Ah! Leve-toi soleil

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Uploaded by on Feb 2, 2008

Adam Kirkpatrick sings Ah! Leve-toi soleil from Romeo et Juliette at the Seoul International Voice Competition. Visit www.adamkirkpatrick.com

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Music

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  • likes, 2 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (yiyibin)

  • Beau timbre, musicalité, technique parfaite...

    Magnifique. La ligne de chant est superbe, les aigus parfaitement "mixtes", haut placés et jamais poussés... Du grand art.

  • Merci beaucoup!

  • sehr gut! Diese Stimme merke ich mir. Bravo

  • Danke schoen!

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All Comments (17)

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  • Truly stunning

  • @toupelitidl Achetez vous des oreilles, la v oix est serrée dans l'aigu et fausse ane plus la plupart du temps!!!

  • @romondesbert If I may butt in. Unfortunealy there is no French native "r" is taught or encourged in most music conservatories and institutes because it's not part of the IPA, "international phonetic alphabet". In classical singing English "r" is italianated too. So,is that wrong?

  • @CullenGandyTenor Listen to the baritone François le Roux too. He's been one of the best Pelleas an is know a wonderful Golaud. And he's a master in French Mélodie. His "Académie Francis Poulenc" in Tours is attended by young singers from all parts of the World who want to work on style and diction in Mélodie.

  • @romondesbert eh, yeah, but even then, the r's are often taught to be not rolled but flipped...and Alagna, though a native french speak, I would think is in the minority as far as diction choices in french...it seems to work for him...but I would think it impossibly to sing and properly phonate on some of these r's I hear coming out of french peoples mouths...but i guess its just a matter of who taught you and where you come from.

  • @CullenGandyTenor Sorry but i'm a singer too and I know it's perfectly possible to sing opera in french without rolling the "r". Do you want a proof ? Listen to Roberto Alagna. His diction is the example to follow.

  • @romondesbert but, you are not a singer, if you were, then you would know that in french diction they often teach to roll many r's because it is impossible to project spoken french sounds like this in certain situations.

  • Good but not totally perfect (I'm french). He couldn't be taken for a french singer. The french "r" is not "rolled" like in italian

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