Enjoy an excerpt of rehearsal session - Aleksandra Kurzak is performing "Mercè, dilette amiche", Elena's aria from Verdi's I Vespri Siciliani. Marcello Mottadelli conducts the PKF Prague Philharmonia orchestra.
Pieknie .Podziwiam talent Pani Aleksandry.Ktos gdzies napisal,ze rozkwitla u boku Roberto Alagna i pewnie mial racje ale sadze takze,ze Alagna przy niej przezywa cos w rodzaju drugiej mlodosci..Dalej tak Drodzy Panstwo.Cieszcie nasze oczy i uszy!!!! Zycze wszystkiego najlepszego i niech Malena bedzie Wasza radoscia.
barahona68 Did you not notice that it’s just a rehearsal ? Yet it’s even written in the title. Is it hard to understand that when a singer is rehearsing he or she is not singing everything out ? And for a rehearsal I think that it’s far more impressive to hear how musical, easy , clear and agile it is, than noting that, maybe, in some passages her voice can’t overlap the orchestra ...
I'm certainly not complaining or criticising her, in fact I even remarked that she makes it sound quite easy, I just didn't understand why she's not singing full voice, even knowing that it's just a rehearsal.
Ah, because it’s not useful, tiring for the voice ath the end of the day and not the purpose of a rehearsal. Does an athlet, during a training, takes the risk to run each lap as it was a final race of a world competition? Of course not. That’s why ...
@@barahona68 you stupid cow,you just said yourself ,you don`t understand,what is this all about and still try to talk gibberish and idiotic bullshit,just shut up and don`t let others know how stupid you are.
@@vincec8218 And yet, it's interesting that nearly every singer of previous generations could trill (Callas, Sutherland, Schwarzkopf, Sills, Gencer, Ludwig, Leider, Branzel, Melba, Joseph Schmidt, etc. etc.), and today, nearly no-one can. Also every singer of middle-eastern music can trill, as can just about every cantor in synagogues. I think it has something to do with how singers are taught nowadays. I think that the trill was something that singers were expected to master before stepping on stage, whereas today, we think of it as something exceedingly difficult that only a few gifted people can do. A couple of decades ago, "Opera News" had a wonderful article on trills calls, "The Thrill is Gone." It's worth looking for.