1. Overture 2. We sail the ocean blue 3. Hail, men-o'war's men 4. I'm called Little Buttercup 5. But tell me, who's the youth 6. The nightingale sighed for the moon's bright ray 7. A maiden fair to see 8. My gallant crew, good morning 9. I am the captain of the Pinafore 10. Sir, you are sad 11. Sorry her lot who loves too well 12. Over the birght blue sea 13. I am the monarch of the sea 14. When I was a lad I served a term 15. A British tar is a soaring soul 16. Refrain, audacious tar 17. Can I survive this overbearing 18. Oh joy, oh rapture unforseen 19. This very night 20. Let's give three cheers 21. Entr'acte 22. Fair moon to thee I sing 23. Thing are seldom what they seem 24. The hours creep on apace 25. Never mind the why and wherefore 26. Kind Captain, I've important information 27. Carefully on tiptoe stealing 28. Pretty daughter of mine 29. Farewell my own 30. Hark, the hour of ten is sounding 31. Now jurymen hear my advice 32. Is this the Court of the Exchequer? 33. When first my old, old love I knew 34. Silence in Court... All hail great Judge 35. When I, good friends, was called to the Bar 36. Swear thou the jury 37. Where is the plaintiff? 38. Comes the broken flower 39. Oh, never, never, never 40. May it please you, my Lud! 41. That she is reeling is plain to me 42. Oh, gentlemen, listen, I pray 43. That seems a reasonable proposition 44. A nice dilemma we have here 45. I love him, I love him 46. The question, gentlemen, is one of liquor 47. Oh joy unbounded 48. Overture 49. Pour, oh pour the pirate sherry 50. When Frederic was a little lad 51. Oh, better far to live and die 52. Oh, false one, you have deceived me! 53. What shall I do?... 54. Stop, ladies, pray! 55. Oh, is there not one maiden breast? 56. Oh, sisters, deaf to pity's name 57. Poor wandering one 58. What ought we to do? 59. Stay, we must not lose our senses 60. Here's a first rate opportunity 61. Hold, monsters! 62. I am the very model of a modern Major-General 63. Oh, men of dark and dismal fate 64. I'm telling a terrible story 65. O master, hear one word 66. Pray observe the magnanimity 67. Oh, dry the glistening tear 68. Now, Frederic, let your escort lion-hearted 69. When the foeman bears his steel 70. Now for the pirates' lair 71. Young Frederic! 72. When you had left our pirate fold 73. Away, away! my heart's on fire 74. All is prepared 75. Stay, Frederic, stay! 76. Ah, leave me not to pine 77. In 1940 I of age shall be 78. No, I'll be brave! 79. Though in body and in mind 80. When a felon's not engaged in his employment 81. A rollicking band of pirates we 82. With cat-like tread 83. Hush, hush! not a word 84. Softly sighing to the river 85. Now what is this, and what is that 86. Frederic here! Oh joy! 87. Overture : The Sorcerer 88. Overture : Cox and Box 89. Overture : Princess Ida 90. Overture in C (In memoriam) 91. Am I alone and unobserved? 92. Long years ago, fourteen maybe 93. Prithee pretty maiden 94. Let the merry cymbals sound 95. Now tell us, we pray you 96. Your maiden hearts 97. Come walk up and purchase with avidity 98. True love must single-hearted be 99. I hear the soft note... But who is this? 100. Overture 101. Twenty lovesick maidens we 102. Still brooding on their mad infatuation 103. I cannot tell what this love may be 104. The soldiers of our Queen 105. In a doleful train... Twenty lovesick maidens we 106. When I first put this uniform on 107. On such eyes as maidens cherish 108. Sad is that woman's lot 109. Turn, oh turn in this direction 110. A magnet hung in a hardware shop 111. Love is a plaintive song 112. So go to him and say to him 113. It's clear that medieval art alone retains its zest 114. If Saphir I choose to marry 115. When I go out of door 116. I'm a Waterloo House young man 117. After much debate internal 118. I: Andante - Allegro, ma non troppo vivace 119. II: Andante espressivo 120. III: Allegretto 121. IV: Allegro vivace e con brio 122. Overture 123. Tripping hither, tripping thither 124. Iolanthe! 125. Good marrow, good mother 126. Fare thee well, attractive stranger 127. Good marrow, good lover 128. None shall part us from each other 129. Loudly let the trumpet bray! 130. The Law is the true embodiment 131. my well-loved lord and guardian dear 132. Of all the young ladies I know 133. Nay, tempt me not 134. Spurn not the nobly born 135. My Lords, it may not be 136. A sheperd I 137. When I went to the bar as a very young man 138. When darkly looms the day 139. Oh, shameless one, tremble! 140. In babyhood upon her lap I lay 141. For riches and rank I do not long 142. To you I give my heart 143. Tripping hither, Tripping thither 144. The lady of my love 145. Go away, madam 146. Oh, Chancellor unwary 147. With Strephon for your foe 148. When all night long a chap remains 149. Strephon's a Member of Parliament 150. When Britain really ruled the waves 151. In vain to us you plead 152. Oh, foolish fay 153. Though p'r'aps I may incur your blame 154. Love, unrequited, robs me of my rest 155. When you're lying awake with a dismal headache 156. If you go in, you're sure to win 157. If we're weak enough to tarry 158. My Lord, a suppliant at your feet I kneel 159. He loves! If in the bygone years 160. It may not be 161. Soon as we may 162. BBC Symphony Orchestra 163. Overture 164. If you want to know who we are 165. Gentlemen, I pray you tell me 166. A wand'ring minstrel, I 167. Our great Mikado, virtuous man 168. Young man, despair 169. And have I journey'd for a month 170. Behold the Lord High Executioner! 171. As some day it may happen 172. Comes a train of little ladies 173. Three little maids from school 174. So please you, sir, we much regret 175. Were you not to Ko-Ko plighted 176. I am so proud 177. With aspect stern 178. Your revels ceae 179. Braid the raven hair 180. The sun, whose raze are all ablaze 181. Brightly dawns our wedding day 182. Here's a how-de-do! 183. Miya sama, miya sama 184. A mor humane Mikado 185. The criminal cried 186. See how the Fates their gifts allot 187. The flowers that bloom in the spring 188. Alone, and yet alive 189. Hearts do not break 190. On a tree by a river a little tom-tit 191. There is beauty in the bellow of the blast 192. For he's gone and married Yum-Yum 193. Overture 194. Fair is Rose as bright May day 195. Sir Rupert Murgatroyd 196. If someday there chanced to be 197. I know a youth who loves a little maid 198. From the briny sea 199. I shippd, d'ye see, in a Revenue sloop 200. My boy, you may take it from me 201. The battle's roar is over 202. In sailing o'er life's ocean wide 203. Cheerily carols the lark 204. To a garden full of posies 205. Welcome gentry for your entry 206. Oh, why am I moody and sad? 207. You understand? 208. Hail the bride of seventeen summers 209. When the buds are blossoming 210. Hold, bride and bridegroom 211. Oh, happy the lily 212. I was once as meek as a new-born lamb 213. Happily coupled are we 214. In bygone days I had thy love 215. Painted emblems of a race 216. When the night wind howls 217. He yields! He yields! 218. I was once a very abandoned person 219. My eyes are fully open 220. There grew a little flower 221. Oh, happy the lily 222. I: Introduction 223. IV: Prelude Act III 224. VI: Banquet Dance 225. VII: Overture Act IV 226. X: Dance of the Nymphs and Reapers 227. XI: Prelude Act V 228. XIIc: Epilogue 229. I: Introduction 230. III: Bourrée 231. V: À la valse 232. VII: Finale 233. Overture 234. When maiden loves 235. Tower warders, under orders 236. When are gallant Norman foes 237. Alas, I waver to and fro 238. Is life a boon? 239. Here's a man of jollity 240. I have a song to sing, O! 241. How say you maiden 242. I've jibe and joke 243. 'Tis done! I am a bride 244. Were I thy bride 245. Oh, Sergeant Meryll, is it true? 246. Night has spread her pall once more 247. A private buffoon is a light-hearted loon 248. Here-upon we're both agreed 249. Free from his fetters grim 250. Strange adventure! 251. Hark! What was that, sir? 252. A man who would woo a fair maid 253. When a wooer goes a-wooing 254. Rapture, rapture! 255. Comes the pretty young bride 256. Overture 257. List and learn, ye dainty roses 258. Good marrow, pretty maids 259. For the merriest fellows 260. Buon'giorno, signorine 261. we;re called gondolieri 262. And now to choose our brides 263. Thank you, gallant gondolieri 264. From the sunny Spanish shore 265. In enterprise of martial kind 266. O rapture when alone 267. There was a time 268. I stole the Prince 269. But bless my life 270. Try we life-long 271. Bridegroom and bride 272. When a merry maiden marries 273. Kind sir, you cannot have the heart 274. Don not give way 275. Then one of us will be a queen 276. Replying we sing 277. For everyone who feels inclined 278. Come, let's away 279. Then away they go to an island fair 280. Og happiness the very pith 281. Rising early in the morning 282. Take a pair of sparkling eyes 283. Here we are, at the risk of our lives 284. Dance a cachucha, fandango, bolero 285. There lived a King 286. In a contemplative fashion 287. With ducal pomp and ducal pride 288. On the day when i was wedded 289. To help unhappy commoners 290. Small titles and orders 291. I am a courtier grave and serious 292. Here is a case unprecedented 293. Now let the royal lieges gather round 294. The Royal Prince 295. I: Allegro moderato 296. II: Andante espressivo - 297. III: Molto vivace
Amazon.com
The advent of stereo brought forth two competing Gilbert and Sullivan cycles that retain their classic status in divergent ways. Seasoned Savoyards lean towards Decca's D'Oyly Carte recordings, where the use of singing actors and inclusion of dialogue add up to a palpable theatrical experience. By contrast, EMI's competing cycle featured some of Britain's finest operatic singers of the 1950s and '60s, who largely command both music and text on equal terms. The nine operettas in this series conducted by Sir Malcolm Sargent--Trial by Jury, HMS Pinafore, The Pirates of Penzance, Patience, Iolanthe, The Mikado, Ruddigore, The Yeomen of the Guard, and The Gondoliers--are repackaged in a budget-priced, space-saving box. True, some might contend that Sargent's stoutly moderate tempos downplay the authors' irreverent bite, but at least you can make out every blasted word. And that's important, since EMI includes no librettos, just a synopsis of each work. As a bonus, Sullivan's orchestral forays outside comic opera fill out the discs, including incidental music to The Tempest and The Merchant of Venice, the touching Overture in C ("In Memoriam"), an attractively tuneful Symphony in E, and a fascinating reconstruction of a Cello Concerto, whose autograph and parts perished in a 1964 fire. You simply cannot find a more comprehensive Gilbert and Sullivan bargain than this highly enticing set. Grab it while you can. --Jed Distler
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Gilbert & Sullivan - Operettas / Pro Arte Orchestra · Sir Malcolm Sargent
- Audio CD: 0 pages (2001-11-20)
- Publisher: EMI Classics
- Label: EMI Classics
- Format: Box set
- Studio: EMI Classics
- Average Customer Review:
based on 11 reviews
- Sales Rank in Music: #152521
Avg. Customer Review:
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: The complete Sargent G&S 2005-07-08
Comment: Actually, its not! But it is a complete edition of the last recordings he ever made of the operettas in question.
The evidence of pre-war Sargent recordings (for instance his earlier "Princess Ida") shows that when he was a little younger he appoached these works with vigour and a stong sense of musical humour. As he mellowed (or got older, anyway) his interpretation of G&S definitely became more personal and reverent (or, if you like, slower). Whether you like this or not is absolutely a matter of taste. There are times when those of us more used to other productions may find a mellow geniality in the music rather than the razor sharp wit we are used to. On balance it has to be said that Sullivan comes off better than Gilbert when you slow things down a bit.
My own personal opinion is that if you only want one performance of each operetta I would look elsewhere. If you love G&S enough to want several recordings of each one - then get these - if only to enjoy a "different" slant on the music.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Nice collection...but you can get a better price. 2005-01-20
Comment: This boxset is really a gem for Gilber & Sullivan fans and all operetta lovers. I am not going to add more good words on its excellent performance and nice recording, 'cos it has already got enough of them.
I am not complaining about the price of Amazon, but I purchased this boxset in Hong Kong at an extremely attractive price of HK$218, ie US$28. This price is not only for this boxset, but for all EMI boxsets with the same packing, no matter how many CDs are in one box (from 6pcs to 16pcs). I can't understand how this astounding price gap comes into being. Maybe Amazon should contact EMI for a better promotional price.
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: An operatic approach to G&S 2004-01-31
Comment: In the late 1950s and early 1960s, as soon as the copyright on Gilbert's lyrics expired, EMI began to issue what could have been the complete series of Gilbert & Sullivan collaborations but never quite finished. Of the 14 operettas from "Thespis" to "The Grand Duke," only 9 found their way into the EMI series. In order of composition rather than recordings, they were "Trial by Jury," "HMS Pinafore," "The Pirates of Penzance," "Patience," "Iolanthe," "The Mikado," "Ruddigore," "The Yeomen of the Guard," and "The Gondoliers." They are all played by the Pro Arte Orchestra under the baton of veteran G&S conductor Sir Malcolm Sargent (who conducted most of the RCA Victor/HMV electric recordings) and feature the soloists and chorus of the Glyndebourne Festival. The only voice familiar to devotees of the earlier recordings is that of George Baker, who had assumed most of the comic roles on many an acoustic and electric recording, although he himself had never appeared in any of those roles on a stage. Once the days of the mono LP were over, the Decca (overseas) and London (over here) labels were busily issuing stereo versions with D'Oyly Carte casts while EMI was giving them stiff competition with their Glyndebourne people. While the D'Oyly Carte singers were not quite up to their rivals vocally, several of their recordings included the dialogue, which was a bane to some, a blessing to others. However, now that both companies have reissued their complete Gilbert & Sullivan sets in a budget format, you can judge for yourselves which is superior. But it is of the EMI set that I wish to comment here. It comes in a box of 16 CDs, arranged in the order of composition, except for "Trial by Jury" which follows rather than precedes "Pinafore" as part of the same set. My only quarrel with the series as a whole is the lack of a good basso profundo, especially for the role of Pooh-Bah. Using opera star Geraint Evans as Ko-Ko, Jack Point, and the Duke of Plaza-Toro was not a good idea, since he does not have that lightness of voice and sparkle the roles require. But George Baker takes over in the other comic leads; and it is difficult to believe that this man had made a "Mikado" recording back in 1917 and was still going strong. Oh, of course, now and then the patter songs take their toll. But Baker is a G&S legend and I am one of the thousands who love him. The leading tenor (in 7 of the 9 recordings) is Richard Lewis, whose voice may not be as characterful as some of the D'Oyly Carte tenors of old but is beautiful to hear. The leading soprano is Elsie Morison, who can tackle the coloratura of Josephine ("Pinafore") and Mabel ("Pirates") with no trouble. Sounding a little too mature, perhaps, for some of the other roles, her vocalizing more than makes up for it. Now remember that most of these singers have long operatic backgrounds and approach Sullivan's music in that mode. When the EMI LPs were transferred to CDs, the extra time each disc could carry called for several "fillers" or what is now called "bonus" tracks. So as an added inducement to purchase this set, you will also hear Sullivan's symphonic alone in his overtures to three of the works not included, "Overture in C," "Symphony in E," "Overture di Ballo," incidental music to "The Tempest" and to "The Merchant of Venice," and the "Cello Concerto in D." They are taken from more recent recordings with different orchestras and conductors. The booklet gives all the casts and tracking, along with synopses cued to the tracks. However, newcomers are advised to find a good edition of the plays so they can follow the words and perhaps pause between songs to read the equally clever dialogue as a group entertainment. So even if you own other recordings of these immensely popular works, I am sure you will enjoy this EMI set very much indeed. And yes, some of the sets are still available separately in their individual jewel cases.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: A gem! 2003-08-12
Comment: This may not be a complete discography of their works, but what a pleasure it is to have. Forget about the librettos, since they're public domain and can be easily found on the web. By the time you've finished listening to a few of these masterpieces, wonderfully conducted by Malcolm Sargent, you'll be like me; whistling and humming 'till you drop over with euphoria. Enjoy it!
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Great Value and Some Unusual Items - OK performances 2003-07-14
Comment: I give this set somewhat mixed reviews. On the positive side, it is a great value, is well-recorded (especially given that some of the recordings go back to the 50s) , and includes come unusual orchestral works, in addition to 9 operettas. On the negative side, I just don't think these are the best performances of the operettas, in that Sargent really does adopt tempos that often just too slow and the singers sometimes sound just a bit too serious for the roles. My favorite G&S are the recent Telarc performances (Pirates, Pinafore, Mikado, Trial by Jury, and Yeoman) -- great sound, fine singing, and very lively performances.
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