Cielo e mar! l'etereo velo Sky and sea! the airy curtain
splende come un santo altar. sparkles like a holy altar.
L'angiol mio verrà dal cielo? Will my angel come from the sky?
l'angiol mio verrà dal mare? will my angel come from the sea?
Qui l'attendo; ardente spira Here I wait for her; the wind
oggi il vento dell'amor. now blows hot with love
Ah! quell'uom che vi sospira Ah, that man who sighs for you,
vi conquide, o sogni d'ôr! he overcomes you, o golden dreams!
Per l'aura fonda Through the thick air
non appar né suol né monte. neither shore nor mountains appear
L'orizzonte bacia l'onda! The horizon kisses the waves;
l'onda bacia l'orizzonte! the waves kiss the horizon.
Qui nell'ombra, ov'io mi giacio Here in the darkness, where I lie
coll'anelito del cor, waiting with racing heart
Vieni, o donna, vieni al bacio Come, o woman, come to my kiss
della vita e dell'amor... of life and of love.
So which Lanza version do *you* prefer? The colourful Coke take or the sharp 1950 one? I'll be very interested in reading any comments.
But, all in all, I prefer the 1952 version. In this one he shows more
feeling - tender on the first 'dell'amor' and intense somehow (can't
find the word) on the first 'o sogni d'ôr!' and the first 'Vieni, o
donna' - it sounds like he really adores this woman.
Both versions have a splendid ending - a typical Mario-thrilling-
ending.
Derek, thank you for uploading the music and including the text, it
makes it much easier to 'play along'. :-)
Ann-Mai
But isn't it nice to have two versions to enjoy?
> On 20 Okt., 22:53, Derek McGovern <derek.mcgov...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > Cielo e Mar: Sky and Sea! I love this aria, and would give anything to
> > have
> > been at Mario's first Chicago concert (Grant Park, 1946), where
> > according to the notoriously-hard-to-please Claudia Cassidy, he sang
> > the aria taking "the soaring climax like a veteran". Was this the only
> > time he sang the aria in public? (Such a crowd-pleaser would have made
> > a great choice for his Hollywood Bowl debut the following year.)
> > Probably not - which only makes it all the more frustrating that we
> > don't have a definitive Lanza performance of the aria.
> >
> > But what we do have, of course, is one exciting 1952 Coke performance
> > - a
> > recording that critic Delcie C. Howard rightly praises in one of our
> > review pages here as containing "real sensitivity and a feeling for
> > atmosphere" - and one 1950 commercial recording with some stunning
> > touches (especially on the title words at the beginning), but marred
> > by several instances of truly piercing sharpness. (Mario was having a
> > notably "sharp night", with other numbers he recorded that evening -
> > e.g., Addio alla Madre & O Holy Night - slightly marred by the same
> > mispitching. I put it all down to exuberance!)
> >
> > While I've long preferred the Coke take (which, incidentally, has
> > never been released on CD; the 1967 LP Mario Lanza Sings His Favorite
> > Arias has been its only outing), lately I've been coming around to the
> > commercial take as well - especially as heard on one of the Naxos CD
> > releases, which features warmer sound (ex-LP) than on the harsher-
> > sounding BMG CDs.
> > This helps to mitigate some of the sharpness. If one can hear past the
> > sharpness, it's actually quite a musical performance. Yes, there
> > should have been a retake (as even Mario's
> > father acknowledged to Armando about some of Lanza's RCA operatic
> > recordings), but it's not half bad.
> >
> > Curiously, the only reviews of the commercial Cielo e Mar I've read
> > don't even mention the obvious sharpness. Henry Fogel, for example, in
> > a 1990 Fanfare magazine review, praises its "rapt and poetic opening",
> > citing it as an example of how Mario could do things right
> > (operatically) when he wanted to! And years earlier, the otherwise
> > extremely critical Oliver King wrote in the Gramophone that "on it,
> > Lanza comes near to justifying his reputation."
> >
> > Anyway, if you haven't heard both of Lanza's performances - or would
> > like to renew your acquaintance with them, you can find both of them
> > here:
> >
> > http://mariolanza.4shared.com/
> >
> > (The 1950 take featured on this link comes from the Naxos CD I
> > mentioned above.)
On Oct 21, 12:03 am, "Derek McGovern" <derek.mcgov...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Ann-Mai: Thanks for your post. Overall, I prefer the Coke take as
> well, though the commercial take definitely has its moments - and is
> more operatic to boot. Like you, I love his "Ah! quell'uom" on the
> commercial take - very poetic & musical! On this version, I'd have to
> say that Mario delivers the aria as he would if he were on stage; on
> the Coke take, on the other hand, he plays to the mike more &
> alternates a little between operatic singer and balladeer (if you know
> what I mean), so stylistically he's not as consistent. I find he's in
> better voice, though, on the Coke version.
>
> But isn't it nice to have two versions to enjoy?
>
> > > I'll be very interested in reading any comments.- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
On Oct 21, 10:19 am, Vince Di Placido <vincent.diplac...@gmail.com>
wrote:
But as Armando pointed out in an e-mail a few months back, given that RCA had hired a producer for these sessions (one W. Heebner), you have to wonder why this fellow didn't do his job properly and politely but firmly request a few retakes here & there. Of course, if Peter Herman Adler of The Great Caruso fame had been conducting instead of Callinicos, then this definitely would have happened. (Think of all the retakes - eg, the seven Celeste Aidas - that were done for that film.) Adler was strict, but he got results - and Mario clearly respected him.
Speaking of Adler, yes, I'd forgotten to mention the Cielo e Mar ending that was recorded (at least twice) for The Great Caruso soundtrack. The version used in the movie is brilliant; in fact, I prefer it to both the endings in Lanza's complete versions. The La Gioconda scene - coming, as it does, at the end of an exciting montage - is one of the high points of the film: I can certainly understand why your father loves it!! Visually too, it's quintessential Lanza in this scene - thrilling stuff.
But what a shame a complete version of Cielo e Mar wasn't recorded for
The Great Caruso! In some ways, I would have preferred a complete
Cielo to a complete Celeste Aida, particular if the rest of the
Gioconda aria was as well sung as the climactic snippet we get in the
film's first montage.
Hello, Derek! I actually listened to the RCA version for the first time in quite a while & it is beautiful, sharpness aside, it is the more impressive performance. I have been listening to the Coke recording for the last couple of years & I thought this was the final word until I revisited the RCA recording. It's funny how you can listen with a fresh perspective after a break. The one thing that slightly jars with me on the Coke version is the break after "della vita" & before "e dell'amor..." the line in one breath is just the way it should be as on the RCA take, also the opening line "Cielo e Mar" captivates you on the RCA performance. As they say I wouldn't like to live on the difference between these 2 recordings, if I was left with just 1 of the 2 it wouldn't upest me at all.