1st time I hear her. She has a FABULOUS voice. This is a very difficult song and she sings it with emotion and reserved power. I hope she receives the world acclaim she deserves.
Pretty!! Proudly South African. She grew up poor in a rural township in Piet Retief and she and her parents could not afford singing lessons when she saw someone sing opera on TV. But she vowed to sing one day and here she is! One of the best voices South Africa has to offer. Muhle kakhulu mama Yende!!
Beautiful singing! Impeccable diction and interpretation. We need her in the US in the operatic world. This is an aria that could be destroyed very easily but, she treats it with delicacy. Simply lovely.
Wow! First Rusalka done by not native speaker which I was able to listen it till end and enjoy it a lot. She si perfect, beautiful voice .... and she is doing great work with czech language. Many famous and my favorite opera singers failed in that. I love her version.
+Jana Souflova yes, for a not Slavic singer quite a challenge, and yet, I would rather listen without looking at her, she is beautiful in her own right, and yet, it is Dvorak.
I don't know about her accent as I don't speak Czech, but her voice and expressions are so beautiful.. I would love to have been a member of the audience and to watch her perform live!! Well done!!
We South African women are SOOOOO BEAUTIFUL and TALENTED! Go Pretty!!! Your name suits you! Her voice is so powerful and that delivery is spotless. I'm crying in the office listening to this.
Yes, indeed you are. Her beauty and her rendition makes me cry along with you. Stay safe you wonderful African people. Pretty, that was magnificent. Thank you. Love from Seattle, WA, USA
But in the scenario Vodnik (waterman) her father is singing "Rusalka bleda"..... Which means in english Rusalka pale (or white).....She isnt white. but she is nice singer.
@@alaalfa8839 AND (not 'but') I think if you know the culture from which the Rusalka folklore emerges, you know exactly why they can refer to a white face without any of the implied references to what other skin colors there are...as we have in our beautiful, multicultural Europe/planet Earth. The Rusalka legends were in western part of Russian Empire (Ukraine, in particular) and bordering Slavic regions. For many hundreds of years, at least, the settled people had pale skin tones, just as in Scandinavia, an evolutionary adaptation to northern latitudes where maximum absorption of sun's 'weak' rays was needed for strong bones to survive childhood. This, and countless other musical performances across cultural bounderies show, more than my words, that music (and dance) are universal to the human race.
@@shanaw5390 ....It wasnt about white race....but he sings Rusalka bleda....We use this therm bleda (female) bledy (male) when someone gets sick...or gets some flu....but I didnt know how to explain it., because bleda means white (from being sick or having flu or also when person is tramatised)..When people are happy healthy they have nice pink cheeks, pink color in face....but when people get sick or feel bad emotionally they are pale or white, but its difficult to translate, because I am not english speaker.....Or when someone gets sick to a stomach...we say zeleny...which means you look green....But if black person is sick or traumatised is not white.
Amazing, I love it! I think Czech can not be pronounced perfectly by anybody who is not a Czech (especially a hell of a word like "příbytky"), BUT it absolutely does not matter in this case because this woman has breathtaking voice. I hear just the voice and I have goose bumps. I feel a content of these words perfectly because they are so heartfelt. When I found this video I was a bit sceptic first (well, this lady doesn't look like a typical Rusalka) but when she started to sing, I knew in an instant she is perfect Rusalka. Děkuji.
Slava Ivanov I don't think so. Or it depends on what you accept as quite good. Even Slovaks (our closest language relatives) struggle with ř. And the preposition v makes that part "v příbytky" hard to pronounce even for Czechs as there is a lot of consonants together. I don't think that Czech is unique in its difficulty, every language has its characteristic sounds that are extremely hard to learn.
Slava Ivanov I don't think so. Or it depends on what you accept as quite good. Even Slovaks (our closest language relatives) struggle with ř. And the preposition v makes that part "v příbytky" hard to pronounce even for Czechs as there is a lot of consonants together. I don't think that Czech is unique in its difficulty, every language has its characteristic sounds that are extremely hard to learn.
Petr Hošek I didn't mean "perfect", of course, each language has it's difficulties. But generally, it's possible to sounds close (not the same) to native speaker. Your accent will be visible, but not awful, because most of the sounds and the same or similar and combinations of them is't so complicated for slavic languages. You just need to really control every word
definitely not true. Letter Ř can be correctly pronounced by very few nations. This sound as we pronounce it is naturally only in one other language - some eskimo
Lovely great warm sound of this wonderful soprano Ms. Yende.I will like very much to hear much more from her!!!!. Lovely voice and lots of sensible expresion on her interpretation, BRAVAAAA!!!!
I am so glad that I know nothing about the technicalities of opera. I have no idea of her accent, pronunciation, or timing. My ears and my heart like this. Lovely. Just plain lovely.
Better get used to hearing from Pretty Yende. She is going to dominate the operatic stage for the next 20 years just the way Sutherland, Tebaldi, Price and Callas did in their time.
Překrásný zpěv, nádherně odděleny dramatické celky. Musela jsem si pustit už zatim 2x. Je to prostě nádherný text o lásce. Cítím to z toho, přízvuk mi nevadí, dílo pana Dvořáka je nesmrtelné. Děkuji.
Wow! absolutely beautiful, and powerful. She has great control of her pitch breathing and vibrato. Sarah Brightman is my all time favorite but this lady beats all the other lady's that I've hear. A lot of the others that sing this have great moments in the song but she carried it through the whole song. Nice!
Stunning! Not only has she a beautiful voice, but she had to sing in Czech. Prague is my spiritual home, and I would love one day to hear this wonderful singer in the Opera House
She has really beautuful voice !!! Nevertheless, I am Czech and the pronunciation is not good so that in some parts the song misses the Czech "pathos" which can be found, for exemple, in the version sung by Gabriela Beňáčková; but I appreciate all her efforts. In fact, our language is really difficult to pronunciate even for the other Slavs, the "ř" is the most difficult consonant at all: but who tries, improves. Bien a tous!
WOW!!! Even befor you sang, Pretty, you showed how much you love this piece.. as do we all... Your voice is silken... And I read that your diction is pure! Viva la Musica and Viva Pretty!
when I listen to this incomparable soprano , I feel supreme delight . I heard God,s voice that woke me up to listen to her incomparable soprano . 🍎 From effulgent Tokyo in profound Japan Which national are you watching this video ?
At the Metropolitan Conservatory of Music in New York City, Antonin Dvorak saw to it that, for the first time, blacks would be admitted to study there. He not only appreciated the richness of American folk music and Negro spirituals, he socialized with and loved these students. One, William Arms Fisher, wrote Goin' Home to the largo of Dvorak's New World Symphony. How proud and moved Dvorak must be to hear Ms. Yende sing this aria from (as I am sure a loving God will allow)!
Sorrow of this music gets deep into my soul , and it is not possible for me even to cry for excessive sadness . 🍎 Thank-you very much to her pensive and exquisite soprano from effulgent Tokyo in profound Japan .
Es una gran intérprete ; logra una excelente caracterización de contenido y forma de la obra , y una dialéctica estrecha y profunda con la orquesta. Bravo!!!