Thomas Hampson is the best baritone I have ever heard of. SeokJong Baek has been amazing as a baritone in the masterclass and as of now he is a superior and amazing tenor that sang a wonderful Calaf at the Met.
You have not heard too many great baritones if you think he is the best....try for example...battistinni,bastiannini,ruffo,danise,apollo granforte,urbano,tagliabue,merill,capuchilli,taddei,gobi,herlea,warren,bruson,i could go on and on,but they are all truly great baritones,hampson is also a fine baritone but a lighter lyric,try some of the others
I don't think I've ever seen such an interventionist masterclass and it was all the better for it. The subject makes a tremendous sound and Hampson showed how the subtlest of changes could extend the reach of that voice and make it even better. A thoroughly enriching video. Indeed, I checked back on the timing expecting it be eighteen or twenty minutes, but it was thirty-six. So engrossing.
You can hear the immediate improvement!!! Great singing being taught....PLUS you can tell when the master singer starts singing they’re ENJOYING the singing!!!
So right about posture. Keep the spine absolutely straight and the back of your neck (I was told to imagine you have a pony tail at the back of your head and you're hanging from the ceiling by it). Once the posture is correct the support flies and the power of the core is absolute taking pressure off all the stuff around the throat. He's also right about yoga. Singers warm up their voices but warming up your body (and specifically your spine, ribs, and neck area) really helps with both production and resolving the "nerves things". In settling the body we help settle the voice and the mind. Loved this and isn't he lovely - he simply wants to help in all the best ways. Great quality for a teacher.
What a superb instrument! I could listen to this young man all day. ... Thomas Hampson.... One of the best Masterclasses I have seen online. I respect his ability to work with and have knowledge of the body while putting it into context of the music and text. We need more teachers in general who have this or similar, approach.
35:11 ... I have rarely heard a tenor sing a g that beautifull and I never heard a baritone like that! Most singers tend to almost belt it out. But he just started so soft and it was so effortless, and beautifull, I get goosebumps every time I hear it. This is what opera singing/classical singin is about: reaching intensity by keeping it natural, never doing too much. I think he got a bright future ahead, and I'm so amazed as well how Hampson managed to bring him to that point. Bravo bravo bravo!
I've been in masterclasses like this and it reminded me of all the subtle things to learn that improve the voice quality, yet as singers we often can't hear the differences ourselves.
This guy Thomas Hampson seems like a great friend and master at his craft. He's the best I've heard do Largo al Factotum. I'm not really into opera and music theory but he's the first singer that has gained my interest. I can now sing the whole part of Figaro's Aria that is in Mrs. Doubtfire. I feel like one of the audience members while watching this. Thank you all.
Wonderful video. If only all voice teachers were this picky and detailed and this perfectly understandable - speaking in a way that would make sense to someone who has never even had a lesson. For example, he doesn't just say, "support more", or "I need more head voice" followed by a jargon that attempts to explain the pedagogy but has zero utility. He makes it so simple and he is 100% spot on with his simplifications. Brilliant! And thank you, Manhattan School of Music, for sharing this gift with us.
I just love this, masterclasses with the best in classical music are so encouraging. There's no tear down, just incredible advice with attention to detail to make your technique the best it could be. Really excellent and the baritone has a great voice !
The world is going to hear from him. And what a great and nice teacher is Thomas Hampson , but we already know that. But SeokJong Beak , we are going to hear from him.
A really wonderful job working with an unknown voice, and making sure that the singer really understood the few things that Thomas asked him to concentrate on. The body work was incredible, and the changes in his sound AND singing were so wonderful in such a short period of time. That is why masterclass teaching is so difficult.
From operawire 2022's top 10 rising stars Pest - He didn't listen to Hampson and went tenor🙂 SeokJong Baek The South Korean tenor began his career as a baritone, during which time studying as an Adler Fellow, a member of San Francisco Opera’s Merola Programme, and a Resident Artist at the Lyric Opera of Kansas. With San Francisco, he performed in various productions including “Carmen,” “Romeo et Juliette,” Manon Lescaut,” “Rusalka,” and Le Nozze di Figaro.” However, he moved into the tenor repertoire over the past two years slowly building his career. In 2021 he received the third prize at the Tenor Viñas Competition as well as the Plácido Domingo prize, Public prize, and Teatro Real de Madrid prize. He was also the first place winner of the 2021 Loren L. Zachary Society National Vocal Competition, First Prize, Audience Award, and Enrico Caruso Award winner of the 2021 Vincero World Singing Competition. But it was in 2022 that the tenor broke out and made an unprecedented debut at the Royal Opera House in a new production of “Samson et Dalila;” this also represented a role debut and his highest-profile assignment to date. OperaWire raved about the tenor noting he “may well be the outstanding voice of the cast.” The debut was even filmed in HD and presented in cinemas. That was followed by more performances at the Royal Opera in “Cavalleria Rusticana,” where the tenor was once again praised and subsequently signed with Intermusica for General Management. Up next, the tenor will return to the Royal Opera House for “Aida,” make his Prague State Opera debut, and will also make his Arizona Opera debut. He is also set to join the Metropolitan Opera’s roster.
Intelligent? Try pretentious such as his comment to the pianist "do you know what inertia means?" Asking questions or making insufficient comments that adds absolutely NOTHING to the singer nor interpretation that the singer has done. It's Hampson being Hampson, through and through, the consummate and pretentious wannabe.
This is a fine voice (SeokJong Baek). Your voice has some growing to do and I hope you will let it grow naturally and not try to force it to grow as so many singers do. Good luck.
I would not handle a masterclass well. It's so difficult to have your insecurities and weaknesses brought out. Hampson seems so sweet and well-mannered, but it's like being grilled and the person grilling you is the best at what they do and you can't do anything about it. It's quite scary. But if I did do a masterclass and Hampson was running it, I'd probably collapse and cry right then.
Here's the thing. He's a pro, you're a student. It's a master class. He's not there to tell you what you suck at, but he's telling you how to improve. That's what teachers do.
Legato! That is the point of your singing Thomas! Yes, I like it....not many singer do not think and understand this way of singing! Great! That is phraseology! Thanks!
Just curious to know the date of this wonderful masterclass. No comment about the French diction. But all my deep admiration for the great artist and inspired pedagogue Thomas Hampson who metamorphosed this well endowed singer in this short time. ( Palma Toscani, French diction teacher at MSM 1985-2001)
I could feel "myself" saying what Mr Hampson was explaining just before he said it! Tee Hee. His understanding of resonance, projection through posture and breathing is amazing. The way "He" explains it "Resonates" itself. A great pupil also, and accompaniment that will, I'm sure, help a lot of others understand what the great man is passing on. Keep "LISTENING" folks ;) Amazing!
"Easier" I think is the wrong word to describe it. It's "easier" to be lazy and let the phrasing suffer. But it's tiring. Consistent phrasing is less tiring. It also sounds a lot nicer.
Los dos chicos están muy guapos y el barítono tiene UNA BELLA VOZ, me encanto el pianista, es hermosamente personal y le saca al piano un excelente sonido....BRAVO los dos....que no fastidie tanto el viejo...jajaja.. el viejo es simpático también por que no 😼
Wow, didn't notice it was French until 5 mins in, was convinced he was singing Italian. Nevertheless such a beautiful voice! Our language is very difficult even for natives, keep up the efforts :)) I think it's the vowels that are difficult, also the necessity to roll the "r"s in singing that is not done in spoken French that can make it harder to understand when it's sung
Thomas Hampson is a wonderful man and therefore a great coach (mentioning Sir Charles Santley shows his profound education). The young man has a wonderful voice, but it may help him to better learn the pronouncing of the French language.
Jesus, where's the dramatic voices nowadays? Even in these universities, the teachers are making it harder for dramatic voices to go out and sing to the fullest. No wonder opera houses (especially the Met), aren't doing as well now. The dramatic, young and rich voices that we should be hearing are getting pushed aside for more little and pushed-lyric sounds. I listened to a masterclass from Maria Callas at Julliard and almost all the male baritone singers... had dramatic voices! Now, I don't know why people think the lyrical voices (where everything sounds smudged and not even resonant or open), is the only way to go. Bellini in his time also stated that voices of that nature would easily die out soon.
tonshaad1230 there are plenty of dramatic voices. I don't think you've been to the met too much. the reason the met is failing is because they are overspending and not advertising to new customers. they're relying on the same money they've been relying on for the past 20 years.
jay hutzler Correction I've been going to the met for the last 28 years and even back then I questioned how much longer would the dramatic voice exist even then. I'm 51 now and I've learned to appreciate all sounds and all types of voices but even I can see the decline in the Met. The Met's been losing money ever since the early 1990s and it isn't because they aren't using new productions. The voices just doesn't fit the roles required to sing. For example Jerome Hines said it best in his book "Back in my day, baritones Leonard Warren and Robert Merrill sounded much more like basses than baritones!" They sung repertoire that their voices could handle and successfully sustain. Now, we have pushed lyric voices, with voices that you can't hear in a large theater or even a small one, singing dramatic roles that will kill them vocally. For Example, Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Thomas Hampson. Two great lyric baritones who are punishing and pushing their instruments simply because they are now being supplied with microphones to amplify their sounds. This is what's killing opera, not so much the reusing of old productions. Opera conductors have always used old productions as it's less time focusing on the set, and more time dedicated to working with the orchestra and voices. Callas, even in 1975, saw how this would come crashing down. And she was right.
jay hutzler Oh come now. People like Renee Fleming, Roberto Alagna, Anna Trebeko and Jonas Kaufmann are all the "new breed" and the supposed "Romeos and Juliets" off opera now, but even they can't save the Met from failing. Renee Fleming is doing her best to alert people from ALL types of music that Opera is here to stay, yet that isn't working. Anna is singing countless concerts across the globe and here in America and yet people aren't going to the met on a regular to see her there. Don't blame the met for not trying to advertise when they've been using the same formula that's proven in the past could work.... with the RIGHT LEADERSHIP.
+tonshaad1230 I can't exactly attest to what you're saying because of my relative youth to the whole spiel, but being a Jerome Hines devotee, I agree that scouring live performances and recordings of the last 5-6 years, you can say that you'll find tenors with more heft by just setting the tessitura bar slightly lower in the tenor-baritone scale, (just call baritones "tenors" BOOM!) but fewer just stand and bark and it's the hounds of hell true-to-form basses.
The student is trying his best to understand, and that is what matters. I can see this is such a intimidating situation for a student but I think the student handled the difficult situation very well throughout despite his limited language. Hampton is so passionate yet funny and the student is so respectful. It is hilarious to watch these two together!
I do think Hampson's eloquence is more suited to people whose English skills are excellent. I think he could have simplified his language and sentences to make it more understandable to a non-English speaker. As you say, the student showed grace.
+Shahrdad I think he understood perfectly what Hampson was trying to teach. You only have to listen to the beginning and then to the end of this clip to hear the difference.
O sainte médaille Qui me vient de ma soeur, Au jour de la bataille, Pour écarter la mort, Reste sur mon coeur. Avant de quitter ces lieux, Sol natal de mes aïeux A toi, seigneur et Roi des cieux Ma sœur je confie, Daigne de tout danger Toujours, toujours la protéger Cette sœur si cherie! daigne de tout danger la proteger, Daigne la protéger de tout danger Délivré d'une triste pensée J'irai chercher la gloire, la gloire au seins des ennemis, Le premier, le plus brave au fort de la mêlée, J'irai combattre pour mon pays. Et si vers lui, Dieu me rappelle, Je veillerai sur toi fidèle, O Marguerite! Avant de quitter ces lieux, Sol natal de mes aïeux, A toi, seigneur et Roi des cieux, Ma sœur je confie! O Roi des cieux, jette les yeux, Protège Marguerite, Roi des cieux!
Trovo che sia snervante per chi fa un master ed è continuamente interrotto con uno che ti parla continuamente sopra sul canto, io l'avrei mandato a quel paese.
Well, but Hampson only said that in the context of explaining breathing and breath support to the student: in other words, technique. Your comment suggests that Merrill and Warren had no awareness of their own technique, but that can't be true. Maybe they didn't talk about it in public, but they must have known about ribs and breathing and "support."
I understand your thoughts but...BUT this is a MASTER teacher and he’s showing the purpose of knowing the body and yoga and all that goes with singers. Think about it; how well do we singers know our bodies??
Обоє співають дуже заглибленим звуком, та якщо в учня звук рівний, то у вчителя всі звуки в різних позиціях, ще й постийно мігрує діафрагма. А суть академічного співу в додержанні єдиної позиції. Both sing with a very deep sound, and if the student's sound is even, then the teacher's sounds are in different positions, and the diaphragm constantly migrates. And the essence of academic singing is to maintain a single position.
From my understanding, in music a masterclass is basically a class given out by an expert to a relatively advanced student using a piece of music (it also generally has an audience/other students watching). Hope this helps!
ah ok...maybe an expert in music....the degree academically...might define who is master and who is not....thanks for your help...really appreciate it....
my pleasure! and just to clarify, I think the main thing in a "masterclass" is not necessarily whether someone is considered a "master" at singing, guitar, or piano; but rather that both, the instructor and the student, are advanced enough to where learning through the use of a piece of music is possible. The student needs to know enough about the craft so that they don't need to focus on learning basic exercises but rather focus on learning things to improve the student's performance. In short, the nature of a "masterclass" requires an advanced student to learn and a very advanced instructor (aka an "expert") in order to be able to teach to said advance student.
Hampson é corretto nel'insegnamento... la domanda é, perché non ha applicato anche a sè stesso queste regole visto che il suo canto ha parecchie pecche tecniche ???
OMG, this man is not teaching singing, he's giving a lecture. 26 min in he's still not beyond the first phrase. And each time the poor singer is ready to sing he stops him. How can he learn to sing if he's not allowed to sing?
I like Seokjong Baek but I still believe Thomas Hampson was right about his voice? Tenor roles he sings lack squillo and timber of true tenors, just as Domingo's and Kaufmann's.
“Don’t sing to people, sing for them”. Brilliant!
Thomas Hampson is the best baritone I have ever heard of. SeokJong Baek has been amazing as a baritone in the masterclass and as of now he is a superior and amazing tenor that sang a wonderful Calaf at the Met.
You have not heard too many great baritones if you think he is the best....try for example...battistinni,bastiannini,ruffo,danise,apollo granforte,urbano,tagliabue,merill,capuchilli,taddei,gobi,herlea,warren,bruson,i could go on and on,but they are all truly great baritones,hampson is also a fine baritone but a lighter lyric,try some of the others
Mr Hampson you are a precious singer and a wonderful teacher!
Who would have thought that Seokjong Baek would have become world renowned Tenor!!!
Amazing!!!👍
I don't think I've ever seen such an interventionist masterclass and it was all the better for it. The subject makes a tremendous sound and Hampson showed how the subtlest of changes could extend the reach of that voice and make it even better. A thoroughly enriching video. Indeed, I checked back on the timing expecting it be eighteen or twenty minutes, but it was thirty-six. So engrossing.
You can hear the immediate improvement!!! Great singing being taught....PLUS you can tell when the master singer starts singing they’re ENJOYING the singing!!!
So right about posture. Keep the spine absolutely straight and the back of your neck (I was told to imagine you have a pony tail at the back of your head and you're hanging from the ceiling by it). Once the posture is correct the support flies and the power of the core is absolute taking pressure off all the stuff around the throat. He's also right about yoga. Singers warm up their voices but warming up your body (and specifically your spine, ribs, and neck area) really helps with both production and resolving the "nerves things". In settling the body we help settle the voice and the mind. Loved this and isn't he lovely - he simply wants to help in all the best ways. Great quality for a teacher.
What a superb instrument! I could listen to this young man all day.
... Thomas Hampson.... One of the best Masterclasses I have seen online. I respect his ability to work with and have knowledge of the body while putting it into context of the music and text. We need more teachers in general who have this or similar, approach.
Hello how are you
35:11 ... I have rarely heard a tenor sing a g that beautifull and I never heard a baritone like that! Most singers tend to almost belt it out. But he just started so soft and it was so effortless, and beautifull, I get goosebumps every time I hear it. This is what opera singing/classical singin is about: reaching intensity by keeping it natural, never doing too much. I think he got a bright future ahead, and I'm so amazed as well how Hampson managed to bring him to that point. Bravo bravo bravo!
Well now he's doing Calaf at the Met haha
I've been in masterclasses like this and it reminded me of all the subtle things to learn that improve the voice quality, yet as singers we often can't hear the differences ourselves.
This guy Thomas Hampson seems like a great friend and master at his craft. He's the best I've heard do Largo al Factotum. I'm not really into opera and music theory but he's the first singer that has gained my interest. I can now sing the whole part of Figaro's Aria that is in Mrs. Doubtfire. I feel like one of the audience members while watching this. Thank you all.
Wonderful video. If only all voice teachers were this picky and detailed and this perfectly understandable - speaking in a way that would make sense to someone who has never even had a lesson. For example, he doesn't just say, "support more", or "I need more head voice" followed by a jargon that attempts to explain the pedagogy but has zero utility. He makes it so simple and he is 100% spot on with his simplifications. Brilliant! And thank you, Manhattan School of Music, for sharing this gift with us.
Great teaching! Bravissimo, Maestro Hampson!
"We make our thoughts audible - we don't sing text"
Thomas Hampson
There you go, someone wrote it down ;)
His voice sounds not smooth. It seems from 70Y.O man 😂
I am so grateful for RUclips...........this masterclass is the best thing I've heard in ages.............
A wonderful teacher and a beautiful voice. I am humbled and in tears.
Best master class I've ever seen.
научился петь??
I just love this, masterclasses with the best in classical music are so encouraging. There's no tear down, just incredible advice with attention to detail to make your technique the best it could be. Really excellent and the baritone has a great voice !
Mr. Baek debuted recently at the Metropolitan Opera House as Half in Puccini's Turandot.
Thomas Hampson is simply great and gorgeous. Thanks for all that.
I love this talented singers voice very moving.
The world is going to hear from him. And what a great and nice teacher is Thomas Hampson , but we already know that. But SeokJong Beak , we are going to hear from him.
A really wonderful job working with an unknown voice, and making sure that the singer really understood the few things that Thomas asked him to concentrate on. The body work was incredible, and the changes in his sound AND singing were so wonderful in such a short period of time. That is why masterclass teaching is so difficult.
From operawire 2022's top 10 rising stars
Pest - He didn't listen to Hampson and went tenor🙂
SeokJong Baek
The South Korean tenor began his career as a baritone, during which time studying as an Adler Fellow, a member of San Francisco Opera’s Merola Programme, and a Resident Artist at the Lyric Opera of Kansas. With San Francisco, he performed in various productions including “Carmen,” “Romeo et Juliette,” Manon Lescaut,” “Rusalka,” and Le Nozze di Figaro.”
However, he moved into the tenor repertoire over the past two years slowly building his career. In 2021 he received the third prize at the Tenor Viñas Competition as well as the Plácido Domingo prize, Public prize, and Teatro Real de Madrid prize. He was also the first place winner of the 2021 Loren L. Zachary Society National Vocal Competition, First Prize, Audience Award, and Enrico Caruso Award winner of the 2021 Vincero World Singing Competition.
But it was in 2022 that the tenor broke out and made an unprecedented debut at the Royal Opera House in a new production of “Samson et Dalila;” this also represented a role debut and his highest-profile assignment to date. OperaWire raved about the tenor noting he “may well be the outstanding voice of the cast.” The debut was even filmed in HD and presented in cinemas.
That was followed by more performances at the Royal Opera in “Cavalleria Rusticana,” where the tenor was once again praised and subsequently signed with Intermusica for General Management.
Up next, the tenor will return to the Royal Opera House for “Aida,” make his Prague State Opera debut, and will also make his Arizona Opera debut. He is also set to join the Metropolitan Opera’s roster.
this is a GREAT singer!!!
What a great teacher Mr Hampson is. Great technique tips especially regarding breathing and delivery. Really fantastic.
I am not a vocalist but I enjoyed every bit of this!
A lot of great singers lean forward to support the voice on the front leg 🦵
what a gorgeous instrument.
it's the inner character and stage charisma which is the next level he needs.
but a gorgeous sound!
good advice. Thomas Hampson-what a hunk! what a voice!
Thomas is one of the most intelligent singers/teachers you will ever know. I wish every singer had 10% of his musical sense.
Intelligent? Try pretentious such as his comment to the pianist "do you know what inertia means?" Asking questions or making insufficient comments that adds absolutely NOTHING to the singer nor interpretation that the singer has done. It's Hampson being Hampson, through and through, the consummate and pretentious wannabe.
@@deadwalke9588 perfectly said.
Perfectly
What such a voice! Beautiful!
The young man has a beautiful voice no doubt about it
True. A fine voice and technique.
John Blasiak He has a awesome voice with good technique too.
great Masterclass
Lovely instrument!
This is a fine voice (SeokJong Baek). Your voice has some growing to do and I hope you will let it grow naturally and not try to force it to grow as so many singers do. Good luck.
Best Master Class.
This is unbelievable. Pure Gold.
여러 마스터 클레스 중에서 토마스 님이 이 분 레슨 하면서 가장 열정적이고 흐믓해 하는 모습을 볼 수 있었다...
great teacher
Hello how are you
very impressive , Sing for the people,don't sing to the people,stand strightly😄
Yohhh powerful, am blessed... What a voice 😮
I would not handle a masterclass well. It's so difficult to have your insecurities and weaknesses brought out. Hampson seems so sweet and well-mannered, but it's like being grilled and the person grilling you is the best at what they do and you can't do anything about it. It's quite scary. But if I did do a masterclass and Hampson was running it, I'd probably collapse and cry right then.
G. Rossini that's not true there is only one thing for you Todo and that's sing.
Here's the thing. He's a pro, you're a student. It's a master class. He's not there to tell you what you suck at, but he's telling you how to improve. That's what teachers do.
Great voice !!!!! It reminds me of Hvorostovsky
Yadai De la cruz Ah I hear that too!
Wooooow.....perfect teaching .....
ha ha ha ...
so good the master!
What a voice 😍
He ist so good!
Brilliant sensibility !!
Legato! That is the point of your singing Thomas! Yes, I like it....not many singer do not think and understand this way of singing! Great! That is phraseology! Thanks!
Hello how are you
Just curious to know the date of this wonderful masterclass. No comment about the French diction. But all my deep admiration for the great artist and inspired pedagogue Thomas Hampson who metamorphosed this well endowed singer in this short time. ( Palma Toscani, French diction teacher at MSM 1985-2001)
Hello how are you
Brilliant. So vital.
28:56 “We make our thoughts, audible; we don’t ‘sing text’.” Bravo
love the teaching
GRANDIOSSO.
what a nice surprise!
I heard Dimitri Hvorostovsky sing this in a production of Faust. The applause after went on for about five minutes.
Hello how are you
Can we get some more, please? :)
He is a Terrific MONSTER!!
I could feel "myself" saying what Mr Hampson was explaining just before he said it! Tee Hee. His understanding of resonance, projection through posture and breathing is amazing. The way "He" explains it "Resonates" itself. A great pupil also, and accompaniment that will, I'm sure, help a lot of others understand what the great man is passing on. Keep "LISTENING" folks ;) Amazing!
incredible
Marvelous ❤️
Perfectly!
браво!!!
Would the title of the book be ‘what every dancer should know about the body’? It sounds very interesting.
the pianist isnt wowed by Thomas's brilliance
What do you mean?
"Easier" I think is the wrong word to describe it. It's "easier" to be lazy and let the phrasing suffer. But it's tiring. Consistent phrasing is less tiring. It also sounds a lot nicer.
Los dos chicos están muy guapos y el barítono tiene UNA BELLA VOZ, me encanto el pianista, es hermosamente personal y le saca al piano un excelente sonido....BRAVO los dos....que no fastidie tanto el viejo...jajaja.. el viejo es simpático también por que no 😼
Wow, didn't notice it was French until 5 mins in, was convinced he was singing Italian. Nevertheless such a beautiful voice! Our language is very difficult even for natives, keep up the efforts :)) I think it's the vowels that are difficult, also the necessity to roll the "r"s in singing that is not done in spoken French that can make it harder to understand when it's sung
Hannah Butterworth French is often ‘italianized’ for the purpose of clarity in French Aria
@@zacharymendenhall2859 Thanks for your reply!
yeah that's what I meant by "rolling the Rs", nevertheless it should still be understandable as French.
instant improvement
does anyone else see that his suit is two different colors, in one camera its plum, and in another it's grey
yes. very fine !
there is a difference between "e", "é" or "è" in French, and there is much more.
Thomas Hampson is a wonderful man and therefore a great coach (mentioning Sir Charles Santley shows his profound education). The young man has a wonderful voice, but it may help him to better learn the pronouncing of the French language.
Hampson comes across as a highly intelligent dude.
Pompous
And pretentious pseudo-intellectual
A-----vooooo--döööööö-kiiiiiii ......sehr guter Tipp von Thomas !!!! ohne n .......
Jesus, where's the dramatic voices nowadays? Even in these universities, the teachers are making it harder for dramatic voices to go out and sing to the fullest. No wonder opera houses (especially the Met), aren't doing as well now. The dramatic, young and rich voices that we should be hearing are getting pushed aside for more little and pushed-lyric sounds.
I listened to a masterclass from Maria Callas at Julliard and almost all the male baritone singers... had dramatic voices! Now, I don't know why people think the lyrical voices (where everything sounds smudged and not even resonant or open), is the only way to go. Bellini in his time also stated that voices of that nature would easily die out soon.
tonshaad1230 there are plenty of dramatic voices. I don't think you've been to the met too much. the reason the met is failing is because they are overspending and not advertising to new customers. they're relying on the same money they've been relying on for the past 20 years.
jay hutzler Correction I've been going to the met for the last 28 years and even back then I questioned how much longer would the dramatic voice exist even then. I'm 51 now and I've learned to appreciate all sounds and all types of voices but even I can see the decline in the Met. The Met's been losing money ever since the early 1990s and it isn't because they aren't using new productions. The voices just doesn't fit the roles required to sing. For example Jerome Hines said it best in his book "Back in my day, baritones Leonard Warren and Robert Merrill sounded much more like basses than baritones!" They sung repertoire that their voices could handle and successfully sustain.
Now, we have pushed lyric voices, with voices that you can't hear in a large theater or even a small one, singing dramatic roles that will kill them vocally. For Example, Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Thomas Hampson. Two great lyric baritones who are punishing and pushing their instruments simply because they are now being supplied with microphones to amplify their sounds. This is what's killing opera, not so much the reusing of old productions. Opera conductors have always used old productions as it's less time focusing on the set, and more time dedicated to working with the orchestra and voices.
Callas, even in 1975, saw how this would come crashing down. And she was right.
jay hutzler Oh come now. People like Renee Fleming, Roberto Alagna, Anna Trebeko and Jonas Kaufmann are all the "new breed" and the supposed "Romeos and Juliets" off opera now, but even they can't save the Met from failing. Renee Fleming is doing her best to alert people from ALL types of music that Opera is here to stay, yet that isn't working. Anna is singing countless concerts across the globe and here in America and yet people aren't going to the met on a regular to see her there.
Don't blame the met for not trying to advertise when they've been using the same formula that's proven in the past could work.... with the RIGHT LEADERSHIP.
+tonshaad1230 I can't exactly attest to what you're saying because of my relative youth to the whole spiel, but being a Jerome Hines devotee, I agree that scouring live performances and recordings of the last 5-6 years, you can say that you'll find tenors with more heft by just setting the tessitura bar slightly lower in the tenor-baritone scale, (just call baritones "tenors" BOOM!) but fewer just stand and bark and it's the hounds of hell true-to-form basses.
+tonshaad1230 in reference to the "pushed lyric" statement you made, using the example of basses for "dramatic" voices.
soccorso !
aiuto !
Ma la gente sembra molto contenta di questo ciarlatano. ;) Questa lezione e il maestro mi fanno vomitare.
Imagino "ti soffoca il sangue!!" Ha ha ha.
Baritono leggero per l'operette.
mino7520
Parole sante !
👍
woow
I don't think the student understood 2/3 of what Hampson was saying. He's such a good teacher, every eloquent and helpful.
The student is trying his best to understand, and that is what matters. I can see this is such a intimidating situation for a student but I think the student handled the difficult situation very well throughout despite his limited language. Hampton is so passionate yet funny and the student is so respectful. It is hilarious to watch these two together!
I do think Hampson's eloquence is more suited to people whose English skills are excellent. I think he could have simplified his language and sentences to make it more understandable to a non-English speaker. As you say, the student showed grace.
+Shahrdad Do you happen to know the piece that he is singing?
+Shahrdad I think he understood perfectly what Hampson was trying to teach. You only have to listen to the beginning and then to the end of this clip to hear the difference.
"Avant de quiter ces Lieux" from "Faust" by Charles Gounoud. The Character that sings it is Valetin.
Yoga is your best friend🌹YES 🌊🙏
"We make our thoughts audible. We don't sing text."
O sainte médaille
Qui me vient de ma soeur,
Au jour de la bataille,
Pour écarter la mort,
Reste sur mon coeur.
Avant de quitter ces lieux,
Sol natal de mes aïeux
A toi, seigneur et Roi des cieux
Ma sœur je confie,
Daigne de tout danger
Toujours, toujours la protéger
Cette sœur si cherie!
daigne de tout danger la proteger,
Daigne la protéger de tout danger
Délivré d'une triste pensée
J'irai chercher la gloire, la gloire au seins des ennemis,
Le premier, le plus brave au fort de la mêlée,
J'irai combattre pour mon pays.
Et si vers lui, Dieu me rappelle,
Je veillerai sur toi fidèle,
O Marguerite!
Avant de quitter ces lieux,
Sol natal de mes aïeux,
A toi, seigneur et Roi des cieux,
Ma sœur je confie!
O Roi des cieux, jette les yeux,
Protège Marguerite, Roi des cieux!
Trovo che sia snervante per chi fa un master ed è continuamente interrotto con uno che ti parla continuamente sopra sul canto, io l'avrei mandato a quel paese.
E avresti fatto bene.
Il problema è che questi ragazzi pagano fior di quattrini per queste lezioni inutili...per questo non lo manda va cagare
미국인인 토마스 햄슨이 독일어를 하는 것을 보라, 경이로운 수준이다. 특별히 토마스 햄슨은 경이로운 외국어 능력을 가지고 성악예술의 아름다움을 지극의 경지에서 보여준다.
Are you sure this is how SInatra did it?
pity about the French though... Mr. Hampson is sublime though!
I wonder if Robert Merrill and Leonard Warren knew “unequivocally how many ribs they had”? Most of what he says is self serving white noise.
Well, but Hampson only said that in the context of explaining breathing and breath support to the student: in other words, technique. Your comment suggests that Merrill and Warren had no awareness of their own technique, but that can't be true. Maybe they didn't talk about it in public, but they must have known about ribs and breathing and "support."
Pavarotti to Sinatra, the arms go out for a reason. They move away from the torso to allow the rib cage to expand unhindered. Hampson is spot on.
I understand your thoughts but...BUT this is a MASTER teacher and he’s showing the purpose of knowing the body and yoga and all that goes with singers. Think about it; how well do we singers know our bodies??
Thomas Hampson has a slur on the "sh" sound but only at times.
백석종 ㄷㄷ
Обоє співають дуже заглибленим звуком, та якщо в учня звук рівний, то у вчителя всі звуки в різних позиціях, ще й постийно мігрує діафрагма. А суть академічного співу в додержанні єдиної позиції.
Both sing with a very deep sound, and if the student's sound is even, then the teacher's sounds are in different positions, and the diaphragm constantly migrates. And the essence of academic singing is to maintain a single position.
what makes it a masterclass? what defines a master class?
From my understanding, in music a masterclass is basically a class given out by an expert to a relatively advanced student using a piece of music (it also generally has an audience/other students watching). Hope this helps!
ah ok...maybe an expert in music....the degree academically...might define who is master and who is not....thanks for your help...really appreciate it....
my pleasure! and just to clarify, I think the main thing in a "masterclass" is not necessarily whether someone is considered a "master" at singing, guitar, or piano; but rather that both, the instructor and the student, are advanced enough to where learning through the use of a piece of music is possible. The student needs to know enough about the craft so that they don't need to focus on learning basic exercises but rather focus on learning things to improve the student's performance. In short, the nature of a "masterclass" requires an advanced student to learn and a very advanced instructor (aka an "expert") in order to be able to teach to said advance student.
Hampson é corretto nel'insegnamento... la domanda é, perché non ha applicato anche a sè stesso queste regole visto che il suo canto ha parecchie pecche tecniche ???
OMG, this man is not teaching singing, he's giving a lecture. 26 min in he's still not beyond the first phrase. And each time the poor singer is ready to sing he stops him. How can he learn to sing if he's not allowed to sing?
But he did transition to Tenor now!
how lucky....
The end....now he is a lirico spinto tenor hahahah
Yeah .... so amazing hahaha
I like Seokjong Baek but I still believe Thomas Hampson was right about his voice? Tenor roles he sings lack squillo and timber of true tenors, just as Domingo's and Kaufmann's.
28:52
GREAT FUKKIN INSTRUCTION!!!
AA WLS FUKK YES!!!
I don't know why this is on my page but the teacher slimily interrupted the student 90 percent of the time. slight genius slight douche