"In spite of having been recording during the German Occupation in WWII, this is one of the great opera recordings of the century. EMI released it on CD in 1988 in a fine mastering by Keith Hardwick. That mastering revealed a modest bit of surface noise, but the sound was basically quite good for its vintage. Andante also released it with some additional material a few years ago, but their remastering suffers from excessive hiss.
This new remastering was performed via EMI's vaunted "Abbey Road Technology" (ART), where it was "noise shaped via the Prism SNS system," whatever that is. All the surface noise is gone. But the result sounds strangely synthetic, and lacks the warmth, and some of the detail, of the Hardwick remastering. I was surprised at the difference in comparing the old EMI with the new, and strongly prefer the old. As far as I can tell, it is still available, but probably not for long. I'd try to track it down; the product number on my copy is CHS 7 61038 2, if that helps.
Along with the opera are various songs performed by Maggie Teyte with Alfred Cortot, and a few brief pieces sung by Mary Garden, with Debussy at the piano. The Garden selections were recorded in 1904. What a wonder it is to hear Debussy's music as he heard it and played it! This is indispensable for Debussy lovers."
Five stars +
Finnegan | NYC | 04/06/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Simply one of the greatest recordings, opera or otherwise, ever made. Enough said. This has been available on a rather limited basis in this country, so grab it now while it is part of the GROC series."