as a solo for Betty Bartley with chorus back-up.

DOCUMENTATION:
No libretto, although one is hardly needed, since the English words of the singers are immaculately clear. Track list that identifies singers (some of them, anyway) but not characters in the cast. No timings. A brief essay on the history of the show, with emphasis on the 1907 premier of "The Merry Widow" in New York. Once again, if memory serves, that essay is a word-for-word reprint of the text on the back cover of the old Columbia Lp album.

COMMENTARY:
This is the first version of "The Merry Widow" I ever heard and I still think it one of the best.

An earlier Amazon reviewer is clearly not a fan of the Adrian Ross translation. Ross was certainly free with his work, naming Danilo's country "Marsovia," demoting Danilo from prince to count, simplifying the nearly unpronounceable Njegus into "Nisch," changing Hanna Glavari into "Sonia," and a hundred other things. But the plain truth is that all translations of this operetta are only loosely based on the original--which is, itself, a very loose adaptation into German of a French comic play. And consider the horrors inflicted by Hollywood in its various bloody-minded cinematic adaptations. In my time, I have performed on stage in the roles of Camille, St Brioche, Cascada and (heaven help me) Nisch/Njegus, always using the Ross translation. It works perfectly well before audiences and has the great virtue of sounding and feeling appropriate for a work set in 1905.

Dorothy Kirsten was a major American soprano who had a fine career at the Metropolitan Opera and in many other places. She has pulled back a bit on her operatic voice for this lighter work, and done so with great success. Her diction is flawless, even in the Vilia song/Viljalied, which very definitely demands an operatically-trained voice. He characterization of the Widow is equally flawless.

Robert Rounceville was a fine American lyric tenor. He can be heard on the original cast recording of Bernstein's "Candide" as Candide and he can be seen doing a very creditable job in the fiercely difficult role of Hoffmann in the movie of "The Tales of Hoffmann," made at about the same time as this recording. His performance here is proof positive, as far as I am concerned, that Danilo should be sung by a tenor as intended, rather than a baritone, as is now usually the case.

About Genevieve Warner, Clifford Harvuot, Wesley Dalton and Betty Bartley, I know no more than what I hear on this disk, although the liner notes make passing mention of the fact that the first two were singers with the Metropolitan Opera. They were good singers, whatever their backgrounds. Betty Bartley, on the other hand, was apparently a musical comedy character performer of the type often cast as Adelaide in "Guys and Dolls." Having had my own struggles with the high-lying part of Camille, I can assure you that Wesley Dalton was a very fine lyric tenor indeed. And on top of that he managed to be intelligible throughout--amazing!

By 1952, "The Merry Widow" had been playing more or less continually somewhere in America for 45 years. Pick-up singers and accompaniments adjusted to fit local abilities and talents had become the rule. It is clear that this 1952 revival was intended to be a class act. The singers are very strong and the producers proudly proclaimed that they had revivified the original orchestrations used in the smashingly successful 1907 New York premiere.

The only real fault I find in this recording is centered on the chorus. In 1952, a typical Broadway show had ten chorus singers, whose job it was to sing, and eight dancers who, well, danced. "The Merry Widow" is not a dancing show--except in that abomination cobbled together for Sutherland--so I'd expect more singers rather than less. On this recording, my impression is that the chorus consists of two or three men and two or three women, none of them particularly strong. Now, this may be the fault of the recording engineers, but I suspect that it was a cost-cutting measure to use a handful of Columbia's house singers instead of a stage-full of singers from Broadway.

Because of the "historic" sound and the anemic chorus, I might have assigned a miserly four stars to this American and Broadway version of "The Merry Widow," but, no, the performance overall is so good that I think it's worth a full, solid, five stars. And devil take the hindmost!

LEC/Am/12-09
More Merry Widow free music reviews:
1

Description of Merry Widow

No Description Available.
Genre: Soundtracks & Scores
Media Format: Compact Disk
Rating:
Release Date: 24-SEP-2002

Broadway & Vocalists CDs

Music Genres
Bestsellers in Broadway & Vocalists CDs
Elegant Evening ImageGeorge Shearing, Mel Torme - Elegant Evening
SHEARING,G/TORME,M; Release date: 1990-10-25; Music CD
Best price: $6.39
Price in other shops: $11.98
Spring Is Here ImageStan Getz - Spring Is Here
Release date: 1993-01-11; Music CD
Price in other shops: $8.98
Girl Singer ImageRosemary Clooney - Girl Singer
Release date: 1999-04-01; Music CD
Best price: $8.97
Price in other shops: $8.98
Nog ImageThe Blenders - Nog
Release date: 1998-10-20; Music CD
Best price: $8.77
Price in other shops: $15.99
Girl ImageBrave Combo, Tiny Tim - Girl
TIM,TINY/BRAVE COMB; Release date: 1996-03-19; Music CD
Best price: $15.07
Price in other shops: $16.98
Southern Journey, Vol. 11: Honor The Lamb - The Belleville A Cappella Choir ImageBelleville a Cappella Choir - Southern Journey, Vol. 11: Honor The Lamb - The Belleville A Cappella Choir
Release date: 1998-02-10; Music CD
Best price: $83.93
Love Songs ImageDiane Schuur - Love Songs
Release date: 1993-05-11; Music CD
Best price: $4.25
Price in other shops: $11.98
Love Is the Thing [Vinyl] ImageNat King Cole - Love Is the Thing [Vinyl]
Release date: 1996-11-19; Music CD
Best price: $169.99
Linda Ronstadt: Greatest Hits ImageLinda Ronstadt - Linda Ronstadt: Greatest Hits
Release date: 1998-01-13; Music CD
Best price: $19.99
Price in other shops: $29.98
Sounds of 66 ImageBuddy Rich, Sammy Davis Jr - Sounds of 66
Release date: 1996-09-17; Music CD
Price in other shops: $10.98
Similar CDs
How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying ImageHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying
Release date: 2011-06-07; Music CD
Best price: $9.98
Price in other shops: $18.98
Carnival (1961 Original Broadway Cast) ImageCarnival (1961 Original Broadway Cast)
Release date: 1989-06-08; Music CD
Best price: $7.17
Price in other shops: $11.98
Music of Sigmund Romberg ImageMusic of Sigmund Romberg
Release date: 1990-10-25; Music CD
Best price: $49.99
Carmen Jones (1943  Original Broadway Cast) ImageCarmen Jones (1943 Original Broadway Cast)
VARIOUS; Release date: 2003-02-25; Music CD
Best price: $4.31
Price in other shops: $16.98
Flora The Red Menace: The Original Broadway Cast Recording (1965) ImageFred Ebb, John Kander - Flora The Red Menace: The Original Broadway Cast Recording (1965)
Release date: 1992-03-10; Music CD
Best price: $5.89
Price in other shops: $8.99
Follies (New Broadway Cast Recording) ImageFollies (New Broadway Cast Recording)
Release date: 2011-11-29; Music CD
Best price: $12.51
Price in other shops: $22.98
The Desert Song ImageNelson Eddy - The Desert Song
Release date: 2010-07-20; Music CD
Best price: $11.17
Price in other shops: $22.98
The Merry Widow Image1964 Music Theater of Lincoln Center Cast Recording - The Merry Widow
Release date: 2011-05-17; Music CD
Best price: $10.93
Price in other shops: $11.98
The Music of Victor Herbert ImageThe Music of Victor Herbert
Release date: 2008-05-01; Music CD
Best price: $12.99
Price in other shops: $15.99
The Desert Song / The New Moon ImageThe Desert Song / The New Moon
Release date: 2002-07-30; Music CD
Best price: $9.55
Price in other shops: $16.98
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles