James Vargas
James Vargas
ASIN: B0002DRE4A
Track Listings
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1. Curtain Call
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2. Say You Will
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3. Sitting Pretty
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4. Whenever, Wherever, Whatever
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5. Won't Be a Fool
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6. Push da Button
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7. Prelude
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8. Lasting Impression
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9. Galveston Bay
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10. One Fine Day
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11. Portmeadow
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12. Speakeasy
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James Vargas,James Vargas,V2,Jazz,Pop,Smooth Jazz
Average customer rating:
- Two great Puccini singers caught too late
- Tale of an engineer's job for an overparted tenor
- magnificently powerful
- Levine's best recording
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Puccini: Manon Lescaut
Giacomo Puccini , James Levine , Mirella Freni , Luciano Pavarotti , Dwayne Croft , Ramon Vargas , Cecilia Bartoli , and Orchestra and Chorus of Metropolitan Opera
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Freni, Mirella
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Similar Items:
- Rossini - La Cenerentola / Bartoli, Dara, Matteuzzi, Corbelli, Pertusi, Chailly
- Strauss - Der Rosenkavalier / Schwarzkopf · Ludwig · Karajan
- Puccini: La fanciulla del West
- Bellini - Norma / Sutherland · Caballé · Pavarotti · Ramey · WNO · Bonynge
- Mascagni - Cavalleria Rusticana & Leoncavallo - Pagliacci / Pavarotti, Freni, Varady, Cappuccilli, Gavazzeni, Patanè
ASIN: B00000418G
Release Date: 1993-09-14 |
Tracks:
- Ave, Sera Gentile - Ramon Vargas
- L'amor?...l'amor? - Luciano Pavarotti
- Tra Voi, Belle, Brune E Bionde - Luciano Pavarotti
- Ma Bravo! - Ramon Vargas
- Discendono, Vediam! - Metropolitan Opera Orchestra And Chorus
- Cortese Damigella - Luciano Pavarotti
- Donna Non Vidi Mai - Luciano Pavarotti
- La Tua Ventura Ci Rassicura - Ramon Vargas/Met Opr Chor
- La tua Proserpina - Ramon Vargas
- Vedete? Lo Son Fedele - Mirella Freni
- Non C' E Piu Vino? - Dwayne Croft
- Di Sedur La Sorellina E Il Momento - Giuseppe Taddei
- Dispettosetto Questo Riccio! - Mirella Freni
- In Quelle Trine Morbide - Mirella Freni
- Poiche Tu Vuoi Saper - Dwayne Croft
- Che Ceffi Son Costor?...Sulla Vetta Tu Del Monte - Dwayne Croft
- Paga Costor! - Mirella Freni
- Minuetto - James Levine
- Oh, Saro La Piu Bella! - Mirella Freni
- Ah!...Affe, Madamigella - Mirella Freni
- Senti, Di Qui Partiamo...Ah! Manon, Mi Tradisce - Luciano Pavarotti
- Lescaut?!...Tu Qui?! - Luciano Pavarotti
Tracks:
- Intermezzo - James Levine
- Ansia Eterna, Crudel - Luciano Pavarotti
- ...E Kate Rispose Al Re - Paul Groves
- All'armi! All'armi! - Metropolitan Opera Orchestra And Chorus
- Rosetta! - James Courtney
- Presto! In Fila! - James Courtney
- Tutta Su Me Ti Posa - Luciano Pavarotti
- Manon, Senti, Amor Mio - Luciano Pavarotti
- Sei Tu Che Piangi? - Mirella Freni
- Sola, Perduta, Abbandonata - Mirella Freni
- Fra Le Tue Braccia Amore - Mirella Freni
Customer Reviews:
Two great Puccini singers caught too late.......2007-02-25
A lot of wind is blowing thorugh the reviews here. Dissecting every detail of this Manon Lescaut seems like overkill, and calling it "magnificent" or "Levine's best recording, ever" sounds fatuous. Decca made this recording in 1993 for the sake of capturing Pavarotti in one of his best Puccini roles. There's no doubt that he was masterful in their Madama Butterfly and La Boheme, and despite advancing years one hears how good his Des Grieux must have been in his prime. But the voice is frayed, and the tenor's earlier ability to offer nuance has become sadly coarsened.
As for Freni, who gave a great interpretation of Manon for Sinopoli on DG, she was successful in doing remakes of Tosca and Butterfly that depended on artistry to disguise vocal wear and tear. She's moderately successful here, too, although being a seductress, Manon should sound as fresh and gleaming as possible. Levine, his orchestra, and Decca's engineering are all first-rate.
In the end, this set can't be called anything less than accomplished, but it captures two great Puccini singers too far past their prime.
Tale of an engineer's job for an overparted tenor.......2005-12-18
Everything gets to an animated enough start, if on closer scrutiny, in the usual generic sort of way, under Levine's baton. The impression one could have of his work by end of Act One, however, is that perhaps he really did by 1993 have a natural feeling for Puccini and his idiom. More on that later.
Ramon Vargas is absolutely splendid as Edmondo, dreamy for his opening lines and effectively catches an often otherwise expressively blank Pavarotti in some of the vivacious banter of the opening scene. Luciano Pavarotti sings "Tra voi belle" trippingly off the tongue, on first impression, but it is obvious on closer scrutiny that age has taken its toll already, and there is a hardness, inflexibility that creeps in, even here, that is not so welcome. "Donna non vidi mai", with Pavarotti's very long vowels and intonation problems, is hardly convincing at all. His first encounters with the Manon of Mirella Freni are mostly convincing, Freni injecting an extra dose of demureness in her interpretation of the part, from where she had it for Sinopoli ten years earlier on DGG. Giuseppe Taddei makes an appropriately crotchety, then later a truly menacing Geronte (in his sarcasm), a real star turn and certainly one of my favorite performances on this set, and preferable to the Geronte of Kurt Rydl on the Sinopoli. Dwayne Croft is the animated enough, but somewhat (artificially) dark voiced Lescaut.
That just about marks the end of unfavorable comparison of the earlier Freni set with this one. The opening of Act Two finds Levine working the orientalesque flute solos just a bit much. "In quelle trine morbide", while perhaps being expressively a little more intimate than before, and all the while continuing to cut a very sympathetic figure, is less well connected in line and clear with intonation than before from Freni. Cecilia Bartoli's madrigal has a little more art than can conceal it, whereas Sinopoli has Brigitte Fassbaender, who manages to altogether avoid putting a personal stamp on this simple assignment and wins out this way. Anthony Laciura is disarmingly the stiff, decrepit, and stuffy Dancing Master. The Geronte of Giuseppe Taddei continues to be vivid, and without, so to speak, overcooking the goose.
After this divertissement or levee scene, we have the first long duet of two to three between the two lovers. Almost immediately one gets the sense, especially for Pavarotti's sake, of the entire thing being overmiked and placed, to the extent that the two protagonists seem to occupy a different sound stage from the orchestra. Same happens in Act Three during roll call (a solid James Courtney as Sergeant) with both orchestra and chorus also more separate from each other than the norm, which makes a bit of this passage sound like something out of Akhnaten or Einstein on the Beach.
"O tentatrice", from Pavarotti is generous with no less than three scoops and one quite ungainly downward portamento, and in response to Freni, after a too slow "L'ora o Tirsi" and shaky opening to this duet. She quickly gets things in focus for a touching delivery of "Son forse della Manon d'un giorno meno piacente e bella?" Overall, thanks to Pavarotti and Levine, the entire duet lacks something in line and its ability to fully engage the listener. This is followed by one of three volcanic bursts from the orchestra to introduce the next things to be happening dramatically. Unconvincing.
"Ah! Manon, mi tradisce" after Taddei and Freni have been so elaborate with their lines,is sung blank, straight ahead with heavily elongated vowels, and same happens with the arioso that follows convincingly intimate exchange between lovers and a fine Lamplighter's solo by a young Paul Groves. Pavarotti closes well, with his plea to the ship captain to be let aboard for the voyage to America, and actually again, after maybe at most three earlier instances, sounds like he is actually singing to someone else on stage.
Act Four, a few good lines apart, is belabored with a little ovrdoing it on the verismo from Freni and much loud, crude singing from Pavarotti, all straight ahead with long vowels again early on in the scene for "Vedi, son io che piango." With the eccentricity of the miking, the reach for the high C in "Sei tu, sei tu che piange?" is ear-splitting. Mirella Freni finally sounds vulnerable and overspent by the elements in her closing lines to the entire opera, salvaging what contribution she has made to an otherwise thoroughly misguided project from the getgo.
James Levine and the Met orchestra that plays well for him, sounds constantly supportive of all of his singers, but involved in only the most generic sort of way, and guilty of gilding the lily a bit much (as also does Muti in no more at all a preferable choice for this opera) in the first half of Act Two. Whatever fussiness and perversities one runs across from the then young Giuseppe Sinopoli on DGG, a few of them quite maddening, his set overall makes a much more invigorating case for this opera and for the open modernisms within that look forward to so much music by others and also the composer's own Il Tabarro and Turandot from close to twenty-five and thirty years later, respectively.
Mirella Freni could not have sounded better for the sessions and she is clearly preferable than all choices available on dvd and to the vocally beautiful but studio-bound Montserrat Caballe (opposite Domingo's first Des Grieux on records, equally beautiful and routine) and paired by an always musically and dramatically sympathetic Des Grieux from Placido Domingo. This is the choice between the two Freni sets, contributions from Vargas and Taddei apart, if only one can stay in print, that should do so.
The engineering job on this set comes very close to sinking the still newer Decca, for me, to two stars, and foreshadows the trickery that has made several recent Andrea Bocelli sets of complete operas by Puccini, Verdi, Massenet the true and sad reality that they have all become. Pavarotti's Duke and Alfredo Germont for DGG (both opposite a vocally tired Cheryl Studer) within a year or two of this Manon Lescaut, more realistically recorded, seemed so much more of a struggle for him than that of Des Grieux, whereas the opposite would have normally been the case. Apart from the engineering, there is no explanation.
magnificently powerful.......2001-10-19
Here we have one of those (rather rare) recordings with a whole cast of stars managing to make a performance just as magnificent as one would expect.
James Levine conducts a white hot and blood red performance that still is warm in the more quite and poetic parts, caught in exceptionally clear and vivid sound by the engineers. And his singers definately has the skill to follow him. Both main caracters are far too old to be able to make a believable stageperformance, but you hear little of that fact on this record. Freni's voice is still as great as in many of her much older recordings: both warm, tender and powerful when so called for. Her last aria sola, perduta... shows no signs of wear in the voice. Her des Grieux in Pavarotti is, if possible, even better. I've not always been very fond of him, but this is truely great - he has a almost vulgar power combined with passionate and very thought through singing that perfectly matches des Grieux's caracter. And the mix of Freni and Pavarotti, under the support of Levine, is stunning. I havn't ever heard such a magnificently heartbreaking last act (the desert scene).
All the other singers catch up with them - Dwayne Croft superbly so as Lescaut, with a firm and full tone. Having Taddei, Bartoli and Vargas in minor roles is pure luxury. The choir and orchestra of the Met also are splendidly good.
This version also is believable, though recorded in a studio, probably because both conductor and lead singers have done it many times before on stage. This recording is a pure puccinian drama caught at its best. There really are no weak part in the whole production, which definately is the case in almost all rivalling versions. Although I love Jussi Björling's des Grieux (on RCA), possibly even more than Pavarotti's, this recording has both better sound and better over all qualities.
Don't hesitate - Highly recommended!
Levine's best recording.......1999-06-21
This is by far Levine's best recording, and probably the best overall recording of Manon Lescaut. Levine manages to match sense and sensibility, and the singers are just perfecly casted. Mirella Freni (despite her age) is still the greatest soprano of our time, and Pavarotti sings the way everybody wants him to sing, although some too open vowels sound a little kitsch. Listen closely to Bartoli's wonderful "cameo" and Taddei's clumsy Geronte.
Average customer rating:
- I heard him in person at the Catalina Jazz Festival
- You will love every single track on James Vargas' CD "James Vargas"
- Pete Giakoumatos ATHENS GREECE
- Delightful
- Simply a wonderful debut CD
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James Vargas
James Vargas
Manufacturer: Trippin 'n Rhythm
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Jazz
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Smooth Jazz
| Jazz
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- Dressed to Chill
- Shine
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- Ultrablue
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ASIN: B0002DRE4A
Release Date: 2004-07-13 |
Tracks:
- Curtain Call
- Say You Will
- Sitting Pretty
- Whenever, Wherever, Whatever
- Won't Be a Fool
- Push da Button
- Prelude
- Lasting Impression
- Galveston Bay
- One Fine Day
- Portmeadow
- Speakeasy
Customer Reviews:
I heard him in person at the Catalina Jazz Festival.......2007-01-08
It was his first visit to the states and he introduced this CD at the Festival - for me he was the highlight of all 3 days. His music stole my heart! His ability to play the sax is amazing - his tone and sound quality is perfect. Being a classically raised musician it is painful to hear the saxaphone overblown, etc. James Vargas' musicianship is captivating. I bought his CD at the Festival a couple years ago and it is still my favorite. Wish he lived in the States! Wish he would give us another gem to buy.
You will love every single track on James Vargas' CD "James Vargas".......2006-08-15
I often listen to the smooth jazz format of our cable TV provider's music channel. I heard "speakeasy" by James Vargas, Track #12, and immediately knew I would buy the CD without hearing any other tracks from it. I was not disappointed; I enjoyed the entire CD and found that several of the tracks were "stand-alones"; my definition of a track on a CD that, by itself, is enough to prompt me to purchase it. In my opinion, James Vargas is a perfect example of the genre "smooth jazz". His music is what I hear when I think of this type of jazz.
Oh, and did I mention this man can sing? It's rare that you find a jazz musician who can hold his or her own vocally. Mr. Vargas' track, "Galveston Bay" proves the exception to this theory. I was pleasantly surprised to find him listed as the lead vocals, he did a wonderful job. I highly recommend his CD if you're looking for a smooth jazz CD that you'll thoroughly enjoy every single track on.
Pete Giakoumatos ATHENS GREECE.......2006-06-07
Excellent This word says it all
Waiting for his next album
Delightful.......2005-09-16
Exciting and new. This cd is fabulous I really enjoyed him, I'm also a first time listner to James. He has totally earned my respect, looking forward to his next album.
Simply a wonderful debut CD.......2005-03-30
This is an extremely beautiful smooth jazz CD. I had never heard of James until I was reviewing smooth jazz artists online. I listened to a few tracks and had to pick his CD up. You will too! James Vargas showcases amazing versatility on the alto, soprano and tenor saxophones. The alto is his sax of choice on most cuts and you won't be disappointed. This is one of those smooth jazz CD's that you can put into your CD player and play it from beginning to end while having a big smile on your face listening to each song. The opening track, "Curtin Call," puts you in the mindset of being in concert with him waiting for the curtin call. It sets you in the mood for the rest of this awesome CD. Track three, "Sitting Pretty," is another beautiful track with James showcasing his talents. "Galveston Bay," proves he can sing just as well as he plays the saxophone. It reminds you of just "chilling at the beach" with that special someone with a wineglass in your hand enjoying a jazz concert or the beach. Galveston Texas would be proud to have this as their theme song. On track ten, "One fine day," James truly showcases his remarkable versatility on the sax with beautiful and rapid chords and arpeggio runs on the sax. I put James in the same catagory as Euge Groove, Kirk Whalum, David Sanborn, Gerald Albright, Kim Waters, and Pamela Williams, who are among my personal favorite sax players. I am eagerly anticipating his next CD. Pick this one up quickly, you will not be disapointed.
Average customer rating:
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James Vargas
James Vargas
Manufacturer: Trippin & Rhythm
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Smooth Jazz
| Jazz
| Styles
| Music
Similar Items:
- The Jazzmasters V
ASIN: B000P29B5S
Release Date: 2004-07-13 |
Tracks:
- Curtain Call
- Say You Will
- Sitting Pretty
- Whenever, Wherever, Whatever
- Won't Be a Fool
- Push da Button
- Prelude
- Lasting Impression
- Galveston Bay
- One Fine Day
- Portmeadow
- Speakeasy
Average customer rating:
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James Yannatos: Trinity Mass
Manufacturer: Albany Records
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
Chamber Music
| Forms & Genres
| Classical (c.1770-1830)
| Historical Periods
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Chamber Music
| Classical
| Styles
| Music
General
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
Masses
| Vocal Non-Opera
| Opera & Vocal
| Styles
| Music
ASIN: B0000049QW
Release Date: 1997-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Trinity Mass: I. Kyrie (Prologue) Nos. 1-2
- Trinity Mass: II. Dies Irae (Day Of Rath) Part I: Day Of Trinity - Nos. 1-4
- Trinity Mass: Nos. 5-8
- Trinity Mass: No. 9
- Trinity Mass: Part II: Day Of Thebes: The Trial Nos. 10-11
- Trinity Mass: No. 12
- Trinity Mass: No. 13
- Trinity Mass: No. 14
- Trinity Mass: III. Credo In Reduxio Ad Aburdum No. 1
- Trinity Mass: No. 2
- Trinity Mass: IV. Sanctus Nos. 1-2
- Trinity Mass: Nos. 3-5
- Trinity Mass: V. Angus Dei (Epilogue)
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