Richard Wagner, Giuseppe Verdi, Giacomo Puccini

Verdi, Wagner, and Puccini.
Today’s Distressing Vocal Predicament is not Their Fault.

Lisa Paglin

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A (late) comment from the subjects of Bernhard Warner’s excellent article in The Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/news/2017/aug/10/adele-vocal-cord-surgery-why-stars-keep-losing-their-voices, 10 August 2017):

The statement, “Their research pointed Brilla and Paglin to a surprising conclusion: that responsibility for the modern decline of the voice lay at the feet of Verdi, Wagner and Puccini.” warrants clarification.

For their groundbreaking operas, Verdi, Wagner and Puccini, while emphasizing dramatic authenticity, expected singers to meet their high standards: agility, nuance, perfect intonation and natural, expressive words on a legato line, based on the principles of the old Italian method.

Wagner died in 1883, Verdi in 1901, Puccini in 1924.
They couldn’t have imagined the future.

The Old Masters of Singing died. No one replaced them.

Their pupils, who had debuted the Verdi, Wagner and Puccini scores, attempted teaching, mostly unsuccessfully. They taught expression and phrasing, neglecting technique.

Singing styles, partially influenced by emotionally charged plots and music, moreso by increased orchestral power, began to change from the fluent, versatile emission of the past to concentration on volume.
New vocal “theories” about “resonance and volume” emerged.

A surface crack had formed between the singing of the past and that of the future generations.
It has since widened into an abyss.

The difference between the singing that Verdi, Wagner and Puccini knew and loved and that which we hear today, is gargantuan.

Lisa Paglin, Marianna Brilla
New Voice Studio Brilla-Paglin

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