Mattia Battistini - Ah! non avea più lagrime [Maria de Rudenz] - 1921
Happy birthday to Mattia Battistini. This recording changed my life. When I first heard it a few years ago, I immediately felt, for the first time, awake to what bel canto is in meaning and in action and in sound. It also set me on the path to working out my own voice. I became obsessed with this aria and even went so far as to recreate the score as performed by Battistini. In his biography of the baritone, Jacques Chuilon writes: "In this precious remnant of a transcendent performance, with its flowery ornamentation, the legendary romantic spirit of bel canto is reborn. The voice sounds impressively large, capable of ebbing from the loudest forte to the softest hush with extraordinary flexibility. The vocalises are so rapidly executed that one has to listen twice to believe what one has heard. If this little jewel of a record had never been made, one might legitimately doubt that such a style of singing ever existed." And an historical note: Battistini never performed Maria de Rudenz itself, but he did have Maria di Rohan revived from time to time, and like his predecessor Giorgio Ronconi (who created the baritone roles in both Donizetti operas), he inserted this aria into his Maria di Rohan performances. In the opening line of the recitative, you'll notice he sings "...adorata Maria," which is actually "...adorata Matilde" in the original. The photo in this video is of Battistini in costume as Enrico, Duke of Chevreuse in Maria di Rohan. ..................................... This channel is primarily about vocal emission—aural examples of basically correct singing, correct impostazione—chiaroscuro, vowel clarity, firm and centered pitch, correct vibrato action, absence of throatiness or thickness, sounds free from constriction and from the acoustic noise that accompanies it—with occasional video examples that demonstrate what the body, face, mouth, jaw, and tongue look like when used with correct impostazione—the vocal emission of the one and only Italian school. Caveat: I'm biased in favor of baritones and baritone literature, but if you want to learn about and listen to all the greatest singers in the old-school tradition, explore this spreadsheet (voice parts are separated by tabs): https://bit.ly/2W4qmE3
![Mattia Battistini - Ai miei rivali cedere [Ruy Blas] - 1921](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/it8OU7K7u2Q/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEjCNACELwBSFryq4qpAxUIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAE=&rs=AOn4CLB3IRbkhf_Eeuz6wn8c3w1q4V-20g)
Mattia Battistini - Ai miei rivali cedere [Ruy Blas] - 1921

Forgotten Baritone You MUST Hear (Metropolitan Opera Golden Age)

Mattia Battistini in Un Ballo in Maschera - Eri tu che macchiavi (1907)

Ah! Non avea piu lagrime from Maria de Rudenz, Donizetti Baritone Joo Won Kang

William Harness: 9 High C Aria Day of Glory (Ah mes amis; Pour mon âme)

Eine Dorfschule im Schwarzwald (1960)

Maria di Rohan: Act III: Bella e di sol vestita (Enrico)

The Real Reason You Can't Reach Your High Notes (Hint: It's Not Your Range)

Only 20 minutes Enjoy Francesco Merli Best 16 Opera Highlights

Caro mio ben

Joseph Ratzinger über den Sinn des Lebens...
![Mattia Battistini & Janinna De Witt - Così mantieni il patto? [La Gioconda] - 1921](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/8WKiQlEOWec/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEjCNACELwBSFryq4qpAxUIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAE=&rs=AOn4CLBcGFOyiKt28E-AZFVwbn9uKuhXPw)
Mattia Battistini & Janinna De Witt - Così mantieni il patto? [La Gioconda] - 1921

Modern (bad) VS old school (great) opera singing

How To Stop Singing From Your Throat

Pavarotti stopped the opera because of a mysterious voice – their duet became immortal

Il Guarany: Senza tetto, Senza cuna (Recorded 1924)

Kirsten Flagstad rehearsal footage - Dido & Aeneas + concert w Melchior, Branzell, Tibbett - 1939/51

Tito Gobbi - Rigoletto - Cortigiani, vil razza dannata, 1959

