belt hater! but yah i think he thought he could slam into the top note if he strenghthened his lower note. Anchor it. But sadly this gimmick didnt work for him, neither did the jumping. I feel terrible for him. He sounds like he tried a lot a lot and more a lot.
@@arathglez_ well, I think he is Villazón for several factors: his way of saying the Italian, his mannerisms in walking through the stage and to act (like sending kisses to the audience in a very particular way after he finishes the aria, and how he saw the director before starting the E sempre misero, all his gestuality is very particular and never ever saw it in any other tenor, only he is so histrionic), and because he spoke Spanish (after each catastrophical try to the last high B, he said: No llego, that means "I can't reach the note", so why's a tenor speaking Spanish to an evidently Chinese audience? At least he's not a Chinese tenor definitely, as other have assumed). And his timber is at least similar to the lyric timbre of Villazón, although it's overly darkened by his tongue since the very beginning of the aria. Well, that's what makes me think the most probable tenor singing here is Villazón. But can be another tenor with similar timbre and with Spanish as his mother tongue (the only way for him to speak Spanish in a desperation moment in front of a Chinese audience) who may have been in China in that moment and whose personality in stage is as histrionic as Villazón. Even his hair is similar! It's to search or for a better quality of this same video, or the Villazón's schedule of that year, to discard that he wasn't there that year. But well, at last it doesn't matter who was, but just for guess haha.
Sometimes, you just can't do it right, and that's okay. Every musician has messed up during a live performance. We can either pout and quit, or laugh it off and learn from it like this awesome singer did. Here in the US, in our junior high and high schools, we have solo and ensemble festivals every year. This allowea students to perform, compete, and get feedback from an adjudicator. My freshman year, I played the prelude to the Cello Suite in G Major by Bach. I was extremely nervous and started too fast, so, I had to start over again, and I played it well the second time through. Afterwards, the adjudicator tried to show me some technical stuff that I didn't understand at the time. Then, he set my music aside and asked me to play it from memory to try to get me to come out of my shell, not knowing that I had impaired memory function. So, I just played what I remembered, picked up my stuff, thanked the adjudicator, and walked out quickly as I started crying. My music teachers followed me out, saying that I did very well, given that I played first time in the morning, I hadn't been working on the the piece very long, and I was asked to play by memory (they didn't anticipate that). Instead quitting, I actually felt more driven to show the world I could do it. The next week, in my private cello lesson, we played through several pieces until I settled on the first movement of Vivaldi's Cello Sonata in B-Flat Major. I started practicing it for an hour every day, increasing to two hours a day during the summer, performing for anyone who would listen. Once I nailed it, I memorized it by phrase, breaking the larger ones down by measure until I could play them perfectly five times in a row. I then combined the phrases two by two until I memorized the whole movement, and I got an excellent rating at the next year's festival. Immediately after that, I started working on the Saint-Saens Concerto in A Minor in the same manner for my junior and senior year, which got me into the music school of my choice. Music school wound up not being for me because I didn't get as much time to learn the music as I needed, but, I now play with an esteemed semi-professional orchestra, and I absolutely love it. Success really does come down to how you handle your mistakes.
Even if this guy had medical issues with his voice(and God bless him, as I am a vocalist also & I understand) .. However; This shit just sounds hillarious. No one is laughing at his attempt as much as they are laughing at the sound itself.. Unfortunately, comical... Much like an Olympic gymnast farting whilst sticking a landing X)) If he did in fact have a vocal fold operation, and during recovery performed, so speaks to the BALLS this guy has to attempt the near impossible for most any vocalist. Kudos brother ! May u reach those climbs once again upon healing. Bob. We love U.
He has a gorgeous voice...just sings MUCH too dark and with FORCED BREATH PRESSURE (HAS NOT LEARNED TO CONTROL HIS DIAPHRAGM)........ but the VOICE IS BEAUTIFUL !!!!!
Hey if anyone is in choir can you explain to me, what does choir help you with exactly? Does it make you good at singing or have higher notes or what is the main point in choir?
All singers are human. I once, mid- recital felt that i was not well. I asked the audience for their understanding. I felt unwell and didn’t continue before embarrassing myself.
I feel so bad for him, he did an excellent job. I wouldn’t have tried to go for it the second time, but cracking on stage is very embarrassing and shouldn’t be laughed at.
The moral lessons is always be humble.and sing 100% from the heart.Not for empress your voice.avoid arrogant attitude. because God always look in our your heart.
Nevertheless, props to the conductor for ending the performance with the cadence after the third majestic Tarzan scream. I think the conductor recognized that his voice was blown after that third consecutive crack 🤣
I just dont understand what he was trying to do on the last note, it's like he didn't crack he like did a weird cadenza run thing trying to get to it. Bizzare
Yeah...the first cadenza was...okay, but that "reach" for the final high B was like watching a possum try to dig its way out of quicksand. I've sung this aria many times, and it's quite treacherous. But even *I* never cracked that badly, except in a practice room.
No es chino es mexicano y su nombre es el tenor Rolando Villazon, después de esta presentación tuvo un chequeo medico y le detectaron nódulos en las cuerdas vocales, se sometió a la cirugía y ya esta bien, lo malo tuvo que cancelar como un año de presentaciones.
@@aimikokoro6947 : Yes, it is. It's practically unintelligible. You think you're the only one who speaks Italian?? I sing tenor. I've sung this aria (without grabbing with the throat and cracking). This is a completely mush-mouthed mess of impure vowels and lacking consonants. Keep up your fantasy though!
@@dmcg8400 senti pensi di sapere quale pronuncia è la migliore? Io sono italiana e tu probabilmente no. Ho più esperienza nell'italiano. Lo sento parlare ogni giorno. Tu no.
You can already tell he's struggling them high notes before he even cracks with how he sounds like kermit at those moments. His vibrato was all over the place my goodness. At least he was a good sport about it.
Questa orchestra suona l’opera italiana coi piedi,per non parlare del cantante. È per individui del genere che l’opera italiana,la maestra di tutti,muore.
This is Ronaldo Villazon. He is a great tenor, but right after this concert he was diagnosed with vocal cord cysts. There was nothing much he could've done and much was out of his control..
As a fellow vocalist I can testify to the damage done to the human voice via the over use of, or in my case G.E.R.D , YES ...GERD.. The stomach acid back flowed into my larynx over time , little by little, and eventually burned granulomas on my vocal folds!! WTF!!
It's not just the cracking though, the entire performance is subpar and awful. Cysts or not, he shouldn't have been on stage if this was the best he could do.
Ronaldo Villazon never were a great tenor, he’s more like a clown on the stage, I’m not surprised he’s end up like that because he’s teacher was Domingo
Los grandes cantantes Hacen cosas diferentes Y consiguen resultados diferentes Por ejemplo el vocalizo antes de pensier Lo cantan con un volumen controlado E inclusive lo apiánan muchísimo para Buscar la relajación antes del agudo. Cantan el si natural en el sonido e Con abertura de a Y concentran el sonido como si fuera una i En eso Kraus era un maestro
As a classical soprano, I know that this can sometimes happen just as you are starting to come down with a bad cold or throat infection. You go out on stage, ready to perform, and your voice starts to do it's own thing. You panic and then lose all control of it. He has a beautiful voice so I think he probably spent the next several days nursing a very sore throat. He almost made it but he lost his confidence when he realised his voice was in trouble. It can happen to any singer. Pity it was in front of such a large audience. He must have been dying up there on stage.🎶🎵🎼💐💐
He did not reach the high note, but does not mean he's not a great singer. The song is either too high for his range, or his voice is not in good condition that time. Singing high notes in the mixed registers can be unpredictable at times.
Can happen to anyone phlegm on the vocal chord will do it I’m sure he didn’t collaborate with the conductor and say let’s try it for fun he will be back to tumultuous applause the voice in itself is beautiful
The voice is fantastic. You must work the breath support and the mezza di voce. Then, crescendo, diminuendo, on this small place of voice. And never again will you crack your sounds.
I find it most interesting that there seems to be so many world class opera singers and experts here in the comment sections. Yet not very familiar names nor do I see many versions by them. It's easy to critisize from this side of the screen, but put yourself in his boots.
Djakonda D Because while bending the knees is not actively unhealthy, but it doesn’t play a role in air management or vowel formation which are the two basic components of singing.
Omg, always these singing specialists in the UA-cam comments section... Why aren't you all guys singing at the Met already... 🙄 I think this man is really amazing, he likes what he does, he's got a wonderful voice and every tenor should crack eventually. If you don't ever, THEN there's something wrong.
No, he is not an amazing singer, not an amazing musician. He is a lovely showman, and that he does it very well! He knows how to entertain people, which also has its value. His technique is very, very poor, and he ended having surgery because of that and stopped singing for more than a year, always pushing too much the air and almost shouting. The vibrato is not a good one either -because of the use of the air and the colour-. But as a performer, yes, very enjoyable to watch him in those contexts.
This is what happens when you don't warm up. You have to prepare. You can't run around town doing other things, then waltz in and sing a recital. Get the voice oiled and moving. Warming up is not just for beginners and amateurs.
He isn't a chinese tenor. He's Rolando Villazon, spanish tenor. And let me say a thing: tenor singing is not easy. It seems easy. But everyone is a critic...or not?
Marco Giocarolli Villazon is not Spanish, he is Mexican. When are you people gonna get that straight? Spaniards or Spanish people are European, they are not Latin American. Too many ignorants in the world. Ugh!
Marco Giocarolli Hehehe, it's ok. I hope it didn't sound nasty or anything. It wasn't my intention. I live in the US and people here use the word Spanish the wrong way. I apologize if it sounded personal. It wasn't. I'm European too btw. Have a great one.
It's ok, it's ok. :-) I'm a baritone (non professional) and I know how difficult it is to sing. You must remember how inspire, how take low larynx, how much to curve soft palate...a lot of things,in short...Everyone can make mistakes and anyone allows himself to deride or criticize, means that he has never studied belcanto.
Marco Giocarolli I'm glad I didn't offend you. Well, I'm a professional tenor and I mostly sing Bel Canto but I never ever sing back-throated or raise my soft palate for high notes. I do the contrary, I place everything very high in the maschera and then my soft palate goes down at the same time as my larynx, allowing the REAL sound of my voice to come out. Most "famous" singers of today sing back and round, use color instead of vocal technique, that's why they get nodes and lose their voices so quick. Villazon is just a copycat of Domingo. He sings way too back in his throat and too round. His voice doesn't project at all. This is the reason why everybody is miked nowadays. So sad! I'm glad I learned the technique of the singers from the golden age of opera (1900-1966).
Ok, so noone told him he needs to switch to a different register? You can't sing head register notes with a chest voice no matter how good of a baritone you are 😮
1. He's clearly a tenor singing a tenor aria 2. When singing this aria, tenors hit that note in full voice all the time. 3. He is clearly a trained opera singer having a bad day, he knows how to switch registers
Astonishing how many keyboard warriors think they know better how to sing than this tenor who's blessed with a magnificent voice and has years if not a decade or two of training. In opera you don't just switch to head voice. This is not the Bee Gees or Michael Jackson. A forte high C sounds pretty much like chest voice despite a lot of cricothyroid activation.
You need strong nerves to recover from such a shitty moment as a singer... but it sounds too funny, especially the second Tarzan scream.
how did you think of 'Tarzan'? It fits 100%!
That was some truly heroic cracking. Gotta admire the guy for giving it everything he had!
everything just wasn't enough xD
the thing is, in singing you just can't give everything or too much, or you'll crack
If you listen carefully, you can hear Verdi spin in his grave!
'if you listen carefully' makes the comment superlative!
That belted F sharp before the crack kills me everytime! xD
belt hater! but yah i think he thought he could slam into the top note if he strenghthened his lower note. Anchor it. But sadly this gimmick didnt work for him, neither did the jumping. I feel terrible for him. He sounds like he tried a lot a lot and more a lot.
Too long. Go to 1:50.
Nisse Pärlemo thanks mate
LOOOLLL!!!!
Impatient bastard
The description does tell us but thanks .
you help me
He starts too heavy which effect his crack on high note!
Actually he has a GREAT voice I guarantee on a good day he’s standing ovation material.
He is Rolando Villazón
@@bernatriera5437 He certainly sounds like Ronaldo Villazón.
@@pericofantasiasHis name is Jin Yong, a Chinese tenor, now a teacher.
Well he still a good singer. Sometimes crack happens
Apart from the crack, he has quite a nice, loud and clear voice with great diction for an amateur tenor!
Brünn hilde , he's not amateur 😆 It's Rorando Villazon
@@yuliana703 he’s not Rolando, his voice doesn’t sound like Villazon, not even close.
@@arathglez_ he is Rolando Villazón xd
@@eliascastillorivera7130 man, listen the color of the voice, even the high notes xd. It’s another guy
@@arathglez_ well, I think he is Villazón for several factors: his way of saying the Italian, his mannerisms in walking through the stage and to act (like sending kisses to the audience in a very particular way after he finishes the aria, and how he saw the director before starting the E sempre misero, all his gestuality is very particular and never ever saw it in any other tenor, only he is so histrionic), and because he spoke Spanish (after each catastrophical try to the last high B, he said: No llego, that means "I can't reach the note", so why's a tenor speaking Spanish to an evidently Chinese audience? At least he's not a Chinese tenor definitely, as other have assumed). And his timber is at least similar to the lyric timbre of Villazón, although it's overly darkened by his tongue since the very beginning of the aria. Well, that's what makes me think the most probable tenor singing here is Villazón. But can be another tenor with similar timbre and with Spanish as his mother tongue (the only way for him to speak Spanish in a desperation moment in front of a Chinese audience) who may have been in China in that moment and whose personality in stage is as histrionic as Villazón. Even his hair is similar! It's to search or for a better quality of this same video, or the Villazón's schedule of that year, to discard that he wasn't there that year. But well, at last it doesn't matter who was, but just for guess haha.
Sometimes, you just can't do it right, and that's okay. Every musician has messed up during a live performance. We can either pout and quit, or laugh it off and learn from it like this awesome singer did.
Here in the US, in our junior high and high schools, we have solo and ensemble festivals every year. This allowea students to perform, compete, and get feedback from an adjudicator. My freshman year, I played the prelude to the Cello Suite in G Major by Bach. I was extremely nervous and started too fast, so, I had to start over again, and I played it well the second time through. Afterwards, the adjudicator tried to show me some technical stuff that I didn't understand at the time. Then, he set my music aside and asked me to play it from memory to try to get me to come out of my shell, not knowing that I had impaired memory function. So, I just played what I remembered, picked up my stuff, thanked the adjudicator, and walked out quickly as I started crying. My music teachers followed me out, saying that I did very well, given that I played first time in the morning, I hadn't been working on the the piece very long, and I was asked to play by memory (they didn't anticipate that).
Instead quitting, I actually felt more driven to show the world I could do it. The next week, in my private cello lesson, we played through several pieces until I settled on the first movement of Vivaldi's Cello Sonata in B-Flat Major. I started practicing it for an hour every day, increasing to two hours a day during the summer, performing for anyone who would listen. Once I nailed it, I memorized it by phrase, breaking the larger ones down by measure until I could play them perfectly five times in a row. I then combined the phrases two by two until I memorized the whole movement, and I got an excellent rating at the next year's festival.
Immediately after that, I started working on the Saint-Saens Concerto in A Minor in the same manner for my junior and senior year, which got me into the music school of my choice. Music school wound up not being for me because I didn't get as much time to learn the music as I needed, but, I now play with an esteemed semi-professional orchestra, and I absolutely love it. Success really does come down to how you handle your mistakes.
Love how literally takes it in stride and thanks the audience for being patient with him
The conductor proceeding with the cadence to end the performance after the third Tarzan scream is comedic gold 🤣
As a tenor, this hurts my soul in multiple languages
Even if this guy had medical issues with his voice(and God bless him, as I am a vocalist also & I understand) .. However;
This shit just sounds hillarious.
No one is laughing at his attempt as much as they are laughing at the sound itself.. Unfortunately, comical... Much like an Olympic gymnast farting whilst sticking a landing X))
If he did in fact have a vocal fold operation, and during recovery performed, so speaks to the BALLS this guy has to attempt the near impossible for most any vocalist.
Kudos brother !
May u reach those climbs once again upon healing.
Bob.
We love U.
He has a gorgeous voice...just sings MUCH too dark and with FORCED BREATH PRESSURE (HAS NOT LEARNED TO CONTROL HIS DIAPHRAGM)........ but the VOICE IS BEAUTIFUL !!!!!
To me he sounds like a natural baritone more than a tenor. Yes, beautiful tone.
Yes, agreed. Beautiful voice.
Hey if anyone is in choir can you explain to me, what does choir help you with exactly? Does it make you good at singing or have higher notes or what is the main point in choir?
Definitely a Baritone with range. Beautiful Dark Tonality, just an unfortunate lack of discipline and breath control
@@StaticYonder Definitely a Spinto tenor !!!
It's awful when that happens. I was a little sick one night & did that on television. Awful
Malachy Smith sorry Michael
Sorry, Malachy, that's tough. Please post a video of it.
Post the video and timestamp the crack
1:59 the Beginning of the word sounds like a shout, with no vibrato
Thats how you know its already gone wrong
It sounds like he has a decent voice underneath but he's clearly forcing it too much.
"decent"? 🤣🤣
FABULOUS. Love it. At least it's not boring. BRAVOAnd the Orchestra. Great!!
All singers are human. I once, mid- recital felt that i was not well. I asked the audience for their understanding. I felt unwell and didn’t continue before embarrassing myself.
respect for standing there and giving himself to the audience, and even a 2nd try at the end! I would have fled in terror!
The orchestra tuning is just... Omg
I feel so bad for him, he did an excellent job. I wouldn’t have tried to go for it the second time, but cracking on stage is very embarrassing and shouldn’t be laughed at.
xD
Poor guy. Hope he looks back on it and laughs.
I would not criticize just for cracking, buy why in the world would he try to make a high note after a dreadful crack? He should have lowered it.
He can't or else he's offkey
@@Fearless.cat1209 octave
The moral lessons is always be humble.and sing 100% from the heart.Not for empress your voice.avoid arrogant attitude. because God always look in our your heart.
Apart from the cracks he has an awesome voice, full and resonant with a natural and beautiful vibrato.
i'm satisfied with his masculine voice. bravo!
The orchestra was pretty awful too...
John Cheng true
It's the sound quality that's awful, not the orchestra.
@@cellogirl11rw55 no, the orchestra was pretty bad haha
Nevertheless, props to the conductor for ending the performance with the cadence after the third majestic Tarzan scream. I think the conductor recognized that his voice was blown after that third consecutive crack
🤣
The person who wrote this no the sound quality was bad
X))
I love this !
God bless this dude for giving us his best and one hell of a laugh.
Tonights performer: Tarzan
poor dude. he handled it really well.
I just dont understand what he was trying to do on the last note, it's like he didn't crack he like did a weird cadenza run thing trying to get to it. Bizzare
Eh???
Yeah...the first cadenza was...okay, but that "reach" for the final high B was like watching a possum try to dig its way out of quicksand. I've sung this aria many times, and it's quite treacherous. But even *I* never cracked that badly, except in a practice room.
the best comment on the internet
Pen SIEEeiieEir
My stomach hurts! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
He has a beautiful voice and he was great up to the moment... It was really funny.
No es chino es mexicano y su nombre es el tenor Rolando Villazon, después de esta presentación tuvo un chequeo medico y le detectaron nódulos en las cuerdas vocales, se sometió a la cirugía y ya esta bien, lo malo tuvo que cancelar como un año de presentaciones.
His italian is the greatest sin
No. Not that bad
@@aimikokoro6947 : Yes, very bad. I thought the exact same. Muddled, unintelligible Italian.
@@dmcg8400 I'm italian. And I can say that is not that bad
@@aimikokoro6947 : Yes, it is. It's practically unintelligible. You think you're the only one who speaks Italian?? I sing tenor. I've sung this aria (without grabbing with the throat and cracking). This is a completely mush-mouthed mess of impure vowels and lacking consonants. Keep up your fantasy though!
@@dmcg8400 senti pensi di sapere quale pronuncia è la migliore? Io sono italiana e tu probabilmente no. Ho più esperienza nell'italiano. Lo sento parlare ogni giorno. Tu no.
he going to heavy on the top
Broooo, he says, "again" and yet repeats to fuck up, he must be a literal iron man to come back from that...
You can already tell he's struggling them high notes before he even cracks with how he sounds like kermit at those moments.
His vibrato was all over the place my goodness.
At least he was a good sport about it.
THE TENOR IS ROLANDO VILLAZÓN
guy is nuts he sounds good
Doing it once, tickled. Going for it again and it sounding exactly the same 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Questa orchestra suona l’opera italiana coi piedi,per non parlare del cantante. È per individui del genere che l’opera italiana,la maestra di tutti,muore.
Other than the end and him not really knowing the aria, it was pretty good...
This is Ronaldo Villazon. He is a great tenor, but right after this concert he was diagnosed with vocal cord cysts. There was nothing much he could've done and much was out of his control..
As a fellow vocalist I can testify to the damage done to the human voice via the over use of, or in my case G.E.R.D , YES ...GERD..
The stomach acid back flowed into my larynx over time , little by little, and eventually burned granulomas on my vocal folds!!
WTF!!
It's not just the cracking though, the entire performance is subpar and awful. Cysts or not, he shouldn't have been on stage if this was the best he could do.
Ronaldo Villazon never were a great tenor, he’s more like a clown on the stage, I’m not surprised he’s end up like that because he’s teacher was Domingo
very beautiful voice... just a bad day.
This is simply the BEST. Thank you so much!!!!! LOL
This is not easy... Luciano Pavarottis voice crashed two times when he was 50years old. No problem... it just happens something.
From the first note I can tell there's gonna be a problem 🤣
Los grandes cantantes
Hacen cosas diferentes
Y consiguen resultados diferentes
Por ejemplo el vocalizo antes de pensier
Lo cantan con un volumen controlado
E inclusive lo apiánan muchísimo para
Buscar la relajación antes del agudo.
Cantan el si natural en el sonido e
Con abertura de a
Y concentran el sonido como si fuera una i
En eso Kraus era un maestro
He even made the pooping squat position before every high note ; ...Dahhhhhhhhhh..Hehhh.%#&*!!
As a classical soprano, I know that this can sometimes happen just as you are starting to come down with a bad cold or throat infection. You go out on stage, ready to perform, and your voice starts to do it's own thing. You panic and then lose all control of it. He has a beautiful voice so I think he probably spent the next several days nursing a very sore throat. He almost made it but he lost his confidence when he realised his voice was in trouble. It can happen to any singer. Pity it was in front of such a large audience. He must have been dying up there on stage.🎶🎵🎼💐💐
I know him ,from Tianjin syphony orchestra,my cousin was in that concert,he have shown me that almost ten years ago
Towards the end, did he just say "ok no more" in Spanish? Because thats what it sounded like.😆
He said: No llego, and then again, he said the same. That means "I can't reach the note" lol
他叫金庸,中国男高音歌唱家,现为教师.
Really strong voice!! It just happens. All right
"A" for trying. Thrice.
That poor tenor. =/ All this gimmicks werent working. I would have felt mortified and collapsed right there with the first F-sharp.
He did not reach the high note, but does not mean he's not a great singer. The song is either too high for his range, or his voice is not in good condition that time. Singing high notes in the mixed registers can be unpredictable at times.
Can happen to anyone phlegm on the vocal chord will do it I’m sure he didn’t collaborate with the conductor and say let’s try it for fun he will be back to tumultuous applause the voice in itself is beautiful
I support him. Here I realize we are human beings.
I love him !
Hi is tarzan tenor Grande...... och oh oh hihi hihi hihi......
The voice is fantastic. You must work the breath support and the mezza di voce. Then, crescendo, diminuendo, on this small place of voice. And never again will you crack your sounds.
I find it most interesting that there seems to be so many world class opera singers and experts here in the comment sections. Yet not very familiar names nor do I see many versions by them. It's easy to critisize from this side of the screen, but put yourself in his boots.
I love it! He makes my cry :°°°)))))))
haha an embarrassing ending but an amazing performance!
my teacher always told me if you make a mistake do it again do they think you meant it!
Tianjin is the third biggest city which 120 km away from Beijing in China
As a beginner vocalist, this struck me a little
Im impressed by his strength in over the orchestra Lol why i feel like he did that on purpose
Not quite Bonisoli !
I hope he recovered and sang again XXX
Are we going to ignore his worst crime? Not staying in time with the orchestra.
Nice screaming, he sounds like a cat in heat.
When you bend your knees while singing, let's just say it's not healthy.
Why?
Djakonda D Because while bending the knees is not actively unhealthy, but it doesn’t play a role in air management or vowel formation which are the two basic components of singing.
Though it can also rob the singer of energy. At the very least.
At first I thought “he’s not so bad”, but then...oh God
if he sang with half the volume, even 1/3 from the beginning , that is the solution.
Omg, always these singing specialists in the UA-cam comments section... Why aren't you all guys singing at the Met already... 🙄 I think this man is really amazing, he likes what he does, he's got a wonderful voice and every tenor should crack eventually. If you don't ever, THEN there's something wrong.
No, he is not an amazing singer, not an amazing musician. He is a lovely showman, and that he does it very well! He knows how to entertain people, which also has its value. His technique is very, very poor, and he ended having surgery because of that and stopped singing for more than a year, always pushing too much the air and almost shouting. The vibrato is not a good one either -because of the use of the air and the colour-.
But as a performer, yes, very enjoyable to watch him in those contexts.
Making up notes,, making up rhythms, making up words- He should just do comedy
it's almost like he's doing it on purpose. both cracks landed on the same notes. lol
I could not do that if I wanted to
Been there, done that!
Did he say something like “ain’t happening tonight”
This is what happens when you don't warm up. You have to prepare. You can't run around town doing other things, then waltz in and sing a recital. Get the voice oiled and moving. Warming up is not just for beginners and amateurs.
He isn't a chinese tenor. He's Rolando Villazon, spanish tenor. And let me say a thing: tenor singing is not easy. It seems easy. But everyone is a critic...or not?
Marco Giocarolli Villazon is not Spanish, he is Mexican. When are you people gonna get that straight? Spaniards or Spanish people are European, they are not Latin American. Too many ignorants in the world. Ugh!
Yes, you're right. Sorry...I've made a mistake. Now he's a french citizen...sorry again master of bel canto
Marco Giocarolli Hehehe, it's ok. I hope it didn't sound nasty or anything. It wasn't my intention. I live in the US and people here use the word Spanish the wrong way. I apologize if it sounded personal. It wasn't. I'm European too btw. Have a great one.
It's ok, it's ok. :-) I'm a baritone (non professional) and I know how difficult it is to sing. You must remember how inspire, how take low larynx, how much to curve soft palate...a lot of things,in short...Everyone can make mistakes and anyone allows himself to deride or criticize, means that he has never studied belcanto.
Marco Giocarolli I'm glad I didn't offend you. Well, I'm a professional tenor and I mostly sing Bel Canto but I never ever sing back-throated or raise my soft palate for high notes. I do the contrary, I place everything very high in the maschera and then my soft palate goes down at the same time as my larynx, allowing the REAL sound of my voice to come out. Most "famous" singers of today sing back and round, use color instead of vocal technique, that's why they get nodes and lose their voices so quick. Villazon is just a copycat of Domingo. He sings way too back in his throat and too round. His voice doesn't project at all. This is the reason why everybody is miked nowadays. So sad! I'm glad I learned the technique of the singers from the golden age of opera (1900-1966).
1:59 *Tarzan_yelling.mp3*
2:01 when you’re practicing in your bedroom 😂
1:07 wow that orchestra was such a classy thing too
If u came to see the voice cracking part 1:50
Simpaticissimo ❤️
give him another chance...maybe he was having a bad day...what about him singing on other days?
I think that's Rolando Villazon
Ok, so noone told him he needs to switch to a different register? You can't sing head register notes with a chest voice no matter how good of a baritone you are 😮
1. He's clearly a tenor singing a tenor aria 2. When singing this aria, tenors hit that note in full voice all the time. 3. He is clearly a trained opera singer having a bad day, he knows how to switch registers
Astonishing how many keyboard warriors think they know better how to sing than this tenor who's blessed with a magnificent voice and has years if not a decade or two of training. In opera you don't just switch to head voice. This is not the Bee Gees or Michael Jackson. A forte high C sounds pretty much like chest voice despite a lot of cricothyroid activation.
@@TheSandkastenverbotbro... In opera you switch registers all the time.
1:53
Godzilla
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣A clown singing Opera 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Oh, dear Lord....
C'est une plaisanterie 😄
My name is R-r-r-onaldo Villazon :D
HammondDER HAHA
This hurts
*AIYA*