@dugongyogurt Not that I know of. The recs from the 40s and forth are probably considered at least good enough to improve as they are. However, I have an LP from the 80s with Charlie 'Bird' Parker, soundtracks from a film I think, where they have filtered out the sax voice and applied a new ackompaniment in stereo, chiefly recorded by the same musicians as in the originals. As for Caruso, I can understand the temptation as he died just a few yars before the advent of electrical recording.
I get choked up every time I listen to this, and I've listened to it dozens of times. For me, this is the greatest moment in operatic recording: Caruso singing the aria that may well define his greatness. The pain and betrayal in that voice just floors me.
@dugongyogurt Only Caruso's voice is from the 1907 recording, the orchestra is added "now" for the purpose of the CD issue. Pretty well done I suppose, it must be difficult to filter out all of the original accompaniment without distorting the solo voice too much. However, I think the result is kind of weird.
@dugongyogurt I has been done before, sometimes with less than professional methods, i.e. by simply overpowering the original orchestra. In some re-issues from the 30s, one can hear parts of the old comp as a poor-sounding shadow where they didn't get the timings exactly right. Caruso must be the number one most re-cycled artist of the 20th century, all cathegories...
This has been flagged as spam show
@dugongyogurt Not that I know of. The recs from the 40s and forth are probably considered at least good enough to improve as they are. However, I have an LP from the 80s with Charlie 'Bird' Parker, soundtracks from a film I think, where they have filtered out the sax voice and applied a new ackompaniment in stereo, chiefly recorded by the same musicians as in the originals. As for Caruso, I can understand the temptation as he died just a few yars before the advent of electrical recording.
JeyelSchroeder 1 month ago
Comment removed
JeyelSchroeder 1 month ago
Comment removed
JeyelSchroeder 1 month ago
I get choked up every time I listen to this, and I've listened to it dozens of times. For me, this is the greatest moment in operatic recording: Caruso singing the aria that may well define his greatness. The pain and betrayal in that voice just floors me.
1906sfjd 2 months ago
sound is awesome - 1907!?
dugongyogurt 4 months ago
@dugongyogurt Only Caruso's voice is from the 1907 recording, the orchestra is added "now" for the purpose of the CD issue. Pretty well done I suppose, it must be difficult to filter out all of the original accompaniment without distorting the solo voice too much. However, I think the result is kind of weird.
JeyelSchroeder 4 months ago
@JeyelSchroeder - Wow, thanks for all the info! I sure as heck would never have guessed that the original orchestra would be 'replaced' [?!]
dugongyogurt 1 month ago
@dugongyogurt I has been done before, sometimes with less than professional methods, i.e. by simply overpowering the original orchestra. In some re-issues from the 30s, one can hear parts of the old comp as a poor-sounding shadow where they didn't get the timings exactly right. Caruso must be the number one most re-cycled artist of the 20th century, all cathegories...
JeyelSchroeder 1 month ago
Magnifico desde el minuto 1:46
emupsp 4 months ago
@emupsp 1:52 unico
sircrist1 4 months ago
1 persona le puso por error manita para abajo a este video :3
tsupiru 6 months ago
beatiful sad got my heart
debiporemba 1 year ago
It was my cover and video. It is not nice to take another works without asking.
Maldoror26
rosaponselleart 1 year ago
Woooooooooooow, ke cabron era este wey, uf. :) Gracias.
PrincipeSayayin 1 year ago
magnifique una fantastica interpretazione d enrico caruso
Att: Mariachi Guayacan
TrioMariachiGuayacan 2 years ago
una fantastica interpretazione...commovente....
GiulioKdona 2 years ago
merci pour un bon movie
takhirviolinest 3 years ago