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Beniamino Gigli - Recondita armonia (Victor, 1921) 

Dead Tenors' Society
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Beniamino Gigli (1890-1957) was a beloved Italian tenor whose 41 year career encompassed stage, screen, concerts, recordings, radio and television. Born in Recanati, Gigli was the youngest of six children of an impoverished shoemaker. He showed early promise as a boy soprano and joined the choir of his hometown Cathedral at age seven. Gigli spent several years with the choir and was eventually elevated to soloist. In 1905, Gigli made his debut Macerata’s Teatro Lauri Rossi as the title character in Billi’s operetta La Fuga di Angelica, singing the title part…a soprano role! Although the 15 year old youth was mortified by having to appear in drag, the applause he received at the end of the evening somewhat assuaged his embarrassment.
At 17, Gigli joined his brother Catervo (a budding sculptor) in Rome, where the two lived a rather Bohemian existence. After working several jobs (not to mention a stint in the army), Gigli entered the Academy of Santa Cecilia and studied with legendary baritone Antonio Cotogni. He was soon reassigned to Enrico Rosati, with whom he completed his studies. In 1914, Gigli entered an international singing competition in Parma. Out of 105 entrants, Gigli took first prize, one of the judges writing the now legendary notation, “At last, we have found THE TENOR!”, on the singer’s report. Although the outbreak of WWI prevented Gigli from singing in Chicago (the competition’s actual prize), he made his official debut as Enzo in La Gioconda at Rovigo’s Teatro Sociale on October 15, 1914. The tenor caught the attention of renowned conductor, Tullio Serafin, who invited him to open the season at Genoa’s Teatro Carlo Felice as des Grieux in Manon in December. Appearances in Palermo, Naples, Bologna, Brescia, Turin, Verona and Rome followed and within a year of his debut, the budding tenor’s repertoire had increased to seven roles. Critical response was favorable, and Gigli was soon established as one of Italy’s finest young talents.
Following appearances in Madrid and Barcelona, Gigli made his La Scala debut on December 26, 1918 in Mefistofele. Five months later, he made his Buenos Aires debut as Cavaradossi in Tosca at the Teatro Colón. Gigli became an audience favorite in South America and made semi regular appearances there for the next 30 years. His Met debut took place on November 26, 1920 (again in Mefistofele) to positive reviews. Although the company was dominated by Caruso, who would shortly withdraw due to his fatal illness, Gigli was soon recognized by the New York critics and public alike as an artist of the first rank. The tenor spent twelve seasons with the Met, singing 29 roles in such operas as Cavalleria Rusticana, La Bohème, Tosca, Lucia di Lammermoor, Rigoletto, Manon Lescaut, Roméo et Juliette, L’Africaine and the Met premieres of Andrea Chénier, Le Roi d’Ys, Loreley, and La Rondine. Gigli left the Met over a salary dispute in 1932 but returned in early 1939 for a handful of performances, including Radames in Aïda.
Gigli spent the 1930s appearing in the major theaters of Rome, London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Copenhagen, Budapest and Prague, as well as starring in a series of films. The unlikely cinema star went on to appear in over 20 pictures, the first of which, “Non ti scordar di me”, was released in 1935. Throughout the 1940s, Gigli showed no signs of slowing down, despite contracting diabetes in his late 50s. However, when his health began to fail, the aging tenor decided to embark on a farewell tour which culminated in a May 25, 1955 recital in Washington, D.C. After his retirement, Gigli returned to his birthplace, where he suffered a serious heart attack in the fall of 1955. He continued to struggle with diabetic complications and cardiac issues but remained active as a teacher and coach. Gigli was injured in a September 1957 automobile accident and was later struck down with Asiatic flu. Although he seemed to be recovering, he developed double pneumonia and rapidly deteriorated. Despite doctors’ best efforts, Gigli passed away at his villa in Recanati on November 30. He was 67.
Gigli’s repertoire of 60 roles encompassed everything from Bel Canto to Verismo…with a solitary Wagner role (Lohengrin) tossed in for good measure. Among his greatest roles were the leads in Il Trovatore, La Forza del Destino, Un Ballo in Maschera, La Favorita, L’Elisir d’Amore, Lodoletta, L’Amico Fritz, Maristella and L’Arlesiana. In spite of the ravages of illness, the voice remained largely intact to the end of the tenor’s career. Gigli’s recorded legacy is monumental… over 400 discs, including several complete operas, made for Victor and HMV between 1918 and 1955. These records reveal a full lyric tenor, which took on spinto characteristics as he matured. In this recording, Gigli sings “Recondita armonia” from Puccini’s Tosca. This was recorded in New York for Victor Records in January of 1921.

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6 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 38   
@Theartofevolutie-x9h
@Theartofevolutie-x9h 3 месяца назад
Best lyric tenor ever lived .. no one beats the maestro
@hashatz
@hashatz 2 года назад
There are some singers you never get tired of hearing. Gigli is one of them
@hashatz
@hashatz 2 года назад
Gigli's magnificent voice and art are singular. It is like premiere wine.
@mariofilippeschi4855
@mariofilippeschi4855 2 года назад
truly a wine, because his voice got more aroma as he got old then he took dramatic roles
@sananton2821
@sananton2821 Год назад
@@mariofilippeschi4855 At what age do wines get a prominent beat in their vibrato and start singing flat?
@hashatz
@hashatz Год назад
@@sananton2821 Each wine is special.
@luigimaffei9132
@luigimaffei9132 Год назад
Che spettacolo!!!!! Non ci si stanca mai di ascoltarlo. Il papà di tutti i tenori, anche se altri avevano voci più estese per repertori eroici, GIGLI li superava interpretando con il cuore. La mia modesta opinione
@zaharivladimirov8428
@zaharivladimirov8428 5 месяцев назад
Джили е велик и неповторим....👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@blascortes8391
@blascortes8391 4 года назад
Magistral Gigli
@bodiloto
@bodiloto 3 года назад
Divino .
@AnneDekle
@AnneDekle Месяц назад
True, a lyric tenor but whatever he sang the glorious sympathetic quality and ring never appeared pushed and could always be easily heard-a special sound one never tires of hearing.
@alfredbernasek3912
@alfredbernasek3912 4 года назад
PERFEKT
@sachseco
@sachseco 4 года назад
Also, the perfect Pinkerton, hear his recording with Toti dal Monte as Butterfly!
@hashatz
@hashatz 2 года назад
Yes!!
@FranciscoFerrerGaliana1930
@FranciscoFerrerGaliana1930 8 месяцев назад
MARAVILLOSO
@marioalejandroruizcarreras8387
The best. Il piú grande di tutti i tempi.
@erikaskolovin-erven8136
@erikaskolovin-erven8136 10 месяцев назад
Beniamino Gigli starb heute vor 66 Jahren an den Folgen der Diabeteskrankheit. Hier war er 30 oder 31 Jahre, als er "Wie sich die Bilder gleichen" sang. Da er im Januar 1921 sang, war erst 30 Jahre. Er wurde 67 Jahre, fast 68 Jahre.
@sidneikovacs5499
@sidneikovacs5499 Год назад
O saudoso Dr Beniamino Gigli Jr menciona que Gigli dizia ser no inicio de sua carreira um tenor um pouco ligeiro e no decorrer do tempo com trabalho constante e tecnica se tornou tenor lirico e spinto. Gosto mais ainda da fase até 1930
@pippofan123
@pippofan123 2 года назад
Além do belíssimo timbre, pathos, dicção, técnica, penso que a mais importante característica do grande Gigli foi a SABEDORIA com que sempre soube usar a sua voz. Grandes vozes se destruiram com repertório não adequado. Gigli soube ir do barroco ao verismo, do ligeiro ao spinto, de Haendel, Monteverdi, a Verdi, Wagner, Ponchielli, Bizet, Puccini, Giordano, Cilea, etc., com sabedoria e qualidade, até idade avançada.
@armwrestlingfanatic7923
@armwrestlingfanatic7923 2 года назад
Interessante como fazem muitos comentários elogiando a performance de Gigli em papéis spinto, enquanto que os mesmos comentaristas criticam Pavarotti por fazer o mesmo. Seria hipocrisia, fanatismo, ignorância? Saudades de um passado supostamente superior, o qual nunca o foi de fato?
@MarcioSaburi
@MarcioSaburi Год назад
@@armwrestlingfanatic7923, Gigli é superior a Pavarotti, em qualquer ária que cante.
@armwrestlingfanatic7923
@armwrestlingfanatic7923 Год назад
@@MarcioSaburi Um tenor cheio de maneirismos e tecnicamente limitado em comparação ao Pavarotti.
@MarcioSaburi
@MarcioSaburi Год назад
@@armwrestlingfanatic7923, praticamente cada tom produzido pelo Gigli é perfeito, diferente do Pavarotti, cuja voz tá sempre ou quase sempre com algum sobretom sujando a nota, além do que ele faz umas opções de vogal bastante questionáveis.
@mariopinot9884
@mariopinot9884 4 года назад
Nice.
@Makenor13
@Makenor13 4 года назад
Omg poor Gigli! Diabetes, hearth diseases, a car accident and even the Asiatic flu?? 😱😱
@stone301
@stone301 2 года назад
Sounds like a normal life of a man born in 1890 honestly. But his life was far from ordinary. You should read about some of the historical and sociopolitical events that he was involved in, most not by choice
@sidneikovacs5499
@sidneikovacs5499 9 месяцев назад
Gostaria muito de obter essas informações. Você recomenda qual literatura?
@Сергій-ч9ш
@Сергій-ч9ш 4 месяца назад
Что бы делали вы,умея лишь петь и попав в такой переплет.Не все способны поступать подобно великой Личности подобной Тито Руффо,оставим его анатомирование психиатрам,а самим слушать и учиться.Титаны ушли,а гниды далее не вошли.
@armwrestlingfanatic7923
@armwrestlingfanatic7923 2 года назад
Small voice. Nemorino singing Cavaradossi.
@nthdegree1269
@nthdegree1269 2 года назад
Puccini highly praised him,
@e.g.8454
@e.g.8454 Год назад
Small voice? Pavarotti small voice.
@PMiss-gl8fy
@PMiss-gl8fy Год назад
Small voice Gigli lol
@e.g.8454
@e.g.8454 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ITbrh-hjAbg.html Gigli the best.
@gnarbeljo8980
@gnarbeljo8980 Год назад
@@e.g.8454 yes. Pavarotti started out wonderful in his most early years. I can't really listen to any of him besides that period. There's also something to be said about having good taste in artistry. That's not a given at all and not something you really learn later on. Gigli had impeccable taste, and would sacrifice showing off technique for delivering convincing emotion and staying in character every single time. His technique was never limited to belting out prolonged notes. Which is often quite ghastly if it's not entirely appropriate to the libretto and score. Gigli was one of Pavarottis idols btw. You can hear it in his early days.
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