Mar 31, 2012

Ernestina Bendazzi-Garulli (Soprano) (Naples 1864 – Trieste 1931)




She was the daughter of known soprano Luigia Bendazzi (1829-1901) and the conductor and song pedagogue Benedetto Secchi. She received her vocal lessons from her father and appeared quite early as a concert singer. She had big success as a soloist in ‘’Stabat Mater’’ of Rossini at the Teatro Constanzi in Rome (1884). Her stage debut took place in1885 at the Teatro Comunale in Trieste, where she sang the role of Zerline in ‘’Fra Diavolo’’. Afterwards she sang there in ‘’Dinorah’’ and ‘’Bianca da Cerbia’’ of Antonio Smareglia. That same year she also performed at the Teatro Comunale in Bologna in ‘’Kônigin von Saba’’, ‘’Dinorah’’ and ‘’Le Villi’’ of Puccini. On December, 1885 she made her debut at La Scala appearing in ‘’Carmen’’ and ‘’Robert le Diable’’ of Meyerbeer. In 1886 she again sang at La Scala, but this time in the Italian premiære of Bizet’s ‘’I Pescatori di perle’’. In the 1886-87 season she guested in Lisbon (Teatro San Carlo) and Berlin (Kroll Theatre). In 1887 she was married to the tenor Alfonso Garulli with whom she appeared often. In 1894 she performed at the Teatro Lirico in Milan and at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome as Manon in Massenet’s opera of the smae name. In 1902 she sang at the Teatro Politeama in La Spezia. In 1904 she made guest appearance at the theatre de Aix les Bains. After her retirement she taught singing in Trieste.

Chronology of some appearances

1885 Milano  Teatro alla Scala Carmen (Micaela)
1886 Milano   Teatro La Scala Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1886 Roma  Teatro Argentina Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1887 Perugia  Teatro Morlacchi Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1888 Reggio Emilia Teatro Municipale Carmen (Carmen)
1888 Bologna  Teatro Comunale Carmen (Carmen)
1889 Bologna  Teatro Comunale Lohengrin (Elsa)
1889 Madrid Teatro Reale Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1889 Torino  Teatro Regio Traviata (Violetta)
1890 Livorno  Teatro Avvalorati Barbiere di Siviglia (Rosina)
1890 Livorno  Teatro Avvalorati Mefistofele (Margherita)
1890 Verona  Teatro Ristori Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1890 Parma Teatro Regio Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1891 Pisa Teatro Verdi Carmen (Carmen)
1891 Pisa  Teatro Verdi Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1891 Parma  Teatro Regio Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1891 Como  Teatro Sociale Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1892  Pisa  Teatro Nuovo Mefistofele (Margherita)
1892 Barcellona  Teatro Liceo Otello (Desdemona)
1892 Cremona Teatro Concordia Pescatori di Perle (Leila)
1893 Palermo  Politeama Loreley (Loreley)
1896 Trieste  Politeama Rossetti Carmen (Carmen)
1897 Lisbona  Teatro San Carlos Carmen (Carmen)
1897 Pamplona  Teatro Gayarre Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1897 La Corugna  Teatro Rosalia Lohengrin (Elsa)
1897 La Corugna  Teatro Rosalia Pagliacci (Nedda)
1901 Lucca Teatro Del Giglio Werther (Carlotta)
1902 Bologna  Arena Azeglio Carmen (Carmen)
1902 Milano  Teatro Lirico Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)
1902 La Spezia  Politeama Duca di Genova Cavalleria Rusticana (Santuzza)

RECORDINGS FOR SALE

 






Zonophone, Milano 1903?
Serenata: Sera di paradiso with Alfonso Garulli X-1543
Ogni sabato (Gordigiani)  X-1544
Manon (Massenet): Addio mio picciol desco  X-1546
Mireille (Gounod): Chanson de Magali with Alfonso Garulli X-1548

Pathe-AICC cylinders & discs, Milano 1903?
Mireille (Gounod): Canzone di Magali with Alfonso Garulli  84085




















Garulli by Stampanoni

Mar 30, 2012

Franco De Fregorio (Tenor) (Palermo 1875 - ?)

 

He began his career in italian provincial theaters where he sang during the first decade of the 20th century. In 1908 he appeared at the Teatro Nazionale in Rome as Edgardo in Donizetti’s ‘’Lucia di Lammermoor’’. In the next year, he performed at the Teatro Rossi in Pisa as Fra Diavolo in D. Auber’s opera of the same name. In 1911 De Gregorio guested during a season at the Italian opera in Holland. From 1915 to 1920 he traveled with smaller opera troops through North America. In 1919 he sang with the San Carlo Opera Company in New York as Turiddu in Mascagni’s ‘’Cavalleria rusticana’’, while soprano Rose Ponselle appeared as Santuzza. Probably after finishing his career, De Gregorio taught in USA.

Chronology of some appearances

1897 Aja Het Gebow Lucia di Lammermoor (Edgardo)
1900 Garlasco Teatro Martinetti Faust (Faust)
1903 Odessa Teatro Municipale Rigoletto (Duca)
1905 Aja Het Gebow Manon Lescaut (De Grieux)
1906 Salerno Teatro Verdi Rigoletto (Duca)
1908 Firenze Politeama Nazionale Manon (De Grieux)
1910 Arezzo Teatro Petrarca Manon (De Grieux)
1912 Melbourne Her Majestic's Rigoletto (Duca)
1917 Bogotа  Teatro Olimpia Stagione
1919 Quebec Auditorium Faust (Faust)



RECORDINGS FOR SALE








Favorite
Gioconda (Ponchielli) Cielo e mar  42046

Beka, Milano? 1908/1909
Tosca (Puccini): Recondita armonia 42080
Aida (Verdi): Celeste Aida 42379
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Cielo e mar 42046

Gramophone, Milano 1910-04-15
Tosca (Puccini): Recondita armonia 2-52754 157ah
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Cielo e mar 2-52744 166ah

Victor, USA 1910-04-15
Tosca (Puccini): E lucevan le stelle 45017 156ah
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Cielo e mar 45027-B

Victor, USA 1910-04-16
Manon Lescaut (Puccini): Tra voi belle 45015 168ah

Gramophone, Milano 1910-04-16
Bohème (Puccini): Questa è Mimì with Nulli, Sala & chorus 54416 173ah

VictorUSA 1910-04-23
Bohème (Puccini): Sono andati with Maria Bronzoni 45013-A

Gramophone, Milano 1910-12-09
Zazа (Leoncavallo): E un riso gentil 2-52790 945ah

Gramophone, Milano 1910-12-14
Cavalleria Rusticana (Mascagni): O Lola (Siciliana) 2-52806 964ah

Victor, USA 1910-12-17
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Già ti veggo with Ernesto Badini and Fanny Lotti 55019-A

Pathé, Milano 1912?
Traviata (Verdi): Scena della borsa with Billi 86433

Traviata (Verdi): Parigi o cara with Billi 86434

Faust (Gounod) Salve, dimora, pt 1 Pathe 86435
Faust (Gounod) Salve, dimora, pt 2 Pathe  86436

Victor, USA 1913-03-08
Lucia di Lammermoor (Donizetti): T'allontana sciagurato with Malvina Pereira, Giuseppe Maggi and Vincenzo Bettoni 68454 610aj

Victor, USA 1913-03-19
Boheme (Puccini): Mimi e  una civetta with Noemi Casini and Paolo Ferretti 68453 650aj

Gramophone, Milano 1913-03-19
Trovatore (Verdi): Di quella pira 059250 647aj




















De Gregorio by Stampanoni

Mar 29, 2012

Antonio Paoli (Tenor) (Ponce, Puerto Rico 1871 – San Juan, Puerto Rico 1946)


                                                                Otello

                                                             Otello

                                                              Manrico

He was known at the height of his fame as "The King of Tenors and The Tenor of Kings." He is considered to be the first Puerto Rican to reach international fame in the musical arts. Paoli has been recognized as "one of the most outstanding opera singers of all time," and as one who had "one of the most lyric and powerful voices...superior even to his contemporary rival, Enrico Caruso. After spending his childhood in his birth town of Ponce, Paoli moved to Spain where, with the assistance of his well-connected sister Amalia, he obtained a Royal scholarship to take singing lessons in Italy. After singing to standing ovation crowds in both Spain and Italy, Paoli made his grand debut in Paris, France, where he was enouraged to perform on the highest levels of the world stage. Before the end of the 19th century and while Paoli was still in his twenties, he went on a tour of Europe that earned him both popular acclaim, and imperial honors from princes, kings, and emperors. Between 1900 and 1914 his career sky-rocketed, with performances not only in Europe but also in the Americas, the Caribbean, Africa, and Asia. When World War I forced the closure of all European opera houses, Paoli made his living as a professional boxer. Unfortunately, he also lost his singing voice during this period. After the War ended, following medical advice and performing vocal exercises, Paoli regained his voice and returned to the international stage, in all the glory of days past. He performed in Europe, North and South America, and finally settled with his sister Amalia in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where she had opened a singing school. Paoli spent the last 20 years of his life teaching voice and singing in San Juan, while also working for the establishment of a music conservatory in that city. He would not see this last dream come true, because he developed cancer and died at age 75. He was buried in San Juan, but his remains were later transferred to a mausoleum in his birth town of Ponce.
Paoli (birth name: Antonio Emilio Paoli y Marcano) was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico. He was the son of Amalia Marcano Intriago, from the island of Margarita, Venezuela and of Domingo Paoli Marcatentti, from Corsica. Paoli's maternal grandfather, a rich landlord, was opposed to the relationship, therefore the young couple escaped to the Dominican Republic without getting married and later returned to Puerto Rico. The couple established themselves in the city of Yauco, but later moved into a house, given to them by Amalia's aunt, Teresa Intriago, located at one of the main arteries in the city of Ponce's urban core, Calle Mayor (Mayor Street), House #14. Ponce at the time was the financial and cultural capital of the island, thereby the ideal place for the initial cultural development of Paoli.
When Paoli was young, his parents would often take him to operas at Ponce's La Perla Theater located a block away from Paoli's residence. There, on one occasion he saw a performance of Giuseppe Verdi's Il Trovatore by Italian tenor, Pietro Baccei, and at that moment knew what he wanted to do as an adult. His parents were very supportive of his ambition and guided him on this route during his youth, enrolling him in a school of "voice" directed by Ramon Marin. His sister Amalia was a soprano who performed at La Perla in Emilio Arrieta's opera, Marina. In 1883, when Paoli was only 12 years old, both his parents died and he went to live in Spain with his sister Amalia.
Amalia, who at that time was under the protective wing of Isabel de Borbon, Princess of Asturias, and sister of the King of Spain, Alfonso XII, was taking singing classes under Napoleon Verger. In 1884, Amalia helped Paoli to obtain two scholarships from her Majesty Queen Maria Christina, Queen Regent of Spain. Paoli started his studies at the Royal Monastery of El Escorial. Paoli entered the Toledo's Military Academy and in 1892, graduated with honors. He was assigned to the Queen's escort and named personal custodian and guard of the child King Alfonso XIII. Paoli desired to continue singing and in 1897, went to study at the Academia de Canto La Scala in Milan, Italy. On April 26, 1899, he made his debut in Gioacchino Rossini's opera William Tell in Paris, France. Paris newspapers commented on Paoli's success and stated "we should declare Paoli the Tenor of France.
Between 1900 and 1914, Paoli performed in Europe, America, Africa, and Asia. He performed in Italy, Luxembourg and in the United Kingdom, with performances in London, Scotland, Edinburgh, and Brighton, closing the year with concerts in Corsica (his father's homeland) and Turkey. In 1900, he married Josephine Vetiska, an Austrian, in Vienna. From 1901-1902, Paoli performed in the following countries: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Venezuela and the United States. Paoli purchased a villa in Porto Cereso, Lugano, Italy, where his son Antonio Arnaldo was born. After singing for King Alfonso XII and the Royal family in Spain, he returned to the United States and sang in various cities, among them New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Albany, Providence, Grand Rapids, New London, Detroit, Cleveland, Indianapolis, Buffalo, Pittsburg, Syracuse and Chicago.
In 1905, Paoli performed at the Grand Theatre du Conservatoire in St. Petersburg, Russia. The Czar of Russia Nicholas II was present during one of the performances and after inviting Paoli to perform at the Royal winter palace, awarded Paoli The Cross of St. Mauricio medal and bestowed upon him the title Cammer Sanger (Chamber Singer).
On September 5, 1907, Paoli held a private recital for Pope Pius X at the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. That same year he was named as a "Singer of the Royal Court" by William II of Germany. Paoli was also the first operatic artist to record an entire opera when he participated in a performance of Pagliacci by Ruggiero Leoncavallo in Milan, Italy. He was selected in 1907, as the First Tenor in the main character by a team of engineers and musicians which included Leoncavallo. The recording was arranged in the following manner; the musicians were placed at the end of the recording room and the cack up singers in a semi-arc in front of the gramophone while Paoli stood alone 20 feet (6.1 m) away from the gramophone.
Paoli continued to perform around the world with performances in Greece, Palestine, Poland, Egypt, Spain and Italy, where he established his permanent residence. In 1910, the singer was signed as the First Tenor by La Scala, Milan, the most prestigious opera company in the world at the time. Paoli received a contract to inaugurate Teatro Colón, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he sang Otello and Di quella pira. He also performed in Russia, Poland, Egypt, Hungary, Belgium, Cuba, Chile, Haiti, Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil, Canada, and the United States.
By 1914, just before the start of World War I, Paoli lost his voice and all of the major opera houses in Europe were shut down. Paoli moved to Spain, a neutral country in the conflict, leaving all his properties unattended in Italy. By 1915, Paoli found himself without economic means as a result of his bad investments.
In order to make a living, Paoli became a professional boxer and after a period of training in Spain, he moved to England to start his new "career." He was undefeated in his first five fights. He broke his right wrist on his sixth challenge, which ended his boxing career.
Paoli sold his properties in Italy and acquired a small country house in Spain. He stayed for a few months with his brother Carlos in the Philippines. Paoli was medically treating his vocal cords, and it was commented that his career was over, but he continued his singing exercises with his sister Amalia, who moved into his house in Spain.
In January 1917, Paoli returned to the stage and performed the opera Samson and Delilah at the Constanzi Theater in Rome. Elvira de Hidalgo, who later became the singing coach of Maria Callas, remembered that:
"No one suspected that Paoli was coming back to the stage; we all knew that he had lost his voice. People were there to see him fail; I saw some guys with tomatoes and rotten eggs, ready to throw them as soon as Paoli made his first mistake. But when he came out singing his initial aria, the public went crazy and stood up in a standing ovation. Paoli's voice sounded like one of those trumpets that you expect to hear in the day of the final judgment. His debut was tremendous. He had to repeat twice every single aria that he performed that night, because the public furiously demanded it. He performed for seven consecutive nights with the theater at its maximum capacity. I attended every single function. Every night he sang better than the night before. I always dreamed to sing with Paoli, but I don't think my voice was good or strong enough to sing with him. I think he was the greatest tenor ever.
Paoli kept busy performing in Italy, South America and the United States. He returned to Puerto Rico in 1923. At the time, Amalia Paoli was residing in San Juan (in the ward of Santurce) where she was running a singing school (Academia Paoli). Antonio conducted a few performances around the island and then departed to sing at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Manhattan Opera House and the Metropolitan Opera House in Philadelphia. He had wanted to sing in the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, but apparently his competitor Enrico Caruso opposed this. Some attribute this to the fact that Caruso was a shareholder of the renowned opera house. From the U.S., the tenor would visit Curaçao, Cuba, Colombia, Haiti and Ecuador.
Even with this busy agenda, Paoli's financial situation remained strained. After living in New York City for almost the entire year of 1927, Paoli decided to come back to Puerto Rico to live and work with his sister Amalia, giving voice lessons at the Academia Paoli. Paoli also helped produce Othello at the Municipal Theater in San Juan. For the next two decades Paoli's main concern would be teaching at the Paoli Academy with Amalia. In 1928, the tenor performed Verdi's Otello entirely for the last time in San Juan, Puerto Rico. This was his last performance on stage. It took place at the San Juan Municipal Theater, known today as the Tapia Theater. In 1935, the government of Puerto Rico named the San Juan Municipal Theater in his honor, changing its name to Teatro Paoli. In 1929, his wife Josephine died and a year later he married Adelaida Bonini, from Rimini, Italy, and whom he affectionately called "Adina". He gave his last singing performance in 1942, while commemorating the one-year anniversary of the death of his sister, Amalia Paoli. The service was conducted at the Chapel of the University of the Sacred Heart (Santurce).
Paoli died of prostate cancer in San Juan on August 24, 1946, and was buried in the Puerto Rico Memorial Cemetery in Carolina, Puerto Rico. On April 13, 2005, Paoli's remains, and those of his (second) wife Adina Bonini (who had died in May, 1978) were exhumed and transferred to Ponce's Román Baldorioty de Castro National Pantheon and buried by the base of his statue.

Wikipedia.org

Chronology of some appearances

1903 Firenze Teatro Della Pergola Otello (Otello)
1903 Venezia Teatro La Fenice Trovatore (Manrico)
1903 Milano Teatro Dal Verme Trovatore (Manrico)
1903 Bologna Arena Azeglio Trovatore (Manrico)
1904 Trieste Politeama Rossetti Lohengrin (Lohengrin)
1904 Graz  Stadt Otello (Otello)
1904 Lisbona Teatro San Carlos Otello (Otello)
1904 Valencia  Teatro Principal Otello (Otello)
1905 Madrid Teatro Reale Otello (Otello)
1906 Santiago del Cile Teatro Municipal Lohengrin (Lohengrin)
1906 Napoli Teatro San Carlo Otello (Otello)
1906 Santiago del Cile Teatro Municipal Otello (Otello)
1906 Valparaiso Teatro Victoria Otello (Otello)
1908 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Otello (Otello)
1908 Ferrara Teatro Tosi Borghi Otello (Otello)
1909 Madrid Teatro Reale Otello (Otello)
1911 Madrid Teatro Reale Otello (Otello)
1912 Genova Teatro Carlo Felice Otello (Otello)
1912 Buenos Ayres Politeama Argentino Otello (Otello)
1913 Barcellona Teatro Tivoli Otello (Otello)
1917 Milano Teatro Dal Verme Otello (Otello)
1917 Torino Politeama Chiarella Otello (Otello)
1918 Milano Teatro Lirico Guglielmo Ratcliff (Guglielmo)
1918 Milano Teatro Lirico Otello (Otello)
1918 Firenze Teatro Della Pergola Otello (Otello)
1918 Lucerna Kursaal Otello (Otello)
1919 Buenos Ayres Teatro Coliseo Otello (Otello)
1919 Rio de Janeiro Teatro Municipal Otello (Otello)
1920 Lisbona Coliseo Recrejos Otello (Otello)
1920 Roma Teatro Costanzi Otello (Otello)
1920  Milano Teatro Carcano Otello (Otello)
1920 Lisbona Coliseo Recrejos Pagliacci (Canio)
1921 Torino  Politeama Chiarella Otello (Otello)
1922 New York Academy of Music Otello (Otello)
1922   Philadelphia Teatro Metropolitan Otello (Otello)
1923 Havana Teatro Nacional Otello (Otello)
1926 New York Manhattan Theater Otello (Otello)

RECORDINGS FOR SALE

G&T, Milano 1907-06?
Trovatore (Verdi): Di geloso amor spezzato with Francesco Cigada and Clara Johanna 54340 10519b
Trovatore (Verdi): Miserere with Clara Johanna 054159 1178c
Samson e Dalila (Saint-Saens): Figli miei 2-52597 10521b
Profeta (Meyerbeer): Re del cielo 2-52598 10522b
Samson e Dalila (Saint-Saens): Spezza i ceppi 052169 1179c
Trovatore (Verdi): Deserto sulla terra 2-52596 10540b
Trovatore (Verdi): Di quella pira 052170 1182c
Africana (Meyerbeer): O paradiso 052171 1184c
Guglielmo Tell (Rossini): Che finger tento with Francesco Cigada 054160 1186c
Guglielmo Tell (Rossini): Troncar suoi di with Francesco Cigada and Aristodemo Sillich 054161 1187c
Carmen (Bizet): Mia tu sei with Francesco Cigada, Ines Salvador and Giuseppina Huguet 054162 12041/2c
Pagliacci (Leoncavallo): Vesti la giubba 052166 1210c
Pagliacci (Leoncavallo): No pagliaccio non son 052167 12111/2c
Pagliacci (Leoncavallo): Versa Il Filtro with Francesco Cigada, Gaetano Pini-Corsi and Giuseppina Huguet 54339 10609b
Pagliacci (Leoncavallo): Aitalo Signore with Francesco Cigada, Gaetano Pini-Corsi and Giuseppina Huguet 054157 1230c
Pagliacci (Leoncavallo): Finale with Francesco Cigada, Gaetano Pini-Corsi, Giuseppina Huguet and Ernesto Badini 054158 1231c
Carmen (Bizet): Io t’amo ancor with Maria Passeri 054174 1257c
Mademiglia de Belle Isle (Samara): Si, io t'amo 2-52595 10650b
Otello (Verdi): Esultate & Ora e per sempre addio 052172 1259c
Otello (Verdi): Dio mi potevi scagliar 052173 1260c

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-06
Andrea Chenier (Giordano): Si, fui soldato 2-52783 13199b

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-10
Cid (Massenet): Inno 2-52710 13215b
Cid (Massenet): Padre del ciel 052297 18411/2c
Andrea Chenier (Giordano): Un di all'azzuro spazio 052271 1842c

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-11
Otello (Verdi): Tu! Indietro, fuggi…Ora e per sempre addio 052272 1843c
Aida (Verdi): Nume custode e vindice with Andres Perello De Segurola  054262 18441/2c

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-12
Rigoletto (Verdi): Questa o quella 2-52711 13232b

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-15
Poliuto (Donizetti): Al suon del'arpe with Honoria Popovici 54407 13255b
Robert le diable (Meyerbeer): Siciliana 2-52721 13257b
Roberto il diavolo (Meyerbeer): Di mia patria 2-52712 13258b

Gramophone, Milano 1911-06-27
Otello (Verdi): Niun mi tema  052328 313ai
Trovatore (Verdi): Ah! si ben mio 052329 317ai

Gramophone, Milano 1911-06-28
Aida (Verdi):  Celeste Aida 052330 324ai

Gramophone, Milano 1911-06-30
Dejanire (Saint-Saens): Viens! o toi 2-52808 1180ah
Rigoletto (Verdi):  La donna e mobile 2-52809 1181ah
Ugonotti (Meyerbeer): Bianca al par 052332 329ai

Gramophone, Milano 1911-07-29
Otello (Verdi): Questa e una ragna with Vittorio de Goetzen and Salvatore Salvati 54451 1291ah
Otello (Verdi): Vieni, l'aula e deserta with Vittorio de Goetzen and Salvatore Salvati 054330 356ai
Otello (Verdi): Venga la morte with Fernanda Chiesa 054399 358ai
Otello (Verdi): Una vela...Esultate! with Vittorio De Goetzen and Giuseppe Sala 054331 360ai

Gramophone, Milano 1911-08-04
Otello (Verdi): Dio mi potevi scagliar 052336 382ai

Gramophone, Milano 1911-08-05
Iris (Mascagni): Apri la tua finestra 2-52813 1305ah
Andrea Chenier (Giordano): Come un bel di di maggio 2-52815 1307ah
Canzone Guerresca (Giordano) 2-52817 1309ah
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Cielo e mar 052337 383ai




















Paoli by Stampanoni

Mar 28, 2012

Honoria Popovici (Soprano)




Probably she was born in Romania and received here education in Italy. Here real name was Onoria Popovich and she arrived in Italy approximately in 1902. In 1903 she sang at the Teatro La Fenice in  Venice in Mascagni’s "Guglielmo Ratcliff". Two years later she appeared at the Teatro Regio in Parma in "Siberia" of Giordano. I know that in 1907 she also performed at the Teatro San Carlo in Lisbon. In Italy she alsways sang only on the best opera stages.

Chronology of some appearances

1901Barcellona Teatro Liceo   Aida (Aida)
1902 Milano Teatro La Scala  Euryante di C.M.Weber (Eglantina)
1903 Venezia   Teatro La Fenice Guglielmo Ratcliff (Maria)
1904 Alessandria d'Egitto  Teatro Abbas Aida (Aida)
1905 Conegliano Teatro Accademia    Siberia (Stephana)                            
1906 Marsala Teatro Garibaldi Aida (Aida)
1907 Lisbona Teatro San Carlos Ballo in Maschera (Amelia)

RECORDINGS FOR SALE

 






Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-11
Ernani (Verdi): Tu se' Ernani with Giuseppe Maggi and Giovanni Davi 54443 13229b

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-14
Ernani (Verdi):  O sommo Carlo with Giovanni Davi and Francesco Federici 054287 1851c

Gramophone, Milano 1909-05-15
Poliuto (Donizetti): Al suon del'arpe with  Antonio Paoli 54407 13255b


Popovici by Stampanoni

Amelia Pinto (Soprano) (Palermo 1878 - Palermo 1946)




                                                                Tosca

She received her education at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome. There she studied with Zaira Cortini Falchi. She made her debut in 1899 at the Teatro Grande in Brescia in ‘’La Gioconda’’ followed by ‘’Il trillo del diavolo’’ by Stanislao Falchi. In 1900 she performed ar the Teatro Giglio in Lucca as Tosca in Puccini’s opera of the same name. Already in 1900 she came to the Milan's La Scala where she appeared in ‘’Tristano e Isotta’’ with Giuseppe Borgatti. At the same theatre, on 11. 3. 1902, she sang in Alberto Franchetti's ‘’Germania’’ world premiere together with Enrico Caruso and Mario Sammarco. In 1908 she guested at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires. In 1903 she sang Desdemona in Tamagno’s last performance of Otello at the Teatro Argentina in Rome. After she had married a Sicilian doctor, she finished her career, but in 1914 again sang at Scala as Isolde in ‘’Tristano e Isotta’’ under Toscanini. In 1916 she accepted an engagement in Madrid appearing in ‘’La Gioconda’’, ‘’Tristano e Isotta’’ and ‘’La Walkiria’’. After her daughter's death she retired from the stage and later lived in Palermo.

Chronology of some appearances

1899 Brescia Teatro Grande Gioconda (Gioconda)
1900 Lucca Teatro Giglio Tosca (Tosca)
1900  Milan La Scala Tristano e Isotta (Isotta)
1902 Milan La Scala Germania (Ricke)
1903 Rome Teatro Argentina Otello (Desdemona)
1914 Milan La Scala Tristano e Isotta (Isotta)



RECORDINGS FOR SALE

 






Complete G&T, Milano 1902-04-11
Germania (Franchetti): Tu non sei buono 53239  1775b
Cavalleria Rusticana (Mascagni): Voi lo sapete 53233 1776b
Ero e Leandro (Bottesini): Romanza di Ero 53238 1777b
Tosca (Puccini): Vissi d’arte, vissi d’amore 53234 1780b
Gioconda (Ponchielli): Suicidio 53240 1781b
Tosca (Puccini): Vissi d’arte, vissi d’amore 53232 1782b (BG)

Fonotipia, Milano 1908-10-17
Marcella (Giordano): Son tre mesi unpubl. XPh3531
Cavalleria Rusticana (Mascagni): Voi lo sapete 92400 XPh3533

Fonotipia, Milano 1908-10-28
Siberia (Giordano): Non odi là il martir  92401 XPh3570

Fonotipia, Milano 1914-04-27
Maestri cantori di Norimberga (Wagner): Arioso di Eva 69193 xph5067 

Fonotipia, Milano 1914-04-28
Tristan e Isloda (Wagner): Morte di Isotta 69177 xph5068 
Juive (Halevy): Ei de' venir! 69194 XPh5071

Fonotipia, Milano 1914-04-29
Forza del destino (Verdi): Pace, pace, mio Dio 69190 XPh5072
A la barcillunisa (Sicilian trad, arr Favara) 69191 XPh5073
Orazioni de San Stanislao (Canzone Siciliana) (trad, arr Favara) 69192 XPh5074

















Pinto by Stampanoni

Mar 26, 2012

Jean Baptiste Georges Imbart de La Tour (Tenor) (Paris 1865 – Paris 1911)



                                                           Tannhauser

He studied at the Paris Coservatoire with St. Yves Bax. In 1889 he won the song competition of the Paris Conservatoire. His stage debut occurred in 1890 in Geneva as Raoul in ‘’Gli Ugonotti’’ of Meyerbeer. In 1893 he joined the Opéra-Comique in Paris; here he appeared as Don  José in ‘’Carmen’’ and as Gérald in ‘’Lakmé’’ of Delibes. In 1895 he was engaged by the opera house of Marseille. From 1897 he was a principal tenor of the Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels where he appeared in ‘’Tannhäuser’’, ‘’Lohengrin’’,  ‘’Aida’’, ‘’Roméo et Juliette’’, ‘’Samson et Dalila’’ and ‘’Hérodiade’’. In this theatre he also sang on 12. 3. 1897 in the premiere of the opera ‘’Fervaal’’ of D'Indy and on 18. 1. 1900 in  ‘’Tijl Ulenspiegel’’ of Jan Blockx. In 1899 he guested again at the Opéra-Comique. In 1900 he sang at Covent Garden  in ‘’Aida’’, ‘’Carmen’’, and ‘’Tannhäuser’’. In the 1900-01 season he was engaged by the Metropolitan Opera in New York. But appeared there, however, only as Radames in ‘’Aida’’ and in two Sunday Night Concerts. Then he continued his career in France (Marseilles 1906, Lyons 1907). Since 1908 he taught at the Paris Conservatoire.

Chronology of some appearances

1890 Geneva Opera House Gli Ugonotti (Raoul)
1893 Paris Opéra-Comique  Carmen (Don Jose)
1900 New York Metropolitan Opera Aida (Radames)
1900 Los Angeles, California Hazard's Pavilion Romeo  et Juliette (Romeo)
1900 San Francisco, California Aida (Radames)
1900 Kansas City, Missouri Convention Hall Gli Ugonotti (Raoul)
1900 Minneapolis, Minnesota Tannhauser (Tannhauser)

RECORDINGS FOR SALE








Pathe cylinders & discs, Paris 1903?
Iphigenie en Tauride (Gluck): Air de Pylade 0273
Tannhauser (Tannhauser): Hymne a Venus 0273
Muette de Portici (Auber):  Cavatine du sommeil 0277

Pathe, Paris 1906/1907
Lohengrin (Wagner):  Recit du Graal 4581
Huguenots (Meyerbeer):  Plus blanche 4585
Sigurd (Reyer): Esprits gardiens 4586



Jean Baptiste Georges Imbart de La Tour by Stampanoni

Adelina Stehle (Soprano) (Graz 1860 – Milan 1945)





She studied at the Milan Conservatory and made her debut in 1881 at the opera house of Broni as Amina in Bellini’s ‘’La Sonnambula’’. Then she sang in Florence, Venice and in 1888 at the opera house of Bologna. She married the tenor Edoardo Garbin. On 21. 2. 1891 she performed at La Scala in the premiere of the opera ‘’Condor’’ of Carlos Gomes. On 22. 5. 1892 she appeared at the Teatro Dal Verme in Milan in the premiere of Leoncavallo’s ‘’Pagliacci’’. At the same opera house she sang on 9. 11. 1893 in the premiere of Leoncavallo’s ‘’I Medici’’. On  9. 2. 1893 she created at La Scala in the premiere of Verdi’s ‘’Falstaff’’ the role of Nannetta, while her husband sang the role of Fenton. On 20. 1. 1892 she helped at La Scala in the premiere of ‘’La Wally’’ of Catalani, on 16. 2. 1895 in the premiere of Mascagni’s ‘’Guglielmo Ratcliff’’, on 25. 3. 1895 in Mascagni’s ‘’Silvano’’ as Mathilde. In 1890 she appeared at the Teatro Comunale in Bologna in the premiere of the opera ‘’La Pellegrina’’ of Filippo Clementi. In 1898 together with Edoardo Garbin she sang again at the Teatro Massimo in Palermo in Puccini’s ‘’La Bohème’’. She made guest appearances also in Berlin, Vienna and St. Petersburg. She counted one of the most significant interpreters of the Verismo repertoire. After her retirement from the stage she lived as a pedagogue in Milan and later spent her old age at the Casa di Riposo Giuseppe Verdi In Milan. Among her pupils were Giannina Arangi-Lombardi. Her brother, Achille Stehle, was a successful opera tenor.

Chronology of some appearances

1889 Mantova  Teatro Sociale Ballo in Maschera (Oscar)
1890 Firenze Teatro Niccolini Barbiere di Siviglia (Rosina)
1890 Milano Teatro Dei Filodrammatici Barbiere di Siviglia (Rosina)
1892 Milano  Teatro La Scala Rigoletto (Gilda)
1892 Rio de Janeiro  Teatro Lirico Rigoletto (Gilda)
1902 Buenos Ayres  Teatro dell'Opera Werther (Carlotta)
1903 Odessa  Teatro Municipale Ballo in Maschera (Amelia)
 

COMPLETE PUBLISHED RECORDINGS FOR SALE

 






Fonotipia, Milano 1904-11
Adriana Lecouvreur (Cilea): Ma dunque e vero? with Edoardo Garbin 39117 Xph95

Fonotipia, Milano 1905-05
Boheme (Puccini): Quartetto with Maria Camporelli, Edoardo Garbin and Mario Sammarco  69014 xph265


Stehle by Stampanoni