Early Maria Callas in Full Fat Voice Blasts Elvira's 1st Act Eb6s

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  • čas přidán 23. 08. 2024
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Komentáře • 162

  • @ubiestinsula
    @ubiestinsula Před 5 lety +87

    Squillo by the truckload! Unparalleled artistry.

  • @alexseyer8878
    @alexseyer8878 Před 3 lety +56

    Brunhilde and Elvira.
    Norma and Amina.
    Gioconda and Lucia.
    Lady Macbeth and Lakmé.
    Abigail and Gilda.
    Coloratura in dramatic voice.
    Speechless 😶❤

    • @mbadiapamies4850
      @mbadiapamies4850 Před 2 lety +12

      Santuzza and Rosina
      Imogene and Isolde
      Kundry and Violetta
      Konstanze and Medea...
      Soprano assoluta!!!

    • @alexj.denton7453
      @alexj.denton7453 Před 2 lety +5

      Dramatic doing coloratura is much better

  • @aceofspades8634
    @aceofspades8634 Před rokem +28

    Out of this world! 😃🌹 Is there anything that woman couldn’t do in her prime? 😅 What a gift to humanity that she lived in an era when her voice could be recorded for the rest of time!

  • @aetion
    @aetion Před 6 lety +76

    IMHO that's the difference between a good singer and a vocal phenomenon.
    Thank you, dear friend.

    • @waynerivera8573
      @waynerivera8573 Před 6 lety +1

      These are high "D"s not Ebs. Perhaps the remastering in up a half step>

  • @jmiller05
    @jmiller05 Před 4 lety +35

    Been listening to Callas' Elvira for days. How she managed to lighten her voice but yet project a totally healthy and supported sound is beyond me. The tidal wave of genius was pushing her forward, ever forward.

  • @NLidar
    @NLidar Před 6 lety +115

    Is this the same woman who sang monster roles like Medea?
    She totally transforms herself to a light, nonchalant young woman with a hint of joy in her tone. She sounds youthful! Thanks for this!!

    • @greatmomentsofopera7170
      @greatmomentsofopera7170 Před 6 lety +13

      N. Lidar you're right, nonchalant is the word!

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +32

      someone by listening to her complete thick fat sound here could suspect she was able to sing Medea and Gioconda... but someone listening to her 1957 Amina could no way think the same woman would the same year sing Medea like she did

    • @giuseppedisilva3534
      @giuseppedisilva3534 Před 4 lety +15

      "Is this the same woman who sang monster roles like Medea?
      She totally transforms herself to a light, nonchalant young woman with a hint of joy in her tone. She sounds youthful!"
      Yes, precisely for this reason she is considered one of the greatest vocal actresses in the history of opera. Different characters, different voices, different vocal characterizations, different qualities of voice. A girlish Gilda in Rigoletto, a commanding Turandot, Gioconda, Norma, etc. High flying light and virtuosic coloratura in Lakme's Bell Song, great depth of voice, chest voice, and searingly dramatic high notes in Gioconda's aria Suicidio!, and everything in between, all within about the same time period. That is Callas.

  • @esquibelle
    @esquibelle Před měsícem +3

    Once you go Callas you can't go back.

  • @Leanrosso
    @Leanrosso Před 5 lety +36

    She is the reason why I love the opera as a vehicle of artistic expression and the Belcanto repertoire.

    • @kurtgarmaker3719
      @kurtgarmaker3719 Před 4 měsíci

      Mine too. She is so good vocally especially in the dramatic coloratura roles, musically very accurate.. trills to die for and dramatically so convincing

  • @robertotorrini111
    @robertotorrini111 Před 2 lety +12

    Chi la criticava era geloso della sua immensità!

  • @magicmonkichi
    @magicmonkichi Před 6 lety +63

    Love it ! The many voices that came from Callas was staggering. She could sing mezzo roles, she could be a demon like Medea, or a light voice like Elvira.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +11

      those days she was the Superman and the Miss Marvel of Singing :D

    • @highbaritone
      @highbaritone Před 6 lety +13

      It’s sad she didn’t start performing mezzo roles when her top was going. We would have had some fantastic moments to remember. Not just the great soprano years.
      That is being selfish.
      Happy with what we have.

  • @henryv.macadamia6423
    @henryv.macadamia6423 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I think Maria is a supreme being born with unique musical talent but her ascendancy to what she'd become wasn't achieved at happenstance. She studied with great passion and fire and was lucky to be associated with great tutors/tutelage who saw her promise. She was formidable even at early age, quite attentive to details and absorbed everything thrown at her; she was truly knowing to what she wanted to do. You see, there are not many who has parallels to her. The same thing applies to uniqueness of other greats like Da Vinci, Einstein, etc. They went through rigorous study in their field and non stop search for the "truth." Maria once remarked, " I want to bring the truth in my music." That says it all.

  • @jmiller05
    @jmiller05 Před 6 lety +125

    It's almost as if sometimes Callas invented Bel Canto.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +22

      that feeling that HERS was the ONLY way was totally unique to her...

    • @jmiller05
      @jmiller05 Před 6 lety +22

      Lohengrin O Referential in every Bel Canto role she sang. I was listening today to her entrance aria and cabaletta from La Sonnambula (with the famous flute staccato Eb6s) and I remain in awe at her timing, her synergy with the music, the chorus, the undulating vocal colours that poured from her as well as this mystifying technique that places notes cinematically as if she's not even singing!!!
      Callas's singing will never be repeated, because her voice transcended mere singing. It is the most vivid and pervasive artistic experience I can think of.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +8

      1955 was Callas' personal favorite year... she had once said: If only God could give me another year like 1955 (to sing what exactly I would ask her though :D)

    • @jmiller05
      @jmiller05 Před 6 lety +13

      Her Norma, Violetta, Amina in '55... All unrepeatable. I think 1955 was the perfect blend of pre-54 big voiced Callas and her thin-ultra feminine voiced years.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +11

      it also contains her most colorized performances... her 55 Violetta is a trillion-vocal-color performance

  • @markogalic7781
    @markogalic7781 Před 6 lety +41

    Those perfect chromatic descensions and ascensions (just before the high note) are breathtaking!
    That ending note is massive. Just as is the high D in "Ah, vieni al tempio".

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +6

      chromatic scales were always Callas' best

  • @Operacrazed
    @Operacrazed Před 6 lety +46

    I love your description of early Callas in 'Full Fat'.
    I am assured by your repeated praise of this great singer that you are not being derogatory in what you say.
    Sure she was a big girl earlier on her career , so what. But what we Opera officiandos really appreciate was the 'fatness' of her voice.
    She displayed what the great divas of the past had possessed.
    A big voice that had flexibility and the ability to sing a variety of roles both dramatic and coloratura with the same instrument and with added qualities such as intense vocalisation and mesmirising interpretative powers.

    • @jenniferstewart5665
      @jenniferstewart5665 Před 5 lety +7

      it is argued that her voice during her voluptuous years have more quality into it. hence, the subject of the video I guess.

    • @xavieralberto1176
      @xavieralberto1176 Před 2 lety +1

      The voice is ‘fat’ and this being a recording early in her carreer the picture cannot be right. At the time she was a really big girl!

    • @TedATL1
      @TedATL1 Před 24 dny

      Indeed. A 9 foot piano has more richness than a 6 foot. Sounding board!

    • @TedATL1
      @TedATL1 Před 5 dny

      @@xavieralberto1176
      This photo is before the weight loss although yes she looks even heavier in some photos.

  • @pammyjones1151
    @pammyjones1151 Před 6 lety +43

    Sublime.....is this the performance, where Di Stefano was listening to hear sing Qui la voce on stage in his dressing room? He said It was so beautiful and mesmerising he would never ever forget it......... what a compliment from such an artist.....thank you 😘

  • @BrunoACFernandes
    @BrunoACFernandes Před 6 lety +28

    Such power, such control...
    Just wow!

  • @alioffe4321
    @alioffe4321 Před 6 lety +62

    You want to hear her Eb6s, sign her up for Puritani! Yes, this is Callas. But, I do not hear Medea or L Macbeth here. This is a 16 year old girl with the most beautiful voice in the world. That trill at 0:44 is worth a thousand Eb6s IMO. It's like fingers running through your hair gently.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +18

      the Agility... unbelievable... agility everywhere not just in top register

    • @alioffe4321
      @alioffe4321 Před 6 lety +17

      Yes!!! Agility accopanied by perfect legato!. But for me, the most remarkable thing here is how she keeps her voice light as a feather without ever sounding small. This is a testament to how big her voice was, not just agile.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +17

      Indeed.... the amount of control required to make that Tank of a Voice seem and sound like a Feather.. and to think that those years she had written a letter to her uncle saying: Im so happy! My voice gets heavier and heavier... I sound like a contralto these days!!! :D

    • @alioffe4321
      @alioffe4321 Před 6 lety +20

      And yet, she is the farthest thing from a contralto here! Callas was a vocal sorceress, a voice-shifter.

    • @kling-kling6270
      @kling-kling6270 Před 2 lety +2

      @@LohengrinO Singers and teachers have forgotten that artistry in music means different colours and timbers. They all work to achieve and remain at ,,eveness of tone'' only. Among so many wonderful voices, Caruso, Gigli and Callas were able to use the change of their timber for the character of the music they sang.

  • @eberlinpascal2837
    @eberlinpascal2837 Před 4 lety +20

    A l'époque Maria était un phénomène vocal inégalé ,avec une extension vocale phénoménale qui lui permettait de chanter Tous les rôles de sopranos du répertoire du 19 e siècle .Ensuite en amaigrissant sa voix s'est allégée en gardant toujours cette virtuosité incroyable mais avec en plus un soucis de revenir à plus de sobriété et d'authenticité musicale .Callas était un phénomène vocal et une grande musicienne.

  • @arnoldamaral7406
    @arnoldamaral7406 Před 3 lety +12

    The quality in her voice was so rich,telling & true to the music she was interping. How we miss her my friend. VIVA LA CALLAS 👑💙 . aye Madre Mia 😢🎵💙 Arnold

  • @jangusethna8537
    @jangusethna8537 Před 5 lety +24

    Thank you Lohengrin! Maria is the reason I cannot listen to any other singer! They all just sound so wrong!

    • @esquibelle
      @esquibelle Před měsícem

      In my experience, once I got into Callas nobody else could touch her in any way. I certainly love and appreciate many other beautiful voices and artists but there was nobody NOBODY ever eVER [and probably never will be] in the same stratosphere as Maria Callas. Incomparable. Untouchable. Period.

  • @Nunofurdambiznez
    @Nunofurdambiznez Před 3 lety +13

    The ease of that high note at the end is incredible.. or at least she makes it SEEM easy. I've listened to it at least 10 times now... just fantastic!

  • @paulbrookes6705
    @paulbrookes6705 Před rokem +7

    At times a rich full cream then a light meringue. What technique and vocalisation. Such control and beauty. Yes full fat indeed.

  • @MichaelDG2023
    @MichaelDG2023 Před 4 lety +14

    I live for her early recordings.

  • @mezzosoprano4778
    @mezzosoprano4778 Před 6 lety +50

    There is something about her that is so awe - inspiring. There are many singers with beautiful voices but they don't touch my soul like Callas. Nobody comes close to Callas . She is the greatest artist ever. Hearing her makes me want to stop everything I'm doing and worship her - she's a divine being. We human beings don't deserve her ..

    • @ms.chaewon9231
      @ms.chaewon9231 Před 6 lety +2

      Mezzo soprano I share the same sentiments with you.

    • @janel342
      @janel342 Před 3 lety +7

      She sings with every fibre of her soul. Her work was her life. That’s when she was fully alive.
      Many were jealous of her power.
      She lived when she sang, beyond life.

  • @sophiaangelini4368
    @sophiaangelini4368 Před 4 lety +11

    The Voice is the staircase to Olympus.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 4 lety +2

      the Voice of Purgatory, it had Cleansing Healing abilities

  • @ferrantepallas
    @ferrantepallas Před 4 lety +12

    Some people have the gift of a great voice (or musical ability) some have the gift of artistic genius, but very very few wed these gifts and pursue the goals of artistic truth with absolute unwavering devotion like Callas (or Heifetz imo)

  • @user-ms3lr1ux3w
    @user-ms3lr1ux3w Před 6 lety +19

    La Divina🌹❤Molto bello....Mille grazie,nostro amigo!!!Callas e REGINA!!!👑🎶

  • @fclpjg
    @fclpjg Před 6 lety +23

    Lohengrin O, in my youth I used to think that Joan Sutherland was the best vocalist. But her diction n rather rather clouded mid voice troubled me... I took refuge in chamber music n solo instrumental.. but these past few years, your postings have ignited the fire once again for great vocalists. But importantly, I have come to appreciate the genius that is Maria Callas. Merci!

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +15

      In the top register they actually compare although Sutherland never attempted several of the vocal stunts Callas did in her early years.. but Callas was a miraculous virtuoso throughout her range... listen to her Lady M's recitativi... the Voice flies through the words shaping musical phrases of unspeakable Genius... each phrase is a Miracle and it is in middle voice and no coloratura is required and it is still a Miracle no other has ever even remotely approached... Digital Articulation shaping Music of ingenius Depth

    • @ferrantepallas
      @ferrantepallas Před 4 lety

      you have mirrored my own experience -- how wonderful to learn this, mille grazie!

    • @hanslick3375
      @hanslick3375 Před 3 lety

      You have to listen to early Sutherland. She didn't have these problems in 1959-1961

  • @beachfanatic2010
    @beachfanatic2010 Před 6 lety +68

    Damn Callas when she sang that E-flat, she made everthing and everybody completely dissapeared! Let’s talk about huge gigantic voices with Squillo all over the place!

    • @ms.chaewon9231
      @ms.chaewon9231 Před 5 lety +13

      I love gigantic and full voices rather than light and constricted ones. I don't understand why these modern sopranos love to constrict their voices.

    • @beachfanatic2010
      @beachfanatic2010 Před 4 lety +4

      They are NOT properly developed. They sound like they have diarrea!!!!! BTW, this Eb6 is in mezzo forte, this is NOT in full fortissimo!

    • @vivemafille
      @vivemafille Před 4 lety +2

      On recordings her voice sounds huge, but I know several people who heard her often and they say her voice really wasn't that big.

    • @beachfanatic2010
      @beachfanatic2010 Před 4 lety +2

      vivemafille You can tell me whatever da fuck you want! You will not change my mind about Callas being the biggest voice of HISTORY! Every duet, every choir, every orchestration she was able to dominate with ease!

    • @beachfanatic2010
      @beachfanatic2010 Před 4 lety +5

      vivemafille You got the wrong one to fool babydoll. In this video: czcams.com/video/L48-3eofsNY/video.html.
      Do me a Big favor and forget the E flat at the end. This is a tough part to sing cause both the tenor and the soprano are having a duet while the heavy orchestra, soloist and the choir are BLASTING!!!! Now Callas is having this duet with the BIGGEST TENOR VOICE OF HISTORY who was Mario Del Monaco and Callas OVERSHADOWS Del Monaco and this with singing MEZZO FORTE PIANO with natural resonance without pushing yet her voice is so HUGE that almost before the end Del Monaco gives up....he gave up with Callas cause there simply was no way to compete with her volume. And Del Monaco never gave up! If anything he was a bully with other singers on stage cause his volume was way too much. FORGET THAT FINAL E FLAT - focus on the rest. Above heavy loud choir, MONSTER soloist with gigantic voices like Oralia Dominguez, Mario Del Monaco and a HUGE Verdi BRASS INSTRUMENT orchestra you only hear Callas above everybody. A feat that ABSOLUTELY NO HUMAN BEING HAS EVER REACHED! EVER BEFORE NOR AFTER!

  • @lydiaguarro
    @lydiaguarro Před 6 lety +23

    Insuperable incomparable inolvidable

  • @elsaasta5164
    @elsaasta5164 Před 6 lety +14

    Che posso dire io Lohengrin O da incompetente quale sono ? Io mi delizio ascoltando questa voce...che non trova termini adeguati e giusti per definire questo Pianeta che a nome Callas....In breve...Lei è la meraviglia....la magnificenza....la grandezza stellare della Lirica....Tu sei indimenticabile Maria Callas ☆☆☆☆☆Elsa Asta

  • @pablocarrascosamiguel7680

    Al margen de lo más notorio y asombroso, si nos fijamos en los pequeños detalles todavía es más impactante: su forma de apianar incluso en los pasajes más comprometidos, de indicarle al director lo que tiene que hacer con ritardandos, su variedad en las notas picadas, series en mezzavoce, series en piano, reguladores y dinámicas jugando con el color y el volumen de la voz... Increíble.

  • @AustrianAdrian
    @AustrianAdrian Před 6 lety +66

    Even from our viewpoint of Callas today - a miracle but in those days when a relatively unknown singer switched between Brünnhilde and Elvira it must have caused a sensation like flying to the moon.
    Why would anyone compare the sheer "beauty" of Callas voice with any other singer if no one EVER had her abilities???
    Yes there have been other GREAT sopranos but there was just one MARIA CALLAS - luckily enough in the era of the recored voice...

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +10

      small minds think small... and I dont think those small minds could recognize the Abilities of Callas

    • @AustrianAdrian
      @AustrianAdrian Před 6 lety +9

      I ADORE this woman ... she could make her gigantic voice sound pure, innocent and sweet like noone when she sang Elvira or Gilda. I even started to listen to Wagner with more emphasis through her. She was the epitome of operatic singing and rarely ever I hear an (italian) opera without asking myself "how would that sound with the voice of Maria Callas?" ... my big wish: come back fore one Roberto Devereux
      But as she was Greek, she probably now is singing between other gods and godesses in Mount Olympus

    • @anthonyehrenzweig1635
      @anthonyehrenzweig1635 Před 3 lety

      Yes but that may have been the reason she lost her voice so early - singing too much & too many heavy roles; thats certainly what Nicolai Gedda thought in his interview with August Everding.

    • @MartyMusic777
      @MartyMusic777 Před 3 lety

      @@anthonyehrenzweig1635 that seems unlikely - the period when she was doing the most switches between role types was when her voice sounded most secure. She developed technical problems over time with her breath support (by her own admission, actually), and that was likely caused by both the weight loss as well as a disease that causes tissue degeneration in the body - it also handily explains why the poor woman died so young at only 53, as medication to treat degenerative diseases can really mess with your heart.
      Besides, Sutherland switched from lyric Händel/Mozart pieces to big-ass dramatic stuff her entire career and her voice was fine (if a little loose) by the end. Marilyn Horne started off as a soprano for goodness' sake! I'm sure Gedda meant well, but there's too many successful singers who have sung pretty extreme things without having to end their career at 41.

    • @anthonyehrenzweig1635
      @anthonyehrenzweig1635 Před 3 lety

      What is this degenerative disease you mention?

  • @ernestogonzalezroberto6187
    @ernestogonzalezroberto6187 Před 2 lety +11

    Imaginar la cantidad de letras y melodìas que retuvo en la memoria para llevarlas a escena! Es una genia!

  • @manolis.799
    @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +69

    and tomorrow she will sing Brunnhilde!

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +23

      the plasticity and elasticity of her Voice those years was a never to be repeated Miracle.. and to think that was her Voice after Douzins of Turandots, Toscas and Aidas

    • @manolis.799
      @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +14

      Lohengrin O santuzzas, Normas, Fidelios, Isoldes, Giocandas as well

    • @manolis.799
      @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +3

      Lohengrin O I have a question for you?if you could rank her top ten roles, what would they be?
      For me it is
      1. Norma
      2. Medea
      3. Lady Macbeth
      4. Violetta
      5. Tosca
      6. Lucia
      7. Armida
      8. Anna Bolena
      9. Aida
      10. Amina
      Of course this is very difficult and my rankings could change any day or moment really

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +15

      Norma, Medea, Lady M, Violetta, Anna Bolena, Amina, Gioconda, Lucia, Armida, Tosca, Rosina, Aida, Elvira... but I would put in 1st place, as No1 together: Norma, Medea, Lady M, Violetta, Anna, Amina, Gioconda, Armida, Lucia, Tosca and Rosina... all in No1

    • @manolis.799
      @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +1

      Lohengrin O I thought about having some ties but decided I’d have to choose lol.
      It was very hard not finding a spot for Rosina or Gioconda in my list.
      But if I had to choose the Callas Triple Crown it would certainly be Norma, Medea, Lady M

  • @MisterFds
    @MisterFds Před 4 lety +7

    00:00 "son vergin vegozza"
    03:54 "Chi mosse a miei desir il genitor"
    05:50 "Odi..qual suon si desta"

  • @merceB
    @merceB Před 4 lety +10

    The memory of these registers is what would weigh so heavily on Maria's mind during the worst periods of her unparalleled career, when, beset by criticism, she had to face the terror of not being perfect. And she certainly wasn't perfect, even in her prime, no one is, no one can be. But she never stopped being unique. The timbre of her voice, her interpretative qualities, her courage, her understanding of music, are unrivalled. To me much more impressive than an E6.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 4 lety +6

      that Eb6 and the Agility of such an incredibly heavy and dark voice will always remain an unrepeatable miracle

    • @merceB
      @merceB Před 3 lety +1

      @@shaundudley4576 I agree :-)

  • @annjeanmillikan
    @annjeanmillikan Před 5 lety +9

    LOVELY VOICE! Sublime...

  • @tomterreri6364
    @tomterreri6364 Před 5 lety +7

    Can anyone put a year on this? Maria took on so many roles........truly a modern opera measuring stick!

    • @learntocrochet1
      @learntocrochet1 Před 4 lety +1

      Commenter Victor Beristain says "...esta grabacion fue hecha en Mexico en 1951..." Translation: This recording was made in Mexico in 1951...

    • @kurtgarmaker3719
      @kurtgarmaker3719 Před 4 měsíci

      51 or 52

  • @ioanisikonomou410
    @ioanisikonomou410 Před 3 lety +8

    Superhuman Maria !!!

  • @ghostofyeats
    @ghostofyeats Před 5 lety +23

    The Mexico City Puritani is interesting because Callas had problems with some (not all) of her high notes. The Eb at the end of "Vien, diletto" is cut short, and some of the high B's sound uncomfortable. (The ones she has trouble with are the ones that are in between a staccato and a long held note, that require a "medium" sort of touch; the ones she touches lightly are done exquisitely and just sheer perfection.) And, as far as her purely vocal achievements go, she caps the ensemble in "vieni al tempio" with high notes that are nothing short of magnificent - in a way they're even more thrilling than the Aida. But I digress...
    What I find really lovely here is how lightens her voice and conveys Elvira's youth by bringing forth the open vowel sounds. For her, it's a risk, because she was never terribly comfortable with the open "a" sound and had to make sure to prepare them. She chooses a different characterization in the studio recording - there's a streak of melancholy from the very beginning in that performance. (I wonder - vainly of course - how she decided to interpret her Chicago performances of 1955??) Here, she sounds so carefree, so girlish. It's an enormous contrast with the lugubrious tone she finds for the mad scene. Incidentally, I find the mad scene of this Mexico City performance to be a complete masterpiece - it's plangent, dark, wrenching, and such a contrast to the almost frivolous exuberance of the first act. No wonder di Stefano, who is sometimes grudging of his praise for Callas, admitted to being entranced by her "Qui la voce."

  • @lamiremilamila
    @lamiremilamila Před 6 lety +8

    Ah les folles soirées sud americaines1950- 1953 !!! Smack et merci .

  • @MisterFds
    @MisterFds Před 5 lety +5

    Backward arrangement here: in "I Puritani", "Son vergin vezzosa" is later in Act 1 than "Odi ... qual suon si desta".
    However, thank you very much for posting both gems.

  • @SilverCircle71
    @SilverCircle71 Před rokem +7

    She was superhuman. She could sing (almost) everything that somehow fitted into her vocal range. End of story. No one ever came close and no one likely ever will.

  • @victorberistain9536
    @victorberistain9536 Před 6 lety +20

    Esta grabación es histórica, no sólo por ser la única función grabada de esta Ópera con Maria Meneghini Callas, está grabación fue hecha en Mexico en 1951 y es la primera grabación completa de la historia de esta Ópera de Bellini, casi inmediatamente vino la versión de Studio con la gran Lina Pagliughi (voz en Italia de Blancanieves) en el rol de Elvira, pero Maria tuvo el privilegio de ser la primera.

    • @mbadiapamies4850
      @mbadiapamies4850 Před 3 lety

      De qué ópera se trata??? I puritani????

    • @augustosantoro7086
      @augustosantoro7086 Před 3 lety

      Gracias por la info 💪🏼

    • @ElizabethRainey
      @ElizabethRainey Před 3 lety

      Me parece que Il Puritani fue grabada en 1952. En 1951 Callas presentó Aida en la Ciudad de México.

    • @poglej
      @poglej Před 2 lety

      Mil gracias por la info, me encanta! x

    • @joselatorre1696
      @joselatorre1696 Před 2 lety

      @@ElizabethRainey En el '51 en México cantó Aida y Traviata.

  • @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc
    @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc Před 4 lety +7

    this is very, very young Callas!

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 4 lety

      can you please tell me what is the meaning of: ViệtAnh NguyễnBá a hacker hacked my fb account and my name was changed to that I wrote

    • @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc
      @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc Před 4 lety +1

      @@LohengrinO omg, i don't know :D, why you ask me? not all Vietnamese on internet was hacker :))

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 4 lety

      @@HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc because I placed the nick into the google translator and nothing came out so I just wondered it there is a meaning to my new nick ,,, so it is just a name?

    • @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc
      @HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc Před 4 lety +2

      @@LohengrinO yes, and sorry about that, it is a name of somehow Vietnamese FB account :(

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 4 lety

      @@HoangAnhNguyen-bl7pc it is just an ordinary vietnamese name that does not mean anything? (Im worried if in vietnamese it means something bad :D)

  • @MichaelDG2023
    @MichaelDG2023 Před 4 lety +4

    And thank you!!!

  • @asyaredmendoza5617
    @asyaredmendoza5617 Před 4 lety +13

    Min 7:47

  • @josedomingosgiffonirosa8362

    Muito além de ser apenas um fenômeno vocal deslumbrante Maria Callas trouxe para a ópera de volta a teatralidade, a análise psicológica dos personagens. Além de sua técnica soberba e voz excepcional, Callas encarnava o que encarnava e isso se refletia na sua interpretação. sempre rigorasa com o estilo! Callas é única e, para mim, a maior soprano do século XX.

  • @golden-63
    @golden-63 Před 4 lety +13

    *Fat Callas is the best Callas!*

  • @hectorhugomoyano9518
    @hectorhugomoyano9518 Před 6 lety +10

    ùnica !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @user-me8kr6mv5l
    @user-me8kr6mv5l Před rokem +2

    The best voice ever* utube smile by john bavas

  • @janel342
    @janel342 Před 2 lety +4

    Love your post.
    But I think La Callas would be upset to see fat voice ? Don’t you? I know you love her.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 2 lety

      I think she was more than aware of the Miracle of Nature her Fat Voice was... and I also believe she never regretted losing it to become Audrey Hepburn thin... choices very well thought and calculated... I think she always considered herself a Prisoner of her Talent

  • @andreweinberger1305
    @andreweinberger1305 Před 5 lety +3

    More info where & when this was recorded,seem to me live,.?? In house wire ???,Rene

    • @mrm672
      @mrm672 Před 4 lety

      Andre Weinberger mexico 1951

  • @mariomolinaorbea2180
    @mariomolinaorbea2180 Před 6 lety +4

    Next month I'll go to my first live opera to watch I Puritani... Won't be like this at all (Pretty Yende sings Elvira), but just the music is worth the inversion.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +3

      Ηave a nice scream and wobble feast :D

    • @mariomolinaorbea2180
      @mariomolinaorbea2180 Před 6 lety +1

      @@LohengrinO HAHAHAHA Indeed! Can you believe they giving tickets away for 30 euros?? One on the top 3 theaters in Spain. I won't say no to a few laughs for that price and I'm dying to see how's the theater inside (it's the main reason I'm going).

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +1

      I think I have never heard a more (to use Susan Graham's term) fucked up voice so early than Yende's. The huge screaming she did created a very early wobble that makes her sound as if she is 55 years old

    • @mariomolinaorbea2180
      @mariomolinaorbea2180 Před 6 lety +1

      @@LohengrinO There's a video of her singing "Una voce" in Wendy's (!) - that already says a LOT- and she sounds like a banshee.
      As for the theater, they soooo desperate for people they'd put the prices down, but won't change their quality content.

    • @arnoldamaral7406
      @arnoldamaral7406 Před 5 lety +1

      Mario Molina Orbea you must be a glutton for punishment LOL let us know how it turned out. What fools these mortals be. Later days Arnold Bourbon Amaral

  • @manolis.799
    @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +4

    For some reason I always forget about her Puritani.... stupid me.

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO  Před 6 lety +2

      Sutherland's only chance to surpass Callas with her indeed Dreamy Qui la voce was a Gargantuan task, for Callas' Qui la voce is a Masterpiece of Singing :D

    • @manolis.799
      @manolis.799 Před 6 lety +6

      Lohengrin O they got Callas and Sutherland.... I got Damrau when I saw it. Not a fair trade

    • @arnoldamaral3814
      @arnoldamaral3814 Před 3 lety +1

      So do I, Actually it's a vocal display for Sutherland Help us stat!!!

  • @trex1563
    @trex1563 Před 11 měsíci +1

    "She was really an actress who sang". Laughable. Act - you bet, but in its prime, it was and remains the greatest operatic voice the world has known.

  • @skydomingo6491
    @skydomingo6491 Před 5 lety +6

    Who is the bass?

    • @arnoldamaral3814
      @arnoldamaral3814 Před 3 lety +2

      Evonne Goolagong in drag my friend. 🤔 Arnold Bourbon Amaral

  • @kaholee3756
    @kaholee3756 Před 3 lety +1

    Who's the tenor