- Karl Friedrich, Gwladys Garside, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Sir Thomas Beecham, Erna Schlüter, Edith Furmedge, Sylvia Patriss, Maud Heaton, Monica Warner, Ernst Erbach, Margaret Field-Hyde, Ljuba Welitsch, Royal Philharmonic Chorus, Paul Schöffler, Maria Cebotari, Walter Widdop
- Ljubomir Pantscheff, Margareta Kenney, Clemens Krauss, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Bruno Seidler-Winkler, Gota Ljungberg, Rudolf Christ, Franz Bierbach, Pasdeloup Orchestra, Julius Patzak, Hermann Gallos, Leo Blech, Studio Orchestra, Murray Dickie, Hans Braun, Ludwig Weber, The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Else Schürhoff, Kurt Preger, Walter Berry, Piero Coppola, Vienna Philharmonic, Anton Dermota, Herbert Alsen, Harald Pröglhöf, Marjorie Lawrence, Staatskapelle Berlin, Christel Goltz, Ljuba Welitsch, Emmy Destinn, Hugo Meyer-Welfung, Fritz Reiner
- Mirto Picchi, Glyndebourne Festival Orchestra, Jean Watson, Vittorio Gui, Paolo Silveri, Jan Wallace, Francis Loring, Alda Noni, Glyndebourne Chorus, Ljuba Welitsch, Harvey Alan
Ljuba Welitsch
Biography
While her career was relatively short, Welitsch was a legend in her own time, with a strikingly beautiful stage presence (and a figure she was never hesitant to show off to its best advantage onstage) and a powerfully-focused, though not huge, voice. For many, her Salome has never been vocally or dramatically surpassed. She studied in Sofia under Gyorgy Zlatov, and made her debut as one of the seamstresses in Charpentier's Louis at the Sofia Opera in 1934. Her first lead role was as Nedda in Pagliacci in 1936 at the Graz Opera. In 1937, she became part of the Graz opera company, where she remained until 1940. As her career developed, her roles ranged over the lyrical and the spinto repertoire, including such heavy roles as Senta and Aida. In 1944, she sang Salome in a performance conducted by Strauss himself, and after joining the Vienna State Opera in 1946, made her Covent Garden debut in the same role the next year. Her Metropolitan Opera debut was in 1949, also as Salome. (This was also conductor Fritz Reiner's Met debut.) As early as 1953, her voice was showing pronounced signs of wear, though her total artistry was still commanding, and she began to appear in smaller roles, including comic character parts. In 1959, she made her farewell to the opera stage in Egk's Der Revisor at the Vienna State Opera, though she returned to the Met in 1972 to perform the comic speaking part of the Duchess in a production of Donizetti's La Fille du Regiment.