Remarkably good, especially after her surgery and years of alcoholism. No, it wasn’t as great as her early renditions, but Rysanek (who the queens worship) never sang this well in her best days. She spent her time looking for the correct pitch and places to scream for melodrama. Voigt had 20 years of great singing.
It's funny how her high note at the end is genuinely good. But all the rest, compared to before the weight change, are altered. Vocal teacher say the middle rage is the most important. Sutherland said that. Wagner requires a steady medium to top the high notes on. I wonder : Can a vocal coaching fix that? Pilates? Breathing exercises? The met is a prestigious opera how with experts. I'm sad such a fantastic voice just can't go back up the hill...
@@garygreen3845 She said just this with a personal comment in the box below one of her post-surgery clips, and actually admitted she didn’t sound as good as before, but felt 100 times better.
@@BellaFirenze Pretty rude of you. Ms. Voigt struggled after she rapidly lost weight to produce the same sound she did when she was heavy....but she never "lost" her voice.
@@baritonebynight True. Voigt said in an interview that her weight was her "push against" with her support of breath, and that it's difficult to support now that the weight has gone.
Linda apresentação. Magnífica.Bravo!de São Paulo.Brasil.
Remarkably good, especially after her surgery and years of alcoholism. No, it wasn’t as great as her early renditions, but Rysanek (who the queens worship) never sang this well in her best days. She spent her time looking for the correct pitch and places to scream for melodrama. Voigt had 20 years of great singing.
It's funny how her high note at the end is genuinely good. But all the rest, compared to before the weight change, are altered. Vocal teacher say the middle rage is the most important. Sutherland said that. Wagner requires a steady medium to top the high notes on. I wonder : Can a vocal coaching fix that? Pilates? Breathing exercises? The met is a prestigious opera how with experts. I'm sad such a fantastic voice just can't go back up the hill...
Sad that she was reduced to this at the end. I wonder if she ever regrets that surgery. It was downhill fast after it.
Maybe she talk about that in her book, "Call Me Debbie: True Confessions of a Down-to-Earth Diva ".
Why would she regret it? I doubt singing is all that she has in her life.
@@oohforf6375 Better to have retired then rather than suffer some of the savage reviews she got.
Or, maybe the surgery kept her alive... Ever think of that?
@@garygreen3845 She said just this with a personal comment in the box below one of her post-surgery clips, and actually admitted she didn’t sound as good as before, but felt 100 times better.
Ooh, the Joy -- when music was music, and women real!
When was this
After she lost her voice.
@@BellaFirenze Pretty rude of you. Ms. Voigt struggled after she rapidly lost weight to produce the same sound she did when she was heavy....but she never "lost" her voice.
@@baritonebynight True. Voigt said in an interview that her weight was her "push against" with her support of breath, and that it's difficult to support now that the weight has gone.
@@baritonebynight if you can’t hear how horrid she sounds, then you need to clean your ears. she sounds like she’s 90 years old.
Horror
It sounds ..strange ...like old
Well, we all know this: th-cam.com/video/-sSjRvaty0U/w-d-xo.html
It is like from a parallel universe. Very sad.
just terrible. should stop making a fool of herself
This is like nails on chalkboard
Ok. I won't be sharing the entire concert with you.
@@asdfopera5210 oh my. Please post the entire concert. I would love to see it please :)
Wow, she sounds pretty good.