A few months ago I reviewed a CD of Finzi's music with James Gilchrist as the tenor soloist. Gilchrist's voice sounded alarmingly stressed at the top, so much so that I did wonder about his vocal health. But shortly afterwards we heard him live and he sounded his usual mellifluous self. Gilchrist was the soloist on Sunday on the Radio 3 programme about RVW's On Wenlock Edge. Again Gilchrist's voice sounded stressed. I can only put this down to a tendency for recording engineers to place the microphones too close, so that his voice does not have time to settle.
This is a problem which can occur most frequently with big voices. Many years ago Jane Eaglen, in interview, said that at that time she was happy with only one of her recordings, the Chandos Tosca. She explained how big voices were difficult to record and this was born out by her Chandos Aida and Turandot, where the Turandot was superb but the Aida gave her a significant beat in her voice.
We have recently acquired the new Halle Dream of Gerontius, here is its Bryn Terfel's voice which causes concern. Though he is admirably firm of tone and with superb diction, the recording captures an exceptional beat in the voice. I suspect that if you heard him live, this would not be a problem as the voice would have had time to settle in the distance between him and you in the concert hall. Obviously the decision taken on the recording was that immediacy was more important than avoiding the beat in Terfel's voice.
Perhaps it is me, perhaps I'm a little to allergic to excessive beat in voices. But I am becoming increasingly aware that our recorded experience can entirely fail to reflect the reality.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts this month
-
Grieg: Lyric Pieces, Op. 71 , Moods, Op. 73, Peer Gynt Suite, Op. 46 , transcriptions of Songs, Op. 41 - Alexander Ullmann - Rubicon Cla...
-
Having recorded a disc of motets by Francois Couperin (see my review ), Edward Higginbottom and the choir of New College Oxford have turne...
-
Gimnazija Kranj Symphony Orchestra I get all sorts of mail, people sending my information on concerts and recordings. Everything gets gl...
-
Hans Krasa: Brundibar - Kayla Farrell (Brundibar) - Sarasota Opera (Sarasota Youth Opera) Raise up your voice: Intolerance through the voice...
-
Janácek: The Makropulos Case - Act 2: Heather Engebretson, Susan Bickley, Jenry Waddington, Sean Panikkar, Ausrine Stundyte - Royal Opera ...
-
Christopher Gray and the Choir of St John's College, Cambridge The Advent Carol Service: Judith Weir, Laura Sheils, Paul Manz, Mendelss...
-
Monteverdi: L'incoronazione di Poppea - Hera Protopapas (Nerone), Theano Papadaki (Poppea) - HGO at Jackson's Lane Theatre (Photo:...
-
James Pearson & Lizzie Ball (Photo: Monika C Jakubowska) In February 2026, the upstairs space at Ronnie Scott 's will reopen as Upst...
-
Sara Teasdale. Photograph by Gerhard Sisters, ca. 1910 Missouri History Museum Photograph and Print Collection The Life and Loves of Sarah T...
-
John Blow by Robert White, line engraving, published 1700 NPG D1075 © National Portrait Gallery, London Purcell: Welcome to all the pleasure...
I have the CD...Dream of Gerontius... I am not sure what you mean by "the recording captures an exceptional beat in the voice."
ReplyDeletePhyllis :-)
By beat I mean a wide, rather slow moving vibrato. Heard from a distance, in the concert hall, this can sound effective in Terfel's voice, but heard close to on the recording you are a little too aware of the pitch variation.
ReplyDelete