) It's also one of the best scenes in all of Lanza's films.Hi Derek: I often wondered what you sounded like, but
my imaginings don't come close to what I hear from your recording: warm,
mellow, and soothing vocal timbre; crystal clear diction; plummy (in the best
sense of the word) accent faintly reminiscent of Hugh Grant's. (If this is the
"fruity accent" Linz Perigo said you "affected," I'm surprised
at him because you sound very natural. Dare I speculate that maybe, just maybe,
that esteemed radio broadcasting personality is more than a trifle jealous?)
When I first started listening seriously to Lanza's music, I was already a
widow, a retiree. and an empty-nester. By that time, my emotional troughs were
already behind me (knock on wood), so I had no occasion to seek solace in his
recordings or anyone else’s. But if “great comfort” can be stretched to cover a
sense of deep peace and joy, then I can say that ever since I acquired the
album Christmas with Mario Lanza eight
years ago, “The Virgin’s Slumber Song” has never failed to give me great
comfort every year amid the secular frenzy that all but obscures the religious
significance of Christmas. A believer born, bred, and educated, I had nevertheless
got caught up in the commercialism that had come to dominate the celebration of
Christmas. Year after year for most of my adult life, the struggle with
shopping lists, invitations, and un-Christmassy Christmas decorating left me
frazzled, stressed out, and above all, spiritually unmoved. I was in this state
when I first heard Lanza’s exquisitely reverent rendition of
“The Virgin’s Slumber Song.” His unutterably tender “Ah, Baby, dear
one…,” sung mezza voce, touched me to the core, and as I listened repeatedly to
the song, I gradually felt the secret spaces of my heart fill with deep peace
and joy. Looking back to that experience, I can honestly say that Mario Lanza
helped me to re-connect with the essence of Christmas: God’s Gift of his Son to Mankind, made concrete as a baby
wrapped up in his Virgin Mother’s arms.
The choirboy in Lanza appeals to one’s sense of an innocent sincerity and a joyful reaction to the wonders of the world. Most young people have it; a residue of it remains in the average adult; stamping it out in people is the goal of cynics. The greatest fear of most people is to appear naïve when what they should be afraid of is that they are dying inside. If Mario the choirboy doesn’t reach your heart, I’m afraid I don’t have much advice to give you. You have lost the magic of Christmas, the glory of a perfect sunrise, the joy of living. [...]
To a greater degree than any artist I have experienced, Mario Lanza had his own vision and couldn’t care less if you thought it was silly, crazy or too emotional. Lanza went inside himself and inside the music for inspiration, not to his last critical review. I am struck by two facts of serious singing these days. The first is that the technical proficiency from the stars to the compramarios is much greater than during the Lanza era; the second is that singing is less courageous and much less exciting than it was then. Listen to “Guardian Angels” by Lanza. There is no singer today who has the raw, open, emotive courage to sing “There’s one with shining wings who holds my hand” as Lanza sings it. He approaches it as though it were a vision. He is filled with wonder and sincerity, and the effect on the listener is magical. My God, how I miss that in the over-trained and under-felt performances that rule today!
Hello everybody,
I haven’t done any post on this thread and subject yet, simply because I have no special song or aria that is a source of great comfort for me. Of course, there are songs/arias that I favor and that come much closer to my heart and touch me more than others. I have songs that have a special meaning for me, because they go along with memories of an event that changed my life, or with a thought of a particular person who was/is important to me.
For me, a particular situation or moment in life, the atmosphere around me , and my mood of course, tells me – and this happens spontaneously- what I want Mario to sing for me, which song/aria I need to cheer me up, to celebrate, to console me.
I know that many Lanza fans find great comfort in Mario’s “Ave Maria” renditions, and in this context I remembered an article from an Australian newspaper in which Mario’s “Ave Maria” (Bach/Gounod) played an important role.
“Heard on Heard Island” from “Cairns Post,” 20 March 1954
Members of the Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition stationed on Heard Island in the Antarctic were greatly pleased recently when a record of Mario Lanza singing “Ave Maria” was specially played for them in the B.B.C. programme called “Listeners’ Choice.”
“Listeners’ Choice” is broadcast five times a week and beamed to every part of the globe and is especially welcome on Heard, a remote volcanic island which is covered in permanent ice that moves slowly down to the sea from the central mass and ends in ice cliffs between fifty and a hundred feet in height. There are only two ice-free areas that jut into the sea and even these are snow-covered in winter. The bulk of Heard is formed by Big Ben, a dormant volcano some nine thousand feet high, and there are no trees in Heard and little vegetation.
Mail comes only once a year and communication with relatives is by radio telegram. On Friday evenings K.S.T. Radio Australia devotes a special 15–minute session to the Expedition, when items of local interest and family news are broadcast to them. When the plan for the record of Gounod’s “Ave Maria” reached the B.B.C. it was decided to play it for them at the earliest possible moment. The B.B.C. – which already broadcast a special programme for a party of men near the other Pole, the British Expedition in North Greenland - did not know which edition of “Listeners Choice” was received on Heard Island so to make sure that the broadcast was not missed “trailed” it several times in preceding programmes, adding that members of the expedition might be interested to know that a talk on their lonely life and the scientific research they were doing on Heard was broadcast recently in the B.B.C.’s Home Service by Peter Lancaster Brown, a former member of the expedition.”
P.S: Thank you Derek, for converting the audio for me! When it comes to computer things I know my limitations! :)
What lovely voice and charming accent, Steff. It reminds me so much of Johanna Von Koczian.
Best wishes for the festive season and thank you for all you are doing for the Mario Lanza legacy.
Armando
Derek ,