Although these recordings coincide with the beginning of Pippo's vocal
decline (and it's true that one is almost always aware here of his
problematic upper register) there is still much to enjoy on this disc.
The beauty of his voice and of his phrasing more than compensate for
the metallic harshness of some (but not all) of his high notes, and
nothing can diminish the wonderful storytelling that typifies Di
Stefano's singing here. Among the many highlights are renditions of
songs that I wish Lanza had recorded: Silenzio Cantatore, Chiove
(quite a refreshingly off-beat song this one, melodically speaking,
and with a haunting delivery of "Gesu', ma come chiove" -- "Jesus, but
how it's raining"" -- from Pippo), 'O Paese d' 'o Sole, and Piscatore
'e Pusilecco.
Interestingly, Di Stefano sings seven of the songs featured on Lanza's
"Mario!" album, plus the inevitable O Sole Mio, Marechiare, Torna a
Surriento, etc. Some time back, we briefly discussed the two men's
respective versions of Fenesta Che Lucive, and, as I recall the
thread, most of us gave the edge to Lanza's rendition. But when it
comes to Santa Lucia Luntana, I'd have to acknowledge that, much as I
love Mario's memorably reflective 1958 version, Pippo sings the
superior rendition:
http://www.4shared.com/file/60990211/d0126df2/11_-_Track_11.html
And here's Lanza's version for a quick comparison:
http://www.4shared.com/file/60990755/b5d8ae04/Santa_Lucia_Luntana.html
Of course, not only are the two voices completely different (as Mario
himself acknowledged to Licia Albanese, referring to Pippo's "light,
velvety" timbre), but the arrangements and even the keys are
dissimilar. This makes for two quite diverse listening experiences:
Lanza's restrained, contemplative rendition sung in a baritonal
"honey-dipped" middle register (to quote our resident wordsmith Mike
McAdam :-)), and Di Stefano's much more lyrical approach, capped by
his exceptional mezza voce.
When I have a free moment, I'll post about some of the other
renditions of Neapolitan songs that both men recorded; in the
meantime, I'd be interested in reading your reactions to the above.
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I thought Di Stefano's Santa Lucia Luntana was exquisite. I loved the ending. Such beautiful pianissimo singing.
I think you are correct Derek. He shades Mario on this one but Mario definitely has the upper hand with Passione.
I think the thrilling last note is one of his best...sustained so beautifully with an evenness of tonal quality right until the end.
Jan | |||
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Derek wrote<
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Among the other Neapolitan songs that both Mario and Giuseppe
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Recorded, I prefer Di Stefano's various early versions of Core n'grato
To Lanza's two renditions (though the best version I've ever heard is
That of Carreras at his 1980 New York concert), and I feel that |
Pippo's Senza Nisciuno rivals Mario's 1959 version. If anyone's
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Interested, I can post a link for Di Stefano's recording of the
Latter. It's more poetic than Lanza's dramatic, heart-wrenching
Rendition, but to me both approaches are equally valid. And while Di |
Stefano's voice lacks Mario's ring on the high notes, he sounds in
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Good vocal nick here (for 1956).>
Yes please I would like to hear Pippo's version of Senza Nisciuno.
I particularly like this Neapolitan song.
Jan | |||
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http://www.4shared.com/file/61158342/7fceee0d/19_-_Senza_Nisciuno.html (Di
Stefano)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-x676kaVs80 (Lanza)
I also listened to Corelli's version, and actually found myself quite
enjoying it. (You know I'm not a Corelli fan!) He's in ringing voice here,
and I think the song suits that uniquely sorrowful (mournful?) timbre of
his:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssi0w7jWt3A&feature=related
Anyone else agree?
But getting back to Pippo, do check out his Chiove (which I mentioned in the
first post) if you've never heard it: