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Tannhauser: 'Dich, Teure halle' - Deborah Voigt

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Uploaded by on Jul 24, 2007

Deborah Voigt sings Elisabeth's Aria 'Dich, teure halle' from Act 2 of Wagner's 'Tannhauser'. James Levine Conducts The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra.

'Maldito Candelabro' Un blog para hablar de la opera en el Peru y el mundo
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Uploader Comments (gtelloz)

  • what year was this???

  • 1996

Top Comments

  • If anyone can show me a high B natural that sounds better than Deberah Voigt's in this video I would be very surprised. Please post the link... :-)

  • She is just utterly fabulous in Wagner roles!!! She's relatively thin now, post surgery, but even at this point I just love her to death. If the human voice is arguably reflective of how beautiful a woman is on the inside, she's a supermodel in my book!

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All Comments (149)

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  • deborah is the only woman that 20 years after looks 20 years younger!

  • Oh, she looks like having the most fun... that's outstanding!

  • I died and went to heaven after hearing this.

    BRAVIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII­IIIIIIIIIII!

  • radiant! :)

  • @nyxB Loss of weight, especially very sudden loss, has contributed to the decline of many singers, including Maria Callas' vocal demise. The problem is that singing is very driven by abdominal muscles. Losing the weight changes the balance a singer has learned to maintain. Additionally, in the case of those who have done gastric by-pass surgery have had invasive surgery, not good for singing, which basically starves them leaving them without the necessary energy.

  • Une grande et belle voix

  • @nyxB Belief of fat connected with good singing is not completely unsustained! Weight around the waist does help for a relaxed push of the air with moderate need of muscle use, thus producing a seemingly unforced sound.

    That does not mean that singers trained to use pure but relaxed muscle cannot have the same or better results (eg. the enormous sound of G.Jones)

    However starting as a singer who has grown accustomed to the extra weight-push and changing into a muscle driven mechanism is tricky!

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