Bel canto opera is a plethora of paradoxes and these are most powerfully embodied by the prima donna herself. Pure and passionate, alluring and alarming, desirable and dangerous, she is a woman who, driven by uncontainable desire or righteousness, defies or disregards social convention in her search for what might be deemed a more modern form of self-expression and freedom. She articulates a luxurious femininity which sonically embodies the female form, and is both emancipatory and intimidating. Undeniably, powerfully sensual, she was – and is – subject to patriarchal and social control; innocent, spiritual and soulful, she suffers, is sick and must be destroyed. The melismatic madness of the heroine speaks of a ‘mania’ that is not alien to contemporary notions of a neurosis afflicting modern woman.

Does her vocal intensity make us idealise her, or crave and command her sacrifice? At the start of the 21st century, do we recognise her voice as our own? Or is at, as Michel Poizat has argued, ‘the angel’s cry’, an inarticulate expression of the soul at both the pinnacle of its power and the moment of death: a momento immobile.

Claire Seymour
Writer, musicologist, Associate Lecturer with the Open University
track previews
Eccomi in lieta vesta
I Capuleti e I Montecchi
Bellini
Ah! Non credea... Ah non giunge
La Sonnambula
Bellini
O Luce di quest
Linda di Chamounix
Donizetti
Quel guardo... So anch
Don Pasquale
Donizetti
Prendi per me sei Libero
L'Elisir d'Amore
Donizetti
Assisa a pie
Otello
Rossini
Come dolce all
Tancredi
Rossini
Sombre forêt
Guillaume Tell
Rossini
Regnava nel silenzio
Lucia di Lammermoor
Donizetti
Qui la voce... Vien diletto
I Puritani
Bellini (bonus track, downloads only)
photo album
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