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Title Audio-only bonus interview Opera Fanatic March 30, 1991
Published New York : Bel Canto Society, 2013

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Description 1 online resource (132 min.)
Contents Questa o quella (Rigoletto, by Giuseppe Verdi) -- Un dì all'azzurro spazio (Andrea Ché#x81;nier, by Umberto Giordano) -- O paradiso (L'Africana, by Giacomo Meyerbeer) -- Che gelida manina (La bohème, by Giacomo Puccini) -- Ch'ella mi creda (La fanciulla del West, by Giacomo Puccini) -- Ô‚ souverain, ô‚ juge, ô‚ père (Le Cid, by Jules Massenet) -- 'O sole mio (Eduardo Di Capua) -- Core 'ngrato (Salvatore Cardillo) -- Tu ca nun chiagne! (Ernesto De Curtis) -- 'A Vucchella (Francesco Paolo Tosti) -- Interviews
Summary On this DVD Franco is very much himself. He sings to the audience as he sang to me in his living room--with the same gestures and mannerisms. And they love it! He flings himself into the encores with wild abandon. Gives spinal chills. The most personality of any Corelli DVD. Corelli's Rubato: Listen to Corelli play with the tempo in Ernesto De Curtis's "Tu ca nun chiagne." He introduces ritards and accelerations. Or listen to F. Paolo Tosti's "A Vucchella," where Corelli twice eases back into tempo after (unduly) long fermatas. Yet he told me, "I didn't do rubato for fear of being squadrato [not with the conductor's beat]." In this concert he is squadrato in "O paradiso," on the word "paradiso." The reality may have been that he was willing to sing with flexibility of tempo when with piano accompaniment, as in the De Curtis and Tosti songs, in which he sings with piano after the orchestra has left the stage. His Bobbing Larynx and Dropped Jaw: Voice teacher Giovanni Battista Lamperti maintained, in Vocal Wisdom: The Maxims of Giovanni Battista Lamperti by William Earl Brown, "Though the larynx need not be held muscularly fixed in one position, for either upper or lower register, it should remain quiescent throughout a song," also that a singer should open his mouth "as wide as finger thickness." Corelli adopted an unrelated approach. In accordance with his modification of Melocchi's method, in soft passages his larynx "floated" up, in loud passages down. More, by 1971, Corelli had come to sing with his mouth wide open and jaw dropped to the maximum, on high notes, in particular--as is apparent in this concert. His Scatto: At the end of "Un dì all'azzurro spazio" and the end of "Tu ca nun chiagne" Franco sings with scatto (punch), which is a reason he is so exciting.--Stefan Zucker. DVD Bonuses: Corelli in two radio interviews with Stefan Zucker, 5 hrs., 8 mins., total. The first also includes Jerome Hines and Dodi Protero
Notes Title from resource description page (viewed May 26, 2017)
Performer Franco Corelli, interviewee ; Stefan Zucker, interviewer
Notes In English
Subject Corelli, Franco
SUBJECT Corelli, Franco. fast (OCoLC)fst00096407
Subject Singers -- Italy -- Biography
Opera
Bel canto.
Bel canto.
Opera.
Singers.
Italy.
Genre/Form Interviews.
Biographies.
Sound recordings.
Interviews (Sound recordings)
Form Streaming video
Author Corelli, Franco, singer, interviewee