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Commentary
26 Mar 2005
The Independent Interviews Angela Gheorghiu
“If Puccini were alive today, I’d be in love with him. I am sure of it. He knew how to write for sopranos: he really loved them,” says Angela Gheorghiu. And this soprano knows Puccini’s heroines well, having most of them in her repertoire or in her plans. On her latest CD, a handsomely packaged set from EMI, she steps into the shoes of all his major soprano characters, with the exception of the adulterous Giorgetta in Puccini’s most impressionistic score, Il Tabarro.

Angela Gheorghiu
Angela Gheorghiu: Born to sing of suffering
Angela Gheorghiu, the diva of the age, has a special affinity for the tragic heroines of Puccini's operas. 'I, too, have tears in my voice,' the soprano tells Lynne Walker
[The Independent, 25 Mar 05]
"If Puccini were alive today, I'd be in love with him. I am sure of it. He knew how to write for sopranos: he really loved them," says Angela Gheorghiu. And this soprano knows Puccini's heroines well, having most of them in her repertoire or in her plans. On her latest CD, a handsomely packaged set from EMI, she steps into the shoes of all his major soprano characters, with the exception of the adulterous Giorgetta in Puccini's most impressionistic score, Il Tabarro.
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