Hi Lee Ann:
Very interesting your mentioning "Behold' because that is one of the
songs I listened to the other day and while romantic in its sentiment
and no doubt genuine, I think this song falls into that classification
of mediocre. Now please don't misunderstand me, I rather like the
song and I think Mario's reading of it is stellar, I really do. But I
think, here again, we have a case of the material not being up to the
level of the artist in quality. Interestingly enough, I think
"Behold" comes much closer to being on par with Mario's level of
talent than "Call Me Fool" or "This Land."
"This Land" I have to say is, in my opinion, a truly poor song.
Written in a sort of quasi-patriotic style it starts out with some
promise, but when we get to the final verses, it just falls apart. In
fact, it makes very little sense at all: "This land where I live, is
the land I will give, to the one that I love as much as I love this
land." I don't know Lee Ann, kinda hard for me to buy that one. BUT,
the quality or even the sense of the song make little difference - we
already know that from "Lee Ah Loo" and "Pineapple Pickers" now don't
we - its what Mario does with it. He may have privately said to Betty
or Callinicos or someone, "This song is crap!" but once in front of
the microphone it was a totally different story. He believed in what
he was singing, no matter what it was, with every fiber of his being.
That is what we hear, that is how we come to think that, hey this song
isn't bad. It's Mario that brings the material up to his level.
When you examine the material he was given, even early on at MGM, some
of it was, well, questionable on the quality scale. One song that
jumps to mind is "I'll Never Love You." I must be honest and tell you
that I've never really liked this song, it just seems trite. It also
has the unfortunate distinction of being the second (original) love
song after "Be My Love" not a great place to be. But Lanza brings it
up several notches with his magnificent voice and wonderful
interpretation.
Oh I suppose I could go on and on, but that's no fun and as Armando
pointed out in another thread, we aren't here to pick apart everything
Lanza sang. True enough, but it still remains quite interesting in
comparing the quality of material vs the artist. And when the artist
is Mario Lanza, I would venture to say the comparison and subsequent
dialogue might never end.
All the best, Tony
Here's the link to "This Land"
http://www.4shared.com/audio/9SL4um6-/Lanza_-_This_Land.html