It's such a shame, since this recording features some of Mario's
tenderest, most exquisitely delicate, singing. We'll always have the
film, of course (and it's a magnificently shot sequence; gloriously
romantic with all the fog!), but that's little compensation without
Lanza actually in the scene.
There are two existing *outtakes* of the duet with Ann Blyth, though.
They're both quite different, and while neither is as good as the
version that appears in the film, they each have their moments. I've
just been comparing them, and I thought I'd share them with our group.
Here's a stereo take, complete with Maurice de Packh's sublime
orchestral lead-in (he and Mario certainly make a great team!):
http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182262760/bc7093ec/Deep_in_My_Heart_Dear__in_ster.html
And here's a mono take in lesser sound, but better sung (overall), I feel:
http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182263356/c18baaa3/Deep_In_My_Heart.html
I don't have a link for the film version, unfortunately. Perhaps
someone can upload it for us?
And, just for fun, here's the 1959 version with Norma Giusti. This is
probably the best we'll ever hear this recording from the
much-maligned remake -- and you know what? Lanza does a pretty good
job. (For starters, it's much better sung than the Coke version, and
preferable, I feel, to the live 1946 radio version.) It's a much more
*operatic* performance, of course, but there are touches of the
youthful tenderness Lanza brings to the film version on the lines "As
deep in the shadows, your eyes look in mine":
http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182264827/684fdbaa/Deep_in_my_heart_dear__1959_.html
Thoughts, anyone?
What's not to like about the more "operatic" 1959 version with the
darker, heftier Lanza voice? Nothing, unless you miss the melting soft
touches that the 1952 renditions have in spades. If I must nitpick, in
his delivery of the rather startling (to my ears) last line, "Deep in
my heart, dear, I'll always dream of you," Lanza seems oblivious of
Giusti. But what the heck, with that gleaming, vibrant "dream," all is
forgiven.
On Dec 28, 6:10 am, Vince Di Placido <vincent.diplac...@gmail.com>
wrote:
Mike, bless him, has just sent me a link to the film version, which,
thanks to the McAdam remastering magic (it even has a stereo
opening!), sounds the best I've heard it:
http://www.4shared.com/file/184450612/44dd6a4c/DeepInMyHeartDear-Soundtrack.html
(Mike would have posted this himself, but for some bizarre reason
Google won't let him sign in today.)
I hope others will take the time to compare the three 1952 takes, and
give us their feedback. What I especially love about the film take is
its extra tenderness (listen, for example, to how Lanza sings
"forever" on "But I'll remember forever" just before the bridge) and
its ending. The only (slight) letdown is that Ann doesn't fare quite
as well on this version, especially pitchwise. Still, she's a lot
easier on the ears than Kathryn :-)
> > I hope you all had a lovely time, Buon Natale!- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
On Dec 27, 9:55 pm, Derek McGovern <derek.mcgov...@gmail.com> wrote:
> My father was asking me the other day which of Lanza's many versions
> of Deep in My Heart, Dear was his best. "The MGM Student Prince
> recording," I answered in a flash. The only problem was that my father
> then wanted to know which CD it was on -- and, of course, it isn't
> (well, not in its complete form, at least). It's always frustrated me
> that the beautiful version with Ann Blyth that we hear in the film
> couldn't, for contractual reasons, be included on the RCA LP. Instead,
> what we get on record (and on CD) is a very unsatisfactory hybrid of
> part-soundtrack (Mario), then Elizabeth Doubleday inserted in the
> middle (singing her lines *and* Mario's!), and then a clumsy repeat of
> Lanza's opening as the conclusion. Very messy.
>
> It's such a shame, since this recording features some of Mario's
> tenderest, most exquisitely delicate, singing. We'll always have the
> film, of course (and it's a magnificently shot sequence; gloriously
> romantic with all the fog!), but that's little compensation without
> Lanza actually in the scene.
>
> There are two existing *outtakes* of the duet with Ann Blyth, though.
> They're both quite different, and while neither is as good as the
> version that appears in the film, they each have their moments. I've
> just been comparing them, and I thought I'd share them with our group.
>
> Here's a stereo take, complete with Maurice de Packh's sublime
> orchestral lead-in (he and Mario certainly make a great team!):
>
> http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182262760/bc7093ec/Deep_in_My_Hea...
>
> And here's a mono take in lesser sound, but better sung (overall), I feel:
>
> http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182263356/c18baaa3/Deep_In_My_Hea...
>
> I don't have a link for the film version, unfortunately. Perhaps
> someone can upload it for us?
>
> And, just for fun, here's the 1959 version with Norma Giusti. This is
> probably the best we'll ever hear this recording from the
> much-maligned remake -- and you know what? Lanza does a pretty good
> job. (For starters, it's much better sung than the Coke version, and
> preferable, I feel, to the live 1946 radio version.) It's a much more
> *operatic* performance, of course, but there are touches of the
> youthful tenderness Lanza brings to the film version on the lines "As
> deep in the shadows, your eyes look in mine":
>
> http://www.4shared.com/account/file/182264827/684fdbaa/Deep_in_my_hea...
>
> Thoughts, anyone?
Just to clarify: that take of Deep in My Heart, Dear on the Damon
Lanza Productions CD is not the film version; it's the second take
that I mentioned in my opening post.
I listened to them in sequence of their appearance on the thread, and
Mike's was a grand climax of the earlier versions. I'd been going back
and forth between the first two then came the jackpot. Thanks!
I know this has been discussed often, but particularly with the
varieties of genres consolidated with the release of the Original
Album Classics 5 CD set, the difference is interesting between songs
that are forever grand--Deep in My Heart, Dear, being one of them for
me at least--and songs that are perhaps more dated, period pieces and
"work" ONLY because of the way Mario Lanza sings them. (Not counting
the oddities such as Pineapple Pickers and Italian Calypso.)
The Touch of Your Hand is one such song for me--the short verses, the
rhyming couplets would seem tremendously awkward poetry simply to
speak, to say nothing of trying to sing with the articulation Lanza
does. And I understand from going back to a thread from a bit more
than a year ago (http://groups.google.com/group/mariolanza/
browse_thread/thread/a78dcb5dd43da0a7/ee2f643c893581f7?lnk=gst&q=touch
+of+your+hand#ee2f643c893581f7)--there seem to be many opinions about
that particular song :-)!
Very best wishes for the new year to everyone, and as always thanks to
everyone as well. Lee Ann
I was wondering how Mario's singing in the two outtakes could possibly
be bettered, so exquisite it sounded to my ears. But one listen to the
film version was all it took to convince me that it was possible to
improve on perfection. I too love the extra tenderness pointed out by
Derek. How delicately Mario floats "heart," "starlight," "sever,"
"remember," "forever," "dream" - almost as if he savors the words
themselves and not just their meanings. And then there's the
shimmeringly beautiful ending. It's simply to die for.
On Dec 30 2009, 3:22 pm, Derek McGovern <derek.mcgov...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Hi Lou: There's a good reason Mario sounds "oblivious" to Norma Giusti
> on the 1959 version; unlike Ann Blyth on the 1952 takes, she wasn't
> actually with him in the studio! But, yes, there are some lovely
> touches throughout this recording ("the heart of a rose", for example)
> that belie the (physical) shape that Lanza was in at the time.
>
> Mike, bless him, has just sent me a link to the film version, which,
> thanks to the McAdam remastering magic (it even has a stereo
> opening!), sounds the best I've heard it:
>
> http://www.4shared.com/file/184450612/44dd6a4c/DeepInMyHeartDear-Soun...
> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
> > to have the best rendition in such good sound :-)- Hide quoted text -
Many, many thanks to Derek, Mike, et al for all of the work on the
various audio files and, most especially, for sharing them.
Ciao,
Tony
> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -