Zarzuelas and other gems in the Historical Sound
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Transcript Zarzuelas and other gems in the Historical Sound
Digging for Treasure: Zarzuelas and Other
Gems in the Historical Sound Recordings
Collection at Yale University
Diane Napert, Catalog Librarian, Yale University
Historical Sound Recordings at Yale
Comprised of historical recordings of
performers important in the fields of
Western classical music, jazz, American
musical theater, drama, literature, and
history (including oratory). HSR was
founded by Mr. and Mrs. Laurence C.
Witten II in 1960/1961 with their
collection of early vocal recordings
Mellon Grant – No. of Recordings
Mellon awarded a grant of $789,000
starting in 2006 for cataloging of 78 rpm
recordings
853,162 commercial recordings at Yale,
Stanford and Rodgers & Hammerstein
Archives of Recorded Sound
Over 320,000 78 rpm recordings –
mostly uncataloged
Syracuse joined project March 2008
The numbers
The project contributed over 24,000 records to
OCLC through November 2009 (figure includes only
2008 for Syracuse, approx. 3,500, and some upgraded
copy)
Volume figures would be higher due to multi-disc sets
and multiple copies
Yale able to extend project a few months with money
from Yale Class of ’45W and add several hundred
more records
View of 78s housed in Mudd
Library at Yale
The bibliographic records
Access points were added for composers,
lyricists, arrangers, performing groups (but
not each player within a named group),
main performers, conductors, speakers
Attempts were made to connect arias to
the correct opera and excerpted songs to
the correct musicals (mostly successful)
The labels
Over 360 labels worked on
The largest included Brunswick, Capitol,
Columbia, Decca, Edison, Gramophone
and Victor
Yale Labels
Zarzuela
“It’s been said that zarzuela means to
Spain what operetta means to Vienna,
Offenbach to Paris, Gilbert and Sullivan to
London, and the musical to Broadway.
Well yes, it means all of that—and much
more.” p. xi, The Zarzuela Companion,
Christopher Webber
Foreward Plácido Domingo
Zarzuelas – other elements
Broad range, from one-act farces to
three-act tragedies
Spoken dialogue is employed in most
Alternates between spoken and sung
scenes
Spanish lyric-dramatic genre
Long history, including baroque zarzuela,
romantic zarzuela (early 1850s)
Federico Chueca, 1846-1908
La Gran Vía One act revista or revue
The Zarzuela Companion Webber says
written with Joaquín Valverde
Premiered Madrid, Teatro Felipe, 2nd July,
1886
Columbia C 536, approx. 1906
Composer was still alive
In Italian, very popular work, translated
Federico Chueca, 1846-1908
Gran Vía. Vals del Caballero de Gracia. Italian.
Luigi Baldassare, baritone with orchestra
Federico Chueca, 1846-1908
Ruperto Chapí, 1851-1909
Las Hijas del Zebedeo – 2 act farce
1889
Recording Columbia 3901-M, approx. 1924
Selection Carceleras or Al Pensar en el Dueño
de mis Amores
Prison lament, however in this case it is
described as a song of “amorous frustration”
Technically challenging, popular for Spanish
divas
Ruperto Chapí, 1851-1909
Elvira de Hidalgo, 1892-1980, soprano
Teacher of Maria Callas
This work recorded in London
This was the earliest instance of this
version I could find on OCLC – there
were a couple of later recordings
Ruperto Chapí, 1851-1909
Las Hijas del Zebedeo,
Manuscript, Barcelona,1889
Elvira de Hidalgo, 1892-1980
Pedro Miguel Marqués, 18431918
El Anillo de Hierro, 1878
3 act melodrama set in Norway
Columbia, C 373, 1906
Ven Rodolfo
Carmen Fernández de Lara, soprano with
orchestra
Recording made during composer’s
lifetime
Pedro Miguel Marqués, 18431918
Joaquín Romualdo Gaztambide y
Garbayo, 1822-1870
Una vieja, 1860
Comic opera set in Mexico
Columbia, C 373, 1906
Cavatina
Juan Valls, tenor with piano
Tomás Barrera, 1870-1938
Pupil of Chapí
Emigrantes, 1905
On a ship leaving Spain
Disque Apollon 318, 190?
Granadinas aria
In French and arranged
Composer alive when recorded
Emigrantes. Granadina
Henri Weber, baritone, with piano
Popular work as translated into French
Tomás Barrera, 1870-1938
Paquita Correa, soprano
3 recordings of her from ca. 1906
She was married to composer Rafael
Calleja Gómez
Contacted by her great-granddaughter for
copies of recordings
She was unable to find them in Spain
She found them because they were
cataloged as part of the grant
Paquita Correa
Chose one of the three we have
“Brindis” from Ángel Caído by Apolinar
Brull y Ayerra, 1845-1905
New website
http://www.loc.gov/jukebox/ access to a
vast selection of music and spoken-word
recordings “produced” in the U.S.
between the years 1901 and 1925
Image of Yale web-site
Grant HSR
Council on Library and Information
Resources (CLIR) for Song, Speech
and Dance: Special Collections from
the Recorded Sound Archives at Yale
and Stanford Universities
18 months starting December 2009
More archival work
Thanks
Special thanks to Richard Warren,
Curator, Historical Sound Recordings
collection,Yale
Thanks also to Nicole Rodriguez, Library
Services assistant, Historical Sound
Recordings collection,Yale
Questions
Diane Napert, [email protected]