Bass Cage Match: Osmin's Low D!

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  • Опубліковано 28 жов 2008
  • Time to take the Opera Cage Match to a new low. The Low D in Osmin's aria "Ha! Wie will ich triumphieren" is one of the lowest notes in any standard repertory opera. I have compiled a sing-off between eleven basses, representing 60 years of freakishly low voices.
    In chronological order:
    1. Ezio Pinza 1947 (in Italian)
    2. Mihaly Szekely 1959 (in Hungarian)
    3. Gottlob Frick 1966
    4. Kurt Moll 1974
    5. Marti Talvela 1984
    6. Matti Salminen 1987
    7. Jaako Ryhänen 1988
    8. Robert Lloyd 1991
    9. Cornelius Hauptmann 1992
    10. Franz Hawlata 2006
    11. Kurt Rydl 2006
    If you have a recording of someone else you think should be here, post it as a response!
    And in my opinion, Pinza wipes the floor with all of them.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 369

  • @figaro248
    @figaro248 9 років тому +153

    Kurt Moll, definitely! When I was in the MET Chorus I asked him if he had ever interpolated a B flat below low C at the end of the trio in Die Zauberfloete ( sorry, no umlaut on my keyboard!), and he said he hadn't, but it sounded like it would be fun! He then went on stage for that trio and did just that. It was was amazingly huge and resonant and cut through the orchestra to the audience beautiful and unforced! Maestro Levine, who was conducting, later asked him not to do that for the radio broadcast, which was kind of a shame!

    • @wavecycle
      @wavecycle 9 років тому +6

      Great story ☺

    • @manolis.799
      @manolis.799 9 років тому +10

      Wow! What a story!

    • @herrbrahms
      @herrbrahms 3 роки тому +11

      Stopping Moll from molling was the second worst thing that Levine did during his tenure. Heh.

    • @emmamcallister1743
      @emmamcallister1743 2 роки тому +5

      He sounds like he had a great personality, I wish I could have met him.

    • @allenjones3130
      @allenjones3130 Рік тому +1

      @@herrbrahms And what was the worst?

  • @Fistwagon
    @Fistwagon 14 років тому +49

    Kurt Moll is the man. Always sounds as if "Theres plenty more where that came from." He never struggles.

  • @99SpidermanFan
    @99SpidermanFan 11 років тому +9

    There is a reason why Kurt Moll is considered to be the greatest operatic basso profundo in modern era. He has the most consistant and powerful voice with beautiful tessiture and timbre and with amazing range. His voice is also very distinctive: we recognize it right away( the great Gottlob Frick also has a very recognizable voice). L'impeccable bassiste!

  • @MultiKamil97
    @MultiKamil97 6 років тому +56

    Many people here completely do not understand how good these basses are. Sure, you may be able to go even below D2 but would you be able to SING a D2 over a full orchestra without microphone? Hitting and PROJECTING the note is completely different.

    • @joshuamclean4588
      @joshuamclean4588 Рік тому +9

      And resonating beautifully is another thing too

    • @alexanderwoodward9918
      @alexanderwoodward9918 8 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, a lot of people also don't realize how to project a note like that. It's not all volume, it's the way you resonate that note. It's like you want the note to be inflected so it can pierce through the orchestra into the audience.

    • @MultiKamil97
      @MultiKamil97 8 місяців тому +1

      @@alexanderwoodward9918 Exactly. Those notes may even sound quiet in a video but in person, they are just freaking loud. It's not the same as hitting D2 in our rooms.

  • @johnblasiak607
    @johnblasiak607 4 роки тому +36

    Kurt moll has a brilliant voice what sets him apart from most is squillo or real resonance low but audible and piercing

  • @MrPeejen
    @MrPeejen 8 років тому +67

    It's very interesting. My favorite is also Kurt Moll. But I think, he uses a little but helpful trick, to sing the tone clearer and keep it more easily. The original lyrik is "Denn nun hab' ich vor euch Ruh". But he sings "Denn nun hab' ich Ruh vor euch." He changes the last words, Frick also. This enables them, to sing the low D with the vowel /ɑ:/, because you can sing an /ɑ:/ for /ɔ/ in "euch"/ɔɪ̯ç/. And that is a little bit easier as the singing with the /u:/ in "Ruh". But it's just a detail 😉

    • @LocutusBorgOf
      @LocutusBorgOf 7 років тому +8

      Kurt Möll was an oktavist, so it's not like a trick, this is actually not the lowest note he could go with clarity.

    • @MultiKamil97
      @MultiKamil97 6 років тому +5

      Leandro Tomas Cuadra Basso profundo actually. Oktavist is a term that fits Russian choral basso profundos more.

  • @lsmart
    @lsmart 4 роки тому +6

    "Sweeps the floor" is the perfect phrase. Wow!!! I've always thought that in terms of sheer quality of tone, no singer dominated his or her voice category as profoundly as Pinza - even more than Caruso, Ponselle and Ruffo in their's. Just listen to this set. You have 10 voices of the same rough nature (of course some are of far better quality than others), and then one sound that sings the same notes but sounds like it comes from another planet - so clear, ringing, gorgeous and sweet is it. That this higher-range basso could actually do the greatest low note, and with ease, just adds to the evidence of his greatness.
    As for Talvella, he must have had a cold that day, because his voice his literally unrecognizable, not only in the low note, which he usually slaughters, but throughout the selection.

  • @DonPaolissimo
    @DonPaolissimo 12 років тому +5

    I, too, was most pleasantly surprised that Pinza was the clear "winner" here. I always thought him a basso cantante, yet his note is not only deep, but strong & full of heft!

  • @thephantom1946
    @thephantom1946 13 років тому +6

    @BorisGodunov Pinza did sing those notes live, Osmin was a role he sang abroad before he made his US debut. He could and did, and he had those notes in the house:-) He didn't have to "cheat" and he definitely deserves his legendary status. I have his full repertoire of opera performances for the US and abroad.

  • @xDR1TeK
    @xDR1TeK 2 роки тому +4

    I came looking for Lloyd's performances, and found 12 amazing bass performers. Excellent video. I agree that Pinza sounds fabulous, but agree also with one of the comments, Moll's voice does give the feeling that it's plentiful and full of bounty. Opera forever.

  • @grouchomarx5609
    @grouchomarx5609 4 роки тому +46

    Ezio Pinza - great low D - and he was a cantante!
    Mihaly Szekely - one of favorites, he surely had some notes lower than C2.
    Gottlob Frick - "blackest bass of Germany", another spectacular D2.
    Kurt Moll - I needn't say much about it - just listen!
    Marti Talvela - too sharp and strained, perhaps he had a bad day.
    Matti Salminen - sounds like too low note for him.
    Jaako Ryhänen - it's hardly audible through the orchestra, sorry
    Robert Lloyd - good low D, but a bit throaty.
    Cornelius Hauptmann - just nice.
    Franz Hawlata - sharp and strained, and hardly audible.
    Kurt Rydl - he is clear past his prime here.

    • @Kenny......
      @Kenny...... 3 роки тому +7

      u have to give matti salminen more credit, his D2 sounded much better than many on the list that ure on top of that praising.

    • @Dugehstmiraufnkeks
      @Dugehstmiraufnkeks 3 роки тому +4

      The thing is Kurt Rydl never had those extremely low notes, at least not that I could recall of.

    • @kronkepus3671
      @kronkepus3671 10 місяців тому

      @@Kenny......least patriotic finn:

    • @Kenny......
      @Kenny...... 10 місяців тому +1

      @@kronkepus3671 i dont consider my opinion biased but who knows ahahhah

  • @Lukerdog
    @Lukerdog Рік тому +3

    Moll & Pinza are both a Heavenly thunder in these ears. Thank you for the sampling plate!
    😆Cage match! 😆

  • @dnettles
    @dnettles 12 років тому +9

    PINZA reigns supreme! What a voice!!

  • @figaro248
    @figaro248 9 років тому +13

    I have a recording of a live performance of Der Rosenkavalier from a 1936 Buenos Aires live performance in which Alexander Kipnis sings a low C. In the same performance he also sings a series of high F's an F# and a short G# at the top. All beautifully dark, resonant and rotund in character!

    • @anditag508
      @anditag508 7 років тому +6

      OF course, Kipnis was one of greatest bassos ever.

    • @ilgattopardo3231
      @ilgattopardo3231 4 роки тому

      Baron Ochs is one of the craziest operatic roles ever written, that's for sure.

  • @MrPibb23x
    @MrPibb23x 8 років тому +19

    Is it just me or does the Martti Talvela one from 1984 start going waaaaaaay fucking sharp?

    • @jarofpickles3456
      @jarofpickles3456 7 років тому +5

      He does. It's probably because he can't really go down to the low D and he is straining to get there thus the tone and intonation suffers.

    • @ayottemusic
      @ayottemusic 6 років тому +1

      He's anticipating the two-octave leap.

    • @MultiKamil97
      @MultiKamil97 3 роки тому

      Yeah, he's like between D2 and Eb2.

  • @Norman1566
    @Norman1566 11 років тому +5

    do agree with you, Kurt Moll was one of the best German Basso profundo with an incredible range and presence.

    • @johnblasiak607
      @johnblasiak607 4 роки тому

      One of the true great bass voices only an idiot so someone comments here about Owen Brannigan not being included lmao 😂

  • @benjamin91025
    @benjamin91025 8 років тому +35

    Kurt Moll is The best

  • @romandemidov
    @romandemidov Рік тому +4

    Ezio Pinza - the best!👌👍

  • @franssales
    @franssales 10 років тому +23

    Kurt Moll gets it out most clearly. However, the low D is just a (very small) part of Osmin. All singers, basses included, are singers primarily singers. The strong bottom note is a nice spice for other good singing qualities, but not more than that.

    • @anditag508
      @anditag508 7 років тому +10

      Study Moll's Triplets in the aria - never heard anybody singing these so accurate

    • @RossiniSoprano
      @RossiniSoprano 7 років тому +12

      AND Moll could trill...the total package!

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому

      @@RossiniSoprano Not as well as Pol Plançon. Now THERE was a trill!

  • @thephantom1946
    @thephantom1946 13 років тому +3

    I definitely agree with baritonoguapo. PINZA wipes the floor with all of them. He wasn't Toscanini's and Bruno Walter's favorite basso for nothing. He was amazing. Hits the low D perfectly!

  • @Kevin_Beach
    @Kevin_Beach 10 років тому +12

    Robert Lloyd's voice has never come across in recordings or broadcasts as well as it does live. It has a rich magnificence that the microphone never captures.
    I'd love to here John Relyea singing this roll. He has a forte bottom D.

  • @julianmartinoricordi3434
    @julianmartinoricordi3434 8 років тому +13

    Ezio Pinza rimane il migliore. Un vero e proprio organo!!

  • @nickbaritone
    @nickbaritone 15 років тому +23

    Kurt Moll's low D is nice. I pick that. Pinza's is really good too. He was a higher bass so it is surprising that his is as good as it is.

    • @rja1165
      @rja1165 3 роки тому +1

      Classical types are more relevant about timbre, roles and type of sonority, than range. You can be a baritone and top a Low C and even a tenor High C at the same time.

    • @nickbaritone
      @nickbaritone 3 роки тому +1

      @@rja1165 I agree with you. I sing with a tenor who sings low cs like they are nothing. For this passage specifically, I like Kurt Moll. I heard him sing Sarastro in person and his low notes had tremendous resonance.

    • @rja1165
      @rja1165 3 роки тому

      @@nickbaritone The best example I can give you is mine :
      voca.ro/1loGTaLWQUmQ
      I recorded it at home during practice. A strong low C and a full high C.
      Actually, there are many examples of singers with versatile voices.

    • @luscao8444
      @luscao8444 3 роки тому +1

      @@rja1165 You are amazing man! So good, for how long have you been singing?

    • @rja1165
      @rja1165 3 роки тому +1

      @@luscao8444 Actually, 11 years. My voice changed at 12 and I started singing at 14 !
      But I only took 4 years of real lessons.

  • @DJtelekinesis
    @DJtelekinesis 11 років тому +3

    I sang this aria at a vocal competition the other day and almost completely blanked my low D. This explains to me why I was still able to win.

  • @Rosangela161
    @Rosangela161 5 років тому

    Magnificent Kurt Moll. Didactic post. Thanks.

  • @urssulas
    @urssulas 10 років тому +7

    The 1st two ones are the best of the bunch!

  • @spiderstex
    @spiderstex 12 років тому

    great collection! Thankyou!

  • @CantorClassics
    @CantorClassics 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for posting this. I can attest from personal experience that low D is a beastly difficult note for most basses to sing. Few operatic roles demand it. For example, Sarastro in The Magic Flute, as written, only goes down to low F, though a low E is often interpolated at the end of the second aria. On many of the recordings here the D was sung barely audibly My vote would definitely be for Moll. I would give an honorable mention to Pinza, for singing it well enough despite being a lyric bass who sang some baritone roles too. Incidentally, I recently interpolated a low D into a well-known cantorial piece ("Eilu Devorim") that I recorded on my own UA-cam channel.

  • @iCancrizans
    @iCancrizans 6 років тому +4

    Kurt Moll!! Marti Talvela actually goes a whole semitone higher. Maybe he was trying to do a vibrato and one of the vocal chords came a cropper

  • @uglymoon78
    @uglymoon78 15 років тому +4

    I always liked Moll, so I'd say he "won" it, but Szekely is also very good, so is Pinza. I wonder if Siepi ever sang Osmin, that would be interesting to listen to!

  • @Anton_the_Vampire
    @Anton_the_Vampire 11 років тому

    I'm envious cos' I LOVE Kurt Moll's singing. I could only dream of singing that well.

  • @BobbyBlackhearts666
    @BobbyBlackhearts666 10 років тому +1

    So many magnificent voices :3

  • @manolis.799
    @manolis.799 9 років тому

    Amazing volume on some of these!

  • @mikemerkel912
    @mikemerkel912 10 років тому +59

    Kurt moll won that round

    • @mcmerry2846
      @mcmerry2846 3 роки тому +4

      Vibrato on high.notes is hard...but vibrato on lows...thats a whole life training

    • @user-mw8ni4rh3v
      @user-mw8ni4rh3v 3 роки тому +1

      agree

    • @emmamcallister1743
      @emmamcallister1743 2 роки тому

      without a doubt

    • @user-kw9qu2gz8v
      @user-kw9qu2gz8v 2 роки тому

      @@mcmerry2846 you either have it or you don't, it's basically impossible to train.

  • @matthenrick5531
    @matthenrick5531 3 роки тому +3

    Kurt Moll by a mile...and by far the best artist!!!

  • @BelasPet
    @BelasPet 11 років тому

    WOW nice collection! For me ... Kurt MOLL (from 0:58) thanks for including & introducing him!

  • @jasonhurd4379
    @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому +2

    I also think Moll is the best, but I give honorable mention to Salminen, for his real menace and also for the eerie, expressionistic phrasing of the orchestra under Harnoncourt. And kudos to poor Cornelius Hauptmann for having to sing at A=430, roughly a quarter tone below modern pitch. Doesn't make that low D any easier!

  • @BorisGodunov
    @BorisGodunov 13 років тому +2

    @ReyNixz It has been said that if Talvela had been 6 inches shorter, he probably would have been a baritone. I'm not so sure about that, but he was never particularly strongest on the extreme low notes of his range. But he had, in my view, the most astonishingly beautiful of bass voices.

  • @Nibelungenfrau
    @Nibelungenfrau 12 років тому

    what a great video...!!! LOVE IT

  • @jordipanadesribera6890
    @jordipanadesribera6890 3 роки тому +2

    Moll, Salminen, Lloyd, Pinza, in this order.

  • @landscapetransformationwit6018
    @landscapetransformationwit6018 6 місяців тому

    I just love how PInza sings this whole aria, and his low notes were apparently big and resonant in the house. There’s a real problem with dark bass voices being heard singing these low notes in the house, and I’d bet Pinza’s Ds would have carried quite well.

  • @phillip_costovski
    @phillip_costovski 14 років тому +4

    Pinza, Szekeley, Lloyd are the better ones. Some aren't a low D as they have been transcribed up, including Rydl who has the worst note. Certainly an interesting compilation.

  • @nicolashrv
    @nicolashrv 9 років тому +23

    By faaaaaaaaaaaar, Ezio Pinza was the best. The color of his voice didnt' changed a bit.

    • @Dugehstmiraufnkeks
      @Dugehstmiraufnkeks 6 років тому +2

      Well, that's because it sounded bad from the beginning

    • @pollywoddle471
      @pollywoddle471 6 років тому +7

      Sure was. Though I would have loved to hear Neri.

    • @nicolashrv
      @nicolashrv 5 років тому +10

      @Dugehstmiraufnkeks get your ears and head check, youtuber

    • @enocjordanabi4207
      @enocjordanabi4207 4 роки тому +3

      @@pollywoddle471 I would like to hear him too

  • @ONeirda
    @ONeirda 12 років тому

    @JazzyGiord Thank you for your competent remark, dear JazzyGirod. I completely agree with you. Many baritones and bass-baritones 'reach' a low D and then think, it'd be easy, so what all the fuzz about it... BUT: Mostly they produce vocal fry or 'sit' on the sound and push the note downwards with muscular tension, thus overbreasting and beraving the necessary (even down here!) it of its healthy head voice component... Having to push or having a real deep bass voice = the question.

  • @StuFromOz99
    @StuFromOz99 12 років тому

    Conal Coad - Its recorded on ABC Classics, stunning singer (and still performing)

  • @laszlobaranyay8003
    @laszlobaranyay8003 7 років тому +2

    Dear All, I know that the Hungarian language isn't easy, but listen to a full Osmin aria sung by Mihály Székely and a German version sung by Endre Koreh(Decca 1950 cunducted by J. Krips). Enjoy!
    L.Baranyay

  • @sherom
    @sherom 15 років тому

    Thanks for the comparison's

  • @BucaManTV
    @BucaManTV 14 років тому

    excellent video

  • @ortodox56
    @ortodox56 10 років тому +1

    Bravissimo !

  • @luscao8444
    @luscao8444 3 роки тому +1

    I wanna hear Avi singing this.
    My favorite was Kurt Moll, unbelievable.

  • @seancoxen3329
    @seancoxen3329 2 роки тому +1

    Josef Greindl, Herbert Alsen and Endre Koreh made outstanding recordings

  • @Andramelach
    @Andramelach 5 років тому +1

    I've watched this clip for years now and it still intrigues hearing the differences between each performer.
    Admittedly, I know extraordinarily little about the inner workings of professional singing, so apologies if this comes out wrong.
    Personal favorite is Frick for the richness of his voice. For clarity and execution on keeping with the pacing of the piece, Moll.
    Is it odd that the shape of their mouth or lip size comes out in their execution?

    • @moiraclegg3380
      @moiraclegg3380 2 роки тому +1

      My personal favorite is also Frick. I am always dazzled by the beauty of his voice, the greatest I ever heard. And he can color his voice for different characters. His Sarastro, so kind, not pompous, nothing of the 'Great Man' in it! King Philip (I think of it in German), Prince Gremin, so many others. I fell in love with his dangerous, menacing Hagen!!! But if Kurt Moll supporters want to claim a win in this match, that's OK. It;s not for me the most important thing.

  • @alocksley
    @alocksley 15 років тому

    Fantastic compilation. Thanks for the work.
    It's interesting how many of the artists take "poetic license" with the text over the D to get a more open vowel and thus more volume.
    For my money...Moll is the best.

  • @BorisGodunov
    @BorisGodunov 12 років тому

    @thephantom1946 Thank you for the citation. I've checked on the Magidoff list, and it is indeed there. However, I remain unconvinced for several reasons. Magidoff was completing Pinza's autobio after his death, so this list was compiled around 1956. There are zero citations, and no mention is given of when/where Pinza supposedly sang it. Pinza himself makes no mention of the role at all. For all we know, he could have been assuming Pinza sang the role based on this very recording. (cont)

  • @mikefaulkner9788
    @mikefaulkner9788 9 років тому +9

    Yes.... I think that Moll wins this one!

  • @alocksley
    @alocksley 15 років тому

    THis is all great. I'm wondering if the same competition exists for the duet between Osmin and Blonde, in which Osmin goes from a low e-flat to an f above middle c in about a measure and a half. It'd be interesting to see that competition.

  • @alocksley
    @alocksley 14 років тому +1

    @zepto3600 what about Baron Ochs' exit at the end of act I of Rosenkavelir -- a low C...

  • @karlsonkab51
    @karlsonkab51 10 років тому +1

    Eduard Wollitz should be featured in a cage match of some sort - - if recordings are available

  • @Ramakrishnademeester
    @Ramakrishnademeester 13 років тому

    Yes my friends thit you hear the beauty of them all? For what is this competition? I don ' t understand. When i have a favorite then my favorite is ... Kurt Moll. Now i am going to listen to the full aria and enjoy the music and beaty of all of them. Thank you for the publication.

  • @lesthermiranda1794
    @lesthermiranda1794 7 років тому +1

    One thing is to be able to hit the note and a different thing is to be able to fill an opera house with that note

  • @Sardonicus
    @Sardonicus 12 років тому

    FINALLY! I've been trying to find operatic bass singer videos on UA-cam forever now and all I end up with at best is a baritone because people not classically trained don't recognize the difference, that or they are all bass guitar covers of the "Night of the Opera" or whatever by Iron Maiden. -_-'

  • @dynomax101
    @dynomax101 15 років тому +2

    My opinion? Pinza and Moll.

  • @kingej_2373
    @kingej_2373 3 роки тому +4

    Did anyone try singing it and actually hit the note? I did and I feel invincible!

  • @moirbasso7051
    @moirbasso7051 4 роки тому

    At 18, I sang Sarastro's arias, and longed to do this aria, cuz the D was THERE. Now, I realize, it's just part of the 'package.' But I wonder- How many of these recordings were done early in the morning, when we bassos have great low notes? LOL And yes, a number of the singers, tended to sharp (Phonation that low is much more a 'relax and let go' rather than 'support and aim'.....and yes, you just have to 'park and bark' on a note like that.

  • @RafaelBorgesRDB
    @RafaelBorgesRDB 10 років тому +13

    Kurt Moll is the best Osmin ever!

    • @talkingbowl
      @talkingbowl 10 років тому +7

      Also the best Sarastro.

    • @thomaskgeydan2528
      @thomaskgeydan2528 10 років тому +3

      talkingbowl I fully agree!

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому

      @bodiloto's hater You're both wrong. The best Sarastro by far is Peter Meven.

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому +1

      @bodiloto's hater Not as Sarastro he's not. And widen your listening experience a bit. Pol Plançon, Ludwig Weber, Nicolai Ghiaurov, Alexander Kipnis, Tancredi Pasero and Giancarlo Luccardi are all superior to Siepi.

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому

      @bodiloto's hater Listen to them for yourself. That will demonstrate the truth of my assertion better than any verbal argument I can give.

  • @donnrutkoff922
    @donnrutkoff922 3 роки тому

    can you find Tancredi Pasero singing this? His La Calunia is a big favorite of mine.

  • @adamskyb
    @adamskyb 14 років тому

    i cant seem to find a good cd of this opera with moll...any one have a link...or any other bass, rydl...

  • @mrbassman1754
    @mrbassman1754 8 років тому +10

    You need to include Gunter Wewel. He is the best. Also good, but missing here are Herbert Alsen and Franz Crass

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому

      Did Crass ever record this aria? If he did, I'm not aware of it.

    • @matveykurland7012
      @matveykurland7012 3 роки тому +1

      @@jasonhurd4379 He did. There are at least two different videos of him doing it on youtube.

  • @BorisGodunov
    @BorisGodunov 12 років тому +1

    @thephantom1946 Finally, I'll reiterate that there is no actual documentation of Pinza singing the role. Magidoff's list is not such, it's the equivalent of hearsay in a legal proceeding. Given the complete omission of the role from Pinza's recordings and that it is a role that is very much outside his typical ones, I'm comfortable being skeptical. The overall point, that Pinza wasn't ripping off low Ds in opera houses, and that THIS D is "strong" due to getting close to the mic, stands.

  • @andrewizz
    @andrewizz 12 років тому

    @JazzyGiord Yes, I agree 100% I'm a bass and I can hit that note but it's so weak, these men are really really great.

  • @littlecatholicman
    @littlecatholicman 10 років тому +1

    Maybe they weren't the best but good on Finland for producing so many quality basses with such a small population.

  • @SoulNotes1
    @SoulNotes1 14 років тому

    @Jouwl These guys are not equipped with Elephant tunks to lift the sound up...
    However they will vibrate a message through the earth!
    Low notes are the most difficult to sing and project - and these guys are doing extremely well.
    My like Kurt Moll holds it beautifully and of course Ezio Pinzo...

  • @BaroneVitellioScarpia1
    @BaroneVitellioScarpia1 3 роки тому +2

    Ezio, without a doubt.

  • @adamskyb
    @adamskyb 14 років тому

    Has anyone ever heard of Herbert Ahlsen? I just heard him in a vienna philharmonic recording and his low d's are HUGE. But I cant find any info or other recordings w/him

  • @BorisGodunov
    @BorisGodunov 13 років тому

    @thephantom1946 I will need more than your say-so that Pinza ever sang Osmin on stage. I'm very familiar with his repertoire as well and have pretty much everything he recorded, and there's not a trace of Osmin anywhere outside of the 1946 Bruno Walter studio recording of the aria in Italian that is sampled here. Googling Pinza and Osmin only brings hits on this recording.
    Outside of this recording, there aren't any low Ds in Pinza's recordings by which to judge.

  • @reginagotiam5273
    @reginagotiam5273 5 років тому

    Quite good

  • @BorisGodunov
    @BorisGodunov 13 років тому

    @76Basso And about that low E flat--It's the same story as the Osmin D. He wasn't singing in an opera house for that song, even if there was a live audience (although even THAT is arguable, since in those days they would frequently add laugh and applause tracks to broadcasts from a studio). Regardless, it is clear he is singing right up at the microphone for it. He certainly does not have the deep bass spread for that note that you get with a Moll, or even Siepi.

  • @savioalves1234
    @savioalves1234 10 років тому

    Vozes lindas!!!

  • @Anton_the_Vampire
    @Anton_the_Vampire 14 років тому

    Yes, I totally agree, though I've watched my personal favourite Kurt Moll singing Osmin (on here actually) and he doesn't MOVE much when preparing for the low D. As for singing under the shower, while I wouldn't pretend to be in these guys' league, I did attend music college for guitar and voice, and am somewhat above "shower" level. Moll does a great "Isis and Osiris", which has a bottom F, and I sang that at college. :)

  • @iluvpepi
    @iluvpepi 7 років тому +1

    Moll is my favorite, but who sings the Baroque key? It's slightly lower and quite impressive.

    • @jasonhurd4379
      @jasonhurd4379 5 років тому +1

      That's Cornelius Hauptmann, from the DG Archiv recording conducted by John Eliot Gardiner.

  • @anselmihirvonen6519
    @anselmihirvonen6519 7 років тому

    This 1988 live stage performance recording of Jaakko Ryhänen doesn't show his low notes at their best. On UA-cam is also his studio recording made in 2001 where you may hear an excellent low D. Just write "Jaakko Ryhänen Osmin" and you'll find it.

  • @antemahoney4376
    @antemahoney4376 3 роки тому +2

    is it me or does it sound like Kurt Rydl sung an Eb2 instead of D2?

  • @reviewsvoiceontube
    @reviewsvoiceontube 14 років тому +1

    Well, just evaluating what is given here- Kurt Moll in first and Lloyd in second- even though Frick is probably the darkest in general and popular for his potrayal of Osmin. Greindl and Weber should be heared.

  • @LardoDiColonnata
    @LardoDiColonnata 4 роки тому +1

    Why there's no Josef Greindl's Osmin?

  • @rustyweeks7259
    @rustyweeks7259 3 роки тому +3

    Gottlob Frick in my opinion.

  • @AtemiRaven
    @AtemiRaven 14 років тому +1

    I think most of these are live, you also have to remember they are in order of when they were sung. So the older ones probably would not have as good sound quality as the newer ones.

  • @ivelosthewilltolive
    @ivelosthewilltolive 13 років тому

    @Lassannn And Pinza doesn't take a breath either. One of those other guys had to breathe right before the low note!

  • @psy881212
    @psy881212 15 років тому +1

    i think gunther emmerlich should be there i heard him sing it in the dresden opera night it was very clear and nice done. the feeling was superb one of the best i seen

  • @SchallundWahn
    @SchallundWahn 12 років тому +1

    After hearing it two times, my favorite is Kurt Moll. But in the end I think a lot of them are very good.

  • @LordAroyeum
    @LordAroyeum 14 років тому

    if i could get accompaniment, would it be alright if i posted myself doing this as a response?

  • @chukiri.93
    @chukiri.93 3 місяці тому

    For me (personally): the big thumb goes to Gottlob Frick - one of the darkest bass performers.

  • @danielabdullah
    @danielabdullah 11 років тому

    Oh yeah? Let's hear them!

  • @boramaks
    @boramaks 11 років тому

    As someone has already noted, this is not "Low D" (=D1), this is mere D2, one octave above the low D.

  • @Pacuvio25
    @Pacuvio25 13 років тому

    @sarastro1791 ...and in the Ugonotti, Meyerbeer use a low C too

  • @kachufalav
    @kachufalav 9 років тому

    Do they use vibrato when they sing the low note?

  • @Sardonicus
    @Sardonicus 12 років тому

    Also, you should do one for that Rachmaninov low Bb I think it was? Isn't that the lowest scored note for a bass singer ever? I can't remember...

  • @thephantom1946
    @thephantom1946 12 років тому

    @BorisGodunov The evidence is in the book titled 'Ezio Pinza' an autobiography with Robert Magidoff who did a lot of researching and listed all the roles he performed on stage. I bought the book when I was a youngster in 1959. You can't find a fraction of the information about Pinza anywhere online; only in a book. Online sources provide precious little information, comparatively. It is the first one listed under his roles onstage, and was in Europe. So I'm afraid you're incorrect.

  • @RaphaDomeniche
    @RaphaDomeniche 10 років тому +7

    Pinza and Frick have great and very impressive voices! But Moll is my favorite.
    And Rydl, poor Rydl, has a very inconstant vibrato and an inconstant pitch :/ At least in this recording

    • @zimmelfsho1
      @zimmelfsho1 10 років тому +3

      I absolutely agree with you, Moll is great singer at all; have you heard the version from Gunter Wewel? Great low D, interesting clip.

  • @leadoffeohippus
    @leadoffeohippus 15 років тому +1

    Can you project it in an opera house without a mic? :-P

  • @Pacuvio25
    @Pacuvio25 13 років тому

    @zepto: there is the rosenkavalier too.