I was but a child when my appreciation for this glorious music began! I'm now 64 years old and I can't get along without it!! It touches me like no other music!
This is a great cross-section of Opera. I was taken against my will to the fabulous Maria Callas's farewell performance in London 1973. They couldn't get me to leave at the end. What an experience and a blessing. The best introduction to Opera possible.
My Mother who was a teacher, Taught English Lit, French, Math and Piano. Exposure to the arts such as Opera, classical music, Theatre Stage, playing an instrument and other aspects of culture was a prime directive in my household growing up. And she wanted all diversities to be able to have full access and the tools to experience it. She passed away some time ago. And now I fully appreciate and understand what she always wanted my sister and I to use as steppingstones in life.
My beloved husband introduced me to opera and I will be forever grateful to him. He died on March 26th, and I'm in tears listening to this. Thank you .
I am so sorry for your loss. What a beautiful way he left you for your both to connect. I am sure when you listen to this he is also listening and feeling it along side with you! MUCH LOVE TO YOU MY DEAR.
10. Una Furtiva Lagrima - from l'Elisir D'Amore - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (0:00) 9. Vide Cor Meum - from Hannibal - featuring Danielle Di Niese & Bruno Lazzaretti (4:48) 8. Un Bel Di Vedremo - from Madame Butterfly - featuring Maria Callas (8:40) 7. Duo des Fleurs (Flower Duet) - from Lakmé - featuring Sabine Devieilhe & Marianne Crebassa (13:20) 6. Libiamo, ne' lieti calici - from La Traviata - featuring Juan Diego Flórez & Diana Damrau (17:52) 5. La Donna è Mobile - from Rigoletto - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (21:01) 4. Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (Queen of the Night Aria) - from Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) - featuring Diana Damrau (23:48) 3. Habanera - from Carmen - featuring Anna Caterina Antonacci (26:50) 2. Nessun Dorma - from Turandot - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (28:59) 1. O Mio Babbino Caro - from Gianni Schicchi - featuring Maria Callas (32:05) (Made it easier, so you just click the blue-marked time-stamps, and instantly go to the part you want.)
Vide cor Meum -- It was featured in Kingdom of Heaven (watch the Director's cut for best impact) before Hannibal...but regardless, it rips my heart out of my chest whenever I hear it. When I die I want this played at my memorial. Yikes.. that's kind of grim...lol
I was 28 when i started to appreciate opera. My father was very influential to my appreciation of this fantastic music. He's gone 10 years and I love it more than ever! Thanks Dad! ❤
My first foray into opera was the three tenors at about the same age, growing up in small rural towns in Canda with largely non-musically interested parents it took me a while to find I loved it. Sadly Opera as well as orchestral performance is waning, I definitely was born into the wrong era.
I was introduced to opera by my mother who was listening to the Met oprta on radio as a youngster. I did not like it much. Later in life, in my mid 50’s , i became a fan of opera, of all styles, including the most modern ones
My Dear Father especially loved the operas of Puccini. I started listening when I was about 10. Knowing my interest in art, he took me to see Tosca at about age 12. He passed away at age 72 in 1993. . .Can you imagine the thrill it was for me in 2012 to be visiting the Puccini Museum, located in the home where he composed most of the greatest arias. And who should be there that day, but Madame Puccini, his Granddaughter! In my rudimentary Italian I was able to say, "Mio Papa Sebastiano, tutto rispetto Puccini!!"
Same as for my Dad. He always said, his kids would not appreciate opera or classical music until he’s gone. Unfortunately, he was right. It’s nice to have that influence tho. Miss u Dad!
I got to meet Pavarotti backstage in the costume room of the MET when my grandfather introduced me to him. I was 14 years old and completely in awe of his height and presence! ❤#opera #Pavarotti #NYC
I grew up in welsh valleys ,our home was filled with music---opera the favourite We had nothing ,but our home was filled with love, inspired by the music of arias being played on 78rpms. Wow that sound!!!!! Filled me with awe and appreciation for music Dad was tenor ,brother boy soprano me-----power like Bassey Neighbours genuinely loved our music days :) HAPPY DAYS AND TIMES
I love all types of music. It took me a little more than half my life to fully appreciate opera, not because I didn't like it but because I just didn't grow up with much opportunity to hear it. Well, other than on Bugs Bunny, lol. Now, I can honestly say that it is one of the purest forms of emotional expression that I've ever heard; and I dearly love it. Opera can take my breath away, make the hairs on my arms stand on goosebumps, move me to tears, and stir emotion within me like nothing else can. Just once in my life (preferably more), I would dearly love to see a live performance. Prima Donna, my gratitude to you for filling the last 34 minutes of my life with beauty. :)
Thank you for such a moving comment. I am also lately discovering the beauty of Opera at 35 years old. I grew up in a culturally spartan environment and I sometimes find the stimulation of the modern world overwhelming but I am glad to have discovered the beauty of Opera (and also medieval music:)))
I'm surprised that young people aren't getting exposed to opera in school. That was my first experience. I had a very good high school music teacher, Mr. Janna, who played all the great arias and got me hooked on the beauty of opera.
Exactly. If you're going to talk about opera then talk about opera. An aria is not a song. A song is an individual composition unless it's part of a song cycle. An aria is an integral part of an opera.
Franco Corelli? Mario del Monaco? Jussi Bjorling? @Richard Harris - Jose Carreras was excellent when young and was promising to be the next great tenor. But he wrecked his beautiful voice singing roles that weren't suited for his lyric voice. Of course, his illness didn't help either.
@@jewelmarkess i love how people say that pavarotti is the best no matter what, while there are better ones specially in heavier roles. I would add to your list the great giuseppe di stefano
@@giovannibettini2246 Yes, very true. True about Giuseppe di Stefano as well. The funniest thing about people who say how Pavarotti was the greatest is that they often aren't even able to recognize his voice or rather when it's not him. There are a couple of "fake" videos here with Largo al Factotum sung by Sherrill Milnes in a couple of them and Tito Gobbi in one other - by now maybe more, fakes tend to multiply here. One would imagine that it should be obvious to anybody with hearing slightly better than that of a fish that Pavarotti's tenor voice was very different from these baritones. Nevertheless, there are zillion comments about how Pavarotti was the greatest. There are also fakes with Callas picture and her name in the title on some songs and arias sung by different singers with very different voices, yet there are people there saying how she was the greatest who cannot hear it's not her.
I heard my first opera en utero, my parents would put the headphones on my moms belly. Now that they are both in heaven, I truly understand how tragically beautiful this genre of music is! Thank you mom and dad. RIP
same here Amber, thats why we are so atach to opera!the neurociences showed it already! here my email to exchange , hugs from southamerica carito_89_9@hotmail.com :)
Well it’s taken almost 30 years, to find that mysterious beautiful piece, I once heard in a Honda Accord commercial. For over three decades, I have searched opera databases, and could never find the tune. But thanks to you I found it finally!! It’s name is Mio Babbino Caro Thank you ever so much!!
What a soul-wrencingly beautiful selection! I speak German fluently, and have taught myself Italian & French, so understanding the lyrics adds a special appreciation to the arias. What beautiful minds, to have composed such eternally beautiful melodies!
@@zmahmoud1454 , I believe French is harder than the other Latin languages, maybe if you begin from one of the others like Italian or Spanish. Then the jump to French would be easier.
@@cccconyt Merci so much 😍😍 You make it feel so easy 🙂 I took notes of the tips you suggested. Next, I’ll search for tv shows and some books to read. I watch french songs with lyrics too on youtube. It helps too. Thanks again 🦋🙏🏻💙
@@zmahmoud1454 I think French is the most difficult, grammatically. It was my best subject at school - a very long time ago. But French, Italian and Spanish are all "romance" languages derived from Latin. Once you master French, Italian or Spanish are easier. German (my second best subject at school) isn't as difficult as French. In my opinion anyway.
@@lesleyhalkett5675 I started learning it last year and is still an ongoing process. Its system is certainly different from English or Arabic (my native lang), yet I love how it sounds. One day, I will be sightseeing in France chatting in french as a native. Wish me luck 🙏🏻
In Quebec, we long had a radio program that reviewwed new classical ewcordings. They p,ayed an aria sung by Kathleen Battle. The voice was pitch perfect, each note technically flawlwss. And yet, it left me cold. The critic on the radio too. He the. Played the same aria sung by Maria Callad. The pitch was not àways perfect. But. I was moved to tears.., i would rather get a passionate, heatfelt remditiin than an unemotional, technically perfect one
Im young opera singer and its my second year in music school and this arias make my heart full of happines and joy even if some of them are sad story💫,let the music go thru your heart let the music lead you to that magic land said my teacher to me every time when we are having some competition and she hug me tight ❤️🩹🎼 let this remind you that these little things in life like support is important and that music is really a joy
Every time I listen to Madama Butterfly last song I am breaking down into tears. For sure she says what an heart betrayed by destiny and sliced into pieces is feeling when giving up a life which becomes an heavy toll to bring about.
When I spend time in my bedroom depressed. I listen to Opera and it helps me imagine to as I am listen. I have always loved Opera since I have heard it for the first time and wish I could have known that world.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ Same here. I am listening to all of my favorite Arias at this hour. I am saddened and depressed. But slowly regaining the strength to endure the new day. (Friday 7-19-2024) RIP Mi abuela Carmen. Te amaré por siempre. Ti amerò per sempre
Thank you for sharing such beautiful music. My aunt was a famous opera singer in Poland, Barbara Nieman, and her husband Stefan Rachoń, he was my favourite uncle, we spent a lot of summers together on Mazury, we were playing cards and listening to great music. I'm forever grateful to them for teaching me to appreciate the greatest sounds ever created.
My father heard Barbara Nieman live, singing Zofia in Halka...in Warsaw. He always cherished that performance. We shared a love of opera, and I was able to treat him to a live performance of my favourite tenor, Canada's Ben Heppner, not long before my father passed.
@@danutagajewski3330 Thank you for sharing, I'm so happy that my auntie's voice cherished your father, she is awesome, next time I will see her I will tell her about your dad.
I regret so much never seeing Pavarotti perform live. I was just a kid and didn’t know or appreciate opera when he was touring with the three tenors, or even when he did his final performance. His voice came from heaven.
I don’t know anything about Opera songs. But I listen to it all the times. Relaxes me. I tried to learn but got confused even more. I wish I could understand it more. I am just thankful for these awesome people for their singing.
I can think of many arias that are “missing” from this list, but honestly, with all the sublimely beautiful music in opera, how can you choose just ten? This is a great collection. I love it! Thank you for putting it together.
@@kristopherbagu5611 I don't know as many as other people, but a few that moved me are "Il faut partir" from _La Fille du Regiment_ I heard it first by Pretty Yende, but take a listen to the one by Beverly Sills live (Italy), perfection. Actually both versions are exquisite. "Mon Coeur S'Ouvre A Ta Voix" Olga Borodina and Jose Cura, "La Wally" Wilhelmina Wiggins Fernandez. Just to name a few.
And then I cried...felt the Italian vibe, heard Luciano's voice, and just couldn't help myself This is what a hurting world needs, thank God and these beautiful talents for some classical music relief
Classical music is not the type that "calmly gets out of your way" when you want to work. Rather, it enhances the value of your work, and achievements. Thankful
As a working class bloke brought up on the 'usual' music, my friends just can't understand my love for opera. I've seen all the greats at the Royal Opera House (I know someone who works there FREE TICKETS!!!!) This is a wonderful selection.
I think with Opera, you either adore it or hate it, but I've taken my indifferent best friend (metalhead/Paganini fan) to see 'Turandot' - he was bawling by Liu's suicide scene and went with me to every following performance, even bought a suit.
Personally, I could listen to Luciano Pavarotti sing Nessun Dorma every. day. for the rest of my life & never get tired of hearing him sing that aria. It’s the perfect song for a man to sing about overcoming all obstacles to obtain a desired goal. That said, I could listen to him sing pretty much anything in opera & never tire of it. Also, he seemed to love & appreciate his fans. Miss him! Otherwise, all of these are excellent choices!
Of course we miss him. But just think: we, among all generations, were given the opportunity to actually share this world with him for a short time. No one will ever be able to say that again, and that is no small thing.
This takes me back to the days when my local public radio hosted non english opera for three hours every weekend. No need to understand the words, the music is more than eloquent in communicating the moment.
the radio broadcasts never stopped-- check this out and if u don't get it locally, radsio from anywhere cah no be heard well andy where- radiolocator.com; www.metopera.org/season/radio/saturday-matinee-broadcasts/
I grew up in a family of musicians, classical music lovers and above all, a deep appreciation and love of great opera. Madame Butterfly - oh how to comment for the most beautiful aria in the world.Thank you so very much
Through the years these songs have penetrated with sweet but powerful strength the essence of my soul and make my heart vibrate every time I hear one of them. I am 86.
I am live in the Caribbean we do not listen to opera music at all but as I am getting older I open myself up to every genre but opera music awakens something in me I go to bed every night listening to opera music it speaks to my spirit and soul I absolutely love it ......
You chose well! All of these arias were classics I've heard since I was a little girl...Nessun Dorma is one of my all time favorites! Hearing Maria Callas sing "O Mio Babbino Caro" has always given me chills. She really embodied it. Thank you for this. It brought me to tears. I feel soooo very fortunate to have been exposed to opera and classical music as a young child. Music is Everything! That is, Good music is Everything!
I so miss going to the opera right now, this gives me so much joy and sadness 🖤💙 and the tears are flowing. As much as I appreciate this, we could add so much more to this list I can’t name the top 10
It's amazing how a piece of music can bring such emotion. Duo des Fleurs and O Mio Babbino Caro always make me shiver and the tears flow just from the pure joy and pleasure they evoke. You know that feeling when you look into the eyes of someone you love, the world melts away, your heart races and you just want to lose yourself in that moment forever? That is how I feel every time I hear them. Such bliss ^_^
This is a magnificient list, thank you! Personally, I‘d add Dio, che nell‘alma infondere amor“ (aka friendship duet) - Verdi, Don Carlo Ombra mai fu - Handel, Xerxes Lascia ch‘io pianga - Handel, Rinaldo One of the many highlights of Don Giovanni (Mozart): A cena teco (Don G‘s end), la ci darem la mano, champagne aria etc… But thank you - particularly for Callas! ❤
You hang in there dear one. We are so lucky to have these TH-cam selections. Enjoy the break and soon we will have something new...after all, this Covid stuff is the perfect backdrop for a nice new tragic , juicy and complex opera.. See you there.
So happy you picked Diana Damrau's Queen of the Night. IMO she conveys the elemental menace and rage of the scorned woman like no other. The score is truly challenging, and Diana's is IMO the definitive performance.
Hi, all the arias are gorgeous. I am familiar with all of them except the second aria. My dad loved opera and sang a lot of the arias. I heard it as a baby. When I was a teenager I was a big rolling stones fan. Saw them in concert in the Hague and also in Edmonton. When dad was off work, he blasted opera on his stereo and as a typical teenager I went out with my friends till 3 in the morning. Needless to say I tried to cover up my ears with my pillows to no avail lol. Nessum Dorma my dad sang effortlessly. My dad passed away on September 10, 2021. His death was atrocious as he became "useless," to her and wanted all that he possessed. She did not want to take care of him and hastened and abused my dad. She overdosed him with morphine and who knows, fentanyl. She did everything in her power to keep me away from dad. But God made sure on the day, a Sunday I saw him. I went into shock at his condition. I had my ex husband with me and he went into shock as well. He said the man lying there gasping for air didn't even look like my dad. He immediately said something is fishy here, she is hiding something. I wish I could hire a criminal lawyer. Dad is not the first elderly man who got victimized. My sister and I do not get any answers to where dad is. It's all kept secret by her. All this came out and I am sorry. I just have to. Feel helpless and hopeless since there is no justice. But dad left me something really precious; the beautiful world of Opera. His favorites are Maestro Luciano Pavarotti (hope I spelled correctly) and the unforgettable Maria Callas. As tragic as opera can be about love and loss, we also lost my brother Brian to cancer on July 6th, 2021. I picked up Opera on you tube but sobbed and could not finish listening to the songs my dad sang. But today it gives me joy and peace. Dad did a duet in Holland and I asked her if I could have it. But no. He also has all the old fashion records of Operas. Anyways I am now immersed in the music. If I could only sing like dad, that is all I ever wanted. However so grateful to have good hearing and the privilege to listen to the magnificent world of Opera. My dad's obituary is known with his name Gerardus Jansen in Olds AB. My brother name is Brian Sandy Jansen RIP. Thank you for sharing the 10 famous Arias.
So sorry about your Dad. When my son died suddenly, all I could listen to was Opera…Pavarotti is the most beautiful tenor ever..I only listen to His music and cry, but find great peace after hearing him. Wish I could have seen him just once.
Listening to "Una Frutiga Lagrima" and remembering it's So beautiful. How i miss the beautiful opera live everyone dressed up listening quietly. Can't help the tears from flowing.
I know maybe five words of Italian. I am a 57 yo US southern born and bred female. My favorite music is Christian gospel, old time country, and old school rock/pop. However, for some inexplicable reason, Italian opera moves me to tears. Luciano Pavarotti, Andrea Bocelli, Enrico Caruso, Beniamino Gigli, etc., etc. The music, words, and singing delivery is just electrifying to me.
I'm a newcomer and my favorite is Un Bel Di Vedremo from Madame Butterfly (8:43). Madam Callas drew me into opera and now I can't leave having heard her at 12:38. Many thanks for uploading this.
I am new to opera. I heard 'O mio bambino caro' for the first time a few years ago sung by Rene' Fleming. It melted my heart, my eyes filled with tears and I had goosebumps. I will be taking some time to learn more.
Franco Corelli's Tokyo concert is on youtube. He has those polite Japanese acting like roaring Italians. See Corelli Parma Vittoria. He even had to sing an encore as the applause went on for 1/2 an hours after the end of Tosca. Unheard of before.
My parents took me to the Royal Opera House in London to see Carmen when I was 12. I thought it was wonderful. Several years later I used to stand in the gods with my fellow student opera fans for 80p a time. I saw all the Verdi, Puccini and Mozart operas standing up and still love them. Everyone should have a chance to appreciate opera and it should be available to all.
Yes, many years ago the San Fransico Opera came to Los Angeles Shrine Audtorium during the summer. We spent our $50 yearly entertainment budget for cheap nosebleed seats,
nacamo17 Vesti la giubba is so moving. No matter who sings it! Pavarotti gets the highest marks from my untrained ears. It knocks me down every time I hear it.😭😭
A wonderful choice, nacamo17! As far as the opera "songs" (strangley, I always thought of them as "arie") are concerned, I wonder is it just me, or are there other people who think that "Signore, ascolta!" (Puccini's Turandot), deserves a place in top 10?
Having this play in the background as I sit of my opened window in the evening, listening to the sound of the rain. It's a new different feeling of peace
Thank you for posting, im 54 and just discovered Opera, i feel like ive missed so much but im in love with the world again. Beautiful music. I didn't know arias are what we call them too, thanks for sharing ❤
Thank you for this, my grandpa has this in vinyl, and I had the chance to listen but was to young to remember the name of this songs, I happened to stumble upon this list and my kids were with me and they love it. Classical music has grasped two children's attention... Cheers.
I think many of us could be recommending all night, but here I suggest a couple. I promise not to mention "La forza del ..." E lucevan le stelle (Tosca, Puccini) Che Gelida Manina (La bohème) Vesti la giubba (Pagliaccio, Leoncavallo) Si, pel ciel (Otello, Verdi) Signore, ascolta "Liu aria" o non piangere, liù (Turandot, Puccini)
You picked several that I thought might be in his ten. And I suspect you were about to add Pace...I would also throw in Ebben? Ne andrò lontana from La Wally and Anges Purs, a particular favourite, from Faust. And of course Chi Me Frena from Lucia di Lammermoor, probably the greatest sextet in opera. All of these, and yours, beat teh hell out of La Donna e Mobile and Habanera.
Truly grateful for your efforts!!! Thank you! (It's so difficult, almost impossible!, to choose one "favourite " in between all these masterpieces.. but the " Flower Duet" speaks to my heart the most.. :) )
BEAUTIFUL! I am a newcomer to opera, and I did not want this to end! I thought it would be easy to pick a favorite, but I can't even pick one from this small selection. Many thanks!
Search your areaa for clubs, doesn't have to be the level of Callas or Pavarotti... I promise you much pleasure in the real beauty of classical music & opera. You will also be very surprised at the antiquity of some of this genre Beethoven - Ode to Joy - next year 200 years old!!
Not sure how 356 ppl could dislike this but thank you for this post. Brought back memories of my childhood when I studied ballet. Much needed sound therapy in this chaotic year of 2020.
I think opera (to many people who aren't keen to music) is like bagpipes. You either love it or you hate it. There is no between. I find it may be somewhat of an acquired taste of music!
Thank you this is a super "easy listening" selection of exactly what you say it is; the "must know" opera songs where most of us start. For me, please swap No 1 and No 7. This Flower Duet is just superb and sits at No 1 for my ears.
You missed: La Wally - Ebben ne andrò lontana (Gustav Mahler said: "the best opera ever") Tosca - E lucevan le stelle (a podium piece) Barbiere di Siviglia - largo al factotum (WOOOOOOOOOOOOOW) Nabucco - Va pensiero (probably the best opera piece ever) Rigoletto - Bella figlia dell'amore (the best quartet in the History of music) L' Arlesiana - E' la solita storia del pastore (simply marvelous) Andrea Chenier - Un dì all'azzurro spazio (a very difficult piece) Norma - Casta Diva (heavenly) Tosca - Vissi d'arte (elegant) Rigoletto - Sì vendetta ... (terrible) Trovatore - Di quella pira Rigoletto - Caro nome Traviata - Amami Alfredo Adriana Lecouvreur - io son l'umile ancella Lucia di Lammermoor - Duet Pagliacci - vesti la giubba I also want to mentioned really difficult opera songs for connoisseurs La griselda - Agitata da due venti Barbiere di Siviglia - Una voce poco fa Cenerentola - non più mesta
All beautiful songs, I agree, unfortunately, it was a 'top ten' for debutantes to the genre, so I had to make some tough choices. That being said, I'm going to have to make a new video, maybe *Another* Top Ten "Must Know" Opera Songs :)
Nice list, but they're not "must know" pieces. Vesti la giubba, yeah. For Rigoletto, just La Donna e mobile. As for Seville, Cenerentola... they're not staged as often. Here in SF, we've done three Zauberflotes and 2 Rigolettos in the time that we've done 0 Cenerentola (past 8 or 9 years?).
I teach Music Appreciation in a college, and I always give them plenty of exposure to opera. My goal is to acquaint them with at least the "must-know" opera "songs. I always include your numbers 1-8, but would suggest some that might fit the category more closely for 9 and 10. I like Largo al Factotum from Barber of Seville, Lascia chio pianga from Handel's Rinaldo, Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix from Samson and Delilah. Several choruses also suggest themselves, but I have to go.
I can identify with you as a teacher of Music Appreciation within a Humanities course in an American -style college in Myanmar/Burma. This selection is invaluable, in these doubly dark times, but I too miss Casta Diva from your list. I can introduce Lascia chio pianga through the excerpt from the movie Farinelli, where students gawp at first but quickly are won over. Their favorite, and mine, is Un Bel Di...
We all have our favorites so I'll add a few more: Che Gelida Manina from La Boheme (Puccini), Steersman Leave Your Watch from The Flying Dutchman (Wagner), La Ci Darem la Mano, from Don Giovanni (Mozart), Au Fond du Temple Saint from the Pearl Fishers of Ceylon (Bizet), Liebestod, from Tristan und Isolde (Wagner).
Hi - I went to Catholic al girls boarding school and twice a year parents were invited for a night of music. And I remember being perhaps 13 years old and two Soprano's were invited to sing to us opera. And in a room of 800 people they could sing with such power it was fascinating to me as a child that every person could hear them. And they were Thin and they sung at the time the very popular floret duet. Where music teachers often went wrong for me back in the 90's was trying to make everyone like the same thing. Cool kids have a rep to take care off.
In so many ways. I was in Carmel when he sang and his father was there that night, and also sang. The crowd went wild! (and i hit the down thumb accidentally - soooo sorry!)
My favorite from this particular list is #8 Un Bel Di Vedremo - from Madame Butterfly - featuring Maria Callas. I love how it builds to such an incredible level of painful drama. Thank you for this treat
I was incredibly blessed to see Madama Butterfly live in the Teatro San Carlo; the most senior and grande Dame of Italian opera houses (a half century older than La Scala or La Fenice) in its special commemorative 250th anniversary year. I dont think Ive ever seen another full opera since.. I also got to see Swan Lake performed by the Kirov Ballet in the same theatre - a year I"ll never forget
Thank you so much for this mix! I've only just begun to appreciate the loveliness of Opera and I was wondering how I could get to have all these Arias in one place. I so appreciate your efforts, again Thank you!
You can find music you like and click on the Save button. You can add to a current playlist or create a new one. Then you can just keep adding music you like, and before you know it, you will get lost in this sublime art form.
When I listen to opera, I felt the dormant emotions, memory revisited me, like a dried well suddenly eject again fresh spring, something new and flesh flowing in my vain and every cell is rejuvenated. Something withered has come back to live, but it's so strong and pure, I can only tap on this delicious resource from time to time. I can not listen to it on a daily bases, it will be unbearable. They are crying our tears, when our eyes are dried up, they are singing for the purity of love and live that we can not reach in this life. Opera is one of the most beautiful things a human has succeeded in producing on earth.
It's a lovely compilation! I would have added Vogliatemi bene (Butterfly), Mi Chiamano Mimi (Boheme), Vesti la Giubba (Pagliacci), and Bess, You is My Woman Now (Porgy and Bess). But your list is divine!
For those arias/duets, these would be my picks - De Los Angeles/Di Stefano for the first, De Los Angeles, then Del Monaco and finally Price/Warfield for the last.
Porgy and Bess reminds me of Carmen Jones, both from when I was much much younger than now. Opera in English and learning what those wonderful songs were all about. 😊
@@xxsaruman82xx87 Surprised nobody has mentioned Au fond du Temple Saint from The Pearl Fishers, with Jussi Bjorling and Robert Merrill (surely the definitive version).
Bugs Bunny was my first introduction to opera, too! "Kill the Wabbit," and, of course, "Welcome to my shop, let me cut your mop, let me shave your crop, daiiiintily!"
Dam it I'm crying Not because of the pieces But because the opera House was not customized for digital recording and the live performance would be so much better
True, but think of it this way. Most of these opera houses around the world would not be within our reach anyway. With digital content, we can get a glimpse of performances that we never would otherwise.
@@irmar Agree completely. I am from Southeast Asia and I am very contented that I can enjoy these great works even from a screen. It still stirs the emotions! Watching live would be such a privilege.
Everyone with their special stories about music. Well, I just can say it's been about two years I found interest in Italian music, eight months since I started to learn how to sing, and now my life is full of the joy of singing beautiful music. This is one of the biggest joys in life, as the songs says, Vivo per Lei.
I was but a child when my appreciation for this glorious music began! I'm now 64 years old and I can't get along without it!! It touches me like no other music!
yes, me too I,m 83 years old.
@@witowa9716 damn how was life
This is a great cross-section of Opera. I was taken against my will to the fabulous Maria Callas's farewell performance in London 1973. They couldn't get me to leave at the end. What an experience and a blessing. The best introduction to Opera possible.
What a splendid luck you had! Forever changed, right?
Well said!
They couldn't get you to leave? Are you still there?
@@eddisstreet
@@eddisstreet Opera stole his heart and imprisoned it.
My Mother who was a teacher, Taught English Lit, French, Math and Piano. Exposure to the arts such as Opera, classical music, Theatre Stage, playing an instrument and other aspects of culture was a prime directive in my household growing up. And she wanted all diversities to be able to have full access and the tools to experience it. She passed away some time ago. And now I fully appreciate and understand what she always wanted my sister and I to use as steppingstones in life.
Keep what she tought you!
You are very lucky to have these lovingly provided gifts.
The world badly needs more people who understood what your mother did.
What a legacy to leave behind ❤
You were so damn LUCKY!!
My beloved husband introduced me to opera and I will be forever grateful to him. He died on March 26th, and I'm in tears listening to this. Thank you .
May you be comforted, so sorry for your loss ❤
💔
Сочувствую вам... наверное, ваш муж просто объелся груш ... Это судьба всех сладкоежек ! Учитесь на его ошибках...
I am so sorry for your loss. What a beautiful way he left you for your both to connect. I am sure when you listen to this he is also listening and feeling it along side with you! MUCH LOVE TO YOU MY DEAR.
Oh I am sorry didn´t notice the caption.. 😅
10. Una Furtiva Lagrima - from l'Elisir D'Amore - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (0:00)
9. Vide Cor Meum - from Hannibal - featuring Danielle Di Niese & Bruno Lazzaretti (4:48)
8. Un Bel Di Vedremo - from Madame Butterfly - featuring Maria Callas (8:40)
7. Duo des Fleurs (Flower Duet) - from Lakmé - featuring Sabine Devieilhe & Marianne Crebassa (13:20)
6. Libiamo, ne' lieti calici - from La Traviata - featuring Juan Diego Flórez & Diana Damrau (17:52)
5. La Donna è Mobile - from Rigoletto - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (21:01)
4. Der Hölle Rache kocht in meinem Herzen (Queen of the Night Aria) - from Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) - featuring Diana Damrau (23:48)
3. Habanera - from Carmen - featuring Anna Caterina Antonacci (26:50)
2. Nessun Dorma - from Turandot - featuring Luciano Pavarotti (28:59)
1. O Mio Babbino Caro - from Gianni Schicchi - featuring Maria Callas (32:05)
(Made it easier, so you just click the blue-marked time-stamps, and instantly go to the part you want.)
Not all heroes wear capes! Thank you!
Thank you ❤
Vide cor Meum -- It was featured in Kingdom of Heaven (watch the Director's cut for best impact) before Hannibal...but regardless, it rips my heart out of my chest whenever I hear it. When I die I want this played at my memorial. Yikes.. that's kind of grim...lol
Diana Damrau has great pitch and volume control, but her pronunciation and diction are atrocious. Many have done better.
Thanks, I was going to compile the list before I saw your's.
I was 28 when i started to appreciate opera. My father was very influential to my appreciation of this fantastic music. He's gone 10 years and I love it more than ever! Thanks Dad! ❤
My first foray into opera was the three tenors at about the same age, growing up in small rural towns in Canda with largely non-musically interested parents it took me a while to find I loved it. Sadly Opera as well as orchestral performance is waning, I definitely was born into the wrong era.
I was introduced to opera by my mother who was listening to the Met oprta on radio as a youngster. I did not like it much. Later in life, in my mid 50’s , i became a fan of opera, of all styles, including the most modern ones
My Dear Father especially loved the operas of Puccini. I started listening when I was about 10. Knowing my interest in art, he took me to see Tosca at about age 12. He passed away at age 72 in 1993. . .Can you imagine the thrill it was for me in 2012 to be visiting the Puccini Museum, located in the home where he composed most of the greatest arias. And who should be there that day, but Madame Puccini, his Granddaughter! In my rudimentary Italian I was able to say, "Mio Papa Sebastiano, tutto rispetto Puccini!!"
Dónde la puedo conseguir
Same as for my Dad. He always said, his kids would not appreciate opera or classical music until he’s gone. Unfortunately, he was right. It’s nice to have that influence tho. Miss u Dad!
I got to meet Pavarotti backstage in the costume room of the MET when my grandfather introduced me to him. I was 14 years old and completely in awe of his height and presence! ❤#opera #Pavarotti #NYC
I'm so jealous :) What a memory!!
I grew up in welsh valleys ,our home was filled with music---opera the favourite We had nothing ,but our home was filled with love, inspired by the music of arias being played on 78rpms. Wow that sound!!!!! Filled me with awe and appreciation for music Dad was tenor ,brother boy soprano me-----power like Bassey Neighbours genuinely loved our music days :) HAPPY DAYS AND TIMES
That was beautiful. Thank you for sharing that with us. You had a beautiful childhood.
Can't imagine a world without Music.
It was Tchaikovsky who once said, “Truly there would be reason to go mad were it not for music.”
And good music ! ❤️
Deaf people don’t have to
Ask an atheist, apparently they know
@@tenoremodernotecnicavecchi2151 They still feel rhythm ❤️
I love all types of music. It took me a little more than half my life to fully appreciate opera, not because I didn't like it but because I just didn't grow up with much opportunity to hear it. Well, other than on Bugs Bunny, lol. Now, I can honestly say that it is one of the purest forms of emotional expression that I've ever heard; and I dearly love it. Opera can take my breath away, make the hairs on my arms stand on goosebumps, move me to tears, and stir emotion within me like nothing else can. Just once in my life (preferably more), I would dearly love to see a live performance. Prima Donna, my gratitude to you for filling the last 34 minutes of my life with beauty. :)
I think kids should learn about opera the way I did. From a cross-dressing rabbit.
Thank you for such a moving comment. I am also lately discovering the beauty of Opera at 35 years old. I grew up in a culturally spartan environment and I sometimes find the stimulation of the modern world overwhelming but I am glad to have discovered the beauty of Opera (and also medieval music:)))
We all sail in the same boat 🙂
since my son began music lessons at young age, I follow his passion ever since.
I'm surprised that young people aren't getting exposed to opera in school. That was my first experience. I had a very good high school music teacher, Mr. Janna, who played all the great arias and got me hooked on the beauty of opera.
I guess the first thing you must know is that opera "songs" are called "arias" ;-)
@@baplummer7210 some people are so pedantic!
@@ianmacdonald6754 Nowt like a bit of pedantry; keeps us riff-raff on our toes!
Oh, please, don’t be so pedantic!
Exactly. If you're going to talk about opera then talk about opera. An aria is not a song. A song is an individual composition unless it's part of a song cycle. An aria is an integral part of an opera.
Thanks. I didn't know that.
Without music, I am dead. This gives me so much life. Thank you
RIP Luciano Pavarotti 1935-2007. The greatest tenor of all times.
Sorry - Jose Carreras
Enrico Caruso?
Franco Corelli? Mario del Monaco? Jussi Bjorling? @Richard Harris - Jose Carreras was excellent when young and was promising to be the next great tenor. But he wrecked his beautiful voice singing roles that weren't suited for his lyric voice. Of course, his illness didn't help either.
@@jewelmarkess i love how people say that pavarotti is the best no matter what, while there are better ones specially in heavier roles. I would add to your list the great giuseppe di stefano
@@giovannibettini2246 Yes, very true. True about Giuseppe di Stefano as well. The funniest thing about people who say how Pavarotti was the greatest is that they often aren't even able to recognize his voice or rather when it's not him. There are a couple of "fake" videos here with Largo al Factotum sung by Sherrill Milnes in a couple of them and Tito Gobbi in one other - by now maybe more, fakes tend to multiply here. One would imagine that it should be obvious to anybody with hearing slightly better than that of a fish that Pavarotti's tenor voice was very different from these baritones. Nevertheless, there are zillion comments about how Pavarotti was the greatest. There are also fakes with Callas picture and her name in the title on some songs and arias sung by different singers with very different voices, yet there are people there saying how she was the greatest who cannot hear it's not her.
I heard my first opera en utero, my parents would put the headphones on my moms belly. Now that they are both in heaven, I truly understand how tragically beautiful this genre of music is! Thank you mom and dad. RIP
hope you are doing okay sir..! stay safe.. and hopefully your parents are happy now in heaven ❣️
same here Amber, thats why we are so atach to opera!the neurociences showed it already! here my email to exchange , hugs from southamerica carito_89_9@hotmail.com :)
Listening to this music and reading your post.....I will do the same. GOD BLESS
Well it’s taken almost 30 years, to find that mysterious beautiful piece, I once heard in a Honda Accord commercial. For over three decades, I have searched opera databases, and could never find the tune.
But thanks to you I found it finally!!
It’s name is Mio Babbino Caro
Thank you ever so much!!
What a soul-wrencingly beautiful selection! I speak German fluently, and have taught myself Italian & French, so understanding the lyrics adds a special appreciation to the arias. What beautiful minds, to have composed such eternally beautiful melodies!
@marckdan2508 May I ask how did you teach yourself the other 2 languages? I am struggling in learning French on my own 🥲😔
@@zmahmoud1454 , I believe French is harder than the other Latin languages, maybe if you begin from one of the others like Italian or Spanish. Then the jump to French would be easier.
@@cccconyt Merci so much 😍😍 You make it feel so easy 🙂 I took notes of the tips you suggested. Next, I’ll search for tv shows and some books to read. I watch french songs with lyrics too on youtube. It helps too.
Thanks again 🦋🙏🏻💙
@@zmahmoud1454 I think French is the most difficult, grammatically. It was my best subject at school - a very long time ago. But French, Italian and Spanish are all "romance" languages derived from Latin. Once you master French, Italian or Spanish are easier. German (my second best subject at school) isn't as difficult as French. In my opinion anyway.
@@lesleyhalkett5675 I started learning it last year and is still an ongoing process. Its system is certainly different from English or Arabic (my native lang), yet I love how it sounds. One day, I will be sightseeing in France chatting in french as a native. Wish me luck 🙏🏻
My heart almost stopped when Callas sang the words" so as not to die at our first meeting ". The passion and power in her voice was phenomenal.
In Quebec, we long had a radio program that reviewwed new classical ewcordings. They p,ayed an aria sung by Kathleen Battle. The voice was pitch perfect, each note technically flawlwss. And yet, it left me cold. The critic on the radio too. He the. Played the same aria sung by Maria Callad. The pitch was not àways perfect. But. I was moved to tears.., i would rather get a passionate, heatfelt remditiin than an unemotional, technically perfect one
I feel exactly the same
Im young opera singer and its my second year in music school and this arias make my heart full of happines and joy even if some of them are sad story💫,let the music go thru your heart let the music lead you to that magic land said my teacher to me every time when we are having some competition and she hug me tight ❤️🩹🎼 let this remind you that these little things in life like support is important and that music is really a joy
Every time I listen to Madama Butterfly last song I am breaking down into tears. For sure she says what an heart betrayed by destiny and sliced into pieces is feeling when giving up a life which becomes an heavy toll to bring about.
I can't bear to listen to it. It reeks of racism and the treachery of the male. All others OK, not this one, sorry.
When I spend time in my bedroom depressed. I listen to Opera and it helps me imagine to as I am listen. I have always loved Opera since I have heard it for the first time and wish I could have known that world.
Hope you are well and feeling better, sometimes it takes time. Don't despair....stay with the music and God!
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Same here. I am listening to all of my favorite Arias at this hour. I am saddened and depressed. But slowly regaining the strength to endure the new day.
(Friday 7-19-2024)
RIP Mi abuela Carmen. Te amaré por siempre.
Ti amerò per sempre
Thank you for sharing such beautiful music. My aunt was a famous opera singer in Poland, Barbara Nieman, and her husband Stefan Rachoń, he was my favourite uncle, we spent a lot of summers together on Mazury, we were playing cards and listening to great music. I'm forever grateful to them for teaching me to appreciate the greatest sounds ever created.
My father heard Barbara Nieman live, singing Zofia in Halka...in Warsaw. He always cherished that performance. We shared a love of opera, and I was able to treat him to a live performance of my favourite tenor, Canada's Ben Heppner, not long before my father passed.
@@danutagajewski3330 Thank you for sharing, I'm so happy that my auntie's voice cherished your father, she is awesome, next time I will see her I will tell her about your dad.
@@danutagajewski3330 thanks
@@johanngambolputty8911 is thanks so
Cap
Impossible not to cry listening and missing Pavarotti. I missed him so much, thank you very much for sharing.
All of us sing with Creator/ Agape.. lucky is with you always
He was a Huge loss now wasn't he Sir?
I regret so much never seeing Pavarotti perform live. I was just a kid and didn’t know or appreciate opera when he was touring with the three tenors, or even when he did his final performance. His voice came from heaven.
th-cam.com/video/ZsLe5Ev2SUo/w-d-xo.html
Nessun Dorma gets me every time!
I don’t know anything about Opera songs. But I listen to it all the times. Relaxes me. I tried to learn but got confused even more. I wish I could understand it more. I am just thankful for these awesome people for their singing.
I love opera so much, it makes me feel a kind of safety and calm, and it makes my mind and soul fly above the clouds. It's an indescribable feeling 😍
😮 well said 😊
Exactly my feelings....the world would be a better place if more music like this was played in the radio ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😢😢😢😢😢😢😊😊😊😊😊😅😅😅😅😅
Why is it that there exists music you never get tired of hearing over and over? Maybe it's this thing called ART?
...that s called. ..having a soul that needs tobe filled with emotions
Ombretta
You don't tired of breathing too,so is that also ART
Yes, but it is also LIFE, which imitates art. Aesthetically pleasing to the soul. This is where the angels live (in arias).
LP
It’s FOOD for the soul . Our souls need to be uplifted. To exist on a higher plane than the banal everyday.
I can think of many arias that are “missing” from this list, but honestly, with all the sublimely beautiful music in opera, how can you choose just ten? This is a great collection. I love it! Thank you for putting it together.
Hey I'm just starting to get into opera what arias do u recommend
@@kristopherbagu5611 I don't know as many as other people, but a few that moved me are "Il faut partir" from _La Fille du Regiment_ I heard it first by Pretty Yende, but take a listen to the one by Beverly Sills live (Italy), perfection. Actually both versions are exquisite. "Mon Coeur S'Ouvre A Ta Voix" Olga Borodina and Jose Cura, "La Wally" Wilhelmina Wiggins Fernandez. Just to name a few.
I miss Rusalka, Carmen, Nabucco, Die Zauberflöte and many others.
A beautiful collection! But for me Maria Callas is head and shoulders above everyone, I don't believe that any other soprano has come anywhere near.
@@malakai651 Maybe Joan Sutherland...Renata Tebaldi...
And then I cried...felt the Italian vibe, heard Luciano's voice, and just couldn't help myself
This is what a hurting world needs, thank God and these beautiful talents for some classical music relief
10 - 0:00
9 - 4:48
8 - 8:40
7- 13:20
6 - 17:52
5 - 21:01
4 - 23:48
3 - 26:50
2 - 28:59
1 - 32:05
JoãoVictorOls thanks dawg
Ruber viridis Have you heard of Mozart?
Too bad Vide Cor Meum wasn’t really from an opera. It’s gorgeous.
Che bello!
Come ha fatto così?
Classical music is not the type that "calmly gets out of your way" when you want to work. Rather, it enhances the value of your work, and achievements. Thankful
Right!? People think classical is boring. Beethoven and Bach are crazy! Turandot is brutal! Debussy is dreamy yet challenging.
As a working class bloke brought up on the 'usual' music, my friends just can't understand my love for opera. I've seen all the greats at the Royal Opera House (I know someone who works there FREE TICKETS!!!!) This is a wonderful selection.
Wowww jealous of u
I think with Opera, you either adore it or hate it, but I've taken my indifferent best friend (metalhead/Paganini fan) to see 'Turandot' - he was bawling by Liu's suicide scene and went with me to every following performance, even bought a suit.
Personally, I could listen to Luciano Pavarotti sing Nessun Dorma every. day. for the rest of my life & never get tired of hearing him sing that aria. It’s the perfect song for a man to sing about overcoming all obstacles to obtain a desired goal. That said, I could listen to him sing pretty much anything in opera & never tire of it. Also, he seemed to love & appreciate his fans. Miss him! Otherwise, all of these are excellent choices!
Of course we miss him. But just think: we, among all generations, were given the opportunity to actually share this world with him for a short time. No one will ever be able to say that again, and that is no small thing.
This takes me back to the days when my local public radio hosted non english opera for three hours every weekend. No need to understand the words, the music is more than eloquent in communicating the moment.
the radio broadcasts never stopped-- check this out and if u don't get it locally, radsio from anywhere cah no be heard well andy where- radiolocator.com; www.metopera.org/season/radio/saturday-matinee-broadcasts/
Exactly.... someone in British Airways publicity department realised that years ago
I grew up in a family of musicians, classical music lovers and above all, a deep appreciation and love of great opera. Madame Butterfly - oh how to comment for the most beautiful aria in the world.Thank you so very much
Through the years these songs have penetrated with sweet but powerful strength the essence of my soul and make my heart vibrate every time I hear one of them. I am 86.
I am live in the Caribbean we do not listen to opera music at all but as I am getting older I open myself up to every genre but opera music awakens something in me I go to bed every night listening to opera music it speaks to my spirit and soul I absolutely love it ......
I'm in bed with COVID-19. This has lifted my mood. Thank you.
Get well soon
Stay positive, think happiness
Get well soon and enjoy the music. I just got over it myself, i think it will take some time before my voice returns properly.
magdalena steyn-durand I'm in bed as well but not with Covid-19. Blessings and a complete recovery to you.
Increase your Zinc and Vit-D! Look up Dr Vladimir Zelenko. Also Medcram which are Medical Lectures.
You chose well! All of these arias were classics I've heard since I was a little girl...Nessun Dorma is one of my all time favorites!
Hearing Maria Callas sing "O Mio Babbino Caro" has always given me chills. She really embodied it. Thank you for this. It brought me to tears. I feel soooo very fortunate to have been exposed to opera and classical music as a young child. Music is Everything! That is, Good music is Everything!
I’ve loved opera my whole life. I remember listening to Caruso as a very young child and being mesmerized by his glorious voice.
My favorite is Duo des Fleurs. I get emotional whenever I hear it. So pure. Thank you.
+1 ;-)
I so miss going to the opera right now, this gives me so much joy and sadness 🖤💙 and the tears are flowing. As much as I appreciate this, we could add so much more to this list I can’t name the top 10
It's amazing how a piece of music can bring such emotion.
Duo des Fleurs and O Mio Babbino Caro always make me shiver and the tears flow just from the pure joy and pleasure they evoke.
You know that feeling when you look into the eyes of someone you love, the world melts away, your heart races and you just want to lose yourself in that moment forever? That is how I feel every time I hear them. Such bliss ^_^
They are really awesome I play them when I wanna relax and sleep
This is a magnificient list, thank you!
Personally, I‘d add
Dio, che nell‘alma infondere amor“ (aka friendship duet) - Verdi, Don Carlo
Ombra mai fu - Handel, Xerxes
Lascia ch‘io pianga - Handel, Rinaldo
One of the many highlights of Don Giovanni (Mozart): A cena teco (Don G‘s end), la ci darem la mano, champagne aria etc…
But thank you - particularly for Callas! ❤
I want the arts back, I want to go see the opera, the ballet... my soul is dying.., sob
you go and get the arts back in your life and your soul will revive. just give it a try. hugs and kisses to you.
Ziggs Hiemerdinger, thank you.
The arts survive when society has spare money. Otherwise, join the queue. really good to listen to, this. thanks
@@lisetterodriguez368 Thank you Lisette you have manners and charm which in this age is art. Respect from a total stranger xxx
You hang in there dear one. We are so lucky to have these TH-cam selections. Enjoy the break and soon we will have something new...after all, this Covid stuff is the perfect backdrop for a nice new tragic , juicy and complex opera.. See you there.
My favorite is Madame Butterfly because her emotion pierces my heart.
Did you know that Butterfly's child has a name? Dolore(Sorrow in English)
Same...gets me in tears
@@MrSwifts31 No, I did not. Thank you
I'm 70 something with 5 kids and still I can barely make it through Madame Butterfly without a tear
As along term house music fan I have now embraced Opera. May be its age but this is truly inspirational and emotional. Magnificent.
So happy you picked Diana Damrau's Queen of the Night. IMO she conveys the elemental menace and rage of the scorned woman like no other. The score is truly challenging, and Diana's is IMO the definitive performance.
Damrau is my favorite too. So much rage and beauty
And Luciano--there will never be another like him.
Hi, all the arias are gorgeous. I am familiar with all of them except the second aria. My dad loved opera and sang a lot of the arias. I heard it as a baby. When I was a teenager I was a big rolling stones fan. Saw them in concert in the Hague and also in Edmonton. When dad was off work, he blasted opera on his stereo and as a typical teenager I went out with my friends till 3 in the morning. Needless to say I tried to cover up my ears with my pillows to no avail lol. Nessum Dorma my dad sang effortlessly. My dad passed away on September 10, 2021. His death was atrocious as he became "useless," to her and wanted all that he possessed. She did not want to take care of him and hastened and abused my dad. She overdosed him with morphine and who knows, fentanyl. She did everything in her power to keep me away from dad. But God made sure on the day, a Sunday I saw him. I went into shock at his condition. I had my ex husband with me and he went into shock as well. He said the man lying there gasping for air didn't even look like my dad. He immediately said something is fishy here, she is hiding something. I wish I could hire a criminal lawyer. Dad is not the first elderly man who got victimized. My sister and I do not get any answers to where dad is. It's all kept secret by her. All this came out and I am sorry. I just have to. Feel helpless and hopeless since there is no justice. But dad left me something really precious; the beautiful world of Opera. His favorites are Maestro Luciano Pavarotti (hope I spelled correctly) and the unforgettable Maria Callas. As tragic as opera can be about love and loss, we also lost my brother Brian to cancer on July 6th, 2021. I picked up Opera on you tube but sobbed and could not finish listening to the songs my dad sang. But today it gives me joy and peace. Dad did a duet in Holland and I asked her if I could have it. But no. He also has all the old fashion records of Operas. Anyways I am now immersed in the music. If I could only sing like dad, that is all I ever wanted. However so grateful to have good hearing and the privilege to listen to the magnificent world of Opera. My dad's obituary is known with his name Gerardus Jansen in Olds AB. My brother name is Brian Sandy Jansen RIP. Thank you for sharing the 10 famous Arias.
I’m so sorry about your dad…..may the music and Almighty God comfort you until you see him again. God Bless….
So sorry about your Dad. When my son died suddenly, all I could listen to was Opera…Pavarotti is the most beautiful tenor ever..I only listen to His music and cry, but find great peace after hearing him. Wish I could have seen him just once.
Listening to "Una Frutiga Lagrima" and remembering it's So beautiful. How i miss the beautiful opera live everyone dressed up listening quietly. Can't help the tears from flowing.
I know nothing about Opera, but I enjoy listening ever so often. Thank you!
Just incredible Callas at her best Makes me cry every time WOW !!!! JUST WOW!!!!!!
Credit and respect to all of them...artists, composers as well as orchestras . My favorite is Callas /Madame Butterfly.
Arias is music for the soul
I specifically went here to find Duo des Fleurs since I did not know the name but thought it must be in a top list. Thank you!
I know maybe five words of Italian. I am a 57 yo US southern born and bred female. My favorite music is Christian gospel, old time country, and old school rock/pop. However, for some inexplicable reason, Italian opera moves me to tears. Luciano Pavarotti, Andrea Bocelli, Enrico Caruso, Beniamino Gigli, etc., etc. The music, words, and singing delivery is just electrifying to me.
I'm a newcomer and my favorite is Un Bel Di Vedremo from Madame Butterfly (8:43). Madam Callas drew me into opera and now I can't leave having heard her at 12:38.
Many thanks for uploading this.
I love opera so much. Nothing else comes as close to the intensity of emotions than opera.
Exacto!!
Try sex with someone who loves you or the death/loss of that person, if you're looking for emotion. Bankrupty is probably pretty intense.
Humming chorus from Madama Butterfly ! Puccini!
I am new to opera. I heard 'O mio bambino caro' for the first time a few years ago sung by Rene' Fleming. It melted my heart, my eyes filled with tears and I had goosebumps. I will be taking some time to learn more.
Terry Sandford. Me too. I first heard it as THE music in the wonderful film, first half set in Florence, “Room With a View”, and loved it.
@@margaretlavender4418 Hey maybe we can help each other explore and learn!
Franco Corelli's Tokyo concert is on youtube. He has those polite Japanese acting like roaring Italians. See Corelli Parma Vittoria. He even had to sing an encore as the applause went on for 1/2 an hours after the end of Tosca. Unheard of before.
Babbino aka daddy, not bambino!
No aprendas, disfruta!!! ❤️🇪🇸
My parents took me to the Royal Opera House in London to see Carmen when I was 12. I thought it was wonderful. Several years later I used to stand in the gods with my fellow student opera fans for 80p a time. I saw all the Verdi, Puccini and Mozart operas standing up and still love them. Everyone should have a chance to appreciate opera and it should be available to all.
Yes, many years ago the San Fransico Opera came to Los Angeles Shrine Audtorium during the summer. We spent our $50 yearly entertainment budget for cheap nosebleed seats,
When I hear opera songs, it feels like a song in heaven
I would add two: E lucevan le stelle (Tosca, Puccini) and Vesti la giubba (Pagliaccio, Leoncavallo).
your`e right on the money
nacamo17 Vesti la giubba is so moving. No matter who sings it! Pavarotti gets the highest marks from my untrained ears. It knocks me down every time I hear it.😭😭
I totally agree.
A wonderful choice, nacamo17!
As far as the opera "songs" (strangley, I always thought of them as "arie") are concerned, I wonder is it just me, or are there other people who think that "Signore, ascolta!" (Puccini's Turandot), deserves a place in top 10?
E Luceven Le Stelle, for sure...
Having this play in the background as I sit of my opened window in the evening, listening to the sound of the rain. It's a new different feeling of peace
Thank you for posting, im 54 and just discovered Opera, i feel like ive missed so much but im in love with the world again. Beautiful music. I didn't know arias are what we call them too, thanks for sharing ❤
Thank you for sharing. Maria Callas voice is heartbreaking beautiful and unequalled 🙏
Esto es musica,tengo 15 años y me gusta esto y no hay muchas personas de mi edad q le guste esto que si es arte💜
We should get together
Enhorabuena...es innato
muchacho, deja de verte el ombligo.
yo-mi-me-conmigo.
Hay mas que tu piensas!
Si to vas a una escuela de opera, puedes conocer muchas personas de tu edad que le gustan al opera! Y que estudian opera.
Thank you for this, my grandpa has this in vinyl, and I had the chance to listen but was to young to remember the name of this songs, I happened to stumble upon this list and my kids were with me and they love it. Classical music has grasped two children's attention...
Cheers.
I think many of us could be recommending all night, but here I suggest a couple.
I promise not to mention "La forza del ..."
E lucevan le stelle (Tosca, Puccini)
Che Gelida Manina (La bohème)
Vesti la giubba (Pagliaccio, Leoncavallo)
Si, pel ciel (Otello, Verdi)
Signore, ascolta "Liu aria" o non piangere, liù (Turandot, Puccini)
You picked several that I thought might be in his ten. And I suspect you were about to add Pace...I would also throw in Ebben? Ne andrò lontana from La Wally and Anges Purs, a particular favourite, from Faust. And of course Chi Me Frena from Lucia di Lammermoor, probably the greatest sextet in opera. All of these, and yours, beat teh hell out of La Donna e Mobile and Habanera.
Which was my favourite? Each was more unutterably beautiful than the one before it. How can one choose a favourite?
They are ALL my favourite.
Truly grateful for your efforts!!! Thank you! (It's so difficult, almost impossible!, to choose one "favourite " in between all these masterpieces.. but the " Flower Duet" speaks to my heart the most.. :) )
Благодаря за това, което правите в тези времена на изолираност и липса на жива музика. С обич от България!
The Opera is quite different and special. Thank you for these masterpieces that make us feel alive.
BEAUTIFUL! I am a newcomer to opera, and I did not want this to end! I thought it would be easy to pick a favorite, but I can't even pick one from this small selection. Many thanks!
Search your areaa for clubs, doesn't have to be the level of Callas or Pavarotti... I promise you much pleasure in the real beauty of classical music & opera.
You will also be very surprised at the antiquity of some of this genre
Beethoven - Ode to Joy - next year 200 years old!!
music...no its food for the soul ! What an incredible gift G-d gave to the composers and music directors
Unimaginable beauty and lofty human aspirations to the highest level of civility.
i swear this selection is better than any new music
Not sure how 356 ppl could dislike this but thank you for this post. Brought back memories of my childhood when I studied ballet. Much needed sound therapy in this chaotic year of 2020.
I think opera (to many people who aren't keen to music) is like bagpipes. You either love it or you hate it. There is no between. I find it may be somewhat of an acquired taste of music!
Dislike because this list is full of biases.
@@stansmith4054 : I love bagpipes ! :))
@@brooksequine7621 I do not yet I love to hear opera .
@@stansmith4054 : My father loved Opera but as his hearing went away , so did his enjoyment ...
I sincerely hope that this does not happen to me -
Online learning pre Med learning with this in the background is the peace and love I have been searching for. Thanks. “Respect” , as we Sicilians say.
I'm sure you know the relationship between medicine and music. Good luck.
Thank you this is a super "easy listening" selection of exactly what you say it is; the "must know" opera songs where most of us start. For me, please swap No 1 and No 7. This Flower Duet is just superb and sits at No 1 for my ears.
You missed:
La Wally - Ebben ne andrò lontana (Gustav Mahler said: "the best opera ever")
Tosca - E lucevan le stelle (a podium piece)
Barbiere di Siviglia - largo al factotum (WOOOOOOOOOOOOOW)
Nabucco - Va pensiero (probably the best opera piece ever)
Rigoletto - Bella figlia dell'amore (the best quartet in the History of music)
L' Arlesiana - E' la solita storia del pastore (simply marvelous)
Andrea Chenier - Un dì all'azzurro spazio (a very difficult piece)
Norma - Casta Diva (heavenly)
Tosca - Vissi d'arte (elegant)
Rigoletto - Sì vendetta ... (terrible)
Trovatore - Di quella pira
Rigoletto - Caro nome
Traviata - Amami Alfredo
Adriana Lecouvreur - io son l'umile ancella
Lucia di Lammermoor - Duet
Pagliacci - vesti la giubba
I also want to mentioned really difficult opera songs for connoisseurs
La griselda - Agitata da due venti
Barbiere di Siviglia - Una voce poco fa
Cenerentola - non più mesta
All beautiful songs, I agree, unfortunately, it was a 'top ten' for debutantes to the genre, so I had to make some tough choices. That being said, I'm going to have to make a new video, maybe *Another* Top Ten "Must Know" Opera Songs :)
Great list of recommendations
Nice list, but they're not "must know" pieces. Vesti la giubba, yeah. For Rigoletto, just La Donna e mobile. As for Seville, Cenerentola... they're not staged as often. Here in SF, we've done three Zauberflotes and 2 Rigolettos in the time that we've done 0 Cenerentola (past 8 or 9 years?).
Ooh, what about the sextet from Lucia? That is one of the most famous pieces!
@@SilfredoSerrano Wonderful!
I teach Music Appreciation in a college, and I always give them plenty of exposure to opera. My goal is to acquaint them with at least the "must-know" opera "songs. I always include your numbers 1-8, but would suggest some that might fit the category more closely for 9 and 10. I like Largo al Factotum from Barber of Seville, Lascia chio pianga from Handel's Rinaldo, Mon coeur s'ouvre à ta voix from Samson and Delilah. Several choruses also suggest themselves, but I have to go.
I can identify with you as a teacher of Music Appreciation within a Humanities course in an American -style college in Myanmar/Burma. This selection is invaluable, in these doubly dark times, but I too miss Casta Diva from your list. I can introduce Lascia chio pianga through the excerpt from the movie Farinelli, where students gawp at first but quickly are won over. Their favorite, and mine, is Un Bel Di...
We all have our favorites so I'll add a few more: Che Gelida Manina from La Boheme (Puccini), Steersman Leave Your Watch from The Flying Dutchman (Wagner), La Ci Darem la Mano, from Don Giovanni (Mozart), Au Fond du Temple Saint from the Pearl Fishers of Ceylon (Bizet), Liebestod, from Tristan und Isolde (Wagner).
Hi - I went to Catholic al girls boarding school and twice a year parents were invited for a night of music. And I remember being perhaps 13 years old and two Soprano's were invited to sing to us opera. And in a room of 800 people they could sing with such power it was fascinating to me as a child that every person could hear them. And they were Thin and they sung at the time the very popular floret duet. Where music teachers often went wrong for me back in the 90's was trying to make everyone like the same thing. Cool kids have a rep to take care off.
Listen to Indian raag yaman
They are more cultural and beautiful
Pavarotti was a phenomenon wasn't he
J'adore Pavorotti! Truly, a Gift from above!! Merci, Luciano! 💋
In so many ways. I was in Carmel when he sang and his father was there that night, and also sang. The crowd went wild! (and i hit the down thumb accidentally - soooo sorry!)
My favorite from this particular list is #8 Un Bel Di Vedremo - from Madame Butterfly - featuring Maria Callas. I love how it builds to such an incredible level of painful drama. Thank you for this treat
Not in the list, but Vissi d'arte (Tosca) with Callas is heart-breaking in the most highest (I know it's wrong, but seemed sooo right ...) style!
I was incredibly blessed to see Madama Butterfly live in the Teatro San Carlo; the most senior and grande Dame of Italian opera houses (a half century older than La Scala or La Fenice) in its special commemorative 250th anniversary year. I dont think Ive ever seen another full opera since.. I also got to see Swan Lake performed by the Kirov Ballet in the same theatre - a year I"ll never forget
merci merci pour ce moment d'évasion... vraiment on se sent porté loin très loin avec ces airs exceptionnels ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
What a beautiful set of masterpieces! It's so hard to say which are better than others, but this is a great set of opera songs. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you so much for this mix! I've only just begun to appreciate the loveliness of Opera and I was wondering how I could get to have all these Arias in one place. I so appreciate your efforts, again Thank you!
You can find music you like and click on the Save button. You can add to a current playlist or create a new one. Then you can just keep adding music you like, and before you know it, you will get lost in this sublime art form.
May I reccommend
CECILIA BARTOLLI.
You will be spellbound.
So so glad you used Sabine and Marianne for the Flower Duet, the best version by far
The notes are so magnificent....touches the soul
Even though I don’t understand Italian, I feel the emotions. That’s the universal language of music.
all immortal arias, brilliantly performed by legendary opera singers. simply the best. Thank you for uploading this magical music. ☘💚
When I listen to opera, I felt the dormant emotions, memory revisited me, like a dried well suddenly eject again fresh spring, something new and flesh flowing in my vain and every cell is rejuvenated. Something withered has come back to live, but it's so strong and pure, I can only tap on this delicious resource from time to time. I can not listen to it on a daily bases, it will be unbearable. They are crying our tears, when our eyes are dried up, they are singing for the purity of love and live that we can not reach in this life. Opera is one of the most beautiful things a human has succeeded in producing on earth.
It's a lovely compilation! I would have added Vogliatemi bene (Butterfly), Mi Chiamano Mimi (Boheme), Vesti la Giubba (Pagliacci), and Bess, You is My Woman Now (Porgy and Bess). But your list is divine!
For those arias/duets, these would be my picks - De Los Angeles/Di Stefano for the first, De Los Angeles, then Del Monaco and finally Price/Warfield for the last.
Porgy and Bess reminds me of Carmen Jones, both from when I was much much younger than now. Opera in English and learning what those wonderful songs were all about. 😊
@@xxsaruman82xx87 Surprised nobody has mentioned Au fond du Temple Saint from The Pearl Fishers, with Jussi Bjorling and Robert Merrill (surely the definitive version).
As a clubber/raver/football lad of a certain vintage I genuinely find this selection amazing believe it or not. Thank you ❤️
Look up on here James Brown with Pavarotti (This is a man's world).
I love all them all! Thank you for this beautiful Opera video. Luciano Pavarotti always takes me to another level.
First exposure to opera was a Bugs Bunny cartoon. I'll never forget Elmer Fudd chasing Bugs and singing "Kill the Wabbit"!!
Bugs Bunny was my first introduction to opera, too! "Kill the Wabbit," and, of course, "Welcome to my shop, let me cut your mop, let me shave your crop, daiiiintily!"
Leopold!
How fitting to conclude with Maria Callas.
I'm so happy to have found this. It's spectacular and it made my spirit soar! Thank you!
How glorious is this music, it heals ones soul.
Dam it I'm crying
Not because of the pieces
But because the opera House was not customized for digital recording and the live performance would be so much better
True, but think of it this way. Most of these opera houses around the world would not be within our reach anyway. With digital content, we can get a glimpse of performances that we never would otherwise.
@@irmar Agree completely. I am from Southeast Asia and I am very contented that I can enjoy these great works even from a screen. It still stirs the emotions! Watching live would be such a privilege.
Everyone with their special stories about music. Well, I just can say it's been about two years I found interest in Italian music, eight months since I started to learn how to sing, and now my life is full of the joy of singing beautiful music. This is one of the biggest joys in life, as the songs says, Vivo per Lei.
For those who haven't heard yet, google up Mario Lanza: Nessun Dorma. Happy listening.
Mark Reizen the Gremin aria. Onegin. This one has always stirred a reaction in me