Thank you! Fabulous performance! Another TH-camr uploaded this years ago and later took it down, much to my great disappointment. It's my favourite Nilsson recording as it captures her art and voice at the peak of her power and (in-scale) how she sounded in the theatre. At the very end of the aria, in the very last phrase, she raises her head slightly and out comes a cry of triumph that eclipses just about everything that preceded it.
Remember that this is a live performance. No other soprano who has recorded this aria has sung it live on stage. Nilsson demonstrates her ability to be emotionally involved in the aria [her words, for example, are crystal clear] while providing a perfect reading of the music, including managing her enormous voice for the quick passages and the quiet passages. The more I listen to her recorded [live and studio] legacy the greater she seems.
@@MrQwerty88 I would not be so sure. Note the Asian characters in the upper right corner. Many singers during the 50s, 60s and 70s sang roles on stage in Japan, China, and Korea which they never sang onstage anywhere else. Western opera was just emerging in those countries as a sellable product [altho I am sure there were always some fans] and many famous singers took advantage of that to sing roles they could sing but would not have been offered in the West.
@@wilsonwatt9283 You can see by her mouth movements she's not really singing. As a singer I can confirm that's how playback looks. Compare to the concert version uploaded by user Paul Marchesano. Edit: At 7:09 you can even see her swallow while her voice doesn't stop
Note that in the second section she performs a perfect trill; she handles all of the fast runs completely, and she brings the emotions of the words into the performance both vocally and physically. So much for those who frequently say she was just a cold voice only suited to Turandot and Brunnhilde.
The attempted trill at 4:19? She only barely goes back and forth between the two notes, only like 4 oscillations which is not really any different than singing 4 quaver notes, up then down, up then down. I wouldn't say it counts
Although my favorite soprano rendition of this aria is till Eileen Farrell's for the level of emotional involvement she shows, this is a spectacular performance of a very, very difficult aria from a composer who is rarely performed precisely because he actually assoluta quality of all of this leading singers [sopranos, tenors, bassi].
I think she is lip syncing it here. The finest Ozean I've heard is by Gertrud Bindernagel, followed by Margarete Teschemacher. Here is Bindernagel th-cam.com/video/zQUta-vP1Zk/w-d-xo.html
this aria is in the same category as Donna Anna and Brünhilde but unlike Mozart and Wagner Weber uses the voice to the ultimate. And is a better composer than Wagner who was an amateur.
@@meyerbeer13Glad to learn that. Your assessment of Wagner is world's best kept secret. His incomprable genius, in contrast, is no secret. Alex Ross's 700 page plus study of his influence over Western Culture would tend to affirm his status as incomparable genius more than an amateur.
Silly, just plain silly. Go scrub your ears out and learn to appreciate good singing. I adore Flagstad and think Grob-Prandl is seriously underrated but your comment is stupid.
@@lemgull7865 Yes, by the standards of the mid-late 20th century. This is not bad, but Birgit was never in the same class as Flagstad as a dramatic soprano.
Hard to believe a so-called singer whose main claim to prosperity is wall-quaking high notes, never mind those high notes were scooped up from beneath 90% of the time, not to mention skating through opera after opera without producing one single ounce of legato, (the one golden criteria that governs all kinds of singing, be it folk, jazz, cantata, r & b, pop, oratorio, stadium hard rock or even electronic dance beat/hip hop/rap), treading and thus abusing the Italian rep with a most Teutonic/Scandinavian approach, interpretative insight as abundant as none has been held in the highest regard by generations of certain operagoers. Really ballistic, but then, Hofmannsthal once wrote: "Es sind die mehreren Dinge auf der Welt, so dass sie ein's nicht glauben tät', wenn man sie möcht' erzählen hör'n. Alleinig wer's erlebt, der glaubt daran und weiss nicht wie." However, it should be noted that Tebaldi is no angel: as good as a cackling hen.
Eine phantastische Sängerin. Gesanglich unschlagbar und dazu noch eine Textverständlichkeit die ihresgleichen sucht.
Nilson è sempre stato Nilson..la grandissima !
She owns this aria
C'est inouï tout simplement🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩
What a perfect voice!
Magnificent! Unsurpassed!
I never saw this video. It's simplely amazing ...
Única, ABSOLUTA ❤
Es perfecta!!, Sin vibrato y excelente dicción, Birgite de un virtuosismo absoluto!!
Si La Flagstad es apabullante...¡La Nilsson, una fenómena! (Escuchar cantar así, es terapia.)🙏
Wonderful performance vocally and dramatically.
Thank you! Fabulous performance! Another TH-camr uploaded this years ago and later took it down, much to my great disappointment. It's my favourite Nilsson recording as it captures her art and voice at the peak of her power and (in-scale) how she sounded in the theatre. At the very end of the aria, in the very last phrase, she raises her head slightly and out comes a cry of triumph that eclipses just about everything that preceded it.
I agree this recording seems to capture her voice as it sounded in the theater better than any others.
Phénoménale, quoi dire d’autre.....
Elle semble chanter avec une telle facilité...c'est en effet phénoménal!
Remember that this is a live performance. No other soprano who has recorded this aria has sung it live on stage. Nilsson demonstrates her ability to be emotionally involved in the aria [her words, for example, are crystal clear] while providing a perfect reading of the music, including managing her enormous voice for the quick passages and the quiet passages. The more I listen to her recorded [live and studio] legacy the greater she seems.
I'm pretty sure this isn't live. It's mimed to a prerecorded track. Just like her filmed Lady Macbeth clip.
@@MrQwerty88 I would not be so sure. Note the Asian characters in the upper right corner. Many singers during the 50s, 60s and 70s sang roles on stage in Japan, China, and Korea which they never sang onstage anywhere else. Western opera was just emerging in those countries as a sellable product [altho I am sure there were always some fans] and many famous singers took advantage of that to sing roles they could sing but would not have been offered in the West.
@@wilsonwatt9283 You can see by her mouth movements she's not really singing. As a singer I can confirm that's how playback looks. Compare to the concert version uploaded by user Paul Marchesano.
Edit: At 7:09 you can even see her swallow while her voice doesn't stop
Note that in the second section she performs a perfect trill; she handles all of the fast runs completely, and she brings the emotions of the words into the performance both vocally and physically. So much for those who frequently say she was just a cold voice only suited to Turandot and Brunnhilde.
The attempted trill at 4:19?
She only barely goes back and forth between the two notes, only like 4 oscillations which is not really any different than singing 4 quaver notes, up then down, up then down.
I wouldn't say it counts
@@MrQwerty88What a fool you are. The score only asks for a short trill and she does exactly that.
Extraordinaria
Although my favorite soprano rendition of this aria is till Eileen Farrell's for the level of emotional involvement she shows, this is a spectacular performance of a very, very difficult aria from a composer who is rarely performed precisely because he actually assoluta quality of all of this leading singers [sopranos, tenors, bassi].
What a great clip. Not sure if it's actually live but I don't care
I think she is lip syncing it here. The finest Ozean I've heard is by Gertrud Bindernagel, followed by Margarete Teschemacher. Here is Bindernagel th-cam.com/video/zQUta-vP1Zk/w-d-xo.html
Yep. Pre recorded and this was filmed later
What orchestra is?
I'm sorry I have no idea. The video I had saved had no information at all. No year even. I guess it could be found somehow
this aria is in the same category as Donna Anna and Brünhilde but unlike Mozart and Wagner Weber uses the voice to the ultimate. And is a better composer than Wagner who was an amateur.
Wagner didn't do too bad as an 'amatuer'
@@andrew1598 he didn't do good. He just spent a lot of time telling people he was good.
@@meyerbeer13Glad to learn that. Your assessment of Wagner is world's best kept secret. His incomprable genius, in contrast, is no secret. Alex Ross's 700 page plus study of his influence over Western Culture would tend to affirm his status as incomparable genius more than an amateur.
Ugly, just plain ugly. Go listen to Gertrud Grob-Prandl or the immortal Kirsten Flagstad to hear how it CAN be done!
Silly, just plain silly. Go scrub your ears out and learn to appreciate good singing.
I adore Flagstad and think Grob-Prandl is seriously underrated but your comment is stupid.
Nilsson is perfect !!! Amazing artist!!
She was the best , throughout the german repertoire !!
@@lemgull7865 Yes, by the standards of the mid-late 20th century. This is not bad, but Birgit was never in the same class as Flagstad as a dramatic soprano.
Eres una tonta con balcones a la calle.
Hard to believe a so-called singer whose main claim to prosperity is wall-quaking high notes, never mind those high notes were scooped up from beneath 90% of the time, not to mention skating through opera after opera without producing one single ounce of legato, (the one golden criteria that governs all kinds of singing, be it folk, jazz, cantata, r & b, pop, oratorio, stadium hard rock or even electronic dance beat/hip hop/rap), treading and thus abusing the Italian rep with a most Teutonic/Scandinavian approach, interpretative insight as abundant as none has been held in the highest regard by generations of certain operagoers. Really ballistic, but then, Hofmannsthal once wrote: "Es sind die mehreren Dinge auf der Welt, so dass sie ein's nicht glauben tät', wenn man sie möcht' erzählen hör'n. Alleinig wer's erlebt, der glaubt daran und weiss nicht wie." However, it should be noted that Tebaldi is no angel: as good as a cackling hen.