Friedrich von Flotow merely borrowed this great song for his opera ' Martha' 1847. The words were penned in 1805 by the Irish poet Thomas Moore in Co. Kilkenny. Many say the music was written by another Irishman from Co. Limerick, George Alexander Osborne but this is widely disputed.....'I'll not leave thee thy lone one to pine on the stem, for the lovely are sleeping, go sleep thou with them'....
Thank you for your comment. I agree about the difference in presentation. If you saw the version where Deanna sings seated in a chair, it's a scene from a movie. The older man in the scene is her father. He has surprised his daughter by asking her to sing for him. When she finishes he's going to tell her her voice is "no good," that he's taking her out of music school. His reason: to keep her away from a young man who attends that school. That's why he looks so miserable. He loves her voice.
Renee Fleming is superb. But if you look to the link on the right you'll see the same song by Deanna Durbin. I don't think anyone can sing it better than her.
@protoville Deanna's version is indeed the most ethereal and sparkling one I've ever heard. As for the pathos, Ponselle's is unmatched (her 1937 radio broadcast version is on YT).
@PonselleLover--Thank you for your comment. Rosa Poselle was one of the greatest. She lived not too far from here. I can't remember the name of her estate. It was "Villa" something or other. My wife was a private-duty nurse and met her and saw her estate.
@protoville I think the name you were looking for is "Villa Pace". Your wife was definitely the lucky one : I've only met Ponselle in my dreams ! :) Have a great day.
I have to see the opera Martha by Flotow someday. Renee has Incredible control and power, and yes, the tempo is slow, but the voice is very beautiful and evenly held through every long and slow phrase, yes, it does bring a tear to the eye to hear something as beautiful as this, so masterfully done. The famous tenor aria in Martha is beautiful too
January 2, 2001 this version by Renee was playing on my car radio as I drove home minutes after hearing my mother had just passed away. I cried like a baby and each time I hear it brings a tear to my eye.
sUPER!kOLOSALI!
zentina100 2 months ago
Friedrich von Flotow merely borrowed this great song for his opera ' Martha' 1847. The words were penned in 1805 by the Irish poet Thomas Moore in Co. Kilkenny. Many say the music was written by another Irishman from Co. Limerick, George Alexander Osborne but this is widely disputed.....'I'll not leave thee thy lone one to pine on the stem, for the lovely are sleeping, go sleep thou with them'....
E8gisell 3 months ago
We're singing this in 7th grade chorus. I really like it.
brunolova101 3 months ago
Great voice! I like this tempo, slow but so magic...Hi from Italy.
Riyueren 4 months ago
One of the most simple yet elegant songs ever composed. Along with Danny Boy and The Irish Blessing what more is needed? Beautiful rendition Renee!
LANCASTERPIANOSTUDIO 8 months ago
Thank you for your comment. I agree about the difference in presentation. If you saw the version where Deanna sings seated in a chair, it's a scene from a movie. The older man in the scene is her father. He has surprised his daughter by asking her to sing for him. When she finishes he's going to tell her her voice is "no good," that he's taking her out of music school. His reason: to keep her away from a young man who attends that school. That's why he looks so miserable. He loves her voice.
protoville 1 year ago
This makes me die inside. It's so sorrowful and beautiful. :'(
violinist1990 1 year ago
Just sprayed the greenfly on my 'first roses of summer', this music is truly inspirational.
harryfaber 1 year ago
Simply wonderful ,congratulations ,Sofia.
BlackWWidow 1 year ago
Magnifique mélodie ! ....Renée Fleming délicieuse...
Merci Napât
Bonsoir de France...Mariek
543693The 1 year ago
I will cried whe i heared it again
TT^TT
Nong1KungzA 2 years ago
oh the trills to do that with her percision would be a feat indeed.
gabriellejordan 2 years ago
Renee Fleming is superb. But if you look to the link on the right you'll see the same song by Deanna Durbin. I don't think anyone can sing it better than her.
protoville 2 years ago
@protoville I think both Deanna's version and Rita Streich's are both wonderful even though they're completely different in their presentation.
keydet72 1 year ago
@protoville Deanna's version is indeed the most ethereal and sparkling one I've ever heard. As for the pathos, Ponselle's is unmatched (her 1937 radio broadcast version is on YT).
PonselleLover 11 months ago
@PonselleLover--Thank you for your comment. Rosa Poselle was one of the greatest. She lived not too far from here. I can't remember the name of her estate. It was "Villa" something or other. My wife was a private-duty nurse and met her and saw her estate.
protoville 11 months ago
@protoville I think the name you were looking for is "Villa Pace". Your wife was definitely the lucky one : I've only met Ponselle in my dreams ! :) Have a great day.
PonselleLover 11 months ago
I have to see the opera Martha by Flotow someday. Renee has Incredible control and power, and yes, the tempo is slow, but the voice is very beautiful and evenly held through every long and slow phrase, yes, it does bring a tear to the eye to hear something as beautiful as this, so masterfully done. The famous tenor aria in Martha is beautiful too
griffcats 2 years ago 2
January 2, 2001 this version by Renee was playing on my car radio as I drove home minutes after hearing my mother had just passed away. I cried like a baby and each time I hear it brings a tear to my eye.
Pensiverunner 2 years ago 12
This is very beautiful.
virginiatforever 2 years ago
so pretty:)
natsumeluver4 2 years ago
Her voice is beautiful but the tempo is too slow for my taste it drags the melody a bit too much.
jgdmol4l 2 years ago