Ben
madabouttraviata
The greatest tenor and he never made a boring record. Richard
madabouttraviata
Point being...we know pretty well what Bjoerling sounded like live...and
here is yet another respected source making a direct comparison. Certainly
a basis of some worth.
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
"Richard Loeb" <loe...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:hs6dnY2rwP7...@giganews.com...
Ed
Ed
"Jon E. Szostak, Sr." <jszostaks...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:htKdnf4sGq0GSCbe...@comcast.com...
If you enjoy Caruso's recordings beyond those of any other tenor, then
for you he is not overrated.
There are many instances where I prefer Carlo Bergonzi or Giuseppe di
Stefano or Placido Domingo or Jussi Bjoerling.
Ratings are fine for sports. Recall "Willie, Mickey and the Duke."
My favorite Caruso arias are "O Paradiso", "Ombra mai fu", and "Over
There."
==G/P Dave
He was a great singer who made a lot of money and owned his Rolls.
He's about as overrated as breathing and just as unnecessary a luxury.
John Harnedy
>The unquestioned supremacy of Caruso in tenor history is a sacred cow that should be >questioned.
While one might question the quality of the recordings, his importance
to opera can't really be overstated. Before him, the gramophone was
something of a curiosity. He almost singlehandedly turned it into a
household item.
As for the quality of his singing, well, it depends on who's doing the
rating, I suppose. I don't necessarily love everything he recorded,
but it's a pretty remarkable discography with a very, very high
standard, particularly when one considers the obstacles to recording in
those days. On the other hand, there are those who worship every note
he ever recorded, which does no service, either to them, or to Caruso.
Bill
-david gable
Overrated by whom?
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
"Larry Friedman" <dis...@adelphia.net> wrote in message
news:Xc-dnSxFdq8Heibe...@adelphia.com...
I have to add the duet 'Si pel Ciel' from 'Otello' with Tito Ruffo...the
power of the performance in this recording is simply amazing.
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
<grndp...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136388956....@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
http://www.angelfire.com/nc3/talkingmachines/caruso.html
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
"madabouttraviata" <pa...@iol.cz> wrote in message
news:1136381207.2...@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Every "vocal situation" in all his recordings..is extraordinary..Like
Bergonzi (unlike Pavarotti)..he ios INTERESTING!!!!!...No one vowel is
the same in every single aria..in the sense that he brings heart and
soul and a fabulouas voice..and feeling..and LORD..I could go on.
Just play "Mia picirella" or play "Musette..." from the Leoncavallo
Boheme...or...ANYTHING....
The man was ALONE..He stood ALONE...and not one singer since could
touch him for the combination of vocal quality and heart and anything
else you could want.
I can listen over and over and over to this man..and NOTHING thrills
me more..and nothing brings the tears.
Just listen to "Over There,"in that phonetic English..."That the boys
are ComIIIIING"..Lord..what a tone....and that last session when he did
the "Di ch'io ritorni" from L'Africaine..sounds sometimes like a
basso!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
NO WORDS can describe him..as someone said:
Ponselle,Caruso,Ruffo...and then AFTER THEM..come the singers.
Closest to caruso in my view is Richard Tucker..for the glory of the
tone..the ability to sing lyric and dramatic music with equally
brilliance....Had Tucker "calmed down' he might have been even closer
to what Caruso was...
Caruso was as overrated as Shakespeare,Michelangelo,
Jolson, Zinka Milanov (well.I had to throw her in there)..Charlie
See ya
Steve
--
Rare 78 rpm recordings on CD! http://www.vintageip.com/records/
Building a museum and archive of animation! http://www.animationarchive.org/
The Quest for the BEST HOTDOG in Los Angeles! http://www.hotdogspot.com/
Rediscovering great stuff from the past! http://www.vintagetips.com/
He wouldn't be much of a singer if he didn't sing a vowel the same way
twice.
< and LORD..I could go on. >
That won't be necessary.
Lord Olsen
Is he MY fav? No, not really, but I hold him in the highest regard for what
he was as a person, an artist, & what he did to foster the(then) fledgling
recording industry.
I had relatives & friends of my relatives who saw him live many, many times.
These people would regale us "kids" with stories of his stage presence,
acting abilities & outpouring of intensity & emotion. The parallel with
Richard Tucker in these aspects is 100% valid, according to what I have
heard & learned from the people I have mentioned. I personally do not see a
basis for comparison with Bjoerling - voices are completely different (I do
like JB, BTW).
My "goose bump" recordings of Caruso's, among others, remain the "Rachel,
quand du seigneur" , "magiche tone", & his part in the trio from I Lombardi.
Good (ON topic) thread, Ben!
DonPaolo
"Jon E. Szostak, Sr." <jszostaks...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:qZmdnZdBRra0sCHe...@comcast.com...
Thanks
Steve
In article <1136412824.8...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com>,
<arb...@hotmail.com> wrote:
--
LJO
"donpaolo" <donp...@erols.com> wrote in message
news:7JudnTreAKuG1CHe...@rcn.net...
Ed
Ed
DonPaolo
"Stephen Worth" <ne...@vintageip.com> wrote in message
news:040120061317048247%ne...@vintageip.com...
DonPaolo
<arb...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1136412824.8...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
DonP.
"LJO" <seniorcu...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:G4Yuf.4762$M%4.1...@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...
Well, he apparently didn't 'own any roles', (at least he has not been
endowed with any in this thread), so clearly the man is over-rated.
Big time.
After all, if you don't 'own a role' or two you might as well hang it
up.
He coulda stood in bed.
Pat, who never expects to hear an Eleazar like Caruso
Jake Drake
My loss, undoubtedly.
<wkas...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:1136395973....@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
Does 'originate' count as highly as 'own' I wonder?
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
<capa0...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136422153.4...@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
Hi Jon:
Caruso also was the first Loris in Fedora and Federico in L'arlesiana.
I believe there were some others as well.
Best,
Ken
By Charlie, apparently.
Bill
Reply
and i thought 2006 would bring us a NEW BILL...
I have read this several times over the yrs..not sure who said it...but
it was neither you nor me..someone much wiser....CH
Next..Please write us about how Birgit Nilsson was inaudible...CH
That's interesting to speculate on, Mark. Had Caruso lived to sing the
premiere of Turandot, he would have been 53. It's pretty clear that by
the end of his life, Caruso's voice was getting darker, and the
production was more effortful, even if the results were still
impressive. A Calaf at this stage of Caruso's (fictionally extended)
life might not have been all we could dream of.
Best,
Ken
DonPaolo
"REG" <Rich...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:8P_uf.36925$i1.1...@news-wrt-01.rdc-nyc.rr.com...
DonPaolo
<capa0...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136422153.4...@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
Some have said Caruso would have owned the role of Calaf. He never
owned up to it, though.
Best,
Ken
> I have read this several times over the yrs..not sure who said it...
You mean that silly thing about Caruso, Ruffo, and Ponselle? I believe
that it was
Tullio Serafin.
Bill
frank
Newsgroups: rec.music.opera
From: capa081...@aol.com - Find messages by this author
Date: 4 Jan 2006 16:49:13 -0800
Local: Wed, Jan 4 2006 6:49 pm
Subject: Re: Is Caruso overrated?
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original | Report Abuse
~~~~~~~~~~~
My Goodness, Pat, evidently you haven't heard any of the "complete"
(highly cut) sung gloriously by Richard Tucker (who was going to sing
this role at the Met under the direction of Leonard Bernstein).
An interesting cd was once cobbled together. I think it was called
"Caruso sings Faust." He sounds pretty good here, too. (But I prefer
Domingo and -- for "Salut demeure" nobody, imho, holds a candle to Di
Stefano [perhaps the greatest performance he ever gave of any aria]).
==G/P Dave
that it was
Tullio Serafin.
It cannot be silly if you listen to those voices..unless you think you
know more than Serafin,myself, and a million others....CH
"donpaolo" <donp...@erols.com> wrote in message
news:q4ydnRBXr8B...@rcn.net...
Narrowing the focus, he certainly knows more than you and millions of others
do. As to Serafin, I cannot say.
You vastly underrate the musicality and sense of phrasing that
Pavarotti exhibited. You seem to find him guilty of not having a voice
of approximately the same size as Caruso and Tucker. I could not care
less. His sound was gorgeous, his production was pure, and his
phrasing was sensitive beyond all imagining.
>Ponselle,Caruso,Ruffo...and then AFTER THEM..come the singers.
I respect Serafin, and I can appreciate why he named the singers he
named. Within the scope of the context of his anwer, I would probably
even agree with him. But you're taking the remarks of a brilliant
conductor made in the context of a career spent conducting Italian
opera and turning his judgement into a universal principle binding for
all repertories until the end of time. There are whole repertories
spanning centuries left out of the equation here. Not to mention the
future.
-david gable
I think he could often be perfunctory, and in the second half of his career,
nerves and his awareness that the magic was slowly draining out of the glass
took their toll, but at his best he provides great pleasure, if not, I
think, great insight.
<david...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136525212.6...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
I hate when people put dumb words in my mouth.....His message is very
strange....
frank
You are right..but one or two people did try to get nasty....but
essentially this thread is what RMO should be all about..Thanks CH
Why don't you give it up..you open your mouth every time and make a
fool of yourself..CH
What are you talking about??I have not said anything about
Pavarotti..We are talking about Caruso....What are you talking
about??is someone impersonating me????
You belong with the other snobs...making upb all kinds of things that i
never said..CH
This is strange......
Of course,pav has a gorgeous voice..who said not??? CH
"luiz silva" <lcm...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1136517476....@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
<<One of my friends used to call his singing, "NEAT!!!" Well, I use
other terms..like "GODLIKE."
Every "vocal situation" in all his recordings..is extraordinary..Like
Bergonzi (unlike Pavarotti)..he ios INTERESTING!!!!!...>>
<<One of my friends used to call his singing, "NEAT!!!" Well, I use
Didn't Tebaldi once record that as "F. B. Pinkerton" ?
Yes you did, Opera Clown. You said this:
< Like Bergonzi (unlike Pavarotti)..he ios INTERESTING!!!!!>
You appear to be saying that Pavarotti is not interesting, true?
Just answer the question.
Or, that he's not an island in Greece.
Ken
> I hate when people put dumb words in my mouth.....
Of course - it's so unnecessary...
Bill
Newsgroups: rec.music.opera
From: wkasi...@comcast.net - Find messages by this author
Date: 6 Jan 2006 06:31:08 -0800
Local: Fri, Jan 6 2006 9:31 am
Subject: Re: Is Caruso overrated?
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WWW.Handelmania.com wrote:
Bill
Reply
This bored would not be what it is..without the usual dumb sayings of
our resident snob...Bill Kasimer..I think he has not been getting any
lately.....
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
<grndp...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136497615.8...@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Gedda is French? Wow, was I misinformed!
J.
I have a suggestion for an experiment that could be performed, on a
joint basis,
by the departments of music and technology, of a major university.
Record some
of the great singers of today using devices of the same "poor quality
audio
technology" of Caruso's day. Then compare. The comparisons could be
done on
a blind audition style basis, with the listener/grader not knowing the
identity of
the singer (who has been recorded using the poor quality techniques).
>He was without any doubt TOP TOP SINGER- but if he was
> an incomparable giant, I'm not quite sure. Every generation has (that's
> my opinion) its own "Caruso"s!!!! (As every generation has its
> "Callas"s for example...).
>
The Pav King in his prime (along with his Three Tenor mates) and the
late
great Richard Tucker are my favorites.
RHB
>He was without any doubt TOP TOP SINGER- but if he was
> an incomparable giant, I'm not quite sure. Every generation has (that's
> my opinion) its own "Caruso"s!!!! (As every generation has its
> "Callas"s for example...).
The Pav King in his prime (along with his Three Tenor mates) and the
late
great Richard Tucker are my favorites.
RHB
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I certainly agree with your about Tucker!!
As for the experiment you suggested, a similar experiment was performed
and played on a Met intermission feature a number of years ago.
Birgit Nilsson secretly recorded a selection on the old acoustic horn.
NOBODY could identify her voice when it was played back. If I didn't
know it was her, I wouldn't have guessed, either. I do think the horn
was kinder to tenor voices than to soprano voices, with their much
higher overtones,etc., but this actually did happen.
It still doesn't tell us how Caruso sounded in person, but it was most
probably different than his acoustic recordings, great as those are. It
was, IMHO, much greater than his recordings. In a theater his voice had
time to expand, and all the colors and overtones, in addition to the
sheer size, must have made a tremendous impression.
Ed
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
(aka 'il Riccardo grande')
"J.Venning" <Danis...@Opera.retired> wrote in message
news:43bee319$0$38623$edfa...@dread12.news.tele.dk...
You appear to be saying that Pavarotti is not interesting, true?
Just answer the question.
Even though I do not answer questions posed by idiots..I do feel pav
"phones it in'....Great voice..not great artist.....CH
>at his best he provides great pleasure, if not, I think, great insight.
I know what REG means by this and by his comparison of Pavarotti to
Bergonzi in which he views Bergonzi as the greater "thinker." But I
would say that precisely one of the most instructive things about
listening to Pavarotti is that he does phrase "instinctively" in a very
beautiful, musical, and expressive way without "reflection" in quite
the Bergonzi sense. (No singer is or could be entirely unreflective
while singing. Singers are paying attention to what they're doing
while they're doing it.) Listening to Pavarotti at his best, we're
getting a glimpse at what the man absorbed by osmosis from a tradition
rather than through critical reflection. Nor could we get that glimpse
from just anybody. The person we get if from has to have been endowed
not only with a voice but with an ear, and he has to have been at least
as musical as Pavarotti.
Nobody will ever convince me that Pavarotti's best singing--in the
sense that I care most about, his shaping of phrases on an ongoing
basis--was the result of mere accident. There is a real musicality at
work there, and the off nights, the laziness, the decline, and the
Three Tenors circus are no counter evidence at all.
-david gable
YUP....But I never thought Pav did not have a great voice.....CH
<david...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136571939....@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Then you owe Mr Gable an apology.
Bravo, bravo, arcibravo! Indeed, it is the ear first and then the voice.
The major portion
of the control a singer possesses over his voice rests on his ability to
imagine in its full
complexity the sound which he wishes to produce---that is, in its pitch,
vowel, duration, quality,
volume, resonance, timbre, inflection, color, etc. We do not possess the
faculty of compelling
our vocal folds to flex in any precise manner without first having conceived
an image of the sound
we wish to produce. This a fact of cardinal importance. It has an enormous
bearing
upon any approach toward the study of vocal technique. Most people listening
to a great singer
would say, "I wish I had that voice." You and I would say, "I wish I had
that ear." Pavarotti's ear
was miraculous, and it was that which enabled the voice. --- LJO
This distinction that you're making is a very ephemeral and personal one.
Where one listener might find "insight" another might find none, or might
not
particularly care. Great singing by a beautiful voice, especially when
driven by
a superb rhythmic sense, can present to the listener a kind of empty
canvas upon which he may paint/imagine any insight or emotion he pleases.
More
sophisticated listeners, such as yourself, may demand more. But I suspect
that
some such folks, in their zeal for analytic listening, have lost the ability
to simply
give free rein to their imaginations (excepting present company of course)
and
enjoy the experience. I've often noticed this about myself. -- LJO
Most singers just wilt at the ending...even if they just record the bloody
aria...forget the whole opera.
When she sang...she was a force of Nature!
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
"Mark" <Harpsic...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136610140.8...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
Maybe Eva Turner was in that class....CH
I think that in a more concrete way, she must have been getting at the same
thing.
Very wel and helpfully said.
"LJO" <seniorcu...@earthlink.net> wrote in message
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"WWW.Handelmania.com" <Plac...@aol.com> wrote in message
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"REG" <Rich...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:ezQvf.39322$i1....@news-wrt-01.rdc-nyc.rr.com...
The problem I have with Turner is that I find her an astonishingly dull
singer - sure, she blows you out of your chair with her Turandot where she
can just belt it out - but in other repertory I find little or no evocation
of mood or feelings - its all so foursquare and boring - with Nilsson there
was always an interpretive improvemnt in her work.
Richard
"Richard Loeb" <loe...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:noadndkR8sq...@giganews.com...
Well, yes. It is fundamental and paramount. As a cellist you must know that
a string player needs a much better ear than a pianist to accomplish similar
results. Notice sometimes which singers in attacking a note tend to slide up
to it, particularly on pitches above the register break. This may just be
sloppy singing, although sometimes it is done for dramatic effect. But most
of the time it is because the singer's sound image of the note is vague or
virtually non-existent. Without the sound image firmly in mind the vocal
apparatus is lost at sea, and by the time the singer arrives at the correct
pitch his musculature is already constricted. If an attack is without
freedom, i.e., constricted, freedom cannot be attained during the phrase.
And, the next attack is unlikely to be free because it is very difficult to
go immediately from a constricted condition to one of freedom. Similarly, if
you cannot imagine pitches at least as fast as you are trying to sing you
are doomed -- doomed, I say.
If you compare her work early and later (the Decca Tristan to the DGG, the
RCA Walkure to the Decca or the Aida excerpts to the later complete
recording) you'll find a real deepening of interpretation - and this from a
singer who could have gotten by on voice alone. A superb artist Richard
"Richard Loeb" <loe...@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:hKOdnS878pb...@giganews.com...
"REG" <Rich...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:5oTvf.39505$i1.2...@news-wrt-01.rdc-nyc.rr.com...
I wouldn't be surprised if she said that - though in the situation we are in
today regarding Wagner singers - I would be perfectly happy if we had her in
1959 vocal form and she stayed that way!!!! Richard
>
Didn't ET just phone everything in?
Steve Silverman
Regards,
DonPaolo
"MARK MCLEOD" <tenor...@blueyonder.co.uk> wrote in message
news:yATvf.97758$vl2....@fe2.news.blueyonder.co.uk...
> Bravo, bravo, arcibravo! Indeed, it is the ear first and then the voice.
> The major portion
> of the control a singer possesses over his voice rests on his ability to
> imagine in its full
> complexity the sound which he wishes to produce---that is, in its pitch,
> vowel, duration, quality,
> volume, resonance, timbre, inflection, color, etc. We do not possess the
> faculty of compelling
> our vocal folds to flex in any precise manner without first having conceived
> an image of the sound
> we wish to produce. This a fact of cardinal importance. It has an enormous
> bearing
> upon any approach toward the study of vocal technique. Most people listening
> to a great singer
> would say, "I wish I had that voice." You and I would say, "I wish I had
> that ear." Pavarotti's ear
> was miraculous, and it was that which enabled the voice. --- LJO
>
Very interesting, Mr. Olsen!
Every great golfer says that before he hits a shot, he visualizes
precisely how it should go-distance, trajectory, path, spin, etc.
Unlike some other sports, golf is similar to singing in that the
participant has time (sometimes too much time) to think about what he's
about to do. Proper visualization reduces stress leads to better
execution. And the general consensus in the golf world is that one of
the greatest of them all-Jack Nicklaus-was also the best at shot
visualization.
I'm not sure about Pavarotti's "insight" or ability to "characterize".
I do know that when I want to hear one of the most exciting tenor
albums ever made, I go back to his 1968 Verdi-Donizetti recital for
London. That is glorious singing!
Best,
Ken
DonPaolo
"Ken Meltzer" <comm...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1136638190....@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Still...there were no complaints from the house or the critics...nor anyone
whose opinion I trusted. I wonder if anyone on RMO can make further comment
on this
Jon E. Szostak, Sr.
"donpaolo" <donp...@erols.com> wrote in message
news:NaadnT2qj_7Polze...@rcn.net...
Another interesting observation from LJO. This "empty canvas" is
fundamental for the way that music works. In music, there is all of
this activity unfolding through time--hence LJO's emphasis on the
rhythmic sense--but the patterns are abstract. It's very easy for the
listener to glom onto these patterns and treat them as metaphors for
emotions unfolding through time. Not that the emotions depicted are
entirely arbitrary. This metaphorical "language"--music--is shared by
the members of the culture that produces and listens to it, in short,
by composer and listener alike. Of course, the emotions expressed may
be somewhat vague: they're not readily or entirely susceptible to
verbal paraphrase. "What music expresses is not too vague a thought
but too precise a thought to be put in words." (Mendelssohn)
In the case of singing, the human voice speaks for us. The tenor
articulates our emotions for us, not so much though the words, which
are literally a pre-text, but through the abstract musical patterns
that we automatically and unthinkingly accept as metaphors for emotion
whenever we actually succumb to music.
-david gable