I wonder if any of the opera folk here could answer this query.
I have just been listening to the French CD critics' programme about "Norma". They started with 'Casta diva' - in versions by Rosa Ponselle, Callas (x3), Sutherland, Caballé and Jane Eaglen.
Why - in the climax of the aria, when there's a long high note after a 6 note scale upwards - do some singers, notably Sutherland and Caballé, insert great 'scoops' in the middle of that long note?
I have no access to a score, but Jane Eaglen with Muti certainly didn't do it - just a straight, held note, no awful 'whoop.... whoop' in the middle...
Is it just some sort of 'operatic' mannerism??
I have just been listening to the French CD critics' programme about "Norma". They started with 'Casta diva' - in versions by Rosa Ponselle, Callas (x3), Sutherland, Caballé and Jane Eaglen.
Why - in the climax of the aria, when there's a long high note after a 6 note scale upwards - do some singers, notably Sutherland and Caballé, insert great 'scoops' in the middle of that long note?
I have no access to a score, but Jane Eaglen with Muti certainly didn't do it - just a straight, held note, no awful 'whoop.... whoop' in the middle...
Is it just some sort of 'operatic' mannerism??
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