Don Giovanni - Commendatore Scene - EN Sub (Better Quality)

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  • Опубликовано: 5 мар 2021
  • Don Giovanni (Don Juan), having killed the Commendatore whilst defending his daughter early in the opera, later mocks the old man's statue in a graveyard and invites him to dinner as a joke.
    The statue's ghostly voice agrees.
    Later at dinner, Don Giovanni and his servant Leporello are shocked when the ghostly statue arrives. This is what happens next.
    Starring Samuel Ramey (Giovanni), Kurt Moll (Commendatore), Ferruccio Furlanetto (Leporello).
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @BassosaurusRex
    @BassosaurusRex  Год назад +427

    To everyone who has loved this video - thank you from the bottom of my heart... 1 Million Views!
    It has also been a great honor to have met all 3 of these amazing singers over the years - Moll at La Scala, and both Ramey and Furlanetto in San Francisco. This video gives a perfect example of 3 stellar singers at the top of their game performing Grand Opera. Thanks again.

    • @ricardodamian8734
      @ricardodamian8734 Год назад +13

      One million. congratulations. your video now is part of history. and in the coming years this video will continue getting millions of views. Grettings from a latin country...

    • @alligatoruno6975
      @alligatoruno6975 Год назад +8

      Tbh i would of not expected it from this aria in particular, operatic basso never get big number of views, imo the movie Amadeus had to do a lot with this phenomenom. Big congrats nonetheless, well deserved it. (About time something outside of the tenor spectrum gets this love hehe)

    • @richbb1479
      @richbb1479 11 месяцев назад

      Wolfi to napsal na Bertramce u nás na Smíchově ty blbe

    • @plumeplume677
      @plumeplume677 11 месяцев назад

      😊😊ppm0pmm

    • @jooei2810
      @jooei2810 10 месяцев назад +3

      Going to see this opera next fall, I am overjoyed!

  • @daviddale2570
    @daviddale2570 2 года назад +369

    When you invite your Gf's dad over for dinner as a joke, but he actually shows up

    • @phill3066
      @phill3066 4 месяца назад +17

      ...after you killed him!

    • @necronsplayer
      @necronsplayer Месяц назад +1

      @@phill3066then who was phone????

    • @PeteBMan
      @PeteBMan 22 дня назад

      😂 brilliant 👏

  • @santiagoprio2323
    @santiagoprio2323 Год назад +191

    Everybody gangsta until Commendatore appears.

  • @meanpersona4686
    @meanpersona4686 2 года назад +197

    Don Giovanni: I ain't scared of nothing
    Don Giovanni a minute later: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

    • @meanpersona4686
      @meanpersona4686 2 года назад +12

      I love this version. It's perfectly acted, amazingly atmospheric and just a feast for eyes, ears and soul. That's why I love opera, for moments like this one. Also, the way Ramey just yells instead hitting the proper notes is genius, really elevates this performance. But I both singers are impecable artist so It wasn't really a suprise for me. Brawo!
      And as a hobbyist costume designer, I must say I love the costumes in the entire production. They really suit the characters!

    • @PP1969GR
      @PP1969GR 2 года назад

      lol

    • @hymnodyhands
      @hymnodyhands 8 месяцев назад +6

      Mess Around and Find Out, 19th-century edition...

    • @Cajek2
      @Cajek2 2 месяца назад +3

      The cost of toxic masculinity

    • @witchfindergeneral8208
      @witchfindergeneral8208 27 дней назад

      The title of the opera is "il dissoluto punito" (The punished dissolute). He was an horrible person through his entire life. Personally I find admirable the fact that he doesn't repent at the very last second even he knows what will happen to him. I always found it coherent with his character.

  • @nozyspy4967
    @nozyspy4967 2 года назад +1160

    'Ah master, we are dead!'
    Good way to get out of having to cook.

    • @Hag_of_Fangorn
      @Hag_of_Fangorn 2 года назад +55

      So hard to find good help these days.

    • @silverkitty2503
      @silverkitty2503 2 года назад +9

      Hahaha!

    • @hobbitreal
      @hobbitreal 2 года назад +3

      HAHAHAHAHA

    • @user-td6ki6lj8u
      @user-td6ki6lj8u 2 года назад +1

      Весьма слабое утешение!

    • @MichaelHopcroft
      @MichaelHopcroft 2 года назад +17

      The meal was already cooked, Giovanny merely wanted Leporrelo to bring out another serving. Still, Leporello would have none of it, as he fears for his soul as well as his life.

  • @ec7888
    @ec7888 Год назад +137

    The makeup and direction of the ghosts at the end are amazing.

    • @meredith2803
      @meredith2803 2 месяца назад +4

      I know, it’s so utterly nightmarish. The way the damned come out of the dark gives me chills every time I watch this. Kudos to the art director, absolutely phenomenal.

    • @SmudgerSmith-lh7wv
      @SmudgerSmith-lh7wv 23 дня назад

      But yet l still dream of a production that will render this scene so terrifying that we will be unable to see it. Opera always pulls its punches, even in this scene. I have been trying to find new elements to make it more fear-inspiring, truly terrifying, not ‘opera-terrifying’. A marriage with theatre might be the way forward. Lose should have done it with his film. Perhaps Leporello is the catalyst. No longer a comic part, he should amplify the terror, not ham it up.

  • @barryhomeowner9293
    @barryhomeowner9293 11 месяцев назад +138

    I never understood why anyone likes opera. I always thought it's one of those things you pretend to like to look cultured or educated, like Shakespeare or French food. I saw this scene in college, and I now understand.

    • @marfdasko
      @marfdasko 2 месяца назад +19

      French food is actually very nice as well

    • @liliamarie5329
      @liliamarie5329 Месяц назад +15

      Once you get used to reading the antiquated english, Shakespeare is epic! and absolutely hilarious!

    • @raiheijubely4764
      @raiheijubely4764 Месяц назад +7

      Thats because such "elevated" art forms are blocked by the wall of complexity, you need a minimum of culture to be able to understand it.

    • @DarkWhiteCrow
      @DarkWhiteCrow Месяц назад

      ⁠​⁠@@marfdasko I actually love to pretend I like French food, everytime I see it

    • @illyaismaili6413
      @illyaismaili6413 Месяц назад +5

      "I always thought it's one of those things you pretend to like to look cultured or educated"
      What the actual f*ck is this logic...

  • @joestimemachine6454
    @joestimemachine6454 2 года назад +957

    "It was... terrifying and wonderful to watch"

  • @doncarlodivargas5497
    @doncarlodivargas5497 2 года назад +914

    Moral? Dont ask a statue on a date, the statue may bring its own food

    • @gengis737
      @gengis737 2 года назад +25

      There is a novel by Mérimée, the Venus of Illé, where a man dates a statue of Venus.

    • @doncarlodivargas5497
      @doncarlodivargas5497 2 года назад +10

      @@gengis737 - but girls expect to be taken to a restaurant, then you're safe?
      Anyhow, I am not sure I would mind being taken home to Venus by herself

    • @2gtomkins
      @2gtomkins 2 года назад +33

      Thinking of this encounter as a date is exactly right. The running joke in the opera is that the famous seducer keeps trying but does not succeed at even one seduction during the opera. Then at the end he is seduced into agreeing to go to dinner with the statue. This production gets this visual right, that the Don seals the deal by offering his hand when demanded by the statue (Dammi la mano in pegno.), as earlier the Don had asked for Zerlina's (La ci darem la mano). The statue never lets go, just as one never returns from a meal where this date is taking you.

    • @gengis737
      @gengis737 2 года назад +22

      @@doncarlodivargas5497 In the novel, the man, who is marrying a woman, jokingly put his ring to the finger of the statue of Venus, to play sport more conveniently. But the next night, he is found dead, all bones broken as if crushed by a stone, and the statue has disappeared.
      1830s horror novel.

    • @doncarlodivargas5497
      @doncarlodivargas5497 2 года назад +7

      @@gengis737 - even in the 1830 the men enjoyed the women on top? At least until their bones began to break?

  • @RadagonTheRed
    @RadagonTheRed 5 месяцев назад +27

    The music is utterly timeless. As sinister, beautiful and astounding today as it was 236 years ago.

  • @Xerxes2005
    @Xerxes2005 9 месяцев назад +42

    "But Mozart's music is so happy and frivolous.."
    Yeah. Right.

    • @joansutton
      @joansutton 3 месяца назад +1

      The most terrifying music ever, the climax of Don Giovanni.

    • @pavelvodov1516
      @pavelvodov1516 2 месяца назад

      To that the Mozart Fantasias say "Hold my beer.."

    • @VallinSFAS
      @VallinSFAS Месяц назад +1

      And that Requiem!

  • @punk3900
    @punk3900 Год назад +714

    The best fianale of an opera ever. So sinister. So unexpected. So needed. The strings are like hell fire.

    • @eddbrowne
      @eddbrowne Год назад +23

      A concluding ensemble delivers the moral of the opera - "Such is the end of the evildoer: the death of a sinner always reflects his life". Productions for over a century - beginning with the original run in Prague - customarily omitted the final ensemble, but it frequently reappeared in the 20th century and productions of the opera now usually include it.

    • @operablogger
      @operablogger Год назад +17

      Actually, while this SHOULD have been where the opera ended, Mozart tacked on an ensemble piece that seems awfully anticlimactic, with the singers offering a "see what happens to bad people" conclusion. IMO, Meyerbeer did it better in his "Robert le Diable."

    • @rossmerchant8435
      @rossmerchant8435 Год назад +17

      ​@@operablogger I think it says more about society rather than Mozart and Da Ponte's skills as dramatists that it felt the need to "improve" the libretto by asserting Don Giovanni as some sort of noble and romantic anti-hero. Powerful sociopaths are charming, yes, but they're still criminals who cause wanton destruction and should rightfully be punished. In light of recent social upheaval about serial abusers, I think this has actually turned out to be a more subversive point to make.

    • @richbb1479
      @richbb1479 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@eddbrowne
      Mozart, Verdi, Čajkovskij

    • @alecfoster4413
      @alecfoster4413 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@rossmerchant8435 Bravo!

  • @plushistoriae
    @plushistoriae Год назад +54

    Approximately 500 of these views are mine. Mozart is such a genius.

    • @Rand444
      @Rand444 28 дней назад +1

      At least a thousand are mine!

  • @gengis737
    @gengis737 2 года назад +938

    Perfect interpretation.
    I have always been amazed how Don Giovanni damns himself, not by human weakness, but to be true to his choice of a careless and fearless life.

  • @crazypumpkin7106
    @crazypumpkin7106 Год назад +451

    When the ghost of the commendatore says "Your time is up." at around 5:30, the note the bass singer hits at the very end of the phrase is so terrifically clean and yet so unnaturally low, he adds an inhuman and terrifying final accent to his phenomenal performance that is very real and requires no makeup or smoke. Fantastico!

    • @crazypumpkin7106
      @crazypumpkin7106 Год назад +39

      I didn't want to make my initial comment any longer than it was so ill continue the point I wanted to bring up here... i don't think I can overstate just how impressive a feat that final lowest note was.. As one gets to the limits of ones range, the note not only becomes harder to hit, but even should one hit the note, it takes -so- much training and talent to keep projecting and not allow the "volume" of your voice to drastically decrease. It is ASTOUNDING that as he sings the very lowest note, he not only reaches it but pushes to accentuate that note and make it the loudest part of the phrase! A perfect example how great performances can elevate a brilliant piece and make it even more sublime.
      I would feel guilty if I didn't give credit to the rest of the performers. Every performer In this scene, did a fantastic job. But the scene was made to showcase the abilities of the singer who portrays the ghost of the commandatore.
      That being said, Don Gio and also his servant played their parts -perfectly-. And they deserve to be mentioned.
      As an aside...i...at first...found myself wondering if the bass singer might ever have studied Mongolian throat singing to incorporate so much power into his low registers. However, I concluded that the idea was a bit far fetched..

    • @deantroiano7249
      @deantroiano7249 Год назад +14

      Completely underrated comment. Probably my favorite part of the entire scene is that note.

    • @kevinmarek1321
      @kevinmarek1321 Год назад +7

      Wow. Thanks for pointing this out. You are correct. That note is..a lot of things all at once.

    • @ivandovranic5834
      @ivandovranic5834 Год назад +9

      He sounds more like Russian basso profondo aka Oktavist.
      Very good post

    • @dariciesglaciem3009
      @dariciesglaciem3009 Год назад +5

      I've been trying to replicate that note for a year now...Still nowhere near doing it. On top of years of training, I believe it has something to do with the singer's voice as well. So I believe it's a beautiful combination of talent and hard work. Glad someone else was greatly impressed by this!

  • @PumpestationVest
    @PumpestationVest 9 месяцев назад +99

    Quite possibly my favourite moment of any opera. It is SO powerful, and it sends a shiver down my spine.

    • @alhfgsp
      @alhfgsp 6 месяцев назад +3

      When I first heard it years ago I couldn't believe how good it was. It shattered my conceptions of what music could be. I had never heard harmony create such anticipation and build with modulation like this.

    • @mazmillion451
      @mazmillion451 4 месяца назад +1

      where can i find the full recording?

  • @myostar7
    @myostar7 Месяц назад +3

    WAM dealt with many topics and was able to pin point man’s joys and here his darkest fears with as only he could. Rest In Peace

  • @TheMercyfulEmperor
    @TheMercyfulEmperor Месяц назад +5

    Of the dozens and dozens of performances of this opera I have seen, no Commendatore has ever hit the low notes Moll hits. Amazing performance.

  • @joshuadellinger8279
    @joshuadellinger8279 2 года назад +347

    That scream is 6:23 is great. He goes outside the musical scale, but still keeps a singing quality to it

  • @stmicci3206
    @stmicci3206 2 года назад +83

    Ramey, Moll, Furlanetto! What a cast!!!

  • @AGMundy
    @AGMundy 2 года назад +184

    After more than 30 years of listening to Don Giovanni, this scene never ceases to chill me. The musical construction is marvelous, no wonder it was rapturously received in Prague at its premiere.

    • @likmijnreet4542
      @likmijnreet4542 Год назад +5

      too bad it's immediately followed by a cheerful "Ding dong the witch is gone" type scene.

    • @AGMundy
      @AGMundy Год назад +2

      @@likmijnreet4542 I wouldn't have put is so strongly. That sort of scene was required by convention at the time. Musically I do enjoy it as it is Mozart, but yes the opera would not lose out by its removal.

    • @olly8453
      @olly8453 Год назад +6

      @@likmijnreet4542 Mozart ultimately agreed, and removed the last scene from the Vienna production.

    • @hansaspros2093
      @hansaspros2093 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@AGMundy😂

  • @MATHYou-iz1ry
    @MATHYou-iz1ry 9 месяцев назад +13

    [La statua]
    Don Giovanni
    A cenar teco m’invitasti
    E son venuto.
    [Don Giovanni]
    Non l’avrei giammai creduto
    Ma farò quel che potrò
    Leporello, un'altra cena
    Fa che subito si porti.
    [Leporello]
    Ah, padron!
    Ah, padron, siam tutti morti.
    [Don Giovanni]
    Vanne dico!
    [La statua]
    Ferma un po’!
    Non si pasce di cibo mortale
    Chi si pasce di cibo celeste
    Altre cure più gravi di queste
    Altra brama quaggiù mi guidò.
    [Leporello]
    (La terzana d’avere mi sembra
    E le membra fermar più non so)
    [Don Giovanni]
    Parla dunque! Che chiedi? Che vuoi?
    [La statua]
    Parlo! Ascolta! Più tempo non ho!
    [Don Giovanni]
    Parla, parla, ascoltando ti sto
    [La statua]
    Tu m’invitasti a cena
    Il tuo dover or sai
    Rispondimi
    Verrai tu a cenar meco?
    [Leporello]
    Ohibò, tempo non ha, scusate
    [Don Giovanni]
    A torto di viltate
    Tacciato mai sarò.
    [La statua]
    Risolvi!
    [Don Giovanni]
    Ho già risolto!
    [La statua]
    Verrai?
    [Leporello]
    Dite di no!
    [Don Giovanni]
    Ho fermo il cuore in petto
    Non ho timor, verrò!
    [La statua]
    Dammi la mano in pegno!
    [Don Giovanni]
    Eccola! Ohimè!
    [La statua]
    Cos’hai?
    [Don Giovanni]
    Che gelo è questo mai?
    [La statua]
    Pentiti, cangia vita
    Nell’ultimo momento!
    [Don Giovanni]
    No, no, ch’io non mi pento
    Vanne lontan da me!
    [La statua]
    Pentiti, scellerato!
    [Don Giovanni]
    No, vecchio infatuato!
    [La statua]
    Pentiti!
    [Don Giovanni]
    No!
    [La statua]
    Sì!
    [Leporello]
    Sì!
    [Don Giovanni]
    No, no!
    [La statua]
    Ah, tempo più non v’è!
    [Don Giovanni]
    Da qual tremore insolito
    Sento assalir gli spiriti
    Dond’escono quei vortici
    Di foco pien d’orror?
    [Coro di diavoli]
    Tutto a tue colpe è poco
    Vieni, c’è un mal peggior.
    [Don Giovanni]
    Chi l’anima mi lacera?
    Chi m’agita le viscere?
    Che strazio, ohimé, che smania
    Che inferno, che terror!
    [Leporello]
    (Che ceffo disperato!
    Che gesti da dannato!
    Che gridi, che lamenti!
    Come mi fa terror!)

  • @Delicious1922
    @Delicious1922 2 года назад +271

    The depth of the voicing in this scene is breathtaking! One of Mozart’s best operas!

    • @hjarnansjarn5969
      @hjarnansjarn5969 2 года назад +5

      Lol, you mean the singer? Fuckin glorious singer.

    • @gesakrieg2139
      @gesakrieg2139 Год назад +1

      This opera openenddiskussion the Doors to the next Century of music until to today. The pomusic already discovered this gigantic music.

  • @elijahvincent985
    @elijahvincent985 2 года назад +1226

    There's something so sinister about this scene, whether it is the fact it was composed by the normally-cheery Mozart, the naturally deep voice of these singing actors, the excellent make-up of the hellish skeletal figures at the end, the story of man's refusal to be decent to others and treating them equally, or everything all together at once. Such a haunting performance like this chills me! Well done to the singers, crew, performers, and the late, great Mozart! My entire body gets covered in goosebumps and chills at 06:44!

    • @blackmonkey965
      @blackmonkey965 2 года назад +25

      The scream at 5:23 is so good

    • @elijahvincent985
      @elijahvincent985 2 года назад +8

      @@blackmonkey965 The rarely-sung deep note that follows by Kurt Moll sends shivers to my spine! If you look at the frequency value of the note he sung, it's shockingly close to a number that attracts a certain type of satanic evil... Like the ghosts and demons from Hell visible here! The other screams at 6:30 tempts me to curl up into a ball! The idea behind this scene if it was actually occuring is way scarier than the scariest of horror films, and this was rated G on PBS re-airings! I don't even flinch at jumpscares, even in the most grisly of horror movies rated high as NC-17 (the uncut horror films with strictly graphic violence, of course, as I like to keep things tasteful without the likes of unnecessary, inappropriate sex and nudity).

    • @fivizzano
      @fivizzano 2 года назад +21

      he was NOT very cheery... debts, the disease that killed him ( likely cirrosis and a tumor from it ...) NOT a happy camper.... Lorenzo Dal Ponte was actually concerned about WAM's health in some if his letters.

    • @LowPlainsDrifter60
      @LowPlainsDrifter60 2 года назад +16

      I find it an uplifing scene. Don Giovanni dies a free man, refusing to repent or submit to society's morals. A rebel destined for hell as society always wins but it was quite a party.

    • @psalm2764
      @psalm2764 2 года назад +6

      It was the refusal of a man to REPENT.

  • @user-if9on7lp1i
    @user-if9on7lp1i 6 месяцев назад +11

    Fantastic! I'm breathless with awe. I want to cry. Voices, strings immaculate.......Scary........goosebumps....oh.. my...God.........

  • @Vaelsung1
    @Vaelsung1 Год назад +100

    This scene, the apex of the greatest art form that is opera, performed by the greatest trio ever cast in perhaps the greatest opera ever composed, Don Giovanni. What an honor and a privilege to experience it with these singers....Moll, Ramey, Furlanetto in a traditional production that honors the composer as he must have conceived it. Danke schön Herr Mozart!

    • @angelracing
      @angelracing 10 месяцев назад +1

      ❤‍🔥

    • @jeangabrielkahane2961
      @jeangabrielkahane2961 2 месяца назад

      In Joseph Losey's filmed version, Raimondi, Mc Curdy & José Van Dam weren't bad either.

  • @red5250
    @red5250 11 месяцев назад +63

    This is legitimately my favorite opera scene ever.
    Kurt Moll is a fucking insane basso profundo. Outside of operatic settings he could sing an F1 in chest voice, which - anyone in the bass community in general knows that is ungodly - and he sang a clear Bb1 in an operatic setting. Bb1!! That and this D2 at 5:35 really just goes to show how much power he has in his low range. And his upper range is no joke either! He can navigate his secondo passagio super super well, like this entire line at 2:13.
    Samuel Ramey is also fantastic. His low A in this performance is just phenomenal, his acting and artist vocal choices are also very very good. He and Kurt Moll’s exchange at 5:13 especially the top note at 5:24, those are all supposed to be half notes but it makes much Morse sense to hold them because (for me at least) it adds to that feeling of constant peril, as Giovanni’s soul is literally being ripped out of his body. And 5:24, that I believe is supposed to be a full octave down and is also supposed to be a half note. Ramey just yelling that note in distress is so so cool and adds so much.
    Ferruccio Furlanetto, although he doesn’t sing much in this scene, you can tell (even though his position to the recording microphone is kinda bad) that he just has an extremely big voice. That’s all I can say about him really from this performance, but his massive massive voice plus his artistic choices (especially at 4:14, that line is not written like that at all but it makes more sense to shout it almost frantically like that) are incredible.
    I can’t say it enough, this scene is incredible.

  • @likmijnreet4542
    @likmijnreet4542 Год назад +50

    so nice to see an actual effort being made to make the visuals match the music. I just came back from a Don Giovanni production where in this scene Don G. just stood there 10 meters apart from the Commendatore (just a man in a blood covered shirt) with absolutely nothing else going on on stage. Closing my eyes made the scene 100% better because at least then I truly appreciated how excellent the orchestra was.

    • @Donillini
      @Donillini Год назад +6

      At Lyric Opera in Chicago, his dinner table flips into hell as he tries to climb out of it as his food and underwear knock him further into the foggy red abyss

    • @johnstajduhar9617
      @johnstajduhar9617 5 месяцев назад +1

      It really requires excellent singers to be able to do dynamic action and such while their singing scenes are going on (and it's also much more expensive to stage a scene like this), but it makes it so damn special when it all comes together!

  • @lauterunvollkommenheit4344
    @lauterunvollkommenheit4344 2 года назад +44

    Perhaps the greatest scene of the opera.

  • @suzannesadiiqa
    @suzannesadiiqa 2 года назад +92

    Moll was the most majestic singer of this role ever in my opinion. The power of his voice put even Ramy in the shade, not something easily done.

    • @sandapaperdaisyart
      @sandapaperdaisyart 2 года назад +5

      I think Moll definitely has the most presence I've ever seen as the commendatore (aside from the one in the movie Amadeus) but Moll actually stood there in elaborate costume and performed at THAT level from start to finish on the stage, so I would say he still wins.

    • @spielor0815
      @spielor0815 Год назад +3

      Moll was the brother of my neighbor. He was such an unpretentious person. Even on his high point of his career he came around to sing a hole evening with our local singing club. Imagine that.

  • @hymnodyhands
    @hymnodyhands 2 года назад +168

    One of the most beautiful things about this ... in the middle of this through-and-through excellence, there is just one moment where how much joy and emotion these singers were feeling as they were doing this came through... in a moment of close-up, the Commendatore almost does the unthinkable -- catch the eye sparkle and momentary suggestion of a smile as Kurt Moll gets ready to hit that high note at 3:23 like it is the easiest thing to do, knowing all the while that he has got that low D two octaves and a step lower in his back pocket, and he is going to make that look and sound just as easy!
    This is a terrifying drama ... but the power of the joy these men feel to be performing together at absolute tip-top excellence in this most amazing of scenes also comes through and makes this one of a kind!

    • @kliberalsing
      @kliberalsing 2 года назад +10

      Very nice observation.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 Год назад

      And yet somehow Ramey manages to capture a sense of what it would be like to be given to the captivation and tortures of hell, something about which many are warned, in the hope that as few as possible (such a fate being averted by the help of God voluntarily taken) will commit themselves to it. Just to be honest about being a sinner is to grasp the existential danger of this apart from God. Imagining oneself going to the combined torment and thrill of hell (as C. S. Lewis spoke of a "black pleasure") -- without a speck of the fear or the hope in the promised grace of God -- is a very possible thing. Happily, this was only that -- a hypothetical that he could drop the moment the curtain came down -- for the real life Ramey. For the depicted evil Don, it was real to the core.
      As C. S. Lewis put it, it is only to those not already fully damned that such a fate has any element of being intolerable. If you're afraid of going to hell -- you aren't going to hell, but at worst only close to it. Which still isn't pleasant, but by the wisdom of God is often necessary to teach the fight of heaven. The evil Don had no desire for that kind of fight. He would plunge into an eternity of both abominably woeful torment and abominably gleeful tormenting, the perfect desperate fiend who has found his infernal, everlasting balance and knows a literal nothing of the Christ capable of infinite benevolence in the face of sin.
      "Parla, parla!" as if the evil Don didn't have every reason to know exactly what the Commendatore was going to say! What willful denial the Don is in. He is willfully yielding to the turning of his soul inside out and upside down. Imagine ourselves divorced from God and adamantly betrothed to Satan -- this is the state.
      "How he makes me afraid" -- the evil Don is speaking of the Commendatore. Hell fears heaven.

    • @ec7888
      @ec7888 Год назад +3

      Completely agree Deeann!

  • @EdgarGuediguian
    @EdgarGuediguian 3 месяца назад +19

    There's no atheist when commendatore arrives for dinner.

  • @justinhamilton8647
    @justinhamilton8647 2 года назад +66

    This is so intense wtf

  • @daddysaku8678
    @daddysaku8678 2 года назад +51

    Damn the way Ramey hits that note right at 6:28 gives me chills man

  • @sandraelder1101
    @sandraelder1101 Год назад +19

    This totally enthralled and freaked out my 4th graders. They think opera is so cool now. It was magical. 😁🎶

  • @Kitama23
    @Kitama23 2 года назад +43

    I LOVE the art direction for this production. Truly hellish and ethereal.

  • @metintoptas9874
    @metintoptas9874 2 года назад +20

    This is the most successful Commendatore Scene of all times, and of all other versions.

    • @dragoscercel4247
      @dragoscercel4247 2 года назад +1

      Not really.The version from Amadeus is better but that wasn't performed live at an opera so...

  • @supersmashbro596
    @supersmashbro596 Год назад +24

    i love how don tells his servent to go get him and the statue dinner, and the statue is like "no no no. leave him out of this. this is between you. and me."
    my favorite part is when the statue tells don that his time is up. it's powerful, like a massive grandfather clock striking midnight. that last note sends chills up my spine!

  • @LohengrinO
    @LohengrinO 2 года назад +763

    Only Mozart could have made a No1 hit scene between a Bass and a Baritone...

    • @Kevin_Beach
      @Kevin_Beach 2 года назад +52

      What about Verdi's duet between Philip II and the Grand Inquisitor?

    • @LohengrinO
      @LohengrinO 2 года назад +3

      @@Kevin_Beach indeed

    • @grahamnancledra7036
      @grahamnancledra7036 2 года назад +52

      @@Kevin_Beach There is a vast difference between Mozart and Verdi both in Musical styles and in the beliefs of their time. Mozart wins hands down because of the humanity of his music. In Don Giovanni it is the failings of Humanity, the use of D minor highlighting this issue. If Mozart had lived as long as Verdi, who knows how his music and drama would have developed. By the way going back to the OP's message: It's three bass and baritone. Don't forget Lepporello's contribution to the scene. 'Three Tenors'? Pah - give me three bass/baritones any day!

    • @bogdan98ify
      @bogdan98ify 2 года назад +3

      What about Borodin

    • @hjarnansjarn5969
      @hjarnansjarn5969 2 года назад +1

      I could never have fortuned a bass between baritone. May we all die bye the dwaf or the whine!

  • @BenEmberley
    @BenEmberley 2 года назад +32

    Kurt Moll. Fantastic Gurnemanz, Awesome Sarastro, Terrifying Commendatore. An absolute Legend.

  • @jrellis11
    @jrellis11 3 года назад +282

    Ramey is the quintessential basso cantante. Kurt Moll's voice almost seems to be another dimension. If there is such a thing as "the" greatest singer for any particular voice type, Moll would be my pick for basso profondo.

    • @boundary2580
      @boundary2580 2 года назад +17

      A lot of people seem to not like Moll’s voice for its lack of beauty, but I think it’s one of the things that makes him so unique. He possesses good musicality unlike other profundos, and unlike some with higher voices than him always seems to have control over his voice. I think there are better basses; Siepi and Pinza had beauty that I think has not been matched by any bass since them, but Moll remains unmatched in the areas his voice was best at. Have you heard his recording of Der Wanderer? He sounds more comfortable than most oktavists on that low B.

    • @wishamahmad2719
      @wishamahmad2719 2 года назад +3

      @@boundary2580 haha I've come across you once again, I saw you on a video about Bryn Terfel few minutes before watching this one, what an odd coincidence

    • @boundary2580
      @boundary2580 2 года назад +3

      @@wishamahmad2719 probably have left a lot of comments in my years on RUclips. Also a lot of the same people watch videos like this :) Honestly I wish I could see a list of all my comments and delete the ones that I don’t want anyone to see anymore.

    • @vivianevans8323
      @vivianevans8323 2 года назад +6

      Mine would be the late Martti Talvela. Here he is as commendatory, from a decades-old record, not even a video:
      ruclips.net/video/StpNf2nDEnE/видео.html
      Martti Talvela's voice makes one shiver.

    • @edraith
      @edraith 2 года назад +2

      Oh well, Giulio Neri...

  • @la_belle_heaulmiere
    @la_belle_heaulmiere 2 года назад +27

    The walls of death enclosing them is just absolutely phenomenal. I wish I could have seen this particular performance in person.

  • @Filanca1
    @Filanca1 Год назад +6

    “Other more important matters than your silly dinner invitation brought me here” he sounds like business 😂

  • @johnblasiak2499
    @johnblasiak2499 6 месяцев назад +5

    Kurt Moll is the greatest basso unbelievable

    • @Rand444
      @Rand444 28 дней назад

      Power to spare!

  • @willchan4186
    @willchan4186 2 года назад +28

    If I was a kid and saw it live it'll give me nightmares

  • @dantho50
    @dantho50 2 года назад +118

    By far and away the best production of Don Giovanni I have seen, magnificent performances and amazing sets. How good to see that the late, great Kurt Moll also dyed the inside of his mouth for the final scene. i am always amazed at the singers who don''t do this as part of their make up as the pink mouth in my opinion totally detracts from the image they are trying to project.

    • @itamarbar9580
      @itamarbar9580 2 года назад +1

      How the hell you paint the inside of the mouth?!?!?!?!?!

    • @dantho50
      @dantho50 2 года назад +18

      @@itamarbar9580 The singer i knew who did this used a green food colouring so that the inside of his mouth would resemble the colour of his costume which reoresented the patina of an old weathered statue. He explained his reason for doing so was to ensure that theatrically it looked better than seeing the inside of a gaping pink mouth.

    • @EmilyGloeggler7984
      @EmilyGloeggler7984 Год назад +6

      I do not know if Kurt really did that, but if he did - bravo! You could also use squid or edible printer ink, which creates the same effect. But I’d be more concerned if that stuff may affect the singing voice. If it does not, it’s a wonderful idea!

  • @mypianoschat9475
    @mypianoschat9475 Год назад +5

    to describe this is "EPIC MOZART"

  • @davidfreeman2883
    @davidfreeman2883 2 года назад +8

    Sam Ramey, Kurt Moll, and Furruccio Furlanetto all together? Yes Please!

  • @tulga3760
    @tulga3760 Год назад +12

    I can't stop watching this scene.
    Especially Kurt Moll nailed me down here.

  • @BaroneVitellioScarpia1
    @BaroneVitellioScarpia1 2 года назад +51

    Ramey is magnificent!

    • @BaroneVitellioScarpia1
      @BaroneVitellioScarpia1 2 года назад +1

      @@NGTO-zt9qe Indeed. I hope Siepi could replace him as the Commendatore.

    • @bobajob13
      @bobajob13 2 года назад +2

      @@NGTO-zt9qe ah yes the greatest basso profundo of the the last 50 years was terrible. In what way was his performance terrible?

    • @antemahoney4376
      @antemahoney4376 2 года назад

      @@bobajob13 ruclips.net/video/JavgpyOG4OY/видео.html

    • @marisamassimino6418
      @marisamassimino6418 2 года назад

      @@BaroneVitellioScarpia1 Siepi è un grandissimo. Forse più di Ramey. Bravo Furlanetto indispensabile in questa parte.

    • @BaroneVitellioScarpia1
      @BaroneVitellioScarpia1 2 года назад +1

      @@marisamassimino6418 Siepi? È il miglior Don Giovanni di sempre!

  • @Jupiterssilhouette
    @Jupiterssilhouette 2 года назад +54

    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the talented young man who wrote blissful sweet melodies but also had the potential to write masterpieces as terrifying such as this

  • @0oxeno0
    @0oxeno0 2 года назад +213

    So rose the dreadful ghost from his next and blackest opera.
    There on the stage, stood the figure of a dead commander.
    I knew, Only I understood that the horrifying apparition
    was Leopold, raised from the dead.
    Wolfgang had actually summoned up his own father
    to accuse his son, before all the world.
    It was terrifying and wonderful to watch.
    And now, the madness began in me, the madness of a man, splitting in half.
    Through my influence, I saw to it Don Giovanni was played only five times in Vienna,
    but in secret I went to every one of those five. Worshipping the sound, I alone
    seem to hear.
    And as I stood there, understanding how that bitter old man
    was still possessing his poor son, even from beyond the grave.
    I began to see a way, A terrible way I could finally triumph over God.

    • @nelsongllrd
      @nelsongllrd 2 года назад +15

      Love this movie so much since i was a kid!

    • @gregoryborton6598
      @gregoryborton6598 2 года назад +22

      This scene never made sense until I got acquainted with Don Giovanni. For those like me who where confused, Don Giovanni was a person who basically gave no fucks about anybody but himself, spent his days drinking, fighting, and womanizing. He is dragged down to hell by the ghost of a man he kills in the first scene, a father coming to protect his daughter from rape.
      Mozart (as in the Amadeus depiction, not the real man) similarly spent his days drinking, sleeping around, and overall giving no shits about those around him other than his own music. His father had been the figure that had reigned that in, and later scolded him for it- thus, he is Don Giovanni and his judge is his father, now but a ghost but still very much able to haunt.

    • @MichaelHopcroft
      @MichaelHopcroft 2 года назад

      @@nelsongllrd Sometimes a great play (and "Amadeus" along with the same author's "Eqqus" are among the truly great plays of the Twentieth Century) does in fact benefit from being seen live, even performed byh a local or college troup[e. I would love to have played Salieri. It was from a troupe like that that I saw"Amadeus", when I was at a collegiate drama festival learning how to be a drama critic.
      I sadfly admit I completely missed the point of "Waiting for Godot" until discussing it with my drama professor on the drive home.

    • @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648
      @SeekingTheLoveThatGodMeans7648 2 года назад +1

      @@gregoryborton6598 It must have been quite an internal conflict for the dramatic, if not also the real Wolfgang. Psychological analysis from artifacts is perilous at best, so this is but a guess. His father had not been a kind Christlike figure, yet had at least superficially controlled his son. Resolving such conflicts could take until a trans-mortal encounter. We, not knowing the mental baggage that Wolfgang had, could possibly accept the Commendatore as an angel. But the heavenly vibes, which are the only thing that can really convince, wouldn't have been there for Wolfgang, the only hint of them being the textual reference to heavenly food courtesy of Ponte, who at least got to bear some kind of Christian witness to Wolfgang.
      Anyhow: empty religion is powerless.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 Год назад

      Amazing writing

  • @henkvermalen
    @henkvermalen 2 года назад +5

    Mozart you magnificent bastard!

  • @onitasanders7403
    @onitasanders7403 8 месяцев назад +5

    Love it. Kurt Moll is the gold standard for this part. What a joy it is to hear Samuel, Kurt as well as the servant in this scene.

    • @HughMungus4655
      @HughMungus4655 7 месяцев назад +2

      aw come on, dont disrepect furlanetto like that lol hes iconic. theres seldom any basses who play the role as well as he does
      but i agree 100%, the cast on stage here is absolutely fantastic

  • @calagod
    @calagod Месяц назад +1

    Was für eine herausragende Darbietung der „Commendatore“ Szene - bravo allen Beteiligten

  • @Skyclad_Gnad
    @Skyclad_Gnad 2 года назад +215

    This is heavy metal from the 18th Century....chilling \m/

    • @JM-dy4ty
      @JM-dy4ty 2 года назад +3

      A bit anachronistic

    • @HumanoidCableDreads
      @HumanoidCableDreads 2 года назад +14

      They mean because it was so epic and dramatic. Anyone who listens to metal knew what they meant.

    • @user-ep8ss5gj3u
      @user-ep8ss5gj3u 2 года назад +12

      Except it's miles better.

    • @1911olympic
      @1911olympic 2 года назад +1

      They wish!

    • @imgaryrb
      @imgaryrb 2 года назад +9

      No it’s not. Metal lacks the center element of
      this composition, elegance.

  • @nelsonwalker7105
    @nelsonwalker7105 2 года назад +11

    Commendatore projects better here and enunciates more clearly than other DG's I have seen. Really enjoy hearing him do his lines.

    • @hymnodyhands
      @hymnodyhands 8 месяцев назад

      Kurt Moll is perhaps the greatest basso profundo of the second half of the 20th century... he put his mark on this role, and in many others!

  • @alvaroalfredobragancajunio9788
    @alvaroalfredobragancajunio9788 Год назад +7

    One of the best operas of all times - the final scene is a masterpiece!!!

  • @AMMandrea123
    @AMMandrea123 Год назад +7

    I had the great fortune to see Don Giovanni performed many times at the Vienna Opera House in 1976 and one time at the Met in New York City. This scene still takes my breathe away every time.

  • @TECHWOLF666
    @TECHWOLF666 3 года назад +30

    Love this so much. Makes more sense with subtitles.

  • @divox9pqr
    @divox9pqr 2 года назад +53

    I still get goose bumps when I remember the time I was on stage with Sam singing in the chorus of the WO production of Mephistopheles. Man, what a memory!

  • @malverdeislove
    @malverdeislove Год назад +17

    Well, what did you expect from an opera? A _happy_ ending?

  • @christineablinger2389
    @christineablinger2389 11 месяцев назад +4

    The best end of Don Giovanni Opera I have ever Heard and Seen. Thank RUclips ❤

  • @thierrypascal1913
    @thierrypascal1913 3 года назад +16

    moll and ramey ! unforgettable !

  • @briananderson4291
    @briananderson4291 Месяц назад +2

    Kurt Moll takes some beating as the Commendatore! Awesome.

  • @jessewarner7962
    @jessewarner7962 Год назад +5

    Mozart had so much gift for dramatization! The music perfectly underscores the terror here. I mean, we all know he was an uber-genius, but just wow!

  • @nenechonlisboa4127
    @nenechonlisboa4127 2 года назад +11

    The three men are astounding ! Fantastic ! Kurt Moll is just divine. WOOOF ! It gives me goose bumps each time!

  • @deem7478
    @deem7478 2 года назад +5

    Samuel Ramey IS Don Giovanni. I never tire of hearing his interpretation of the role.

  • @vitellia7299
    @vitellia7299 Год назад +6

    MOZART FOREVER
    Sehr gute Stimmen für Mozarts große Dramatik.
    Er hätte eine Freude an dieser guten Aufführung gehabt!
    Bravo!

  • @sunnythegreat9312
    @sunnythegreat9312 4 месяца назад +2

    This is the first time ever I've read subtitles of the opera and I didn't expect it to be that epic. I want to listen to the whole opera with subtitles now.

    • @crazycat482
      @crazycat482 3 месяца назад +1

      Unfortunately the rest of the opera is not this epic. This is def one of the most mind-blowing opera scenes ever composed, specially when considering the time during which it was created

  • @cliffjamesmusic
    @cliffjamesmusic Год назад +1

    It is good that there is such a plethora of music on RUclips, to please a wide variety of tastes. To me, this is just 2 men shouting at each other but I’m glad that other people enjoy it.

  • @gybx4094
    @gybx4094 2 года назад +170

    Damnation.
    This would have been like Hellbound Hellraiser back then.
    I bet some people fainted from this back in those days.
    The mind of Mozart was deep.

    • @freemandiaz5123
      @freemandiaz5123 2 года назад +12

      Will you dine with me?
      I'll tear your soul apaaart!

    • @WilfredIvanhoe
      @WilfredIvanhoe 2 года назад +6

      It is said that Mozart channeled his own father issues and feelings of guilt into the opera.

    • @CommentaryCentral
      @CommentaryCentral 2 года назад +15

      @@WilfredIvanhoe Mozart composed the music, the libretto was created by Lorenzo Da Ponte and they based it on the legends of Don Juan by Spanish writer Tirso de Molina

    • @schnabelite
      @schnabelite 2 года назад +1

      ah, everything was so meticulously planned that I believed it to be true

    • @warreneckels4945
      @warreneckels4945 2 года назад +3

      @@CommentaryCentral Don Giovanni is a bit lighter than El Burlador de Sevilla...the Comendadore in the original does not allow Don Juan time to repent. "Que tal haces, que tal pagues" -- whatever one does, he pays for.

  • @susannevollmer2347
    @susannevollmer2347 Год назад +3

    A part from a very good Don Giovanni performance: Kurt Moll is such a great commandatore and the ending is so beautiful wienerisch - also the dark Prag. Wonderful made!

  • @olivertimmermann7823
    @olivertimmermann7823 3 месяца назад +1

    Thx Wolfie for your 35 years you spend on earth

  • @ChryslerPhantom
    @ChryslerPhantom Год назад +15

    Mozart managed to create in this scene a symbiosis between the earthly and the phantasmagoric that was not repeated in the entire history of opera. And this version managed to capture it tremendously

  • @sandapaperdaisyart
    @sandapaperdaisyart 2 года назад +28

    I love everything about this performance, all three men did such an amazing job. But my absolute favorite is Ramey's last screams of "Che inferno, che terror!" He perfectly nails the anguish. It cuts me right to the heart every single time and I see what the Don sees (moreso even than the gorgeous imagery conveyed here) and I feel his fear and dismay.

  • @nigelturner7424
    @nigelturner7424 Год назад +9

    An amazing performance of one of the greatest scenes in opera... love it love it

  • @Linkingx2
    @Linkingx2 Год назад +3

    ever since I head this as a kid on the radio or so
    I could never forget the feeling
    asked my dad for a cd of the play - and while I didnt understand much of it
    that scene always amazed me - just otherworldly

  • @fredo1070
    @fredo1070 9 месяцев назад +3

    What a fantastic production

  • @orestiskify
    @orestiskify Год назад +6

    I have watched this scene so many times! I believe this is one of the best adaptations of this work.

  • @barendlotz3410
    @barendlotz3410 2 года назад +30

    Beyond description; this will not be equalled in our time. Absolutely phenomenal singing and what can a mere mortal say about Mozart. Thank you so much for posting.

  • @cornelia4427
    @cornelia4427 3 месяца назад

    Couldn't think of a better performance.

  • @kevinmarek1321
    @kevinmarek1321 Год назад +9

    like three times a year I sit and go through several different versions of this scene sung by different groups. This is my clear favorite. Nothing wrong with the others, but this one just adds another dimension.

  • @camilorm5578
    @camilorm5578 3 года назад +12

    Thank you for the upload, the quality jump is appreciated

  • @emmamcallister1743
    @emmamcallister1743 3 года назад +387

    The best recording of this scene. Everything about it is perfect. The singing, the acting, the set, the costumes. Absolutely amazing.
    Whole version: ruclips.net/video/5jQSj3Vs4LI/видео.html
    Thank you kind person who posted it.

    • @jk21619
      @jk21619 2 года назад +3

      I'm trying to buy this on DVD/Blu Ray. If you have an idea (or a link) where I can find it, please share :) Thanks!

    • @emmamcallister1743
      @emmamcallister1743 2 года назад +3

      @@jk21619 Sadly it is not available on DVD. I think it was due to some copyright issues. The only place where you can watch the whole thing is on Met opera on demand or the one here on RUclips. I really wish they sold it on DVD I know alot of people would buy it.

    • @jk21619
      @jk21619 2 года назад +1

      @@emmamcallister1743 same
      Met Opera on Demand it is... Thanks for the prompt reply!

    • @ESilva-gw9ig
      @ESilva-gw9ig 2 года назад +1

      Indeed.

    • @florafurioso9197
      @florafurioso9197 2 года назад +2

      A great performance it is, but the genius of great opera is its perfection by an infinite number of great performers, each with their unique interpretation.

  • @Bron-Yr-Aur
    @Bron-Yr-Aur 3 месяца назад +1

    This is the best version I have heard.

  • @tomrockhill8634
    @tomrockhill8634 9 дней назад

    It's 2024 and I got chills from watching this!!! Frigging Masterpiece Opera

  • @Sam_Lee_
    @Sam_Lee_ 2 года назад +9

    Real opera. Bravo. Long live the great art form. Directors of 21st Century: watch, respect, and learn.

    • @michaelmontagu3979
      @michaelmontagu3979 2 года назад +1

      Absolutely agree with you. Too many directors are showing off their lack of talent with ridiculous productions, claiming that they are making them 'relevant. ' Such self serving rubbish. Hardly worth going to the opera these days.
      Just seen the perfect case to point at. The Royal Opera House has banned those under 16 from its new production of Theodora because of its extreme sexual violence and terrorism, directed by some stupid radical feminist, Kate something. Apparently they are also pushing to be more inclusive. What a load of rubbish. Ruining a wonderful opera to force someone's extreme views and stopping young people, the audience of the future from attending. When will this nonsense end?

    • @Sam_Lee_
      @Sam_Lee_ 2 года назад

      @@michaelmontagu3979 I grew up going to the opera regularly. I loved it, even as a small child. Currently, the major opera houses are robbing the younger generations of seeing REAL opera. It is embarrassing to see them try to pass opera off as some version of modern theater. And it is downright infuriating to see nonsense productions, or the insertion of filth into this most noble of art forms, degrading its traditions and very essence. For years, the motto of the once great opera houses should be "commonplace opera," instead of "grand opera," as we see utterly bland staging. They neither understand it, nor care about it. If they one day succeed in destroying it, they won't care, nor take responsibility. Rather, they will move on to something else to destroy in their arrogance. The so-called "artists," even the most renowned, are complicit its destruction. I very rarely attend anymore.

    • @michaelmontagu3979
      @michaelmontagu3979 2 года назад +1

      @@Sam_Lee_ I couldn't agree more. Covent Garden used to be so good. Like you I was introduced to opera early and have always loved it. But I haven't been to the opera in London for years, it's just too depressing and I won't pay £100 or more to see Un Ballo in Maschera opening with a row of men sitting on lavatories or a male rape. Verdi didn't include that. I don't want to see Monteverde set on top of an upturned boat or Handelian knights riding bicycles. The last operas that I have been too were in more provincial houses in Europe, where the audiences won't put up with nonsense. I loved Riccardo Primo in Karlsruhr with the wonderful Franco Fagioli. The 5 counter tenor production of Artaserses led by Philippe Jaroussky in Nancy was a little minimal but sublime. I wanted to see Jakob Joseph Orlinski at Glyndebourne (it's my local, ) but I just couldn't face it. Glyndebourne really has lost the plot. Instead of being a centre of excellence as George Christie intended it's become a centre of indifferent mediocrity. Modern productions are an insult to what good artists we still have, an insult to the composers and to the audience who pay a small fortune to have this nonsense foisted on them. Unfortunately too many people now go because it's important to them to be seen to go, and wouldn't know the difference between opera and ballet, between Handel and Lloyd Webber. We are already in danger of losing too much to the woke warriors and opera is just another tool they use to push their grotesque message. I don't suppose I will ever go to the opera in the UK again.

  • @steampunkastronaut7081
    @steampunkastronaut7081 2 года назад +4

    Commendatore: REPENT!
    Don Giovanni: nO
    Commendatore: So you have chosen death

  • @AntoniusTertius
    @AntoniusTertius 2 года назад +19

    Look for 'Mozart Complete Works in Minor keys' and tremble before Mozart's dark divine music!!!!

  • @leonaldobrum
    @leonaldobrum 2 года назад +7

    Absolutely FANTASTIC !!! GOOD everything: scenario, acting, lighting, voices, AMBIANCE.
    THIS is what Opera is all about: sung theatre with a genius touch. I wish we still have that...

    • @robertlambeaux897
      @robertlambeaux897 Год назад

      Acting and voices , I approuve. But ridiculous production (American , probably)

  • @vampireratt
    @vampireratt 3 года назад +53

    Kurt Moll was the best commedatore

  • @allenjones3130
    @allenjones3130 Год назад +3

    One of the greatest operatic ensemble numbers ever written.

  • @PandemoniaAF
    @PandemoniaAF Месяц назад

    That Bass is terrifying sir! Shivers and loveliness ❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @markmcginn8012
    @markmcginn8012 Год назад +5

    Damn! Goosebumps every time. Every time!

  • @_juan.joao_
    @_juan.joao_ 2 года назад +4

    2:30 "So the madness began in me...The madness of the man splitting in half...."

  • @gag7236
    @gag7236 3 месяца назад +2

    WOW! So dark, and emotional.

    • @kaari2271
      @kaari2271 3 месяца назад

      They don’t call it “THE” opera for nuthin’!😊👍🏼

  • @stuarthenlis5740
    @stuarthenlis5740 8 месяцев назад +2

    This has to be the finest version of Don Giovanni ever !

  • @zacharypederson6816
    @zacharypederson6816 2 года назад +8

    God I love the ending here.
    Its so spooky, I gotta see the behind the scenes for this.

  • @amandawoods7929
    @amandawoods7929 3 года назад +51

    1 person didn't listen to the statue and got dragged off to Hell.