Welcome to fletrix.com on July 5 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Francesco Tamagno

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Francesco Tamagno (28 December 185031 August 1905) was an Italian opera singer who performed to enormous acclaim in Europe and America.

The most famous heroic tenor of his age, Tamagno was celebrated throughout the operatic world for the extreme power of his singing, especially in the upper register. Indeed, music critics often likened the sound of his voice to that of a trumpet or even a cannon. (This rare type of singer is called a "tenore robusto" or "tenore di forza" by Italians.)

Tamagno's vocal range extended effortlessly up to the high C-sharp during his prime. He was no mere 'belter' of high notes, however; his recordings provide evidence of his ability, even at career's end, to modulate the dynamic levels of his clarion instrument with remarkable skill.

Best known as the creator of the protagonist's role in Giuseppe Verdi's Otello at La Scala in 1887, he also was the first Gabriele Adorno in the 1881 version of Simon Boccanegra, a far more lyrical Verdi part. He participated, too, in the premiere performance of Verdi's revised version of Don Carlo when it was staged at La Scala in 1884. Five other operas (now largely forgotten) in which Tamagno created lead roles were Carlos Gomes' Maria Tudor (1879), Amilcare Ponchielli's Il figliuol prodigo (1880) and Marion Delorme (1885), Ruggero Leoncavallo's I Medici (1893) and Isidore de Lara's Messaline (1899).

Tamagno was renowned also for his potent performances as Radames in Aida, Manrico in Il trovatore, the title role in Ernani, the title role in Poliuto, Samson in Samson et Dalila, Arnold in Guillaume Tell, John of Leyden in Le Prophete, Raoul in Les Huguenots, Vasco in L'Africaine and John the Baptist in Herodiade. It is estimated that he appeared in a total of about 55 different operas and sacred works during his lifetime. Interestingly enough, with one notable exception he almost completely eschewed verismo opera. That notable exception was Umberto Giordano's Andrea Chenier, composed in 1896. He studied the score of this work with Giordano and was lauded for his authoratative singing of Chenier's impassioned music.

In summary: Tamagno performed at all the major opera establishments of Europe, the United States and South America in a stellar career stretching from the early 1870s to the early 1900s. While not an accomplished actor or a scrupulous musician (his rhythm and pitching could be wayward on occasion), his huge voice and volcanic renditions of the most forceful tenor roles in the Italian and French operatic repertory had a tremendous impact on audiences, enabling him to build a world-wide reputation as an elite singer and charge impresarios on both sides of the Atlantic top-tier fees for his services.

[edit] Birth, operatic career & death

Born in Turin (Torino), Northern Italy, in 1850, Francesco Tamagno was the son of a trattoria owner and wine-seller. His vocal promise manifested itself early, and although steered into learning a trade by his parents, he was able to take singing lessons with Carlo Pedrotti at the local Liceo Musicale and find work as a chorister.

Having completed a stint of compulsory military service, Tamagno sang several small operatic parts at Turin's Teatro Regio in 1872-73 before graduating to principal tenor roles. He burst into prominence in January 1874 with a sensational performance as Riccardo in Verdi's Un ballo in maschera at Palermo. Tamagno then undertook a string of singing engagements in Ferrara, Rovigo, Venice and Barcelona which further raised his profile and enabled him to make his debut at Milan's La Scala in December 1877. La Scala had long been Italy's leading opera theatre and Tamagno became a core member of its company of singers. His voice continued to mature at La Scala, reaching its full potential after a few years of vigorous use in a variety of operas. He enjoyed the added advantage of working closely with Verdi, and his singing acquired a discipline and polish that hitherto it had lacked. Eventually, he would perform in every La Scala season from 1877 to 1887 and appear there again as a guest artist in 1901.

Argentina was an overseas bastion of Italian opera throughout this period, and Tamagno made the first of several visits to its capital city of Buenos Aires in 1879. But his international career would not take off in a big way until 1888 -- with the role of Otello, which Verdi had written with Tamagno's extraordinary voice in mind, serving as his global calling card.

He travelled widely during the final dozen or so years of the 19th century, accepting lucrative invitations to perform Otello and other strenuous operatic parts in Portugal, Spain (where he had first sung in 1875-76), France, Germany, Austria, Russia, Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Mexico. He appeared, too, at the Monte Carlo Opera and at the most important operatic venues in New York City, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco and London. (To give three specific examples: he sang at the New York Metropolitan Opera in 1891 and 1894-95, at London's Lyceum Theatre in 1889, and at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in 1895 and 1901.)

Tamagno performed with a number of outstanding conductors (including the likes of Franco Faccio, Luigi Mancinelli and Arturo Toscanini) during the course of his career, and partnered some of the most illustrious sopranos, baritones and basses in operatic history. He set a benchmark standard in vocalism which still remains relevant, and most expert commentators would regard him as being the greatest heroic-voiced Mediterranean tenor whose voice is preserved on records.

Tamagno was seen in his day as the true successor to Enrico Tamberlik (1820-1889), the dominant Italian dramatic tenor of the mid-19th century, while Polish-born Jean de Reszke was considered to be Tamagno's foremost contemporary rival. De Reszke (1850-1925) was an elegant lyric-dramatic tenor of the French school whose repertoire overlapped Tamagno's. Although he could not outsing Tamagno, de Reszke was the more sophisticated musician, with a sweeter voice as well as an exceedingly suave stage presence. He was also the finest male exponent of Richard Wagner's operas to be heard on the stages of London and New York during the late Victorian era. (Tamagno never attempted to perform Wagnerian works, even in Italian translation; he believed that the music written for Wagner's tenor heroes lay too low to suit his voice.)

Fortunately, Tamagno lived long enough to witness the rise to stardom of the young Enrico Caruso (1873-1921). He greatly admired Caruso's talent, predicting as far back as 1898 that he would go on to become the number one Italian tenor of the 20th century.

In private life, Tamagno was an affable if parsimonious bachelor who never forgot his humble origins. For a hobby, he collected butterflies. His health deteriorated in the early 1900s due to a debilitating cardiac condition. He was forced to retire from the operatic stage but continued to give concerts, the final one of these being held in Ostend, Belgium, in 1904. He sang briefly in public for the last time the following year and died at his ornate villa in Varese, Italy, on 31 August 1905. His chronic heart ailment had combined with the effects of a stroke to bring about his demise at the age of 54. He was buried in Turin's general cemetery. An illegitimate daughter, Margherita, whom he loved deeply and acknowledged openly, inherited his large fortune.

A definitive biography, Otello Fu: La Vera Vita di Francesco Tamagno, il "tenore-cannone", by Ugo Piavano, was published in Milan in 2005 to mark the 100th anniversary of his death.

[edit] Recordings

Tamagno's intensely bright, ringing voice with its penetrating timbre, open production and incisive declamation can be heard on a series of primitive, piano-accompanied recordings of operatic arias which he made in Italy in 1903 and 1904 (at Ospedaletti and in Rome respectively). The Gramophone & Typewriter Company paid him a handsome amount of money to make the recordings and he received a royalty payment from the company for each individually numbered disc that sold. (Buyers were charged one pound sterling, or its equivalent, per 12-inch disc.)

When he stepped before the acoustic recording horn, Tamagno was in poor health and in semi-retirement after a demanding career that had lasted for more than 30 years. Consequently his voice, although still astonishingly powerful and kept under firm technical control, was no longer at its peak. (His phrasing had lost some of its former expansiveness, for instance, and he had developed a preference for stately tempi.) Despite this, his singing remains uniquely impressive and the extracts from Otello which he committed to disc are treated by scholars as audio documents of immense historical and musical importance.

Symposium Records has released a two-CD set containing an almost complete anthology of Tamagno's recordings (catalogue number 1186/87), while an extensive selection of them was issued on the Pearl/Opal label (CD 9846) in 1990. Those wanting to hear Tamagno in a broader context may wish to consult EMI's three-CD La Scala Edition, Volume 1, 1878-1914 (CHS 7 64860 2). This edition contains four Tamagno tracks in excellent re-mastered transfers, plus recordings made by a number of his colleagues/contemporaries. Of more specialist interest is a 21st-century release of all of Tamagno's extant 12-inch discs on high quality, 78-rpm vinyl pressings by the British firm Historic Masters.

[edit] External links

Personal tools

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs