Mercury Studios has announced that it will release on Blu-ray
Pavarotti: Live at Llangollen (1995). The release is scheduled to arrive on the market on November 21.
Description: Nearly three decades after it was recorded, one of the most iconic voices in music history returns to captivate audiences once more. Mercury Studios is honored to announce the upcoming release of "Pavarotti: The Lost Concert – Live at Llangollen 1995".
This remarkable and previously unreleased performance by the legendary Luciano Pavarotti, recorded at the prestigious Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod in 1995, will finally be available to fans around the world. This historic concert captures Pavarotti at the height of his powers, performing with the BBC Philharmonic, soprano Atzuko Kawahara and Corale Rossini, offering a rare glimpse into an unforgettable evening of music, passion, and artistry.
This year marks what would have been the 90th birthday (October 12) of one of the most iconic voices in music history - Luciano Pavarotti. To honor this milestone, Decca Records is spearheading PAVAROTTI 90, a worldwide tribute celebrating the tenor's unmatched contribution to classical music, his international appeal, and his legacy of bringing opera to the masses. They will release this concert in full, alongside two never-before heard tracks from 1955 – the earliest known recordings of his voice, aged just 19.
Keeping a long-held promise, Luciano Pavarotti returned to the small town in North Wales in 1995 to give a special gala concert at the Llangollen International Musical Eisteddfod, forty years after winning a singing competition as part of a choir from his hometown of Modena that changed the course of his life.
Additionally, Decca will release, on the same day, the audio component of The Lost Concert: Live from Llangollen 1995. The recording has been mastered with the latest technology and comes with a 100-page collector's book filled with essays, photographs, and archive material. It also includes two original 1955 recordings of the Corale Rossini, Bonjour mon coeur and In Nomine Jesu, believed to be the earliest surviving audio featuring Pavarotti's voice, as well as a rare interview where he recalls his first visit to Wales.
Speaking about the significance of the event, Nicoletta Mantovani (Luciano's widow) said:
"It was the beginning of everything. Luciano often said that without Llangollen, there would have been no career".