The Great Marcella Sembrich
Marcella Sembrich
(1858 – 1935) was the stage name of the Polish coloratura soprano,
Prakseda Marcelina Kochańska. She was born
in Wisniewczyk, then part of Austria, and now part of Ukraine. She first
studied violin and piano with her father, and later she entered the Lemberg
Conservatory and studied piano with her future husband Wilhelm Stengel . She
was able to enter the Vienna Conservatory in 1875. It was soon discovered that
her voice was exceptional, and she dedicated herself exclusively to voice from
then on. She made her operatic debut at
the relatively tender age of 19 in Athens, as Elvira in I Puritani, in
1877. She was engaged shortly thereafter
by the Vienna Opera, but due to pregnancy she broke the contract. Later, after
the birth of her first son, she had to wait for another opportunity and was
finally hired as a guest artist at the Dresden Royal Opera House in September,
1878, as Lucia. Her success was immediate and she was dubbed the "Polish
Patti." She remained in Dresden for two years, but decided to act
boldly—in order to make up for lost time—and broke her Dresden contract and
began concertizing on her own, in order to raise money. She managed to get to London, and after a
successful audition was accepted at Covent Garden, where she was quick to sign
a contract with them. She created quite a sensation in her 1880 debut there in
Lucia.
Emboldened by her
success, she broke her London contract two years early and came to the United
States in 1883 to make her Met debut, also as Lucia. From there it was on to St. Petersburg, and
eventually back to the Met in 1898, where she finally settled. She remained there until 1909, having given
over 400 performances. She concertized
for years, finally retiring after WWI.
From then on, she dedicated herself to teaching, in important
conservatories. She was very successful
as a teacher, and had significant influence. Among her students were the great
Alma Gluck, Hulda Lashanska, a
successful concert singer, coloratura soprano (and novelist!) Queena Mario, and
dramatic soprano Dusolina Giannini, who had a very successful international
career. Also among her students was
radio vocalist and concertizer Conrad Thibault, who studied with her at Curtis,
and who told the distinguished musical biographer James A. Drake, in an interview in 1976, that “she was always
very attentive and generous to her students, and talked to them personally
about the [singing teachers Francesco and Giovanni Lamperti ] and their
methods.” Drake goes on to say,
interestingly, that “He (Thibault) added
that at least in his experience with her, she never demonstrated vocalises or
otherwise sang even so much as a single tone.”
* She was also a fundraiser for
Polish causes, following WWI.
Since Lucia played so large a part in her earlier career,
serving as a frequent debut opera, it seems appropriate to begin there. I apologize for the scratchiness of the recording. I cannot find a better recording than the one
I posted some years ago, and I was not able to clean up the scratching on the
transfer without taking some quality from the voice. Here is the 1906 recording of “Ardon
gl’incensi”:
What most impresses me about this singing is the clarity,
purity, precise intonation, and general absence of affectation, either
stylistic or vocal. It is, as a result, what can honestly be classified as
elegant singing, not always the case with divas of the era. She was often compared to Patti, especially
in her youth, and one can see why: We
note the same clarity and purity of the
voice, including the floating, haunting
tones. Like Patti, Sembrich sings
perfectly on the breath, which is how she is able to portamento up and down so smoothly and
seamlessly, and also trill easily. There is considerable vocal fluidity to be
noted in the singing of both these great divas from the distant past.
Another favorite opera for Sembrich was I Puritani. Here is the lovely “Qui la Voce sua Soave”
from 1907:
Lovely! This is
really very accomplished singing for the period. At the beginning of the aria, the same
“straight,” restrained and haunting melodic line is apparent. One can notice a slight development of weight
in the lower register, compared to the Lucia recording of the previous year,
but it is slight and still well integrated with the rather remarkable top
register. Later in the aria, the great
flexibility so characteristic of her voice is on display: the rapid and well executed cadenzas, with a
brilliant, in-line C sharp inserted, stand out for their precision. It was common during this time for sopranos
to attempt cadenzas they could not really articulate at speed, with the result
that they were in effect glissandi, often musically inappropriate. Not the case here, as it was not the case
with Patti. Sembrich’s intonation and
articulation are both precise, and this is most admirable.
Finally, a 1912 recording of a song from Leo Fall’s 1907
Musical Comedy Die Dollarprinzessin (“The Dollar Princess”):
Sembrich was 54 years when this was recorded. What we finally have here is a wonderful
recording, first of all because the recording itself, as an artifact, has been
cleaned up to such a degree that it gives us a very real look at her
singing! The digital transfer was done
by my friend Doug at Curzon Road, one of the best classical music sites on the
web. He is extremely skilled at creating
audio files from old recordings, and this is so important. I feel I can very nearly hear the voice of
this singer from long ago with a clarity resembling what one might hear in the
opera house. Several things become
apparent; first, the purity of intonation and articulation of which we have
spoken is not an aural illusion from faded 107-year-old records! It is very real, and absolutely
characteristic of the voice and training.
Second, the vocal registers remain superbly well integrated; there are
no “register scoops” and there is no inappropriate “huskiness” in the lower
register at all. The purity of the high
soprano voice remains spotless even at age 54.
This is a diva who deserves her reputation! A fine, elegant, articulate, vocally and
stylistically immaculate first lady of the lyric stage!
_____________
* My thanks to Mr.
Drake for sharing this information on Sembrich's teaching with me!
7 comments:
Please let me know if the comments section is working properly. I believe it is fixed and working properly now. Thanks, Edmund
Really an excellent singer, and these are selections worth hearing. I am glad to see that you have established a Facebook account and that your fine blog is back to normal. Also nice to see Mr. Drake's involvement again.
A wonderful artist, Sembrich's 1883 Met debut as Lucia is legendary, eclipsing the previoius night's performance by veteran soprano Christina Nilsson (no slouch) as Marguerite in Faust in what was the Met's grand opening.
Thank you very much, Mr. Hobbes. It is such a pleasure to see your comments. You are such a faithful and consistent reader. I don't think you have ever missed an issue of the blog for over 5 years! I really appreciate it! Just amazing!
Yes, her singing was not only skillful, but also very elegant. Clarity of the voice is outstanding
(She was in perfect form at age 54.)
In general,the singing manner of that period reminds me of this type of classic painting:
http://img-fotki.yandex.ru/get/9747/42264962.57/0_ae7b8_a3094082_XL.jpg
https://d1ycxz9plii3tb.cloudfront.net/additional_images/515b3ba5056351dc33001f85/2/larger.jpg
(Giovanni Piazzetta, the 1740,s)
There was a cult of effortlessness.
Thanks for the article.
n.a.
Nowadays, great singers like Sembrich, Melba, Patti, Tetrazzini etc. would have not been successful. The emphasis in the Golden Era was on singing pure and simple, whilst acting took a back seat. Nowadays a pole-dancing, prancing Netrebko takes the big applause, even if her voice is a fraction of the above-mentioned singers' amazing abilities. Isn't opera first and foremost about beautiful singing, not about physical beauty and crazy prancing? Brava Madame Sembrich, and thank you, dear Edmund, for your great blog.
Nice comment, and spot-on) And thanks for the compliment; very thoughtful of you! I always appreciate your comments, which are invariably excellent.
Edmund
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