Showing posts with label Kathleen Battle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kathleen Battle. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

#80 in praise of: kathleen battle

Kathy used to be so hot, as in, legitimately hot.

Oy. People always have "but" when describing Kathleen Battle. "She had a beautiful voice, but..." "Sure she had great coloratura, but..." "She's really great with fans, but..." Fact is many, many, many people hate Kathleen Battle. But that was not her downfall: in fact, it was her decision to sing Zerbinetta.


The voice itself is one of the most beautiful timbres ever produced in USA. It is small, but in its early years it had a piercing quality, and in the notes above the staff sounded as if it could extend itself upwards forever. She excelled especially in oratorio music and Mozart. In fact, I suspect that if she were to remain an exclusively concert-recital artist in the vein of Marian Anderson she would still have a wonderful, fulfilling career as of 2010's. In fact she's still doing jazz performances and the rare recitals.


Of course when talking of Battle we also have to talk about her face - or faces. Another issue was the cloying quality of her middle and upper-middle voice which crept in during the early 80's. She probably felt these contortions helped her intonation, and undoubtedly the cloying sweetness in her voice was a tremndous advantage in crossover rep - it made her voice sounds like a cross between a clarinet and a theremin - but it began to drag her voice down. Her first Zerbinetta's in Covent Garden still had the child-like purity and pearl-like sparkle in the upper voice - a wonderful chest-middle which sounds exactly like her speaking voice was a bonus - but all that disappeared by the time she brought her Zerbinetta to the Met.


Then of course there was the high notes. She could produce them at will, but high D's and Eb's seems to be the limit. By the time of the Met Zerbinetta's the high E has became harsh, scream-like. The quality also changed, earlier they had a laser-like brightness which became velvety and marshmallow-y: no doubt very beautiful sounds all but did not count much projection-wise.


Fortunately she had one of those voices which do as well in crossover music as they do in classical-opera. She became a great proponent of spirituals, and her jazz work is not to be sneezed at, especially her beloved "Creole Love Song", with her in a slinky red dress undulating sinously among her combo members.


It's a loss, a great loss. Who'd predict where Kathy could have gone? When she was fired by the Met she was singing Marie's and Adina's, perhaps she could have went on to Amina. There were talks of Lulu. She was one of the great Handelians of her day, as proved when her Carnegie Hall Semele, with colleagues like Marilyn Horne and ... became a great turning point for Handelian singing in the US. She would have been great in early music like Vivaldi and the Neapolitan school. I shudder to think how her "In furore iustissimae irae" would've sound like. Her French arias album was a gem, as well as her belcanto album. She certainly had the personality for the great operetta parts, like Hanna Glawari, Rosalinde et al. She was also not afraid to venture out, singing Spanish and Catalan lullabies and made-up nonsense Greek. Finally, she would have been great in Broadway, where the size of her voice won't be a factor.


Perhaps I have a bias towards her, because she was my first diva, and like the first fuck you never forget your first diva. I am ashamed to admit I first fell in love with Battle not in opera, not in lieder, but first after hearing her singing the theme from "House of Flying Daggers". Sue me for tackiness, but I have to say that song - or rather, her singing of that song - inspired my great love affair with classical singing. So thank you, Kathy, for making me who I am today.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

#2 Salzburg Recital - Kathleen Battle

First and foremost, Kathleen Battle has always occupied a special place in my heart. She was my dictionary definition of a soubrette, and nothing (including the crazies!) ain't gonna change that!


This album was recorded during Battle's middle period, back when it won't be too far from the truth if I say she was the most beautiful voice of the world. It includes selections from Purcell, Mendelssohn and Fauré, basically the stuff that made her recitals famous. Some Mozart and Strauss standards (though I have to say Schwarzkopf's Ridente la calma is somewhat superior to Our Kathy's) and of course, spirituals. Now, I am of the Marian Anderson school of spiritual singing i.e. deep, deep and deep-ah, but I would venture to say that Battle's rendition of Witness is the best there is.

Voice = sterling. The runs were executed like silk. Ich wollt' ein Sträusslein binden was especially lovely. But Battle is a lyric soprano, and in lyrical singing she excels most: her Mozart is exemplary, and the only lovelier Music for a while I had heard was Philippe Jaroussky's (but then I had a bias for countertenors, but I digress). And let me just say: the high notes are orgasmic! Some anti-Battleites say her high notes had a prison siren-like quality to them. If only jail alarms were half this good!

Accompaniment = perfect. Then again, Levine and Battle were the dream team for about ten years. The playing was limpid, but suspiciously slower (in volume) than usual. But those who know Battle would know the fact that her instrument, for all its beauty, is very frugal dynamically. Levine knows this (perhaps more than anyone else), and adjusted - which makes for the perfect partnership one often found wanting in other recital albums.

The only downturn? Well, you have to turn up your volume full, because at 50% volume Battle basically disappears. Which makes it even more precious!

SALZBURG RECITAL
KATHLEEN BATTLE soprano
JAMES LEVINE piano
Best Classical Vocal Solo Performance, Grammy Award 1988

01. Come All Ye Songsters; The Fairy Queen, Semi-Opera, Z. 629
02. Music For A While (From 'Oedipus'), Song, Z. 583-2;
03. Sweeter Than Roses (From 'Pausanius'), Song, Z. 585-1
04. O Had I Jubal's Lyre; Joshua (Oratorio) Hwv 64
05. Bei der Wiege ('Schlummre! Schlummre und Träume von Kommender Zeit'), Song For Voice & Piano, Op. 47-6
06. Neue Liebe ('In dem Mondenschein'), Song For Voice & Piano, Op. 19a-4
07. Schlagende Herzen ('Über Wiesen und Felder ein Knabe Ging'), Song For Voice & Piano, Op. 29-2 (Trv 172-2)
08. Ich wollt' ein Sträusslein binden, Song For Voice & Piano (Or Orchestra), Op. 68-2 (Trv 235-2)
09. Säusle, Liebe Myrthe!, Song For Voice & Piano (Or Orchestra), Op. 68-3 (Trv 235-3)
10. Ridente la calma, Song For Voice & Piano, K. 152 (K. 210a) (Spurious, By Myslivecek)
11. Das Veilchen, Song For Voice & Piano, K. 476
12. Un moto di gioia mi sento, Aria For Soprano & Orchestra, K. 579
13. Mandoline, Song For Voice & Piano (Cinq Mélodies 'de Venise'), Op. 58-1
14. Les roses d'Isfahan For Voice & Piano (Or Orchestra) In D Major, Op. 39-4
15. En prière, Canticle For Voice & Organ (Or Orchestra) In E Flat Major
16. Notre amour, For Voice & Piano, Op. 23
17. Honor! Honor!
18. His Name So Sweet
19. Witness
20. He's Got The Whole World In His Hands