Giovanni Martinelli - Meco all' altar di Venere (Live)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 พ.ย. 2024
- This week’s edition of Dead Tenors’ Society examines some of the rarest recordings of Giovanni Martinelli (1885-1969). This beloved tenor was born in Montagnana in the province of Padova, Martinelli’s first musical experiences were as a clarinet player in a military band. His voice was discovered during his military service, however, and he began studies with Giuseppe Mandolini in Milan. His operatic debut came about a month before his 23rd birthday when he sang the Messenger in Verdi’s Aïda at his hometown theater, the Teatro Sociale. Realizing that further study was required, Martinelli withdrew to the voice studio where he worked intensely for the next two years. He re-emerged for a second, official debut on December 29, 1910 as Verdi’s Ernani at the Teatro dal Verme in Milan. His success was phenomenal and the young tenor quickly went on to make debuts in the important theaters of Naples, Rome, London and Paris.
On November 18, 1913, Martinelli made his Met debut as Cavaradossi in Tosca. He remained a stalwart member of the company for the next 32 consecutive seasons, singing well over 900 performances of 36 diverse roles including Radames in Aïda, Riccardo in Un Ballo in Maschera, Don Alvaro in La Forza del Destino, Manrico in Il Trovatore, Gabriele in Simon Boccanegra, Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor, Vasco da Gama in L’Africaine, Enzo in La Gioconda, Dick Johnson in La Fanciulla del West, des Grieux in Manon Lescaut, Rodolfo in La Bohème, Calaf in Turandot, Canio in Pagliacci, the title role in Andrea Chénier, Loris in Fedora, Pollione in Norma, the title role in Samson et Dalila, Arnold in Guillaume Tell, Jean of Leyden in Le Prophète, Raoul in Les Huguenots, the title role in Gounod’s Faust, Gérald in Lakmé, Don José in Carmen, Eléazar in La Juive and, probably his greatest triumph, the title role in Verdi’s Otello. During his tenure at the Met, Martinelli sang the world premieres of Giordano’s Madame Sans-Gêne (Lefêbvre), Granados’ Goyescas (Fernando), as well as the Met premieres of Weber’s Oberon (Huon), Wolf-Ferrari’s I Gioielli della Madonna (Gennaro) and Verdi’s Don Carlo (in the title role). In addition, Martinelli sang Paolo in the U.S. premiere of Zandonai’s Francesca da Rimini and Lensky in the U.S. stage premiere of Yevgeny Onegin (in Italian!).
Martinelli’s final performance at the Met in a complete role was as Pollione in Bellini’s Norma on March 8, 1945 (the tenor participated in a gala on the Met stage the following year). The 59-year-old singer continued to perform throughout the U.S. and appeared extensively on radio and, later, television. Following a final Samson et Dalila in Philadelphia in 1950, Martinelli, now in his 65th year, retired from the stage.
Although he was no longer actively performing, the veteran tenor was still very much in evidence on the New York music scene. He regularly attended performances at his old stamping grounds, the Met, and was a frequent panel guest on the Metropolitan Opera Quiz broadcasts. Martinelli remained busy well into his eighties, coaching young singers, giving lectures and masterclasses, making new recordings and even appearing as the Emperor in a Seattle production of Turandot at age 81! The ever-youthful artist enjoyed robust health until the very final days of his life. It was a rupture of an aortic aneurism that brought the 83-year-old Martinelli’s life to a sudden and unexpected end on February 2, 1969.
Giovanni Martinelli’s voice is a hard one to classify. He’s been referred to as a dramatic tenor, a spinto, a lirico-spinto, a spinto-dramatic…nobody seems to be able to make up his mind as to exactly what type of voice the man possessed. In all honesty, I think that Martinelli was a combination of ALL these different tenorial sub-categories at different periods of his career. Also, I believe that Martinelli adapted the weight of his voice to suit the role he was singing at the time. After all, the voice of Edgardo is NOT the voice of Samson. Regardless of which type of tenor Martinelli was, he was certainly unique…there is absolutely no mistaking him for any other tenor. After hearing one or two notes, you KNOW that you are listening to the voice of Giovanni Martinelli.
Martinelli had an extraordinarily long recording career…56 years. His commercial discs were made for Edison, HMV and Victor between 1912 and 1939 and broadcast transcriptions of performances and private recordings continued throughout the 1940s, ‘50s and ‘60s. Here, Martinelli sings "Meco all'altar di Venere; Me protegge, me difende" from Bellini's Norma. This recording was made during a concert performance in the late 1930s.
I've not been a Martinelli fan and a lot of his recordings leave me flat. This, however was just stunning. Incredible visceral singing like I had not heard from him before.
Martinelli was an aristocrat among tenors, authoritative with emotional interpretation. A wonderful recording.
martinelli war einer der ganz grossen Tenöre nach dem Tode von carusoseine stimme gegeistert auch heute noch jeden Liebhaber schöner stimmen
Glorious! What a recording.
STRAORDINARIO TIMBRO FANTASTICO
That voice is a silver trumpet with the bellows of a Cathedral organ behind it!
Great singer! One of the best ever!
Non a caso dopo la morte di Caruso,il Met preferì Martinelli
Awesome
IHN HÖREN ZU DÜRFEN IST IMMER WIEDER EIN VERGNÜGEN.EINER DER BESTEN ÜBERHAUPT
Try as I might, this is one voice I have warmed to.
This comment makes no sense.
How many singers performed when both Caruso and the current singer Placido Domingo performed ? Think about it !!!!
GRANDE Martinelli!!!
Wow, so grand!
without the high C still sounds thrilling and exciting
@@mariofilippeschi4855 he is a all around guy, glorious!!!
@@mariofilippeschi4855 The high C may be an interpolation, but I'm not sure. At least as a young tenor Martinelli never transposed.
@@sugarbist It's written but many tenors omitted it. Merli, Albani, Filippeschi, Corelli and Craig are the ones who sang it.
@@BaroneVitellioScarpia1 Thank you
A stentorian sound. A terrific tenor.
and a very unique voice type that simply can't categorize accurately.
@@mariofilippeschi4855 Sometimes categorizations get tricky
@@mariofilippeschi4855 idk I'd probably stay safe by putting him in Spinto tenor ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Unico
I MENTORI
Turning the treble down a bit
would have helped
He sings the final high note on the "e" vowel: bat-TEEEEE-ro
Ваня, конечно, давится и делает это по своему очаровательно.
40лет пел в мет, а тогда дураков не держали, Мартинелли-легенда
his high note at 3:20 sounds like Angelo Loferese
@@truesoundchris Emission i should say. Trumpet like.
No, he's much better than Loforese.
Holy shit!
NO HIGH C ?
Go to shit, it doesn't matter if there's a high C or not, I've never even heard a high C in this aria