Interesting that the [Building a Library on Verdi's Requiem] contrasted the voices on the Toscanini radio recording (1951?) with the later Muti recording. She referred to the 'narrow, fast vibrato' of the earlier recording. The Toscanini really made me sit up and listen; to me it sounded by a long way the least unacceptable of the recordings illustrated so far on this BAL - although JEG also blows away some of the horrid vocal mannerisms.
When and why did operatic voices become - by-and-large - so ugly? It's a big part of why I stay away from opera houses - the 'norm' sounds to me to be grotesque. The Muti soloists sounded like rouged, made-up, lipsticked caricature saints. When did that ghastly tendency creep in? The lurid '60s and '70s presumably? Was it to combat richer, fuller orchestral instruments and playing? Anyway, I'm not really complaining - it's saved me no end of money over the years; and a lot of the music doesn't appeal to me anyway, even 'properly' sung. But I'm just interested in why 'operatic singing' has gone like that - and why people like it
When and why did operatic voices become - by-and-large - so ugly? It's a big part of why I stay away from opera houses - the 'norm' sounds to me to be grotesque. The Muti soloists sounded like rouged, made-up, lipsticked caricature saints. When did that ghastly tendency creep in? The lurid '60s and '70s presumably? Was it to combat richer, fuller orchestral instruments and playing? Anyway, I'm not really complaining - it's saved me no end of money over the years; and a lot of the music doesn't appeal to me anyway, even 'properly' sung. But I'm just interested in why 'operatic singing' has gone like that - and why people like it
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