Originally posted by Barbirollians
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Pappano's Classical Voices
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
... and wasn't it touching to see Pappano's genuine "lost-for-words" awe when discussing Janet Baker! A really good programme.
One thing that did have me lost for words was how Dido appeared dressed for ancient Carthage whilst her attendants looked as if they had just popped into Romeo and Juliet and were wearing medieval Italian clothes. Great singing though .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIt is a singers I should have love to have conducted programme isn't it ? I was reminded when he was talking to Baker of what Barbirolli said about her that although Ferrier may have had the greater voice Baker was the greater artist .
One thing that did have me lost for words was how Dido appeared dressed for ancient Carthage whilst her attendants looked as if they had just popped into Romeo and Juliet and were wearing medieval Italian clothes. Great singing though .[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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A fabulous programme in progress tonight on basses and baritones: to the folk who have asked for some non-operatic stuff, Pappano has covered Fischer-Dieskau, Robeson and Pinza.
It is 'who Pappano would like to have conducted' but also some of 'who he has conducted'. Both equally interesting...
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NOriginally posted by Prommer View PostA fabulous programme in progress tonight on basses and baritones: to the folk who have asked for some non-operatic stuff, Pappano has covered Fischer-Dieskau, Robeson and Pinza.
It is 'who Pappano would like to have conducted' but also some of 'who he has conducted'. Both equally interesting...
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostN
Some of us are listening to Beethoven 9 !
Good to hear Pappano pronounce Gobbi authentically (Gob-bi with a double consonant and not the usual anglicised, gobby, as in loud and opiniated.)
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wenotsoira
Ferrier is the one that always sends me into a delirious state. Posibly one of the three greatest singers of all time. I can't speak at all for some time after hearing her. (Probably a good thing many might say ...)
And yes, this has been a tremendous series, discussed with real musical understanding. And that's rare for a conductor!
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostIt is a singers I should have love to have conducted programme isn't it ? I was reminded when he was talking to Baker of what Barbirolli said about her that although Ferrier may have had the greater voice Baker was the greater artist .
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I am always now very puzzled by the fact that the one time I saw Janet Baker live, in recital sometime in the early eighties, I was left unmoved. I wasn't as knowledgeable then as I am now, but although I admired her I was unaffected by her singing. When I listen to recordings now I find her virtually perfect, but I will never forget that strange experience. I do think one needs to see and hear an artist live - recordings aren't really performances in the same way.
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostI have known several people who saw both Ferrier and Baker. Without exception they thought Ferrier the greater singer. She seems to have had a unique charisma.
I am always now very puzzled by the fact that the one time I saw Janet Baker live, in recital sometime in the early eighties, I was left unmoved. I wasn't as knowledgeable then as I am now, but although I admired her I was unaffected by her singing. When I listen to recordings now I find her virtually perfect, but I will never forget that strange experience. I do think one needs to see and hear an artist live - recordings aren't really performances in the same way.
The three Ruckert Lieder she recorded are a particular case in point . Baker's recordings are magically sung and very affecting . Ferrier's are devastating especially her Ich Bin...
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I thought the last Pappano programme, on baritones and basses, the best. The section on the bass voices was quite wonderful - I could have had a whole programme on them alone: Chaliapin, Ghiaurov, Christoff, Tomlinson, Robeson (and other glorious voices not mentioned such as Gottlob Frick). The piece on the Russian orthodox tradition was fascinating too, with the voice of the rare octavists. There is something about the bass voice which has an effect on this listener more powerful than any other type of voice, not only because of the qualities which Pappano described, but also because it seems to come from some primeval, subterranean origin. The only pity was that AP did not include footage of someone singing "O Isis und Osiris", perhaps the most celestial music ever given to a bass to sing.
TerrificLast edited by aeolium; 20-07-15, 11:23.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostThe only pity was that AP did not include footage of someone singing "O Isis und Osiris", perhaps the most celestial music ever given to a bass to sing.
Terrific
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostThere is something about the bass voice which has an effect on the listener more powerful than any other type of voice...
I've still got the programme for a Chaliapin concert my father attended.
My parents were particularly taken with the bass John Holmes, who died young I believe. I heard him myself, but I've never been able to find any reference to him.
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