The Great Frieda
Hempel
Frieda Hempel, (1885-1955) was born in Leipzig and began her
studies as a very young woman, first at
the Conservatory in Leipzig, and then, shortly thereafter, at the Stern
Conservatory in Berlin. Her young voice
was rather extraordinary because of its great range. The sharp differences between coloratura and
regular soprano repertoire were not so much observed in her day, when she was
viewed simply as a soprano with an unusually high top register. Her earliest roles were fairly standard
coloratura repertoire, such as Rosina, Gilda, and Queen of the Night. However,
even at the very tender age of 20, she sang, during her debut years around
1905, roles such as Violetta, Leonora and Woglinde. It was this ability to sing high coloratura
roles along with what today are considered heavier soprano roles that
characterized her career path from the very beginning. She sang at the Royal Court Opera in Berlin
between 1907 and 1912, where she added the roles of Lucia and Marguerite de
Valois to her repertoire.
Her international career began during that same
approximate period. In Covent
Garden, (amazingly by today's standards)
she sang both Eva and Elsa. By 1912 she
had sung at the Metropolitan Opera, where she stayed for a good while,
basically making the Met her artistic home during the peak of her career. Again, her repertoire was very wide,
extending from the great coloratura
roles of the day all the way down to Rosenkavalier and Ballo in
Maschera! Such a thing would be
unheard of today, but her era was a different story altogether. There were operas to be sung and singers to
sing them, and that pretty much described the situation. Beginning around 1920,
when she would only have been 35, she left the Met and started to concertize in
earnest, essentially developing a second career, in which she was also very
successful.
I think it makes most sense to first hear
Frieda Hempel in an extremely demanding coloratura aria, because it was her
astonishing upper register that perhaps dominated the largest part of her
early repertoire. I would simply ask you
to remember that this great artist also sang Wagner! Here is the famous Queen of the Night
aria. This particular recording, from
1911, is fairly rare, and you will smile, I think, at two things—the first is
the cute illustration on the video, and the second is the gratuitous F above
high C that she tosses in at 1:03, as though the aria were not high enough
already! This recording is positively
delightful:
Now how about that! I find myself smiling from ear to ear. A
first-rate coloratura, endowed with what, to my way of thinking, is a real
coloratura sound, in the class of Galli-Curci and Lily Pons. There have been much heftier soprano sounds,
driven to great heights by superb technique, but at that point aesthetic
problems arise, I think. This I would characterize as Golden Age bel canto. Now here is something that is just plain fun!
Kentucky
Babe."
Irresistible!
Everybody was doing the same thing back then. The economic potential of making records had
become apparent to all, and opera singers were the most popular and respected singers, generally speaking, of that
period. The temptation was
enormous. With all the American homes
with pianos in the parlors, all the sheet music sales, and all the people
buying Victrolas; well, it was inevitable.
Louise Homer, Amelia Galli-Curci, Alma Gluck, Enrico Caruso, John
McCormack—they were all making "popular" recordings, usually
abounding in covered vowels and nearly
incomprehensible foreign accents, but never mind....it was a particular time
and a particular moment in American cultural history. Frankly, I love it!
Please let me know if the comments are working properly for you. Edmund
ReplyDeleteHa ha. I particularly enjoyed the "Sweet Kentucky Babe" and your comment about it.
ReplyDeleteHow true!
Remember when you and I and Allen and Kenny did our super barbershop version of Sweet Kentucky Babe?
ReplyDeleteOne of the clearest voices I ever heard:) At least she makes such an impression. Beautiful sound/
ReplyDeleteThanks for the article, Edmund.
n.a.