Still at it, are you? Sigh...
Since you're clearly incapable of seeing the glaring flaw in your argument and must continue to justify and rationalize your own biases as Verdi's while failing to understand the elementary fallacy of confusing opinion with truth, I'm going to leave you "standing quite comfortably" with your mother. Maybe she can succeed where others can't, and convince you that Giuseppe Verdi is too dead to have an opinion about Maria Callas or Rosa Ponselle. Meanwhile, I won't try to fathom what level of egotism, or maybe intoxication, is necessary for a person to claim to know the opinions of people too dead to have them.
Goodbye.
Yes. And useless competitions are even more absurd when we claim to know how they'd be adjudicated by other people.
But we can make educated guesses within all the absurdity of it! The level of certainty
Your insight into the mind of Giuseppe Verdi is apparently far more profound than mine. To know his mind "definitely," and to have "no doubt" that you do, is quite an achievement for someone who, at this cultural and chronological distance, can never know Verdi or speak to him.
If you can cite some documented opinions of Verdi's that would justify such certainties, I would be happy to know of them. Without those, we can legitimately speak only for ourselves, not for the composers to whose opinions of their own works we might wish to defer.
Speaking only for myself, and based on my own experience of the singers in question, I would say, with the highest respect for the vocal and musical accomplishments of Rosa Ponselle, that I find no demonstration that any assumption of any role by Ponselle can equal, and probably even approach, the astonishing musical and dramatic achievements of Maria Callas, her "vocal horrors" notwithstanding. You may disagree. Verdi is unable to vote at this time.
Still at it, are you? Sigh...
Since you're clearly incapable of seeing the glaring flaw in your argument and must continue to justify and rationalize your own biases as Verdi's while failing to understand the elementary fallacy of confusing opinion with truth, I'm going to leave you "standing quite comfortably" with your mother. Maybe she can succeed where others can't, and convince you that Giuseppe Verdi is too dead to have an opinion about Maria Callas or Rosa Ponselle. Meanwhile, I won't try to fathom what level of egotism, or maybe intoxication, is necessary for a person to claim to know the opinions of people too dead to have them.
Goodbye.
You know how highly I regard Tadolini, and she herself knows it; but I believe it's necessary — for the interest of all concerned — to make a few observations. Tadolini's qualities are far too good for that role! This may seem absurd to you!! ... Tadolini has a beautiful and attractive appearance; and I would like Lady Macbeth to be ugly and evil. Tadolini sings to perfection; and I would like the Lady not to sing. Tadolini has a stupendous voice, clear, limpid, powerful; and I would like the Lady to have a harsh, stifled, and hollow voice. Tadolini's voice has an angelic quality; I would like the Lady's voice to be diabolical.
WOODDUCK said: Non sequitur. first of all, you're simplifying and caricaturing the unusual, complex timbre of Callas as "diabolical, harsh, and somber." Maybe that's all you hear in it. I hear much more. I hear a voice that could be adapted, by the singer's incomparable inagination, to an immense variety of operatic characters, a voice that could alter its color like a chameleon, to a degree I've not encountered in any other singer. Medea, Lucia, Santuzza, Butterfly, Mimi, Gilda, Carmen...?
Yes, of course Verdi would be happy to have a voice like Ponselle's singing his music. Who wouldn't? All other things being equal, he would not inconceivably choose her for a number of roles. But all other things are not equal. In fact, they are far from equal. They are unequal enough to toss into the trash any presumption about which of the singers in question he would choose for Leonora.
PHOENIXFIRERAPTOR said: IF they were auditioning for Giuseppe Verdi himself, I have no doubt that Verdi would have chosen Ponselle.
First of all there is nothing wrong with stating the timbre of Callas' voice is diabolical, harsh, and somber. I don't see that descriptive as a simplification or a caricature but for some reason you have taken great offense to it. This innate timbre didn't change no matter what she sang which is why we can always recognize Callas distinctly in any recording. Her phrasing changed to adjust and express the drama as she best thought, and she could spread the sound or narrow it, but her basic vocal sound never changed. That sound was diabolical, harsh, and somber whether she sang GILDA and MIMI or LADY MACBETH and ABIGAILLE. We can easily hear that it's Callas singing whether it's O don Fatale or O mio babbino caro. Sure we can list all the roles she sang or just recorded, but many were not suited to her voice at all regardless of how much she tried to spread the sound or narrow it to accomodate character/music/phrasing.
We aren't discussing ALL of Verdi's music here. We are discussing Macbeth and Forza specifically. I don't think Verdi would have been happy to have a voice like Ponselle's singing Lady Macbeth at all based upon his written statements, for the same reason he didn't want Tadolini. For this observation and his vocal writing in Forza which requires beautifully floated passages and limpid piannissimo of an angelic character type, I am sure he would pick Ponselle. The equity of all other things is a pointless statement since we aren't discussing the equity of all other things. It indicates nothing and serves only to toss into the trash anything I or anyone else would say, which is in and of itself, pointless. We are discussing a specific statement made by Verdi at at specific time about a specific voice type, as well as two very specific and distinctly difference opera singers with distinctly different voices, and two specific roles; Lady Macbeth and Leonora from FORZA. Based on those parameters of that information only; I stated I was sure that Verdi would pick Ponselle for FORZA and Callas for LADY MACBETH. Is it an educated guess? Of course. Is it my opinion, of course; and my logical reasoning isn't refuted by your wish to obfuscate the matter by introducing ridicule and insistence on mind reading and channeling the dead. That only serves to support the validity of my statement like white flag of surrender. That is my truth and those are the literal facts. They may not be yours, but that doesn't in any way refute the logic of my educated guesses WITHIN THE PARAMETERS OF THE INFORMATION SPECIFIED.
I find it patently ludicrous that you find the need to imagine this as a jury trial in which I have been caricatured as a hostile witness purely attacking Callas. Is that what this is now?
Of course Verdi never heard them in reality, I said: IF they were auditioning for Giuseppe Verdi himself, I have no doubt that Verdi would have chosen Ponselle. Notice the word IF. The word IF is clearly written and you seem to be dismissive of it. With this word, "IF," I am saying that I know neither of the two sopranos ever sang for him, so of course I know he could have no literal opinion of them, however, the educated guess I made regarding his choices IF he did, is perfectly logical WITHIN THE PARAMETERS OF THE SPECIFIED INFORMATION.
I find it pointedly interesting that you have descended to an ad hominem attack against me, mentioning that there is something wrong with my ego or that I am a drunk who claims to know the opinions of dead people. The overtly hostile and condescending statement says it all. I take the ad hominem attack as a white flag of surrender in this court room and bid you a polite adieu.
