Beyond my pay-grade!
CE Chapel of Magdalen College, Oxford [A] 1.iv.2020
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Interestingly, Russell Oberlin always insisted he was a counter-tenor and not a male alto. His naturally very high tenor voice just went up and up without an apparent break:
Here we have the American Countertenor Russell Oberlin in recital. 1. Henry Purcell: Music for awhile
I note the announcer mentions the French Haute Contre tradition. I don't think Russell O. is one of those, really. His voice might not to be everyone's taste, but he was a phenomenon. (I was lucky enough to hear him live back in the 60s)
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Yes, I remember Oberlin. His voice was interesting, but unfortunately his poor tuning always put me off. Some of that YouTube recital fares well though. Michael Tippett did a disservice by attaching the term countertenor to Alfred Deller. One appreciates why he did it and it seemed logical at the time, but it was misconceived. We are stuck with it now.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostSorry - can you help: so what IS / are the distinctions between a male alto and .........well, any of the other derivations?Last edited by Vox Humana; 03-04-20, 18:25.
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Je croise entendre encore [Bizet Les pecheure de perles] is a good example of an aria written for a French tenor. Not sure who is singing in this clip...it sounds like two performers of the same piece. The second has a slightly more 'fragile' voice'. The tessitura of the whole piece is high, but the extra-high notes, with a fermata, are sung in mezza voce. Imagine what a Pavarotti-type voice might do to it.
Are we getting off-topic?
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