Domenico Viglione Borghese Video
baritono italiano (1877-1957)
- baritono
- Italia, Regno d'Italia
- attore, cantante lirico
Ultimo aggiornamento
2024-05-04
Aggiorna
Domenico Viglione Borghese Viglione Giacomo Puccini 1877 1909 1957
Giacomo Puccini - LE VILLI "No, possibil non è che invendicata... Anima santa” Baritono italiano DOMENICO VIGLIONE-BORGHESE (Mondovì, Cuneo 3.7.1877 - Milano 26.10.1957)
Domenico Viglione Borghese Viglione Antico 1941
Oh, you know I love a curiosity... After retiring from the operatic stage, Domenico Viglione Borghese, convinced by Mario Soldati to try his hand at acting in films, debuted in a small role in that director's Piccolo mondo antico in 1941. Over the next eleven years, Viglione Borghese took on similar modest character roles in another twenty films. This video starts with his debut role. Interestingly we can hear and Viglione Borghese in the act of singing in this first clip. Of course Italian filmmaking had a tradition of actors overdubbing afterwards, but the voice is definitely his, with its ever so slight nasality and a sort of mushy lisp on certain consonants. As far as I know, this is the only electrical recording of his singing voice. The second portion (01:50) contains clips from his role as Zi' Luca Verginesi in Il mulino del Po. ..................................... This channel is primarily about vocal emission—aural examples of basically correct singing, correct impostazione—chiaroscuro, vowel clarity, firm and centered pitch, correct vibrato action, absence of throatiness or thickness, sounds free from constriction and from the acoustic noise that accompanies it—with occasional video examples that demonstrate what the body, face, mouth, jaw, and tongue look like when used with correct impostazione—the vocal emission of the one and only Italian school. Caveat: I'm biased in favor of baritones and baritone literature, but if you want to learn about and listen to all the greatest singers in the old-school tradition, explore this spreadsheet (voice parts are separated by tabs): (http•••)
Apollo Granforte Viglione Borghese 1927 1929
Sure we've heard Granforte sing the Prologue, but I guess I'd never noticed before that the only version on YouTube was the 1929 excerpt from the recording of the full opera, without the high A flat. Just like Viglione Borghese (who had a similarly large voice), Granforte recorded this twice. Here's the 1927 version, *with* the interpolation... and hoo boy, is it a shocker! ..................................... This channel is primarily about vocal emission—aural examples of basically correct singing, correct impostazione—chiaroscuro, vowel clarity, firm and centered pitch, correct vibrato action, absence of throatiness or thickness, sounds free from constriction and from the acoustic noise that accompanies it—with occasional video examples that demonstrate what the body, face, mouth, jaw, and tongue look like when used with correct impostazione—the vocal emission of the one and only Italian school. Caveat: I'm biased in favor of baritones and baritone literature, but if you want to learn about and listen to all the greatest singers in the old-school tradition, explore this spreadsheet (voice parts are separated by tabs): (http•••)
o
- cronologia: Cantanti lirici (Europa).
- Indici (per ordine alfabetico): V...