Hi Derek: For the First Time as well as Seven Hills of Rome can be pre-ordered from Movies Unlimited.Here’s the link: http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/browse_list.asp?cid=mu&dept=Mario+Lanza&media=D
Both in glorious mono sound! :-)
Hi Lee Ann,
It is really amazing that the category “Best Soundtrack of Original Cast from a Motion Picture or Television” was the only category with only two nominees! All other categories had four or five nominations. Any idea why the selection was so limited in this particular category? And what was the official statement as to why “Porgy and Bess” won out over “For the First Time”?
Incidentally, have you ever seen this website?
with the complete listing for the 1959 Grammy nominations ad winners:
http://www.awardsandshows.com/features/grammy-awards-1959-239.html
Steff
And as for official statements--since voting for these kinds of awards--Grammys, Golden Globes, Oscars, Emmys, etcetera--are done by secret ballot among members of certain professional associations, I imagine the reasons are as different as the people who vote. I'm not sure official statement exist.
"I can't help thinking how that last year of Lanza's life left a heritage of such enormous growth and fulfillment, of promise and potential at the same time."
I agree, his voice and reading was more mature in the Vesti of 1958. At the same time, I do not prefer his O' sole mio of FFT at a lower key even though the 1949 version was a bit showboating. What is obvious that he reached his maturity of reading by the Serenade and especially by the Mario! And the Caruso Favourites albums. The latter one contains some strains at the same time, loosing flexibility as well. In my mind he was at his peak at his age of 34-35 especially for the operatic world. Leaving for Rome in 1957 he was not the same until his untimely death in 1959. For me the Mario! album a special exception but you can feel in his renditions of tiredness, fears and sorrow. This is why his renditions are esspecially moving.
Barnabas
A voice, like a violin or a piano, is an instrument and it needs the
best possible encasing in order to produce the best sound. The
encasing for a singer is the body, which has to be in optimal
condition or else there will be serious repercussions on the voice.In Mario's case the vocal changes parallel the crises and traumatic
I am totally convinced that had he pulled himself together and
moments that were afflicting him in his later years.
restored his health, the voice we would have heard in 1960 would have
been closer to that of the Cavalcade album in 1956. After all, the
voice was not damaged. Unlike Callas, just to cite an example, Lanza
had not done enough singing to damage it but, as we all know, his
physical condition was another matter.
He plays a combative, tempestuous, impetuous and engaging American singer who goes to Capri and falls in love with a deaf girl (Johanna von Koczian, a German actress still working today). He decides to take her with him on a concert tour, and at each city they see an ear specialist. Along the way, Lanza, one of the great voices of the 20th century, performs arias from various operas, from Mozart to Leoncavallo. (He also does a beautiful "Ave Maria," at a lovely point in the film. I'll say no more.)
What I like, even love, about this film is the way the real Lanza comes through - big-natured, impulsive, lovable, unreasonable, a glutton, an artist, just another guy from Philly, and the man who can sing "Come Prima" better than anyone else. What a talent, and what a loss.
My DVD of For the First Time is still a couple of weeks away from arriving---I think its release date at Amazon is in a few days---but in the meantime it's great to see the film receiving love in the unlikeliest of places. Prominent film critic Mike LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle, in a review of the DVD, has just amazed me by describing it as "a very good film"---and a great showcase for Lanza:
Excellent, as well as surprising review from La Salle. While it’s not a great film it’s a fitting finale with some great singing and the essence and vibrancy of Lanza’s larger than life personality distinctly visible.
I finally got my "For the First Time" & "7 Hills of Rome" dvds today, which was great timing because I was off work :-)
They both look fantastic & I am sure it is the best we will get, but as others have said the sound is a slight disappointment. I love having the full widescreen image in such great quality, it opens up a whole other level for these films.
His voice was tremendous but you can "see" his failing health in some of the scenes.
Just a P.S. to my earlier comments about the DVD: I watched the film on a 58-inch Samsung TV this afternoon, and I was surprised by how super-red everything was compared with the more natural colour that I'd seen on my Apple notebook. Lanza's face, in particular, was often beetroot red :) You may need to do a little fiddling with the colour and contrast to tone down all that garishness. Very good picture quality overall, though.
So sorry about my earlier post not being routed properly. My smart(ass) phone strikes again. A thousand apologies.
Tony
I'm wondering about the work of the film editor and how much footage Ruggiero might have had to work with and to spare in the 1940s and 1950s--for Lanza films anyway especially under the often-limited time frame for shooting and--at least for Seven Hills--on-the-spot script rewrites and changes. [...]
So, I'm curious, then, about what Ruggiero might have done better in The Great Caruso as well.