Jonas Kaufmann non si limita a cantare, ma interpreta come un vero, grande artista. La voce è affascinante, nel pieno del suo splendore. Con un'orchestra simile e un direttore come Abbado possiamo parlare di capolavoro!
What a master, what an artist! Fabulous performance. Kaufmann's voice is at its pinnacle here, I think. Easy and so rich. Perfect dramaticism and technical detail. He seemed more natural then too in his behavior on stage. And Abbado i just love. So crisp, so clean, so expressive. Personally i believe he may have been the greatest conductor of the 20th century. There are certain things he did just incomparably. Poor man. How ill he looks here!
I agre...there'll never be another like Abbado, the most spiritually expressive conductor who showed it through a certain mystique. I still weep at his absence.
I love subtitles. Singing extends and sometimes dostorts vowels and deemphasizes consonants and I can suddenly lose comprehension no matter how good the acting is.
I miss Maestro Abbado, I’ll never forget his concerts with playing Mahler. On the other hand I’m very happy about being able to attend Kaufmann’s concerts quite often!
Musically, artistically, linguistically stunning, and presented with elegance and passion. I hope that the voice teachers of the world will notice that his tongue is NOT flat.
Jonas Kaufman is in fantastic voice in this performance. His dramatic instrument is perfect for this incomparably strong piece. So beautiful. I'm not always in love with J.K's singing, but Mahler's masterpiece is in such excellent hands here. He's at one with the composer. Thank you--- so powerful.
I have spent my life fighting against the saying "this singer is the best" as I feel all singers have their strengths and weaknesses, but all has changes for me over the last few years! When God sings he sounds like Jonas Kaufmann, Never have I heard all the facets in one place before - He is an incarnation of Bjorling, Corelli, Wunderlich, Gedda (to name a few). He can also trill and handle the coloratura fioritura of Mozart, Rossini & Verdi. I hope he survives as long as Gedda.
Joseph Giles Yes! There are other good ones too, but Kaufmann is superb in certain ways. All his technical embellishments are always so perfectly done, it shows immense mastery of his art, simply icing on the cake, but how pleasant to hear!
10 years ago he was good, just after his vocal breakdown and retraining with a baritone. But today his registers can't blend as easily and as a result he often swallows his tongue. This is the opposite of the tenors you mention who have always had impeccably healthy technique.
Have you seen him live? Because I beg to differ. And actually, if you read Corelli's interview with Hines in his book, he clearly states "the tongue goes down in the back." Now, a lot of singers say a lot of things, but they don't always do the things they say. So whether Franco was correct in his assessment of his own technique or not, to claim he, or any other singer, suffers from some imperfection within their instrument (specifically ailments having to do with specific muscle groups), is not productive. Without knowing the position of those muscles at rest (I'm assuming you have not been with Jonas when he's been sleeping, unless you're in fact the subject of an affair we the public do not know about), it is impossible to say whether he "swallows his tongue" when he sings without knowlege of it's resting position to compare. Analysis of his recent recordings are completely irrelevant unless you've heared (listened very closely to) him live over several occasions, you cannot draw valid conclusions regarding specifics and nuances of his vocal production, and even so, we cannot conclude that his tongue is too far down based on sound. What I think you mean rather is that his larynx is depressed beyond the natural response from inhalation, but it doesn't matter. What we can do is determine whether the fundamentals are the same as they were ten years ago, NOT whether his voice "sounds different." That is nature. He's ten years older, and his voice has no doubt adapted physically, as has his own subconscious and conscious efforts to control it. So if it sounds different, it most likely is not because of a technical change. There are many interviews of him speaking candidly about his technique, and his "approach to vocal production" has not changed since it was revamped in the late 90s, according to him at least. The other aspect of your argument, reflecting on his less than par sound as of late, again has to do with recorded versus live. Anecdotally, many speculate Giacomini sounded baritonal, but from those who heard him unamplified in the house said it was completely different. That there is no question of his voice belonging to the tenor canon. Even modern recording techniques have continued to struggle with larger, darker voices. Live, Kaufmann comes across much more lyrical than his recordings suggest. Apologies for ranting, but to say one singer swallows his tongue and therefore sounds worse than in the past is an inconclusive, unproductive, uninformed, sophomoric argument often made in the student halls of conservatories or from comprimario singers of far less ability who have no place diagnosing any technical ailment in public before their own.
Kaufmann has proven himself as an intelligent and musically sensitive singer. However, while I have a lifelong iron-clad principle, Never to argue with success - and Kaufmann is extremely successful - I have reservations about his vocal production. For the immense volume that he generates, Kaufmann's voice does not have ample "ring". The voice does not project outward. The resulting effect is a feeling that he restrains and reigns in, instead of releasing and allowing the voice to flow freely. This becomes more pronounced in soft passages where he seems to pull the voice inward instead of pushing it gently forward.
Beautiful! More longingly than desperate.... It's always hard to 'forget' the first recording/ performance you heard. All recordings following are compared to this one. Mine was Klemperer, with Wunderlich and Baker....unforgettable. But Haitink and Jessye Norman ...equally beautiful
This is a perfect placement for his voice. Now, his voice is starting to darken and it's losing the "squillo" that was so beautiful. I do hope he turns back from the "dark" side (pun intended).
The wine beckons in golden goblets but drink not yet; first I'll sing you a song. The song of sorrow shall ring laughingly in your soul. When the sorrow comes, blasted lie the gardens of the soul, wither and perish joy and singing. Dark is life, dark is death! Master of this house, your cellar is full of golden wine! Here, this lute I call mine. The lute to strike and the glasses to drain, these things go well together. A full goblet of wine at the right time is worth more than all the kingdoms of this earth. Dark is life, dark is death! The heavens are ever blue and the Earth shall stand sure, and blossom in the spring. But you O man, what long life have you? Not a hundred years may you delight in all the rotten baubles of this earth. See down there! In the moonlight, on the graves squats a wild ghostly shape; an ape it is! Hear you his howl go out in the sweet fragrance of life. Now! Drink the wine! Now it is time comrades. Drain your golden goblets to the last. Dark is life, dark is death!
06:16 Cor anglais: really e flat - c - a flat? Not e - c - a flat? Never heard before. But I am a poor judge, because I am totally addicted to Fritz Wunderlich's renditions.
Struggle? That's the result of technical flaws in other tenors. Kaufmann has none at this point in his career and sings with unmatched feeling and beauty. Legato thy name is Kaufmann. As for Abbado's performance, that is another issue altogether since it is not a matter of technique but interpretation.
Beautiful performance, sound is not so good though - a technical recording matter. But enough can be heard. Kaufmann is managing the great difficulty in this work quite well: getting yourself heard over the orchestra which is quite a blow in the back. Strange that the composer is not mentioned. Either because everybody watching this is supposed to know the composer so well that mentioning is not necessary, not even out of a basic politeness, or out of a need to be complete, or because it is supposed to be irrelevant in relation to the performers: music is there for the performers and not the other way around. I hope the first, but fear the second is the case.
I'm going to spoil the party - much as I love his voice, I miss the sense of struggle that other tenors have with this piece. The orchestra too seems almost to poised, I miss the restless lurching from one phrase to the next. Was everything smoothed out in the studio? I am usually swept away by Abbado's Mahler.
Has Jonas Kaufmann ever experienced a first class Delirium Tremens? No? Well, just try it. And after such an overwhelming event Mahlers Jammerlied can never been sung in a polished manner. It's horribleness first class my friend!!!
His vocal resources seem almost limitless...But his relative failure to give specific color to specific words and phrases makes this performance unsatisfactory in a work where Mahler's extramusical expressive aims are so critical.
maybe you can say to others, it is uninformed and not intelligent comment on him, he is continuing improving singing even over mid year career! Hard to find tenor,
Jonas Kaufmann non si limita a cantare, ma interpreta come un vero, grande artista. La voce è affascinante, nel pieno del suo splendore. Con un'orchestra simile e un direttore come Abbado possiamo parlare di capolavoro!
Bravo Jonas, you are unique....
I want the whole performance!
Nous avons perdu un brillant chef d'orchestre mais nous avons le plus grand ténor qui nous enchante merveilleusement !!! Bravo et Merci !!
What a master, what an artist! Fabulous performance. Kaufmann's voice is at its pinnacle here, I think. Easy and so rich. Perfect dramaticism and technical detail. He seemed more natural then too in his behavior on stage. And Abbado i just love. So crisp, so clean, so expressive. Personally i believe he may have been the greatest conductor of the 20th century. There are certain things he did just incomparably. Poor man. How ill he looks here!
+ArtShouldBeBeautiful Don't forget Bernstein!
+Daniel Schlachta Or Klemperer, Furtwangler, Maazel, Boulez, Walter, Desormiere, Celibidache...
+Jacob Morris And Messiaen and Stravinksky and Janacek :-) RIP Pierre!
I agre...there'll never be another like Abbado, the most spiritually expressive conductor who showed it through a certain mystique. I still weep at his absence.
Controlled extasy! The only one who is not on a trip is Mr. Abbado himself ...
Absolutely breathtaking! Kaufmann, you have soul and voice - a perfect combination!
Performance of great music by two best, magnificent artists in music! Thank you for this! I miss Maestro Abbado!
Unbelievably beautiful.
Magnificent! What a fine combination.
The subtitles are brilliant! Almost a must for a beginner in Opera! Whoever did them here, I thank from the bottom of my heart!
I love subtitles. Singing extends and sometimes dostorts vowels and deemphasizes consonants and I can suddenly lose comprehension no matter how good the acting is.
No English though?
This is not opera
Questa era una performance da registrare in disco! Abbado, i Berliner, Jonas Kaufmann e Anne Sophie von Otter! Un capolavoro!...
😊😊 OPPO
This is great singing!
I miss Maestro Abbado, I’ll never forget his concerts with playing Mahler. On the other hand I’m very happy about being able to attend Kaufmann’s concerts quite often!
No matter how many times I see this, I love it - especially now that Maestro Abbado is gone - I miss him.!!!
Musically, artistically, linguistically stunning, and presented with elegance and passion. I hope that the voice teachers of the world will notice that his tongue is NOT flat.
Très belle ampleur de sa Tessiture ...!!!!
Unique aujourd'hui.....
De belles retenues....
sublime Jonas
Indeed
Parabéns por sua linda voz!
thank you so much mu dear friend :) I'm so grateful to you :)
exquisita aria para un gran tenor
OMG - the MOST thrilling TRINKLIED! ♥♥♥♥♥
Magnifique ! quel merveilleux artiste !
wie wunderbar Abbado & Kaufmann ❤️
The beest-Numero -1.
Ah, Berlin! Simply incredible!
QUE GRANDIOSO ARTISTA Y QUE VOZ MARAVILLOSA ..UNICA ..
Jonas Kaufman is in fantastic voice in this performance. His dramatic instrument is perfect for this incomparably strong piece. So beautiful. I'm not always in love with J.K's singing, but Mahler's masterpiece is in such excellent hands here. He's at one with the composer. Thank you--- so powerful.
I have spent my life fighting against the saying "this singer is the best" as I feel all singers have their strengths and weaknesses, but all has changes for me over the last few years! When God sings he sounds like Jonas Kaufmann, Never have I heard all the facets in one place before - He is an incarnation of Bjorling, Corelli, Wunderlich, Gedda (to name a few). He can also trill and handle the coloratura fioritura of Mozart, Rossini & Verdi. I hope he survives as long as Gedda.
Joseph Giles Yes! There are other good ones too, but Kaufmann is superb in certain ways. All his technical embellishments are always so perfectly done, it shows immense mastery of his art, simply icing on the cake, but how pleasant to hear!
10 years ago he was good, just after his vocal breakdown and retraining with a baritone. But today his registers can't blend as easily and as a result he often swallows his tongue. This is the opposite of the tenors you mention who have always had impeccably healthy technique.
Have you seen him live? Because I beg to differ. And actually, if you read Corelli's interview with Hines in his book, he clearly states "the tongue goes down in the back." Now, a lot of singers say a lot of things, but they don't always do the things they say. So whether Franco was correct in his assessment of his own technique or not, to claim he, or any other singer, suffers from some imperfection within their instrument (specifically ailments having to do with specific muscle groups), is not productive. Without knowing the position of those muscles at rest (I'm assuming you have not been with Jonas when he's been sleeping, unless you're in fact the subject of an affair we the public do not know about), it is impossible to say whether he "swallows his tongue" when he sings without knowlege of it's resting position to compare. Analysis of his recent recordings are completely irrelevant unless you've heared (listened very closely to) him live over several occasions, you cannot draw valid conclusions regarding specifics and nuances of his vocal production, and even so, we cannot conclude that his tongue is too far down based on sound. What I think you mean rather is that his larynx is depressed beyond the natural response from inhalation, but it doesn't matter. What we can do is determine whether the fundamentals are the same as they were ten years ago, NOT whether his voice "sounds different." That is nature. He's ten years older, and his voice has no doubt adapted physically, as has his own subconscious and conscious efforts to control it. So if it sounds different, it most likely is not because of a technical change. There are many interviews of him speaking candidly about his technique, and his "approach to vocal production" has not changed since it was revamped in the late 90s, according to him at least. The other aspect of your argument, reflecting on his less than par sound as of late, again has to do with recorded versus live. Anecdotally, many speculate Giacomini sounded baritonal, but from those who heard him unamplified in the house said it was completely different. That there is no question of his voice belonging to the tenor canon. Even modern recording techniques have continued to struggle with larger, darker voices. Live, Kaufmann comes across much more lyrical than his recordings suggest. Apologies for ranting, but to say one singer swallows his tongue and therefore sounds worse than in the past is an inconclusive, unproductive, uninformed, sophomoric argument often made in the student halls of conservatories or from comprimario singers of far less ability who have no place diagnosing any technical ailment in public before their own.
Amen!!!!!
Kaufmann has proven himself as an intelligent and musically sensitive singer. However, while I have a lifelong iron-clad principle, Never to argue with success - and Kaufmann is extremely successful - I have reservations about his vocal production. For the immense volume that he generates, Kaufmann's voice does not have ample "ring". The voice does not project outward. The resulting effect is a feeling that he restrains and reigns in, instead of releasing and allowing the voice to flow freely. This becomes more pronounced in soft passages where he seems to pull the voice inward instead of pushing it gently forward.
Beautiful! More longingly than desperate....
It's always hard to 'forget' the first recording/ performance you heard. All recordings following are compared to this one.
Mine was Klemperer, with Wunderlich and Baker....unforgettable. But Haitink and Jessye Norman ...equally beautiful
+Ludmilla Herni You mean Wunderlich and Ludwig?
+Jacob Morris
I stand corrected;-) Of course I mean Christa Ludwig....
Mr New cut streng
Todas pero seguidas no con anuncios ni tener de ir saltando
RIP Abbado
The most intense drinking song ever.
well said!
Nein. Incorrecto
Fantastic Abbadò & Kaufman
The mezzo is Anne Sofie von Otter. I had upload Der Abschied with her from this performance but unfortunately was removed by RUclips. Pity!
Wunderbaren ( hermoso) Jonas Kaufmann ópera!
I raise a glass to this!
Cuando la aflicción nos invade, se agostan los jardines del alma
Magnifiques tous les deux
This is a perfect placement for his voice. Now, his voice is starting to darken and it's losing the "squillo" that was so beautiful. I do hope he turns back from the "dark" side (pun intended).
Wie eine schoene Stimmfarbe und Darstellung.
SUPER!!!!!! BRAVO!!!! MULTUMESC că EXISTI !!!!°
The wine beckons in golden goblets
but drink not yet; first I'll sing you a song.
The song of sorrow
shall ring laughingly in your soul.
When the sorrow comes,
blasted lie the gardens of the soul,
wither and perish joy and singing.
Dark is life, dark is death!
Master of this house,
your cellar is full of golden wine!
Here, this lute I call mine.
The lute to strike and the glasses to drain,
these things go well together.
A full goblet of wine at the right time
is worth more than all the kingdoms of this earth.
Dark is life, dark is death!
The heavens are ever blue and the Earth
shall stand sure, and blossom in the spring.
But you O man, what long life have you?
Not a hundred years may you delight
in all the rotten baubles of this earth.
See down there! In the moonlight, on the graves
squats a wild ghostly shape;
an ape it is! Hear you his howl go out
in the sweet fragrance of life.
Now! Drink the wine! Now it is time comrades.
Drain your golden goblets to the last.
Dark is life, dark is death!
06:16 Cor anglais: really e flat - c - a flat? Not e - c - a flat? Never heard before. But I am a poor judge, because I am totally addicted to Fritz Wunderlich's renditions.
Outstanding rendition of this masterpiece God Gustav Mahler bequeathed us.
Jonas Kaufmann ist einfach außerordentlich.
4:44 I've always wondered how flutes achieve that sound.
Fluttertongue!
He betta sanggggg!!!!!
Bravissimo
Dunkel ist das Leben
Der großartige Neumann
Ist der tod
I have JK's "Mahler" CD, but I prefer this RUclips.
E' una forza della natura...
18-05-2011
My God what a fantastic performance, both tenor and conductor. It's written so bloody awful for the tenor it's almost beyond vocal endurance.
I cannot find a CD of this performance...can anyone help with a catalog or recording label, please?
Is that a tall mic in front of the score stand?
Struggle? That's the result of technical flaws in other tenors. Kaufmann has none at this point in his career and sings with unmatched feeling and beauty. Legato thy name is Kaufmann. As for Abbado's performance, that is another issue altogether since it is not a matter of technique but interpretation.
Beautiful performance, sound is not so good though - a technical recording matter. But enough can be heard. Kaufmann is managing the great difficulty in this work quite well: getting yourself heard over the orchestra which is quite a blow in the back.
Strange that the composer is not mentioned. Either because everybody watching this is supposed to know the composer so well that mentioning is not necessary, not even out of a basic politeness, or out of a need to be complete, or because it is supposed to be irrelevant in relation to the performers: music is there for the performers and not the other way around.
I hope the first, but fear the second is the case.
Mahler
I'm going to spoil the party - much as I love his voice, I miss the sense of struggle that other tenors have with this piece. The orchestra too seems almost to poised, I miss the restless lurching from one phrase to the next. Was everything smoothed out in the studio? I am usually swept away by Abbado's Mahler.
perche' in inglese?
What year?
sei tu
René Kollo is better I think. There were patches where he didn’t have complete control toward the end.
Kollo just a better tenor altogether and he never had the score in front of him. Just listen to his Mahler 8, nobody's done it better.
Has Jonas Kaufmann ever experienced a first class Delirium Tremens? No? Well, just try it. And after such an overwhelming event Mahlers Jammerlied can never been sung in a polished manner. It's horribleness first class my friend!!!
Julius Paztak, qui avait dix fois moins de voix, savait mieux rendre le sentiment de l'ivresse.
Completely redefine the word "hideous".
His vocal resources seem almost limitless...But his relative failure to give specific color to specific words and phrases makes this performance unsatisfactory in a work where Mahler's extramusical expressive aims are so critical.
Snobs. Snobs everywhere
Jammervolles Gegurgel in den Tiefen des Rachens!
Mir gefällt's aber
GERMANYFrankie, besser als Ihr Gegurgel in den Tiefen Ihres Backofens, Kaufmann muss wenigstens nicht in der Küche gurgeln wie Sie.
And who is the mezzo in this performance?
non dire piu' niente o dimmi tutto
La democrazia ogni tanto salta...
scusa
Mua
viso modificato
&
Worst toast ever!
Nur schlecht!
abartig...
Symbol of mediocracy of Tenor singing today...
Non mi piace
pura envidia
What is your definition of mediocracy? and explain what you think is mediocre about JK's singing, please!
maybe you can say to others, it is uninformed and not intelligent comment on him, he is continuing improving singing even over mid year career! Hard to find tenor,
La más bella versión de esta fantástica música, Jonas Kaufmann su magnífico e inigualable intérprete..👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻💖⚘⚘🕊