I agree, Jose, Orgonasova's is a magnificent voice. Personally, I am very fond of her Agathe in Harnoncourt's version of Weber's Der Freischutz (probably the best performance of this opera since Carlos Kleiber's) and I also remember her Armida in Hogwood's superb (and star-studded) version of Handel's Rinaldo), but everything I have heard from this lady has been touched with greatness.Jose Echenique wrote:OK, I confess: I am a die HARD fan of Luba Orgonasova. I think her voice unique, one of the wonders of the age, and fortunately I´m not alone Gardiner, Harnoncourt, Brüggen, Jansons, Whun-Chung, etc., worked extensively with her. She is the nearest we have had to Margaret Price, a large lyric voice with coloratura.mcq wrote:Gardiner's version is undeniably a great one, Jose, but I have a very personal attachment to Schafer's voice (I also love her Cherubino for Harnoncourt in his excellent 2006 Le nozze di Figaro - I wish they would do some more work together). And yes, she is a very powerful actress as well as singer. I remember you were very passionate about Orgonasova's performance for Harnoncourt in his barely-released performance of Dvorak's Stabat Mater (which will hopefully be re-released one day).
Before the Gardiner recording appeared, Margaret Price was the one soprano I thought 100% convincing as Constanze. There were the light coloraturas of course, like Edita Gruberova or Arleen Auger, but their voices were too thin in the middle and the bottom notes, Constanze has a huge range, it´s very difficult to find a voice that is equal to all it´s demands. Margaret Price sang the role in the early 70´s, both at Salzburg and Glyndebourne, unfortunately she never recorded the role complete but EMI did release a highlights record from Glyndebourne. She was...stunning.
And then came Luba Orgonasova, a voice large enough to sing Verdi´s Requiem (she is fabulous in the Gardiner recording), but with elegant and accurate coloratura.
Christine Schäfer, a lyric soprano ideal for Susanna and Zerlina has had some strange role choices. She´s been singing Gilda in Rigoletto, surely too heavy for her, and she is particularly famous in Berg´s Lulu, not my cup of tea, but I understand she is very good in that role.
Arleen Auger's Constanze for Karl Bohm was also superb, I feel. I sometimes feel that Die Entfuhring aus dem Serail is the most comparatively neglected of all of Mozart's seven great mature operas and we are just lucky so have Gardiner's and Christie's wonderful versions to enjoy at will. (Last week I was listening to Minkowski's and Christie's magnificent versions of Rameau's Hippolyte et Aricie on successive nights and I was thinking exactly the same thing.) I am also greatly looking forward to Rene Jacobs' thoughts on this opera as well (his upcoming St. Matthew Passion should be a treat, though).
On the subject of Schafer, I feel that she is just a wonderful singing actress. Her version of Lulu under the direction of Andrew Davis in a DVD performance from Glyndebourne in 1996 was only seriously challenged, I feel, in recent years by Patricia Petibon. I also enjoy her performance of Gilda in Verdi's Rigoletto in a DVD performance from Covent Garden in 2001 under the direction of Edward Downes. I agree, it is a role that shouldn't work for her, but it is testament to her gifts as a singing actress that you believe absolutely in her portrayal (her scenes with Paolo Gavenelli are particularly moving). I also love her reading of Schubert's Winterreise (I find it deeply rewarding to listen to Fassbaender's version back-to-back with Schafer's). She has had some very fruitful relationships working with Harnoncourt and Boulez but I think she prefers live performances nowadays to studio work (which is a shame - from what I've heard, her portrayal of the Angel in Messaien's Saint Francois d'Assise is a performance that demands release - there was a pirate release of a performance of this work from Paris in 2004 alongside Jose van Dam in the title role but nothing official aside from a single aria in a recent release for Sony).