Virginia Zeani, VRomanian-Italian soprano, b. 1925http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=0F17390E867D368BShe was born Virginia Zehan in Solovastru and studied literature and philosophy at the University of Bukarest while training her voice with Lucia Anghel and Lydia Lipkowska . After moving to Italy she received vocal tuition by Aureliano Pertile. She made her early debut in 1948 as Violetta (!) at the Teatro Duse Bologna, which turned to be a triumph for the young singer. Violetta became the role she was closely associated with and she sang it hundreds of times throughout her career! For more than ten years she dedicated herself to those roles generically referred to as ¡Ècoloratura¡É roles, singing Lucia, Elvira, Amina and Gilda. She soon added Norina, Rosina and Fiorilla (among others). In 1956 Virginia made her debut as Cleopatra in H??ndel¡Çs Giulio Cesare at La Scala. At the premiere of Poulenc¡Çs Dialogues des Carm??lites she created the role of Blanche. Her superb technique allowed her to excel in singing the four roles (Olympia, Giulietta, Antonia, Siebel) in Offenbach¡Çs Les Contes d¡ÇHoffmann. The artist eventually included more lyric-dramatic roles to her repertoire performing Aida, Desdemona, Tosca, Magda Sorel in Menotti¡Çs The Consul, Fedora, Cio-Cio-San, Manon Lescaut, Elsa and Senta in Italian, Adriana Lecouvreur, Tha??s, Marguerite etc. An innovative artist she participated in many revivals of Belcanto operas (for instance Maria di Rohan, Le Comte Ory, Zelmira, Rossini¡Çs Otello, Alzira). Virginia sang at the Bolshoi Theatre, Barcelona, at the Arena di Verona, Monte Carlo, Paris, St. Petersburg, Mexico City, Belgrad, Houston, Budapest, Philadelphia, the Met and at Vienna (Volksoper and Staatsoper). She appeared in Dublin many times and is still remembered there with great fondness. Married to the bass Nicola Rossi-Lemeni she became a sought-after tutor at the Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, and Urbana-Champaign, Illinois. ¡ÈVirginia Zeani was immediately noted for her rare ability to bring precise meaning to her music, achieving that rare synthesis of bel canto and expression which drew praise for her interpretations, both for their dramatic sensivity and intimacy and for her radiant singing. Beneath all this, however, there was something in Zeani¡Çs timbre which went straight to the heart: an aura of veiled melancholy, a nobly controlled passion which blended exquisitely with the bewitching color of her voice, dusky in the center and radiant at the top. Hers was a voice of fascinating feminity, capable of expressing both tenderness and sensuality, both elegy and tragedy.¡É Davide Annachini |
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Virginia Zeani, Romanian-Italian soprano, b. 1925http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=0F17390E867D368BShe was born Virginia Zehan in Solovastru and studied literature and philosophy at the University of Bukarest while training her voice with Lucia Anghel and Lydia Lipkowska . After moving to Italy she received vocal tuition by Aureliano Pertile. She made her early debut in 1948 as Violetta (!) at the Teatro Duse Bologna, which turned to be a triumph for the young singer. Violetta became the role she was closely associated with and she sang it hundreds of times throughout her career! For more than ten years she dedicated herself to those roles generically referred to as ¡Ècoloratura¡É roles, singing Lucia, Elvira, Amina and Gilda. She soon added Norina, Rosina and Fiorilla (among others). In 1956 Virginia made her debut as Cleopatra in H??ndel¡Çs Giulio Cesare at La Scala. At the premiere of Poulenc¡Çs Dialogues des Carm??lites she created the role of Blanche. Her superb technique allowed her to excel in singing the four roles (Olympia, Giulietta, Antonia, Siebel) in Offenbach¡Çs Les Contes d¡ÇHoffmann. The artist eventually included more lyric-dramatic roles to her repertoire performing Aida, Desdemona, Tosca, Magda Sorel in Menotti¡Çs The Consul, Fedora, Cio-Cio-San, Manon Lescaut, Elsa and Senta in Italian, Adriana Lecouvreur, Tha??s, Marguerite etc. An innovative artist she participated in many revivals of Belcanto operas (for instance Maria di Rohan, Le Comte Ory, Zelmira, Rossini¡Çs Otello, Alzira). Virginia sang at the Bolshoi Theatre, Barcelona, at the Arena di Verona, Monte Carlo, Paris, St. Petersburg, Mexico City, Belgrad, Houston, Budapest, Philadelphia, the Met and at Vienna (Volksoper and Staatsoper). She appeared in Dublin many times and is still remembered there with great fondness. Married to the bass Nicola Rossi-Lemeni she became a sought-after tutor at the Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, and Urbana-Champaign, Illinois. ¡ÈVirginia Zeani was immediately noted for her rare ability to bring precise meaning to her music, achieving that rare synthesis of bel canto and expression which drew praise for her interpretations, both for their dramatic sensivity and intimacy and for her radiant singing. Beneath all this, however, there was something in Zeani¡Çs timbre which went straight to the heart: an aura of veiled melancholy, a nobly controlled passion which blended exquisitely with the bewitching color of her voice, dusky in the center and radiant at the top. Hers was a voice of fascinating feminity, capable of expressing both tenderness and sensuality, both elegy and tragedy.¡É Davide Annachini |
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Doug Jones tickles the ivories with one of the fastest piano songs ever heard. This song is: "Sonatina No. 3" By Denes Agay. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tMB7ldI5rU8 The Fastest Guitar In The WorldFASTEST GUITAR SHREDDING EVERhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aNZihxUenUI |


