I had forgotten how thrilling Jerry's voice was to listen to. The ring in that top part of his voice absolutely sent goosebumps up and down my spine. Magnificent!
LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE. While he doesn’t move me as much in the 90’s and beyond, the 80’s version of Jerry Hadley’s voice and style move me so much. His open and visceral, yet still beautifully controlled vocal production is among the most exciting (to me) in the history of tenors. His technical approach here, and mostly on the high notes, remind me also of the great Carreras’s singing in the 70’s, before his voice started to harden too.
Unfortunately in the 90's he started changing what he was taught originally by my teacher who built his voice. So I agree with you. This recording is when he was trained by my teacher and was coaching with him the music he was singing.
Silver Singing Method I spoke with Jerry once about twenty years ago over email. He was so gracious and I asked him some questions about singing and asked him if he was still singing Rodolfo in La Boheme. He told me, in so many words, he shelved it because he always felt like there was a certain level of imitation he had to use which he was never completely comfortable with in that rep and which was also wearing out his voice. So he switched to lighter rep which he felt allowed him to open up more and be more natural. I have also known tenors who sing professionally but choose lower tessitura material because they feel the higher rep (which they actually sound better in) is too much work. Seems like an attitude thing. Some have the attitude for it and some don’t. Nevertheless, I cherish his early stuff and even some of his crossover. He was a great one for sure!
@@aarontenor interesting what you're saying... because he was still (or again?) singing La Bohème in '99 and gradually started adding heavier rep (Janacek, Britten, Strauss...) around the same period. He also talked about having to 'please a teacher' when singing, rather than being able to 'open up', perhaps that also relates to this...
It brought tears to my eyes... Jerry Hadley will be my favourite American tenor of all time. And Alan Titus is so sublime in his delivery. Thank you for making my day with this posting.
They have reached the cosmos 💐 Spectacular, sublime voices of Jerry Hadley and Alan Titus 💕 The world is very sad without him. My absolutely most beloved Tenor of all time 💝💜💚💛💙💗
Hadley , such a good voice, thrilling, well modulated, free,good technique, legato, so heartfelt.... he went too young and was so underrated...Alan Titus is so good too.
What you do not know, is that Jerry was engaged to a woman in the business, who so undermined his career and utterly defeated him with all manner of manipulation, that he fell into a deep depression and shot himself in the head....thereby ending the expression of a great talent.
OMG! What a voice Jerry Hadley had. So underrated. His timber reminds me a bit of Fritz Wunderlich. Both singers' singers and both died much too young. Absolutely gorgeous!
Thank you. Nothing I can add to what has been already commented, except who couldn't immediately fall in love with this duet. It has a similar effect on me as The Flower Duet.
JH was, with doubt, one of the finest singers. The very sad ending to his life is one thing but what he left behind in music is very special. Very special. Thank you JH. I had a recording of AT singing Dido and Aeneas, I think it was. I loved the warmth of his voice.
So nice and smooth both!!!, this I thougth was a duet for a ligth-tenor, but Hadley does it so wonderfully, that I have to re-made my mind about it,BRAVO!!!
BRAVISSIMO! Rest in Peace Jerry Hadley. I was privileged to meet you after a service at Emanuel Lutheran Church, Manchester, CT just before you would begin your tenure at NY City Opera. You sang an awesome performance of Malotte's Lord's Prayer that prompted me to really learn how to sing. I found a good teacher at Hartt School of Music and learned an excellent vocal technique. Thank you!
Ambas voces maravillosas. De generoso color, brillo, entrega, autenticidad. La voz de Hadley, siempre hermosa, de personalidad distinguida, tan acertado y efectivo en diferentes estilos. Lírica y pura. Canta con aquello que se dice fuego sagrado. Y Titus con esa voz que marca plenitud. Hermosa forma de cantar. Y bellísima la dirección orquestal. Una de las mejores versiones (muy bella la de Hadley con Hampson!). Bravo.
Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) is an opera in three acts by the French composer Georges Bizet, to a libretto by Eugène Cormon and Michel Carré. It was premiered on 30 September 1863 in Paris.
Thank you for posting this. While I cannot recall a bad rendition of this number, this may be the best of them all. I was fortunate to hear them do it live in 1986. Hadley was in his prime well before the nerves struck. I also saw Titus as the Celebrant in Mass that opened the Kennedy Center-very memorable. A flashy but hard part for a young Titus, who did well not to ruin his voice trying to make everyone happy.
If you watch the youtube video of him singing in LA the Maria di Rohan, which is on my channel, you can read exactly what he said. This is an ongoing problem in opera that the public seems to be unaware of. These conductors and directors do not allow people to develop and sing full voice any longer. That is why the voices are all small. Hadley was also being stifled. They want you to pull off your voice and sing lightly. That is why the art is in decline. No voices like those of the past.
This is another segment of an unusually fine Pavarotti Plus program with some unusually fine young talent, Jerry Hadley and Alan Titus among them. I have never found a good quality recording of the entire program.
Yes, he was my teacher's student. My teacher built his voice from the beginning. Now I teach this technique. My teacher passed away 1 year ago. Hadley was in great voice here.
I remember seeing a clip or 2 on YT about Hadley and his training under LoMonaco What brilliant singers with great techniques. Thanks for sharing this awesome pairing.
Exquisite through and through. I am a Jerry Hadley inconditional but I'll say this, I regret Francisco Araiza and Thomas Allen (my two other great favorites!) didn't sing that duet together - unless I'm mistaken. One can dream. ;)
I'd have to disagree. My favorite is the version by Jussi Bjorling and Robert Merrill. The version with Luciano Pavarotti and Nicolai Ghiaurov is also excellent, notably for the performance by Ghiaurov. There is also a version with Fritz Wunderlich and Hermann Prey that is very good too.
The growth in Titus' voice over the years is very interesting. As you say, he started out as almost a baritenor (in Bernstein's Mass). In the 2000s, he successfully had moved into Wagnerian Heldenbariton roles - Dutchman and Wotan (even at Bayreuth). Quite a change (and done very successfully as well)!
Jerry Hadley is the gold standard for this duet. No one has ever it better. Alan Titus does nothing for me. Even though he is a bass, I would have liked to have heard Jerry sing this with Jerome Hines.
Hines's voice was way too heavy and dark for this. The only bass I've ever heard sing the baritone part in this duet and sing it well is Nicolai Ghiaurov, in a version with Pavarotti. Pavarotti isn't at his best, but Ghiaurov is wonderful.
There is a version with Terfel. Alas, the tenor is Bocelli and predictably he's terrible. Also, the performance had to be heavily amplified so that Bocelli could be heard. The amplification distorts Terfel's voice badly. I'd love to hear Terfel sing this with an actual operatic tenor.
What did he mean that he was not allowed to sing with his full voice? That sounds so weird. His voice is so gorgeous here. I just listened to (on youtube) Une Furtiva Lagrima he did in concert and a Che Gelida Manina (youtube as well) and found both of them surprisingly sterile, but he is emoting nicely. So beautiful.
Great interpretation of this two wonderful artists. I am always very impressed by the Jerry Hadley emision (as Mrcafiero told me once, he is in all the mask, without stepping too much in any point at all..no aiming point.GREAT!!!). Thanks for sharing this divine duett.BRAVOOOO!!!!
Brilliant. Titus might have been better then any of the baritones currently singing at the Met. Hadley, easily one of the greatest American tenors, whose career was tragically shortened by issues in his personal life.
It's hard to write about Hadley - his story is so tragic. So I'll tell a story about Titus. I was born in Washington DC but I wisely got out to come to California. Then I went back for grad school just as the Kennedy center was opening I didn't see Titus in Bernstein's 'Mass' but he was asked back to the opera House to sing Nero in 'LIncoranattione di Popea'. He was young then and in good shape. I know because he appeared mostly nude. All he wore was a gold lame jock strap. My wife and I were in the front row. It was embarrassing.
This Recording is as good as My old Enrico Caruso Record that was Made on Tuesday 24th March 1907 and each singer compliments each other and the Conducter looks like the famous Arturo Toscanini who died in January 1957 just two Month's before his 90th Birthday
How exactly were his performances inconsistent? He sang from the early 80's into the early 90's on a consistently high level. He did speak of how the powers that be would not allow him to sing with his full voice much of the time. That probably depressed him. To be able to sing so amazingly well and to be blocked is ridiculous. I have no clue what you mean by inconsistent though.
Very good sonority in the flute. Does anyone know who is playing? I think it might be Trudy Kane. Sounds like Tom Nyfenger. If it was Trudy, great job!
Alan Titus was a wonderful Figaro in NY City’s Barber with Beverly Sills in the late 70s, available on You Tube. That production introduced the world to Samuel Ramey, as a devastatingly fabulous Basilio. Not to take anything away from Hadley, here. Just wanted to alert others to Titus & early Ramey
I only had great memories of Hadley. I watched him singing Bernstein's Candide in 1990 and he was just great. Then I didn't hear much of him until his suicide intent and then his sad death. Now, looking at some of his videos, I notice a decadence in his singing. It's difficult to know if his depression was caused by his lack of success or his lack of success was the result of inconsistent performance due to his depression. Only him and God know, I guess.
This is definitely a fine performance of this aria. But "most beautiful"? Take a listen to Björling's and Merrill's duet from 1950 (also posted here on TH-cam) before you make up your mind.
yes. agree, Jussi's work is powerful, deeply felt, but this is so clean youthful fine tuned 2 pipes. Equally pure gold...the recording is unfair to be compared either.
Criminal and premeditated. As I noted above, what you do not know, is that Jerry was engaged to a woman in the business, who so undermined his career and utterly defeated him with all manner of manipulation, that he fell into a deep depression and shot himself in the head....thereby ending the expression of a great talent. To think, I used to call her "friend."
Holy Voice Box. Both are incredible powerhouses...wish Jerry Hadley would of followed that P on the score though. Good lord, he blew out the whole first row. LOL.
Wow. That's insane! It's a tragedy for the voice. When you have to squelch your tone you start on the short rode to vocal disaster. So sad! I'll definitely watch the video. Thanks
Did his technique begin to slip? Did that perhaps contribute to his depression? It's horrible when anyone takes his own life, but when it is someone who has touched so many through his voice, it affects such a wider group of people. :(
I'm probably going to get flayed alive for relating this, but Jerry was concerned about his voice, as he advanced to an age that required an adjustment in his breath. He sought advice from a Mezzo, who he later engaged. However, she undermined his career for reasons unknown, and seemed to take pleasure in manipulation that drove him deeper and deeper into depression. I believe she was responsible for his suicide. She called me right after with a farsical story about a BB gun, when he, indeed, fired a .38 into his head. I once called this person "friend," but after she destroyed her husband's career (then had a good career of her own in Europe) she contributed to Kim Julian's vocal loss (evertually attributed to aphasia). No, Jerry's aging vocal ability did not kill him.
@@davecoffield7893 OH my God. I'm so terribly sorry. And I hope I'm not equally flayed for this, but I think a man should seek the instruction of another man. If I am correct in what I've been told, the breathing apparatus can be a little different or at least differently managed in men vs. women. I'm a coloratura, so I have been more likely to seek out female teachers. Then again, one of them was a nutjob and began to ruin my breath. Luckily I found Susan, an absolute genius teacher with whom I have studied for 20 years, She's amazing overall, and has taught men and women equally well. So I could be just full of beans here. I'm so very, very sorry that this woman you refer to has been permitted to destroy voices and lives. Grrrrr. It makes me steam with anger!
Magnifique; Probably The most beautiful Duet ever composed !
Hadley in his prime - unbeatable.
For real
A hugely underated Tenor RIP
I cannot listen to this without tears in my eyes.
So Grand, I love Jerry Hadley and Alan Titus, so under appreciated, beautiful voice and artistry, so so smooth.
Unbelievable performance. What a loss to the world! Jerry Hadley was amazing.
I had forgotten how thrilling Jerry's voice was to listen to. The ring in that top part of his voice absolutely sent goosebumps up and down my spine. Magnificent!
I Agree;Hadley was one of the Greatest; Departed Too Soon! Also one of the most Versatile !
LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE LOVE. While he doesn’t move me as much in the 90’s and beyond, the 80’s version of Jerry Hadley’s voice and style move me so much. His open and visceral, yet still beautifully controlled vocal production is among the most exciting (to me) in the history of tenors. His technical approach here, and mostly on the high notes, remind me also of the great Carreras’s singing in the 70’s, before his voice started to harden too.
Unfortunately in the 90's he started changing what he was taught originally by my teacher who built his voice. So I agree with you. This recording is when he was trained by my teacher and was coaching with him the music he was singing.
Silver Singing Method I spoke with Jerry once about twenty years ago over email. He was so gracious and I asked him some questions about singing and asked him if he was still singing Rodolfo in La Boheme. He told me, in so many words, he shelved it because he always felt like there was a certain level of imitation he had to use which he was never completely comfortable with in that rep and which was also wearing out his voice. So he switched to lighter rep which he felt allowed him to open up more and be more natural. I have also known tenors who sing professionally but choose lower tessitura material because they feel the higher rep (which they actually sound better in) is too much work. Seems like an attitude thing. Some have the attitude for it and some don’t. Nevertheless, I cherish his early stuff and even some of his crossover. He was a great one for sure!
@@aarontenor interesting what you're saying... because he was still (or again?) singing La Bohème in '99 and gradually started adding heavier rep (Janacek, Britten, Strauss...) around the same period. He also talked about having to 'please a teacher' when singing, rather than being able to 'open up', perhaps that also relates to this...
It brought tears to my eyes... Jerry Hadley will be my favourite American tenor of all time. And Alan Titus is so sublime in his delivery. Thank you for making my day with this posting.
Jerry Hadley is incredible here. He is so missed. Thanks for uploading.
Stunning, exciting singing especially from Hadley,, his production here is flawless!
Hadley’s voice here is truly majestic in its delievery and joy of singing.
They have reached the cosmos 💐
Spectacular, sublime voices of Jerry Hadley and Alan Titus 💕
The world is very sad without him.
My absolutely most beloved Tenor of all time 💝💜💚💛💙💗
This IS one of the best performances of this duet I've ever heard, thank you!
I agree wholeheartedly - FANTASTIC !!!
IMHO, this is the best recording of this duet. WOW!
Hadley , such a good voice, thrilling, well modulated, free,good technique, legato, so heartfelt.... he went too young and was so underrated...Alan Titus is so good too.
What you do not know, is that Jerry was engaged to a woman in the business, who so undermined his career and utterly defeated him with all manner of manipulation, that he fell into a deep depression and shot himself in the head....thereby ending the expression of a great talent.
Great combination of voices. Beautiful tenor demonstrating perfectly his work with a great teacher.
perfectly tuned,
Jerry hadley, brilliant..
OMG! What a voice Jerry Hadley had. So underrated. His timber reminds me a bit of Fritz Wunderlich. Both singers' singers and both died much too young. Absolutely gorgeous!
Alan Titus is still alive. He's 77.
@@Barbara-dq2fyYes. He was referring to Jerry Hadley and Fritz Wunderlich.
Thank goodness there is a good recording of Jerry Hadley singing this.
Thank you.
Nothing I can add to what has been already commented, except who couldn't immediately fall in love with this duet. It has a similar effect on me as The Flower Duet.
JH was, with doubt, one of the finest singers. The very sad ending to his life is one thing but what he left behind in music is very special. Very special. Thank you JH. I had a recording of AT singing Dido and Aeneas, I think it was. I loved the warmth of his voice.
Just excellent! Mr. Hadley was so refreshing and focused on his high notes! Thank you for sharing!
So nice and smooth both!!!, this I thougth was a duet for a ligth-tenor, but Hadley does it so wonderfully, that I have to re-made my mind about it,BRAVO!!!
DANKESCHÖN, dass beste Perlenfischer-Duet welches ich je hörte.
This is so wonderful, Jerry is truly missed!
Brilliant…wonderful voices together.
Such wonderful voices, gosh how royal
BRAVISSIMO! Rest in Peace Jerry Hadley. I was privileged to meet you after a service at Emanuel Lutheran Church, Manchester, CT just before you would begin your tenure at NY City Opera. You sang an awesome performance of Malotte's Lord's Prayer that prompted me to really learn how to sing. I found a good teacher at Hartt School of Music and learned an excellent vocal technique. Thank you!
Thank you tube for making us happy. Power to the people.
Ambas voces maravillosas. De generoso color, brillo, entrega, autenticidad. La voz de Hadley, siempre hermosa, de personalidad distinguida, tan acertado y efectivo en diferentes estilos. Lírica y pura. Canta con aquello que se dice fuego sagrado.
Y Titus con esa voz que marca plenitud. Hermosa forma de cantar. Y bellísima la dirección orquestal. Una de las mejores versiones (muy bella la de Hadley con Hampson!). Bravo.
Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) is an opera in three acts by the French composer Georges Bizet, to a libretto by Eugène Cormon and Michel Carré. It was premiered on 30 September 1863 in Paris.
Heavenly rendition. It ranks right up there with the best of all time. IMO!
Hadley, we miss you.
the best ,it make 's mé crying .... so beautiful !!!!!!!!!!!!
Utterly beautiful
That is simply awesome!
Love how Jerry puts his arm around Alan for the last verse...they are friends.
Actually, this putting the hand on the shoulder is always done as a part of the singing of this aria.
Hands down. The best ever!!!!!!
He sounds much better here than when I heard him live. Very nice rendition.
truly beautiful - a magnificent performance
Even in face of Jussi and Merill's version, this pair is gorgeous and my grandest!!! Bravo,
Thank you for posting this. While I cannot recall a bad rendition of this number, this may be the best of them all. I was fortunate to hear them do it live in 1986. Hadley was in his prime well before the nerves struck. I also saw Titus as the Celebrant in Mass that opened the Kennedy Center-very memorable. A flashy but hard part for a young Titus, who did well not to ruin his voice trying to make everyone happy.
If you watch the youtube video of him singing in LA the Maria di Rohan, which is on my channel, you can read exactly what he said. This is an ongoing problem in opera that the public seems to be unaware of. These conductors and directors do not allow people to develop and sing full voice any longer. That is why the voices are all small. Hadley was also being stifled. They want you to pull off your voice and sing lightly. That is why the art is in decline. No voices like those of the past.
Thank you
This is the best rendition by far both singers so solid but Jerry as a tenor my goodness so hearty ground and full. My idol.
just beautiful, two wonderful artists. Alan sang in Munich regularly and Jerry not that often unfortunately. Such a radiant, rich and beautiful voice.
Hadley special and still missed by so many
This is another segment of an unusually fine Pavarotti Plus program with some unusually fine young talent, Jerry Hadley and Alan Titus among them. I have never found a good quality recording of the entire program.
Yes, he was my teacher's student. My teacher built his voice from the beginning. Now I teach this technique. My teacher passed away 1 year ago. Hadley was in great voice here.
I remember seeing a clip or 2 on YT about
Hadley and his training under LoMonaco
What brilliant singers with great techniques.
Thanks for sharing this awesome pairing.
Titus...simply remarkable!!
Great, so touching. Thank you for posting.
LG from Austria🇦🇹......i❤Hadley....👏👏👏👏👏
It s very very very beautiful.
Glorious singing.
Exquisite through and through. I am a Jerry Hadley inconditional but I'll say this, I regret Francisco Araiza and Thomas Allen (my two other great favorites!) didn't sing that duet together - unless I'm mistaken. One can dream. ;)
Possibly the best performance of this ever...with the exception of Jerry with Tom Hampson and the Boston Pops 10 years later!
I'd have to disagree. My favorite is the version by Jussi Bjorling and Robert Merrill. The version with Luciano Pavarotti and Nicolai Ghiaurov is also excellent, notably for the performance by Ghiaurov. There is also a version with Fritz Wunderlich and Hermann Prey that is very good too.
Anea Marlivana not even close to this... Bjoerling was great but I like the less constricted sound here by Hadley.
yourmomgoestocollege We're all entitled to have different opinions. It would be a pretty boring world if everyone always agreed on everything.
Except Hanson is a joke.
Bravo! Thank you
The growth in Titus' voice over the years is very interesting. As you say, he started out as almost a baritenor (in Bernstein's Mass). In the 2000s, he successfully had moved into Wagnerian Heldenbariton roles - Dutchman and Wotan (even at Bayreuth). Quite a change (and done very successfully as well)!
Jerry Hadley is the gold standard for this duet. No one has ever it better. Alan Titus does nothing for me. Even though he is a bass, I would have liked to have heard Jerry sing this with Jerome Hines.
Hines's voice was way too heavy and dark for this. The only bass I've ever heard sing the baritone part in this duet and sing it well is Nicolai Ghiaurov, in a version with Pavarotti. Pavarotti isn't at his best, but Ghiaurov is wonderful.
There is a version with Terfel. Alas, the tenor is Bocelli and predictably he's terrible. Also, the performance had to be heavily amplified so that Bocelli could be heard. The amplification distorts Terfel's voice badly. I'd love to hear Terfel sing this with an actual operatic tenor.
Michael Miller
Listen to Léopold Simoneau and Réné Bianco from the early 1950’s.
Anea Marlivana th-cam.com/video/PV5zUa4zMnw/w-d-xo.html
@Jeff Andersen with Ramey the better version.
Beautiful.
So brilliant!
No se de ópera pero está aria me super encanta y ellos son increibles😢😢😢
Fantastique !!!!! ;-)
Bellissimo duetto
Thrilling!
So sad that Hadley is gone. Boy, did he have some pipes!!!
wonderful
magnificent!
Τ he best interpretation of the piece!
What did he mean that he was not allowed to sing with his full voice? That sounds so weird. His voice is so gorgeous here. I just listened to (on youtube) Une Furtiva Lagrima he did in concert and a Che Gelida Manina (youtube as well) and found both of them surprisingly sterile, but he is emoting nicely. So beautiful.
Who is the flute player??? Is it Trudy Kane? Or Tom Nyfenger?
fantastic !!!
Супер дует !!!!
My GOD that Bb was otherwordly... gorgeous timbre. R.I.P
Great interpretation of this two wonderful artists. I am always very impressed by the Jerry Hadley emision (as Mrcafiero told me once, he is in all the mask, without stepping too much in any point at all..no aiming point.GREAT!!!).
Thanks for sharing this divine duett.BRAVOOOO!!!!
Brilliant. Titus might have been better then any of the baritones currently singing at the Met. Hadley, easily one of the greatest American tenors, whose career was tragically shortened by issues in his personal life.
Jerry Hadley, the American Björling. RIP.
Alan Titus the best celebrant ever in Bernstein's Mass
Did Hadley ever sing at the Met? And if not, why not? What a fine honest voice. No tricks.
I think he sung at the Met. Beverly Sills recruited him but check Wikipedia for more info.
did many times later, also did at NYC opera.
He was a huge star at the MET for years.
Wow!
It's hard to write about Hadley - his story is so tragic.
So I'll tell a story about Titus. I was born in Washington DC but I wisely got out to come to California. Then I went back for grad school just as the Kennedy center was opening I didn't see Titus in Bernstein's 'Mass' but he was asked back to the opera House to sing Nero in 'LIncoranattione di Popea'. He was young then and in good shape. I know because he appeared mostly nude. All he wore was a gold lame jock strap. My wife and I were in the front row. It was embarrassing.
This Recording is as good as My old Enrico Caruso Record that was Made on Tuesday 24th March 1907 and each singer compliments each other and the Conducter looks like the famous Arturo Toscanini who died in January 1957 just two Month's before his 90th Birthday
How exactly were his performances inconsistent? He sang from the early 80's into the early 90's on a consistently high level. He did speak of how the powers that be would not allow him to sing with his full voice much of the time. That probably depressed him. To be able to sing so amazingly well and to be blocked is ridiculous. I have no clue what you mean by inconsistent though.
Very good sonority in the flute. Does anyone know who is playing? I think it might be Trudy Kane. Sounds like Tom Nyfenger. If it was Trudy, great job!
I am working on it Candy. We are trying to start that kind of training again.
Watch this
디아트원, 테너 김민석, 베이스바리톤 길병민 / 비제 Bizet : Les pêcheurs de perles "Au fond du temple saint"
Wspaniałe głosy!
Alan Titus was a wonderful Figaro in NY City’s Barber with Beverly Sills in the late 70s, available on You Tube. That production introduced the world to Samuel Ramey, as a devastatingly fabulous Basilio. Not to take anything away from Hadley, here. Just wanted to alert others to Titus & early Ramey
Dear MrCafiero, that is what I meant.Thank you for the precise comment.Bravo!!!
Which teacher is he speaking of in the Opera magazine article?
Wonderful singing. He just exudes total control and comfort.
Jerry voice is true no woolly woofy thin weak amplified sound like other famous singers he dominates
AGREED!
I only had great memories of Hadley. I watched him singing Bernstein's Candide in 1990 and he was just great. Then I didn't hear much of him until his suicide intent and then his sad death. Now, looking at some of his videos, I notice a decadence in his singing. It's difficult to know if his depression was caused by his lack of success or his lack of success was the result of inconsistent performance due to his depression. Only him and God know, I guess.
This is definitely a fine performance of this aria. But "most beautiful"? Take a listen to Björling's and Merrill's duet from 1950 (also posted here on TH-cam) before you make up your mind.
yes. agree, Jussi's work is powerful, deeply felt, but this is so clean youthful fine tuned 2 pipes. Equally pure gold...the recording is unfair to be compared either.
Who were those powers to be and what happened exactly? To block such a talent is almost criminal...
Criminal and premeditated. As I noted above, what you do not know, is that Jerry was engaged to a woman in the business, who so undermined his career and utterly defeated him with all manner of manipulation, that he fell into a deep depression and shot himself in the head....thereby ending the expression of a great talent. To think, I used to call her "friend."
I believe it was in 1994, L'elisir d'amore.
Holy Voice Box. Both are incredible powerhouses...wish Jerry Hadley would of followed that P on the score though. Good lord, he blew out the whole first row. LOL.
Chaosga you're trying to fill a house with sound. Those markings are subjective.
What year did you hear him?
magnificent!!!Mclaire12
Wow. That's insane! It's a tragedy for the voice. When you have to squelch your tone you start on the short rode to vocal disaster. So sad! I'll definitely watch the video. Thanks
Did his technique begin to slip? Did that perhaps contribute to his depression? It's horrible when anyone takes his own life, but when it is someone who has touched so many through his voice, it affects such a wider group of people. :(
I'm probably going to get flayed alive for relating this, but Jerry was concerned about his voice, as he advanced to an age that required an adjustment in his breath. He sought advice from a Mezzo, who he later engaged. However, she undermined his career for reasons unknown, and seemed to take pleasure in manipulation that drove him deeper and deeper into depression. I believe she was responsible for his suicide. She called me right after with a farsical story about a BB gun, when he, indeed, fired a .38 into his head. I once called this person "friend," but after she destroyed her husband's career (then had a good career of her own in Europe) she contributed to Kim Julian's vocal loss (evertually attributed to aphasia). No, Jerry's aging vocal ability did not kill him.
@@davecoffield7893 OH my God. I'm so terribly sorry. And I hope I'm not equally flayed for this, but I think a man should seek the instruction of another man. If I am correct in what I've been told, the breathing apparatus can be a little different or at least differently managed in men vs. women. I'm a coloratura, so I have been more likely to seek out female teachers. Then again, one of them was a nutjob and began to ruin my breath. Luckily I found Susan, an absolute genius teacher with whom I have studied for 20 years, She's amazing overall, and has taught men and women equally well. So I could be just full of beans here. I'm so very, very sorry that this woman you refer to has been permitted to destroy voices and lives. Grrrrr. It makes me steam with anger!
For me the real 3 tenors,the really extraordinary voices,are Hadley,Aragall and Shicoff .