Early in his career, Malcolm Sargent was musical director of the D'Oyly Carte Opera, so the spirit of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas was in his blood, and with that company he made the first complete recording of The Yeoman of the Guard in 1928. Thirty years later, he made his second (of three versions) based on a Glyndebourne production featuring the Pro Arte Orchestra and a cast of some of the finest British singers of the period. The Yeoman of the Guard is Gilbert and Sullivan's most sober work, with their usual ...
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Early in his career, Malcolm Sargent was musical director of the D'Oyly Carte Opera, so the spirit of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas was in his blood, and with that company he made the first complete recording of The Yeoman of the Guard in 1928. Thirty years later, he made his second (of three versions) based on a Glyndebourne production featuring the Pro Arte Orchestra and a cast of some of the finest British singers of the period. The Yeoman of the Guard is Gilbert and Sullivan's most sober work, with their usual ebullient silliness toned down, and with an emotionally complex resolution, in which the central couple is happily wed, but in which three major sympathetic characters are left desolate. It's appropriate that this performance, while full of vitality and the requisite level of humor, has the seriousness (and sometimes grandeur) for which Sullivan had been striving, and which he had felt unable to express in setting Gilbert's previous whimsical librettos. One of the virtues of this version is...
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Add this copy of Gilbert & Sullivan: the Yeomen of the Guard to cart. $10.74, like new condition, Sold by Wonder Book - Member ABAA/ILAB rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Frederick, MD, UNITED STATES, published 2008 by Warner Classics.