Cheap Gilbert & Sullivan: The Gondoliers (Music) (Richard Suart, Arthur Sullivan, John Pryce-Jones, D'Oyly Carte Opera Chorus, D'Oyly Carte Opera Orchestra, Alan Oke, Claire Kelly, David Cavendish, David Fieldsend, Elizabeth Elliott) Price
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| ARTIST: | Richard Suart, Arthur Sullivan, John Pryce-Jones, D'Oyly Carte Opera Chorus, D'Oyly Carte Opera Orchestra, Alan Oke, Claire Kelly, David Cavendish, David Fieldsend, Elizabeth Elliott |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Sony |
| TYPE: | Opera / Operetta / Oratorio, Classical Music, British Operetta, Classical, Opera, Opera/Operetta |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| MPN: | 58895 |
| # OF MEDIA: | 2 |
| UPC: | 074645889528 |
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Customer Reviews of Gilbert & Sullivan: The Gondoliers
Gilbert & Sullivan at their best! This is the best recording of Gilbert & Sullivan's "The Gondoliers" ever recorded! The diction is excellent and the singers are amazing. It has really helped me get ready for the production of "The Gondoliers" I'm in with The Utah Light Opera Company.
Good later G&S
The Gondoliers was the last Gilbert and Sullivan opera to be a great popular success; listening to this version of the opera as performed by the D'Oyly Carte shows why: it is a highly entertaining score, with warm characters and a lot of humor.
This CD contains excellent performances by John Rath as Don Alhambra, Jill Pert as the Duchess of Plaza-Toto and the usual fine comic performance by Richard Suart as the Duke of Plaza-Toro.
The score is particularly fine, with Sullivan showing his mastery of many musical types, as the liner notes indicate, such as the waltz, the gavotte, the saltarello and the tarantello. It is a very vibrant and upbeat score.
The libretto is very clever, and Gilbert's sense of satire is never sharper than here. There are amusing songs as the democratic Gondoliers make Barataria into a model of social equality, and the Duke and Duchess relate the story of their product endorsements -- like the Mikado, all the satires are really about Victorian England, not about the land in which the stories are staged.
The story's plot relies on a typical Gilbert device -- babies "switched at birth" make one of the two Gondoliers -- no one is sure which one -- the rightful King of Barataria, promised to the Duke's daughter, Casilda. This interferes with the Gondoliers' plan to marry their sweethearts, and provides much of the humor as the Gondoliers attempt to adjust to their new social position. There is, of course, the usual Gilbertian plot twist at the end to resolve everything happily.
This is a very fun opera to listen to; with almost none of the wistfulness that haunts the Mikado, Pinafore, or the Yeomen of the Guard.
Definitive
Sullivan's score to The Gondoliers has been the object of a good deal of tampering over the years, and as is the case with all of the D'Oyly Carte's more recent efforts, an attempt has been made to return to the autograph. What we hear in this set is Sullivan's original introduction, minus the cachuca which was tacked on in the 1930s. The original is vastly more effective. There are other points of interest, such as the almost supernaturally crisp chorus - sample them in the "Thank you gallant gondolieri" in the first act. The cast is, as usual with D'Oyly Carte, first rate, with John Rath and Jill Pert standouts. Rarely have I heard Don Alhambra's arias sung with such panache. Rath even gives Donals Adams and Darrell Fancourt a run for their money.
Well worth the investment, even if you have the excellent 1960 recording.