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Eleventh Grand Sunday Night Concert
Stabat Mater
Metropolitan Opera House, Sun, January 31, 1897
Eleventh Grand Sunday Night Concert
Stabat Mater (14)
Gioachino Rossini
- Soloist
- Pol Plan?on
- Soloist
- Cl?mentine De Vere
- Soloist
- Eugenia Mantelli
- Soloist
- Giuseppe Cremonini
- Conductor
- Anton Seidl
Dvor?k: Carnival Overture
Bizet/Sarasate: Carmen Fantasy
Encores
Bronislaw Huberman, violin
Meyerbeer: Extase
Jean Lassalle
Die Walk?re: Les Adieux de Wotan
Pol Plan?on
Conductor...............Anton Seidl
Piano...................Amherst Webber
STABAT MATER {14}
1. Stabat Mater Dolorosa
Cl?mentine De Vere, Eugenia Mantelli, Giuseppe Cremonini,
Pol Plan?on
Metropolitan Opera Chorus
2. Cujus Animam
Giuseppe Cremonini
3. Qui est Homo
Cl?mentine De Vere, Eugenia Mantelli
4. Pro Peccatis
Pol Plan?on
5. Eia, Mater
Pol Plan?on
Metropolitan Opera Chorus
6. Sancta Mater
Cl?mentine De Vere, Eugenia Mantelli, Giuseppe Cremonini, Pol Plan?on
7. Fac ut Portum
Eugenia Mantelli
8. Inflammatus
Cl?mentine De Vere
Metropolitan Opera Chorus
9. Quando Corpus Morietur
Pol Plan?on
10. Amen
Cl?mentine De Vere, Eugenia Mantelli, Giuseppe Cremonini, Pol Plan?on
Metropolitan Opera Chorus
Conductor...............Anton Seidl
This information comes from announcements and reviews. Although a newspaper advertisement lists only Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8, from the Stabat Mater, reviews suggest that the complete work was performed.
Review 1:
Review in the New York Sun
Last Night's Metropolitan Concert
"Les Adieux de Wotan," as they were voiced by Pol Plan?on at the Metropolitan concert last night, made that personage appear to be an old man with beautiful manners, who never would have bored people as he sometimes did if he had only known they were really tired of him. The familiar number from "Die Walk?re" was sung in Plan?on's faultless style, but it was French in something more than the language. It was almost Parisian, and its broadly heroic quality was lacking. M. Lassalle had, before the Wagner excerpt, which is scarcely adapted to a concert programme, sung an aria by Meyerbeer, and Bronislav Huberman played the Sarasate fantasy on "Carmen" and two encores to a highly enthusiastic audience.
The gem of Rossini's "Stabat Mater," which was sung last night for the first time this year, was Plan?on's beautiful singing of "Pro Peccatis." And that in itself would have made the performance worth the price of admission. Mme. De Vere sang the soprano numbers with great taste and feeling, and Mme. Mantelli's share in the result contributed to its admirable quality. Signor Cremonini was the least able member of the quartet, and he attempted "Cujus Animam" very cautiously. Anton Seidl directed and the chorus of the opera sang. The house was crowded.
Unsigned
Review 2:Review in the Brooklyn Eagle
METROPOLITAN CONCERT
In addition to the excellent miscellaneous concert last night at the New York Metropolitan Opera house, Rossini's "Stabat Mater" was sung by the full Metropolitan Opera chorus. Under the direction of Anton Seidl the orchestra opened the programme with the glowing "Carnival" overture by Dvorak. The star of the evening was Master Huberman.
The wonderful boy violinist, whose playing of Sarasate's "Carmen" fantasy won him repeated encores. The vocal soloists were MM. Lassalle, Cremonini and Plan?on and Mmes. Clementine De Vere and Mantelli, the four later singing in the "Stabat Mater." Plan?on's "Pro Peccatis" was the finest thing of the evening, but the familiar music was well sung by all. The house was jammed from top to bottom.
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