As a voice teacher, I completely agree with what Hadley is saying here. I loved his statement about "being critical but not being discerning." Brilliant.
WHY WHY WHY did he feel he had to take his own life? What a tragic loss not only to the singing/opera world but to the entire music world! Such a glorious voice and he took it from us too soon,
Generally you could say, it's called Depression. (I knew him a little.) It's why others in the same circumstances would never do what he did. It's not his fault. And it's why we can never stop trying to bring peoples' dark sides into the light.
In a recent German language interview with Christa Ludwig, she pretty much says the same thing. She says there are so many teachers that tell the students, "No, you can't do that, that's wrong," that although the singers sing nicely, they have lost all of their individuality and humanity. She bemoans the fact that she cannot tell one singer apart from another, whereas before, she knew in two or three notes whether it was Callas or Tebaldi or Pavarotti or Domingo. She says that one knew them not just by their virtues but also by their faults, and despite the fault, they were wonderful. Here is the interview: th-cam.com/video/C8St0mt6V6E/w-d-xo.html
This rings true today, 15 years later...We as singers are so blessed to have access to such amazing artists as Jerry Hadley, who wasn't afraid to speak his mind, and who sang so beautifully for us to learn from!
Where did you study at that had such incompetence like THAT? How can you be a baritone and not study the great-grandfathers of what baritones should be and strive to emulate?
This statement from JH carries a significant weight. He's not only eloquent, he speaks with passion and commitment to the vocal art-the history of the art matters. If he's right and a younger generation are ignoring the outstanding singers from the past, then something is seriously amiss in the teaching sphere. When I became interested in voice in the mid 1970's, I started to raid my local record library and listen to the singers who were available to me in that library: these were singers like Pavarotti, Sutherland, Milnes, Domingo, Berganza..... It wasn't until a few years later, as I read more about the history of opera and the celebrated singers, that I began to discover artists like the baritone Giovanni Inghilleri, then Gigli, Schipa, Tettrazinni, and many others through several decades. In recent years (well into my fifties) I'm just discovering Ruffo, Pertle, and so it goes on. So even though JH speaks of his disappointment of some young singers and their ignorance of older singers I think his very commentary in this interview will serve an important purpose. It never too late, perhaps. He is giving anybody who cares to listen, a number of reference points, just like I had from my teacher and from the books I was reading. A simple love of the art is enough to lead somebody towards many vocal treasures! Lastly: I was aware of the ending of JH's life, which made me sad, but I was distant from it. Now, hearing this interview and listening to some of his performances, I feel an even greater sadness and a sense of loss at his ending. A horrible and overwhelmingly painful place to be in.....What a very fine artist he was. At least for music lovers, he has left a legacy. There is always something beautiful and moving in his performances. I give thanks for the Art of Jerry Hadley.
Modern teachers have completely neglected the frames of reference of which opera was built on, which is the artistry of the great singers of the past and what they left us. Voice teachers at universities seldom recommend their students to listen to singers, which is why *style* is almost nonexistent today. It’s a shame.
Finally..an intelligent and knowledgeable singer...and a wonderful one at that...speaks about the detriment of the teaching of singing. Academics in universities have truly limited the singers-to-be with the their lack of "knowing physiologically" how their own instrument needs to be co-ordinated. How the constrictions of the breath and muscles surrounding the vocal cords interfere with the sound. To put it mildly...they use word-noise terminology that really is confusing and meaningless to a talented, young singer. Listening to the great singers recorded since the turn of the last century must be part of their training. This teaches them to discern, how beautiful voices, free of all tensions...(except the few CORRECT ones; cords and solar plexus of the diaphragm) sound. Thank you Jerry Hadley..Bravo !!!
Wow. Great document. Thank you for sharing :). My Music History teacher said: to be a good musician one must listening. Listening is the gold of the art.
Wow! Thank you so much for posting this! I met him some years ago at a concert of his. I was with my voice coach, who had sang with him, so we spent some time in the green room visiting. What a great person! Sorely missed!
I'm glad I listened to the whole thing. Afterwards, I wrote on a piece of paper "Did I sing this as beautifully as I could" and pinned it inside my vocal booth.
So sad that nobody liked this video! The first one was me. I am not saying this to praise myself but to emphasize how ignorant are nowadays "stars" to grrat singers! Riposa In Pace great Jerry Hadley! I love you❤
There is a parallel to the acting profession here. A great deal of damage to young acting talent has been done by academics in college or university settings. Regrettably, some would be actors think that they can read a book about it and do it. The results are usually grotesque. Having a frame of reference is vital. In opera, students have to depend on recordings to gain an understanding of the great singers of the past. The microphone has changed our perception of singing, just as the camera has changed our understanding of acting. Ask a young baritone if they have ever heard of Mattia Battistini, Riccardo Stracciari; Pasquale Amato; or Giuseppe de Luca. If they haven't heard of Titta Ruffo the problem is worse than we feared. Ask a young acting student if they have heard of Alfred Lunt & Lynn Fontanne; or Laurette Taylor. Past is prologue.
I also agree with Hadley, and I am not even a singer. I am a cellist who was always encouraged to "sing" with my instrument. We string players were supposed to be imitating the human voice, the first instrument of us all. As a cello performance major in college, I spent most of my time LISTENING to great performances of great musicians, including singers. How can you learn if you don't listen?
These are great points that Hadley is trying to get across and I know I'm extremely guilty of everything he's saying. He speaks about how singers, opera singers especially tend to not know the artistry of the music it's self due to negligence on our part for not studying the past greats. That we expect the music it's self what's written down to give us all the answers and to have the same connection ,to perform like the greats even though we haven't studied the artistry of it. It makes amazing sense. He speaks about how you can have the greatest teacher and if you personally don't put in the work or do things on your own which includes studying the past performers, expression, technique and much more there's only so much that teacher can do, that nobody has learned how to sing great by just learning how to sing.(he also speaks about how pedagogy professors just teach voice and the artistry it's self is lessened but once again he defends them by saying there's only so much they can do you have to do the rest) I think the best thing he states is how even if you do all this life has no promises. It's sort of a morbid truth and that's something I personally tend to forget. You can do the best you can and try the hardest and still fail. But for me it's about after that fail, you get back up and don't give up and just keep believing and working even harder.
Such a gifted artist and clearly highly intelligent. I agree with many individual comments and do believe that context and the study of singing outside of the voice studio is imperative. This audio shows a thread of thoughts surrounding voice study, but the thread is loose and being greatly affected by the wind.
I've played guitar for 16 years, I've been having classical voice lessons for 4 years. I am so far better at guitar than I am singing so far and I truly believe my ears are my best friends. Sure learning certain techniques and the like help enormously, but simply listening to how a singer produces a sound (similar to learning guitar) is also very very helpful.
I'm a writer and teacher of writing, and the analogy between the breakdown of 'frame of reference' as a frame of reference in this gentleman's professional-world history and my own is astounding. I'm also a one-time choral scholar at Oxford University, so I know a little about singing. As a singer, Mr Hadley has very few contemporary peers. Perhaps Jussi Bjorling, for anyone who is interested.
That is interesting because I also mentored with Hadley's teacher, Dr. LoMonaco, and I am working on finishing his book that he passed down to me and asked me to get published. Hopefully somehow I can get it done. It is a big project. Actually, Hadley was supposed to write the foreword to the book, but it never got done.
His 100 % correct. Also all singers are individuals , and have an individual instrument. Imperfect instrument 's And you have to study , while you are singing , and remember how you approach a note, support. And write the expierence down No matter the size of the choir , or if you sing in concert , or theater. You have to know the limitations of your voice , and accept them. nd go on from there
There's very poor vocal pedagogy today. The knowledge of Physiology is very important but it does not produce great singers, actually great singers are becoming practically extinct. This is an era of despise for discipline in every aspect of human life which is technically supported but deprived of the idea of efforts as a way towards achievement. Today, singers simply do not train as much as they should and they are flung into the operatic arena too soon before they can actually get a grasp of real singing is about. Hadley's explanation is accurate and unquestionable.
Right on Jerry. . Singing comes from the Lungs and the guts through the reed of the throat and the larynx. You sing from your heart and you don't need to mess around with anything else. Take it from a baritone!
If those who long for an era of great singing really got what he has to say we would seriously consider closing down the academic institutions who pretend they are developing young singers for future careers.
+Brad Clark Ohhhh trust me I know! lol They should all be ashamed of themselves and shut down. And these teachers, like David Jones, should be in jail.
Silver Singing Method this is great stuff, but this just contains his "preface" as he called at the beginning. I LOVE his long winded pontification, but is there more the recording (i.e. is there a part where he gets to the core of his technical beliefs, thoughts, etc)?
Omg this is what I've been saying for years! Hadley is right on the money and singing is being studied like a text book, not the art form it is, hence the "generic performances" that are rampant today that Hadley is talking about. I heard this past saturday's broadcast of La Boheme, completely soulless. Making beautiful sounds does not mean someone is singing.
I couldn’t agree more no teacher I had ever explained it because they didn’t know they just played the piano and said stupid things as imaginations unless your teacher can do it walk away I don’t think a male voice benefits from a female teacher as a reference they are limited and can’t demonstrate. I mentioned some famous singers to an Opera singer once and her reply was I’m more interested in my own voice she didn’t know who I was talking about UNBELIEVABLE !
We are defrauding the world of one of our greatest accomplishments. Here we witness a great singer with a great mind tell us the objective truth. Surrounded by all the tools to make great art, we are forced(singers) and forced fed(audience) to accept that the wheel will roll better if we could make that wheel no longer round but square or triangular in shape. There was even a documentary where someone said that they are trying to get rid of bel canto singing. So they want to change what translated from Italian amounts to beautiful singing? Perhaps therein lies the problem and also the solution. We must demand the truth. When opera becomes a new political forum where nothing matters but the ego and objectives of a corrupt and evil administration, we must look back and see historically what has and will continue to do to our fragile existence. The destruction of art, opera being a culmination of all its forms, is the beginning of the end of the human race and its beauty as it was intended. I think that is what Jerry Hadley faced when he took his life. His final act should scare us into making this change. With all his gifts and success he still chose to leave us. A violent act maybe hoping its operatic nature would be more stirring than great talent. A kind of genocide of opera and its forms has begun. It will finish with Mozart, Puccini, Verdi and Wagner and sneak its way into everything we cherish. The human race will truly become a mediocrity. Our devolution back to monkeys with lots of technology would be pretty theatrical. Except the word theater would have been forgotten and hey monkeys with IPhones are too busy texting ooohaha and bananabanana to even notice.
Thank you Adrian for your very powerful and very accurate comment. I was a young singer back in the 1970's and was in New York at the time that Jerry Hadley "arrived" so to speak. I was studying with a wonderful and gifted vocal coach and conductor named Constantine Callinicos. He had been Mario Lanza's conductor, coach and accompanist. Talk about a sad end to a great voice. Lanza died at 38 and, according to Maestro Callinicos, possessed the greatest voice he had ever heard. And bear in mind he had heard a few voices by the time I was working with him. He conducted opera on both coasts and worked with the young Domingo, Enrico Di Giuseppe and many others. What you postulate about Jerry's death is both excruciatingly sad and deathly frightening. Yes, we as a society are moving toward not only the acceptance of mediocrity but the embracing of it. This is one of the saddest facts of this world we now inhabit.
I saw Hadley onstage many times at the NYC Opera and the Met. His suicide was tragic. He was a good colleague of Sutherland/Bonynge. Sutherland herself studied with professional teachers in Australia, but Bonynge felt that they had taught her all wrong -- darkening her voice for Wagnerian power and taking away her top notes. Nilsson, after nearly ruining her voice with various teachers, figured out a workable technique on her own. Domingo didn't know how to support his voice until another singing friend, during their early professional days in Israel, demonstrated exercises to strengthen his diaphragm. I guess it's hard to find a teacher who knows how to develop a personalized technique.
Can someone tell me why he ended his life? I mean, did his voice just go away, did he forget his technique, did he take on repitoire that was not suitable for his voice? What happened? So sad, I hope he rests in peace. God love him.
I believe it was a combination of things. He wasnt getting hired , was suffering depression, relationship trouble and I think he had problems with alcohol.
Jef Olson, all true. I knew him in his last years. He suffered from what today would be called mental health issues, but his Robin-Williams-like very funny persona covered up a lot. I once talked to him about returning to conducting, which was his first intention when he started in music. He felt he had more singing years left, but his career proved otherwise. He was also wryly bitter in his funny way about all the gimmicks selling opera and he knew he was fading from view. He felt things deeply and passionately, including his depression.
What a rant! I guess he didn't go to school with a bunch of singers who learned their opera roles from recordings because they couldn't read music. A fine singer. It's a shame he's gone.
Mr. Hadley nailed something I've believed for years. As a theater singer, I've learned as much - if not more - from listening to guys like Jerry Orbach, Bing Crosby, George Hearn and others as I have from my various voice teachers and coaches over the years. And now you hear this generic 'voice' among theater vocalists...they all sound the same, enunciate the same way. It's all about volume, not nuance or individuality. We have body mics now - why does everyone insist on bellowing, whether it's a tender ballad or an up tempo piece? It's even worse with women. The Linda Eder/Idina Menzel voice is all you hear, and it's unfortunate. Cookie cutter singing is everywhere.
I couldn’t find a teacher to work with my big voice, they tried to make me small, ‘masked’ and unbalanced. I gave up. Wasted time and technique with New York teachers. I finally quit. It hurt. I was close but couldnt endure.
I am sorry to hear that. I think that it happens more than anyone realizes. I know someone who was a tremendous tenor who studied with Tom and gave up as well.
Please don't endorse a charlatan and especially on my channel. Trimble is one of the WORST teachers out there. He teaching wrong breathing, wrong tongue, basically wrong everything. Including you can only be good if you do yoga and swim. Total charlatan with no results.
@@SilverSingingMethodI think you are wrong but ok...everyone has his opinion. Please look and hear the first videos he did and how he sangs in his younger years. He teaches what the great singers of the past said. And so was his voice. And I can hear that his students are great. Greetings.
So now YOU are the expert? I don't think so. Nothing I said is untrue and I have worked with people who studied with him and he ruins their voices. If he is so great, as you say, and has been teaching for decades then WHERE are the SINGERS he has produced? He hasn't. He is nothing, but talk and bad information. How he sang has NOTHING to do with teaching. So stop spreading your ignorance on my channel promoting charlatans that you have been bamboozled into believing. He duped you.
I love Hailey’s singing. But I disagree with some of his points. Primarily, the point he makes that signing’s natural habitat is the theatre. NO! Long before the theatre, singing thrived in solo song and in ensemble singing.
Hadley has been wonderful but wouldn't call him an American Singer by sound or education..... this is one of the real big problems today all this American Methods are too much constructed..... the old Italian Belcanto is not what American made with it - excuse and today all this bad singers from America, Europe and Russia are all to much running after this bad US-Marchmellowsound...
I've played guitar for 16 years, I've been having classical voice lessons for 4 years. I am so far better at guitar than I am singing so far and I truly believe my ears are my best friends. Sure learning certain techniques and the like help enormously, but simply listening to how a singer produces a sound (similar to learning guitar) is also very very helpful.
As a voice teacher, I completely agree with what Hadley is saying here. I loved his statement about "being critical but not being discerning." Brilliant.
What a beautiful voice. What a loss when he passed.
Jerry Hadley=AWESOME
What an intelligent and incredible human. I couldn't have said this info better in a million years.
WHY WHY WHY did he feel he had to take his own life? What a tragic loss not only to the singing/opera world but to the entire music world! Such a glorious voice and he took it from us too soon,
Generally you could say, it's called Depression. (I knew him a little.) It's why others in the same circumstances would never do what he did. It's not his fault. And it's why we can never stop trying to bring peoples' dark sides into the light.
In a recent German language interview with Christa Ludwig, she pretty much says the same thing. She says there are so many teachers that tell the students, "No, you can't do that, that's wrong," that although the singers sing nicely, they have lost all of their individuality and humanity. She bemoans the fact that she cannot tell one singer apart from another, whereas before, she knew in two or three notes whether it was Callas or Tebaldi or Pavarotti or Domingo. She says that one knew them not just by their virtues but also by their faults, and despite the fault, they were wonderful. Here is the interview: th-cam.com/video/C8St0mt6V6E/w-d-xo.html
omg preach! PREACH! I am so happy that this was recorded! His legacy is set! sharing this!
This rings true today, 15 years later...We as singers are so blessed to have access to such amazing artists as Jerry Hadley, who wasn't afraid to speak his mind, and who sang so beautifully for us to learn from!
Bravo Maestro. I miss this great singer. Every young singer should listen to this!
thanks for the upload cafiero.
My voice teacher at school didn't know who Titta Ruffo was when I asked.
He's a baritone.
I've talked to some young singers who have never heard of most of the great singers of the Golden Age of Singing. Staggering!
Wat............
Juan Reynoso Where do you study?
Titta Ruffo, one of biggest baritone ever!
Where did you study at that had such incompetence like THAT? How can you be a baritone and not study the great-grandfathers of what baritones should be and strive to emulate?
This statement from JH carries a significant weight. He's not only eloquent, he speaks with passion and commitment to the vocal art-the history of the art matters. If he's right and a younger generation are ignoring the outstanding singers from the past, then something is seriously amiss in the teaching sphere. When I became interested in voice in the mid 1970's, I started to raid my local record library and listen to the singers who were available to me in that library: these were singers like Pavarotti, Sutherland, Milnes, Domingo, Berganza..... It wasn't until a few years later, as I read more about the history of opera and the celebrated singers, that I began to discover artists like the baritone Giovanni Inghilleri, then Gigli, Schipa, Tettrazinni, and many others through several decades. In recent years (well into my fifties) I'm just discovering Ruffo, Pertle, and so it goes on. So even though JH speaks of his disappointment of some young singers and their ignorance of older singers I think his very commentary in this interview will serve an important purpose. It never too late, perhaps. He is giving anybody who cares to listen, a number of reference points, just like I had from my teacher and from the books I was reading. A simple love of the art is enough to lead somebody towards many vocal treasures! Lastly: I was aware of the ending of JH's life, which made me sad, but I was distant from it. Now, hearing this interview and listening to some of his performances, I feel an even greater sadness and a sense of loss at his ending. A horrible and overwhelmingly painful place to be in.....What a very fine artist he was. At least for music lovers, he has left a legacy. There is always something beautiful and moving in his performances. I give thanks for the Art of Jerry Hadley.
Modern teachers have completely neglected the frames of reference of which opera was built on, which is the artistry of the great singers of the past and what they left us. Voice teachers at universities seldom recommend their students to listen to singers, which is why *style* is almost nonexistent today. It’s a shame.
Finally..an intelligent and knowledgeable singer...and a wonderful one at that...speaks about the detriment of the teaching of singing. Academics in universities have truly limited the singers-to-be with the their lack of "knowing physiologically" how their own instrument needs to be co-ordinated. How the constrictions of the breath and muscles surrounding the vocal cords interfere with the sound. To put it mildly...they use word-noise terminology that really is confusing and meaningless to a talented, young singer. Listening to the great singers recorded since the turn of the last century must be part of their training. This teaches them to discern, how beautiful voices, free of all tensions...(except the few CORRECT ones; cords and solar plexus of the diaphragm) sound. Thank you Jerry Hadley..Bravo !!!
Such an exceptional singer with masterful technique and thrilling singing , beautiful legato, so underrated and tragic ending....
JH was a truly great Tenor,hugely underated ...R.I.P
Wow. Great document. Thank you for sharing :). My Music History teacher said: to be a good musician one must listening. Listening is the gold of the art.
This is pure gold! I couldn't be more agree... I was just thinking in that subject this morning and now I found this incredible audio! Thanks!
Such good advice. And, among the singers we listen to, let's not forget Jerry Hadley - an exceptional singer.
A very important document from a wonderful musician gone to soon. What he could have further contributed to the art of singing!
This info is amazing... Hadley just gave a splendid dissertation of what singing is about.
I wish I had heard this years ago when I first starting studying music in University.
What an excellent singer and bloody great talk
Hadley has put a lot of thought into answering the question.
He sounds bitter and frustrated. A brilliant singer.
Wow! Thank you so much for posting this! I met him some years ago at a concert of his. I was with my voice coach, who had sang with him, so we spent some time in the green room visiting. What a great person! Sorely missed!
RIP Jerry Hadley (#dotd in 2007) 🌺🌺🌺
I'm glad I listened to the whole thing. Afterwards, I wrote on a piece of paper "Did I sing this as beautifully as I could" and pinned it inside my vocal booth.
what is a vocal booth? I wish i had a sound proof booth so I can sing without disturbing neighbors
This is so precious thank you
I am deeply touched by this interview. Thank you so much for sharing this precious document !
Brilliant
Bravo Jerry!!! ... Memory Eternal!!!
A fabulous perspective.
This is amazing. And very true.
So sad that nobody liked this video! The first one was me. I am not saying this to praise myself but to emphasize how ignorant are nowadays "stars" to grrat singers!
Riposa In Pace great Jerry Hadley!
I love you❤
Brilliant interview!
There is a parallel to the acting profession here. A great deal of damage to young acting talent has been done by academics in college or university settings. Regrettably, some would be actors think that they can read a book about it and do it. The results are usually grotesque. Having a frame of reference is vital. In opera, students have to depend on recordings to gain an understanding of the great singers of the past. The microphone has changed our perception of singing, just as the camera has changed our understanding of acting. Ask a young baritone if they have ever heard of Mattia Battistini, Riccardo Stracciari; Pasquale Amato; or Giuseppe de Luca. If they haven't heard of Titta Ruffo the problem is worse than we feared. Ask a young acting student if they have heard of Alfred Lunt & Lynn Fontanne; or Laurette Taylor. Past is prologue.
Truly excellent and fascinating analysis of the current state of affairs in the classical singing world
I also agree with Hadley, and I am not even a singer. I am a cellist who was always encouraged to "sing" with my instrument. We string players were supposed to be imitating the human voice, the first instrument of us all. As a cello performance major in college, I spent most of my time LISTENING to great performances of great musicians, including singers. How can you learn if you don't listen?
This wonderful man speaks the truth!!!
Just wonderful!!!
These are great points that Hadley is trying to get across and I know I'm extremely guilty of everything he's saying. He speaks about how singers, opera singers especially tend to not know the artistry of the music it's self due to negligence on our part for not studying the past greats. That we expect the music it's self what's written down to give us all the answers and to have the same connection ,to perform like the greats even though we haven't studied the artistry of it. It makes amazing sense. He speaks about how you can have the greatest teacher and if you personally don't put in the work or do things on your own which includes studying the past performers, expression, technique and much more there's only so much that teacher can do, that nobody has learned how to sing great by just learning how to sing.(he also speaks about how pedagogy professors just teach voice and the artistry it's self is lessened but once again he defends them by saying there's only so much they can do you have to do the rest) I think the best thing he states is how even if you do all this life has no promises. It's sort of a morbid truth and that's something I personally tend to forget. You can do the best you can and try the hardest and still fail. But for me it's about after that fail, you get back up and don't give up and just keep believing and working even harder.
Miss you, Jerry.
Such a gifted artist and clearly highly intelligent. I agree with many individual comments and do believe that context and the study of singing outside of the voice studio is imperative. This audio shows a thread of thoughts surrounding voice study, but the thread is loose and being greatly affected by the wind.
Thanks so much for posting. A fascinating interview with a remarkable artist!
Thanks for sharing this, it's very important and i hope many teachers around the world can listen to this.
Brilliant 👏
Beautiful words!! Thanks Jerry!!
wow, very insightful observations
I've played guitar for 16 years, I've been having classical voice lessons for 4 years. I am so far better at guitar than I am singing so far and I truly believe my ears are my best friends. Sure learning certain techniques and the like help enormously, but simply listening to how a singer produces a sound (similar to learning guitar) is also very very helpful.
Lee Cander - I TOTALLY AGREE
I'm a writer and teacher of writing, and the analogy between the breakdown of 'frame of reference' as a frame of reference in this gentleman's professional-world history and my own is astounding. I'm also a one-time choral scholar at Oxford University, so I know a little about singing. As a singer, Mr Hadley has very few contemporary peers. Perhaps Jussi Bjorling, for anyone who is interested.
That is interesting because I also mentored with Hadley's teacher, Dr. LoMonaco, and I am working on finishing his book that he passed down to me and asked me to get published. Hopefully somehow I can get it done. It is a big project. Actually, Hadley was supposed to write the foreword to the book, but it never got done.
Did Hadley write any words in the book? If he didn't, then... pity.
I look forward to the day the book is released
Preach!!!!
His 100 % correct. Also all singers are individuals , and have an individual instrument. Imperfect instrument 's And you have to study , while you are singing , and remember how you approach a note, support. And write the expierence down No matter the size of the choir , or if you sing in concert , or theater. You have to know the limitations of your voice , and accept them. nd go on from there
Gold ! Thank you so
Much for sharing these priceless recordings with the world
Se agradecerá mucho si su subtitula esta entrevista.
There's very poor vocal pedagogy today. The knowledge of Physiology is very important but it does not produce great singers, actually great singers are becoming practically extinct. This is an era of despise for discipline in every aspect of human life which is technically supported but deprived of the idea of efforts as a way towards achievement. Today, singers simply do not train as much as they should and they are flung into the operatic arena too soon before they can actually get a grasp of real singing is about. Hadley's explanation is accurate and unquestionable.
Wow...he said all the right things.
He knew what he was talking about.
Excellent - very intelligent guy, clearly. Very sad that he took his life.
Great TENOR. And you are right about singing.
Thank you Maestro. I feel validated. What a wonderful singer and mentor.
I feel like I'll remember this lesson for the rest of my life.
Quanta verità nelle sue parole...!
Right on Jerry. . Singing comes from the Lungs and the guts through the reed of the throat and the larynx. You sing from your heart and you don't need to mess around with anything else. Take it from a baritone!
AMEN!!!
Thanks for posting this. Can anybody tell me where this is is sourced from and the date? Much appreciated.
If those who long for an era of great singing really got what he has to say we would seriously consider closing down the academic institutions who pretend they are developing young singers for future careers.
+Brad Clark Ohhhh trust me I know! lol They should all be ashamed of themselves and shut down. And these teachers, like David Jones, should be in jail.
Silver Singing Method this is great stuff, but this just contains his "preface" as he called at the beginning. I LOVE his long winded pontification, but is there more the recording (i.e. is there a part where he gets to the core of his technical beliefs, thoughts, etc)?
Omg this is what I've been saying for years! Hadley is right on the money and singing is being studied like a text book, not the art form it is, hence the "generic performances" that are rampant today that Hadley is talking about. I heard this past saturday's broadcast of La Boheme, completely soulless. Making beautiful sounds does not mean someone is singing.
If only these sounds were beautiful... Most of times they even have not enough volume to know if they are beautiful or not.
I couldn’t agree more no teacher I had ever explained it because they didn’t know they just played the piano and said stupid things as imaginations unless your teacher can do it walk away I don’t think a male voice benefits from a female teacher as a reference they are limited and can’t demonstrate. I mentioned some famous singers to an Opera singer once and her reply was I’m more interested in my own voice she didn’t know who I was talking about
UNBELIEVABLE !
What year did this interview took place?
We are defrauding the world of one of our greatest accomplishments. Here we witness a great singer with a great mind tell us the objective truth. Surrounded by all the tools to make great art, we are forced(singers) and forced fed(audience) to accept that the wheel will roll better if we could make that wheel no longer round but square or triangular in shape. There was even a documentary where someone said that they are trying to get rid of bel canto singing. So they want to change what translated from Italian amounts to beautiful singing? Perhaps therein lies the problem and also the solution. We must demand the truth. When opera becomes a new political forum where nothing matters but the ego and objectives of a corrupt and evil administration, we must look back and see historically what has and will continue to do to our fragile existence. The destruction of art, opera being a culmination of all its forms, is the beginning of the end of the human race and its beauty as it was intended. I think that is what Jerry Hadley faced when he took his life. His final act should scare us into making this change. With all his gifts and success he still chose to leave us. A violent act maybe hoping its operatic nature would be more stirring than great talent. A kind of genocide of opera and its forms has begun. It will finish with Mozart, Puccini, Verdi and Wagner and sneak its way into everything we cherish. The human race will truly become a mediocrity. Our devolution back to monkeys with lots of technology would be pretty theatrical. Except the word theater would have been forgotten and hey monkeys with IPhones are too busy texting ooohaha and bananabanana to even notice.
Thank you Adrian for your very powerful and very accurate comment. I was a young singer back in the 1970's and was in New York at the time that Jerry Hadley "arrived" so to speak. I was studying with a wonderful and gifted vocal coach and conductor named Constantine Callinicos. He had been Mario Lanza's conductor, coach and accompanist. Talk about a sad end to a great voice. Lanza died at 38 and, according to Maestro Callinicos, possessed the greatest voice he had ever heard. And bear in mind he had heard a few voices by the time I was working with him. He conducted opera on both coasts and worked with the young Domingo, Enrico Di Giuseppe and many others. What you postulate about Jerry's death is both excruciatingly sad and deathly frightening. Yes, we as a society are moving toward not only the acceptance of mediocrity but the embracing of it. This is one of the saddest facts of this world we now inhabit.
If only we have more of these people around instead of the impostors, egocentrics and idiots we are surrounded with today
I saw Hadley onstage many times at the NYC Opera and the Met. His suicide was tragic. He was a good colleague of Sutherland/Bonynge. Sutherland herself studied with professional teachers in Australia, but Bonynge felt that they had taught her all wrong -- darkening her voice for Wagnerian power and taking away her top notes. Nilsson, after nearly ruining her voice with various teachers, figured out a workable technique on her own. Domingo didn't know how to support his voice until another singing friend, during their early professional days in Israel, demonstrated exercises to strengthen his diaphragm. I guess it's hard to find a teacher who knows how to develop a personalized technique.
Can someone tell me why he ended his life? I mean, did his voice just go away, did he forget his technique, did he take on repitoire that was not suitable for his voice? What happened? So sad, I hope he rests in peace. God love him.
I believe it was a combination of things. He wasnt getting hired , was suffering depression, relationship trouble and I think he had problems with alcohol.
Jef Olson, all true. I knew him in his last years. He suffered from what today would be called mental health issues, but his Robin-Williams-like very funny persona covered up a lot. I once talked to him about returning to conducting, which was his first intention when he started in music. He felt he had more singing years left, but his career proved otherwise. He was also wryly bitter in his funny way about all the gimmicks selling opera and he knew he was fading from view. He felt things deeply and passionately, including his depression.
What a rant! I guess he didn't go to school with a bunch of singers who learned their opera roles from recordings because they couldn't read music.
A fine singer. It's a shame he's gone.
THIS!!!
Who were his idols?
Mr. Hadley nailed something I've believed for years. As a theater singer, I've learned as much - if not more - from listening to guys like Jerry Orbach, Bing Crosby, George Hearn and others as I have from my various voice teachers and coaches over the years. And now you hear this generic 'voice' among theater vocalists...they all sound the same, enunciate the same way. It's all about volume, not nuance or individuality. We have body mics now - why does everyone insist on bellowing, whether it's a tender ballad or an up tempo piece? It's even worse with women. The Linda Eder/Idina Menzel voice is all you hear, and it's unfortunate. Cookie cutter singing is everywhere.
1952 - 2007??? Died at age 55? What happened to him?
Dale Erwin Took his own life unfortunately, depression is an ugly monster.
I couldn’t find a teacher to work with my big voice, they tried to make me small, ‘masked’ and unbalanced. I gave up. Wasted time and technique with New York teachers. I finally quit. It hurt. I was close but couldnt endure.
I am sorry to hear that. I think that it happens more than anyone realizes. I know someone who was a tremendous tenor who studied with Tom and gave up as well.
Look at the channel of maestro Micheal Trimble . I think he can help you.
Please don't endorse a charlatan and especially on my channel. Trimble is one of the WORST teachers out there. He teaching wrong breathing, wrong tongue, basically wrong everything. Including you can only be good if you do yoga and swim. Total charlatan with no results.
@@SilverSingingMethodI think you are wrong but ok...everyone has his opinion. Please look and hear the first videos he did and how he sangs in his younger years. He teaches what the great singers of the past said. And so was his voice. And I can hear that his students are great. Greetings.
So now YOU are the expert? I don't think so. Nothing I said is untrue and I have worked with people who studied with him and he ruins their voices. If he is so great, as you say, and has been teaching for decades then WHERE are the SINGERS he has produced? He hasn't. He is nothing, but talk and bad information. How he sang has NOTHING to do with teaching. So stop spreading your ignorance on my channel promoting charlatans that you have been bamboozled into believing. He duped you.
Aujourd'hui étant donné que les chanteurSEs ne sont plus en mesure de rendre le beau chant sur scène, l'opéra mise sur la mise en scène.
Welp. How’s THAT for addressing the elephant in the room?
I love Hailey’s singing. But I disagree with some of his points. Primarily, the point he makes that signing’s natural habitat is the theatre. NO! Long before the theatre, singing thrived in solo song and in ensemble singing.
Hadley has been wonderful but wouldn't call him an American Singer by sound or education..... this is one of the real big problems today all this American Methods are too much constructed..... the old Italian Belcanto is not what American made with it - excuse
and
today all this bad singers from America, Europe and Russia are all to much running after this bad US-Marchmellowsound...
Huh?
I've played guitar for 16 years, I've been having classical voice lessons for 4 years. I am so far better at guitar than I am singing so far and I truly believe my ears are my best friends. Sure learning certain techniques and the like help enormously, but simply listening to how a singer produces a sound (similar to learning guitar) is also very very helpful.