In his post Vince is responding to Bob Davies's (habitual) praise of Mario's recording of With a Song in My Heart:
"With a song in my heart" has such a great spoken intro that every time I hear it I really want the song that follows it to be to be better than it is. Mario is just too tight vocally & I always felt that it was maybe a semitone or a tone too high for Mario to sound relaxed (even on a good day), & this improves things worse (as Harry Cohn would say!)
"It's such a shame because it is a beautiful Rodgers & Hart song (& not a bad arrangement) & if it weren't for the vocal tightness & sloppy diction then we might have really had something!
"But Bob, if you get something from it then knock yourself out!
"My guilty Coke pleasures include so many corny songs that Mario just sells to me & I'm buying! Derek,"Wanting you" I love, yes definitely! & "My Buddy" (it doesn't get any cornier than this but it is a measure of how well Mario can put over a corny old song. Oh! I said it doesn't get any cornier than "My Buddy", well, I was wrong, my next guilty Coke pleasure is "Somebody bigger than you & I". He has such gorgeous outpouring of tone on this song.
"Wonder why", "If","Marcheta","Romance","When you're in love" .. Oh! the Coke guilt goes on & on...Even the really bad songs I'll find a phrase or a little Mario trick that I like, I am that big a fan!"
Other guilty pleasures, anyone?
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Lanza’s singing of “Wanting You” may not be a lesson in Bel Canto, (nor is it intended to be) but it’s a pretty sexy piece of singing in that unique Lanza sound, and that spectacular high C ending is to die for!
I love the longing & sadness Mario conveys in the lines
"Dreams are vain
But I cling to the nearest
Chance that you may hear me
Dreams are vain
For whenever I wake
I never find you near me."He just gives so much all the time, wringing every bit of emotion from the words & music in whatever he's singing. It always gives me a thrill hearing the way he sings words like "wind" & "stars" from the Student Prince "Serenade" in the line "I hear your voice in wind that stirs the willows. I see your face in the stars that shine above." He just brings it to life & when he sings those words it makes it seem as though a brief beautiful gust of wind has just blown by & that stars are shining brightly. He interprets words & music with so much heart, soul & feeling it just takes your breath away.
Beautifully expressed, Vince, couldn’t agree more!
Saluti,
Armando
[Lanza] had a serviceable but lousy voice, which was hyped and served with a combo of lacrimosity, schmaltz and olive oil, one of those cross cultural matings which is not a good idea. I found it distressingly muscular and "forced" even when I was a tiny kid. I thought he clearly had imprinted on Caruso, and what a pity. When I want to WALLOW, i love THE STUDENT PRINCE. it is like the most high calorie junk food you can cram into your ears, but afterwards, i need to hear bagpipes, mournful solo dirges, to return to aural normal. Or maybe the Beach Boys doing VEGETABLES.
Too much of that Lanza stuff clogs the arteries.
My husband, whom I just consulted, said, there is no art, no soul, it is like a commercial product made to sell beans.
hermine stover
"There's a great purity---a sort of innocence about Lanza's tenor---because it was just a kind of unencumbered voice. It wasn't hampered by too much technique. It seemed to me he sang from the heart. When you hear him singing, you can't believe that this man does not actually love singing, and to me that's so important. Singing is, if nothing else, hugely emotional, and there's an enormous emotion behind Lanza's singing."
Have I just made up a word? "interpretationally" I think I meant "interpretively"... :-)
Oh! Those comments from "Hermine Stover" have upset me! Talk about "not getting it". The "lacrimosity, schmaltz and olive oil" part is just pure ignorance & rudeness! I've come across this kind of thing many times & of course not everybody's taste is the same but I find it astounding when people don't connect with Mario's great recordings. It baffles me in the extreme!
It seems to me that Hermine Stover’s arteries are already clogged. I suggest a good dose of olive oil to unblock them and to give her a husband a couple of spoons as well!
What Mario Lanza was for me was this early impact. He was operatic singing -- the tenor voice I'd heard until I started studying and then listening to some recordings after that. And then, as I started analyzing singing and other singers, I began to appreciate Lanza’s communication, his passion ... the sort of unbridled communication of emotion. When that emotion was missing in another singer I would notice: "Uh, that's beautiful -- but why isn't it reaching out and grabbing me?"t and grabbing me?"