@@emailvonsour stop ridiculising yourself. Danise was obviously one of the greatest of all times. His high register, while not the greatest of all times, was perfectly balanced. He definitely did not crack anywhere. Can you tell me exactly where in this performance he cracked ? where was it unstable ?
Oh the beautiful opening and closing, shading and colouring of the vowels and the fearless grasp of the dark timbre of the Neapolitan. The Italian schooling of the voice in action. True chiaroscuro. Bellissimo canto. Thank you so much for this posting.
Catarì, Catarì, Pecchè me dice sti parole amare, Pecchè me parle e 'o core Me turmiente Catari? Nun te scurdà ca t'aggio date 'o core, Catarì Nun te scurdà! Catarì, Catarì, che vene a dicere Stu parlà, che me dà spaseme? Tu nun 'nce pienze a stu dulore mio Tu nun 'nce pienze tu nun te ne cure Core, core 'ngrato T'aie pigliato 'a vita mia Tutt' è passato E nun 'nce pienze cchiù! Catarì, Catarì, Tu nun 'o saie ca 'nfin 'int'a 'na chiesa Io so' trasuto e aggio priato a Dio, Catarì E l'aggio ditto pure a 'o cunfessore: I' sto a suffrì Pe' chella llà! Sto a suffrì, Sto a suffrì, nun se po' credere, Sto a suffrì tutte li strazie! E 'o cunfessore ch'è persona santa, M'ha ditto: Figlio mio, lassala sta', lassala sta' Core, core 'ngrato T' aie pigliato 'a vita mia Tutt' è passato E nun 'nce pienze cchiù! Adicionado por ϕιλομαθής em 2014-01-30 Última edição feita por ϕιλομαθής em 2014-02-01 Comentários do remetente: Core 'ngrato è una canzone napoletana scritta nel 1911 dall'emigrato calabrese Alessandro Sisca (detto Cordiferro), e musicata da Salvatore Cardillo a New YorK. lyricstranslate.com/pt-br/core-ngrato-cuore-ingrato.html
It was composed by Salvatore Cardillo (1874-947). Cardillo was born in Naples but died in New York. It may have been composed in New York but I think it is still correct to characterize it as a Neapolitan song.
@@AlexNevsky144 Yes, you are correct. I am 89 and first generation American born in New York City and there is almost not a day when I can shake that song out of my head. We lived its tone and mood and there was plenty of unrequited love around. We earned that song and still, you are right. Its a Neapolitan song .
There are great performances of this song by Stracciari and Amato to name 2 baritones from the early years of the C20. Also a filmed version by Lisitsian is wonderful.
Non ce paragone con i Baritoni doggi corrono troppo in fretta .ce tanto dainparare liascolto attentamene e dico Bravissimi non tramontano Mai grazie che licercate Baritono Francesco chiave di fa
Truly beautiful singing; his acoustical Brunswicks with a very fine acoustic process really is superb here; why the reverberation? It is not necessary,; please! It hinders the fine disc!
I think he was one of the greatest baritones of all time.
I agree
@@emailvonsour stop ridiculising yourself. Danise was obviously one of the greatest of all times. His high register, while not the greatest of all times, was perfectly balanced. He definitely did not crack anywhere. Can you tell me exactly where in this performance he cracked ? where was it unstable ?
Bellissima voce!!!
Grande canto!!!
Vocalità da vero baritono!!!
I agree with you.
Un véritable maître du chant italien; ampleur, autorité, beauté du timbre, belles nuances dans l'interprétation
Potente e elegante. Semplicemente magnifico!
Oh the beautiful opening and closing, shading and colouring of the vowels and the fearless grasp of the dark timbre of the Neapolitan. The Italian schooling of the voice in action. True chiaroscuro. Bellissimo canto. Thank you so much for this posting.
This is simply a Rolls Royce baritone performance by a truly great voice -immaculate diction and phrasing -a singing lesson for any singer .
Un vero maestro.
Semplicemente meraviglioso,la perfezione.
Monumentale.
meraviglioso .
Wow! Why haven't I heard Danise before? Great voice!
FABBALOUS‼️‼️‼️
Almost fainted sitting down…😂
Avessi voluto cantare a quei tempi non mi avrebbero preso nemmeno nel coro. Che bravo
La tragedia è che oggi non prenderebbero lui
Just listen to the marvelous interpretation, especially the broad tones, so expansive and modulated. What a pleasure!
Magnificent!
Gorgeous. Thanks for sharing!
Certainly one of the great Italian baritones.
Superb chiarascuro sound, yet with a firm tonal core and concurrent vibrantcy.
Sublime,Thank you!
This is one of the most beautiful things I have heard
Thank you 😊
Magnificent voice...!!!!
Perfection
bravo
Wow.
Catarì, Catarì,
Pecchè me dice sti parole amare,
Pecchè me parle e 'o core
Me turmiente Catari?
Nun te scurdà ca t'aggio date 'o core, Catarì
Nun te scurdà!
Catarì, Catarì, che vene a dicere
Stu parlà, che me dà spaseme?
Tu nun 'nce pienze a stu dulore mio
Tu nun 'nce pienze tu nun te ne cure
Core, core 'ngrato
T'aie pigliato 'a vita mia
Tutt' è passato
E nun 'nce pienze cchiù!
Catarì, Catarì,
Tu nun 'o saie ca 'nfin 'int'a 'na chiesa
Io so' trasuto e aggio priato a Dio, Catarì
E l'aggio ditto pure a 'o cunfessore:
I' sto a suffrì
Pe' chella llà!
Sto a suffrì,
Sto a suffrì, nun se po' credere,
Sto a suffrì tutte li strazie!
E 'o cunfessore ch'è persona santa,
M'ha ditto: Figlio mio, lassala sta', lassala sta'
Core, core 'ngrato
T' aie pigliato 'a vita mia
Tutt' è passato
E nun 'nce pienze cchiù!
Adicionado por ϕιλομαθής em 2014-01-30
Última edição feita por ϕιλομαθής em 2014-02-01
Comentários do remetente:
Core 'ngrato è una canzone napoletana scritta nel 1911 dall'emigrato calabrese Alessandro Sisca (detto Cordiferro), e musicata da Salvatore Cardillo a New YorK.
lyricstranslate.com/pt-br/core-ngrato-cuore-ingrato.html
Wonderful . Thank you. It's a New York song.
.
It was composed by Salvatore Cardillo (1874-947). Cardillo was born in Naples but died in New York. It may have been composed in New York but I think it is still correct to characterize it as a Neapolitan song.
@@AlexNevsky144 Yes, you are correct. I am 89 and first generation American born in New York City and there is almost not a day when I can shake that song out of my head. We lived its tone and mood and there was plenty of unrequited love around. We earned that song and still, you are right. Its a Neapolitan song .
Beautiful.
There are great performances of this song by Stracciari and Amato to name 2 baritones from the early years of the C20. Also a filmed version by Lisitsian is wonderful.
Indeed!
@@trrill I've been looking for Amato on utub. Can't find it. He did Torna di Surriento and it's fantastic. A really great singer.
@@tobiolopainto me neither 😤
is it only me, or is this exactly how one is supposed to sing this?
Non ce paragone con i Baritoni doggi corrono troppo in fretta .ce tanto
dainparare liascolto attentamene e dico Bravissimi non tramontano Mai grazie che licercate Baritono Francesco chiave di fa
Space bar?
Truly beautiful singing; his acoustical Brunswicks with a very fine acoustic process really is superb here; why the reverberation?
It is not necessary,; please! It hinders the fine disc!
Zulke stemmen horen we niet meer jelaas
Tempi passati.