Added: 4 years ago
From: maulwurfchen
Views: 5,325
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  • In case anybody who has written below is still reading, this IS a tenor and a baritone, it sounds slightly different from most renditions since the tenor is a robusto rather than the more usual lyric tenor.

  • WTF?! This is just weird...

  • Fantastic, true professionals!

  • FinalFreek, You are totally wrong. Look at the roles. Guisepie is the baritone. His part goes only to an F on the last note. Marco is the tenor role which goes to a G on the 2nd to last note plus a few other occaisions during this duet. Like I said, MARCO is the TENOR. GUISEPIE is the BARITONE. Just look at the parts.

  • Thank you. You are correct. I PLAYED the role of Marco in college--and I know for a fact that I'm not a baritone, and neither was the role I played. Marco is the TENOR, and Guiseppe is the baritone. And it's Palmieri. My goodness people.

  • marco goes to an A

  • By the way, there is no tenor in this song .... -_-

  • Hmmm..... what do you mean? A tenor-baritone duet without tenor??

  • there is becuase i'm a fan og G&S guisepie is the tenor and marco is the baritone if you want to try to prove me wrong look at the libretto you can find and in the cast it'll say "guiseppie palamary:Tenor Marco palamary:Bar.

  • ur a fucking idiot

  • No.. this is not turgid germanic rubbish this is Gilbert and Sullivan..very English and subtle..EXCELLENT PERFORMANCE CHAPS

  • Does tenor think this is Wagner???

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