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Luciano Pavarotti
1935 - 2007

Probably the most popular tenor since Caruso, Luciano Pavarotti
combined accuracy of pitch and quality of sound production with
a natural musicality. His favorite roles were Rodolfo in
Puccini's "La Bohème", Nemorino in Donizetti's "L'Elisir d'Amore",
and Riccardo in Verdi's "Un Ballo Maschera".
Luciano
Pavarotti was born on the outskirts of Modena in north-central
Italy on October 12, 1935. Although he spoke fondly of his
childhood, the family had little money; its four members were
crowded into a two-room apartment. His father was a baker who,
according to Pavarotti, had a fine tenor voice but rejected the
possibility of a singing career because of nervousness. His
mother worked in a cigar factory. World War II forced the family
out of the city in 1943. For the following year they rented a
single room from a farmer in the neighbouring countryside, where
young Pavarotti developed an interest in farming.
Pavarotti's earliest musical influences were his father's
recordings, most of them featuring the popular tenors of the day
- Gigli, Martinelli, Schipa, and Caruso. At around the age of
nine he began singing with his father in a small local church
choir. Also in his youth he had a few voice lessons with a
Professor Dondi and his wife, but he ascribed little
significance to them.
After what appears to have been a normal childhood with a
typical interest in sports - in Pavarotti's case soccer above
all - he graduated from the Schola Magistrale and faced the
dilemma of a career choice. He was interested in pursuing a
career as a professional soccer player, but his mother convinced
him to train as a teacher. He subsequently taught in an
elementary school for two years but finally allowed his interest
in music to win out. Recognizing the risk involved, his father
gave his consent only reluctantly, the agreement being that
Pavarotti would be given free room and board until age 30, after
which time, if he had not succeeded, he would earn a living by
any means that he could.
Pavarotti began serious study in 1954 at the age of 19 with
Arrigo Pola, a respected teacher and professional tenor in
Modena who, aware of the family's indigence, offered to teach
without remuneration. Not until commencing study with Pola was
Pavarotti aware that he had perfect pitch. At about this time
Pavarotti met Adua Veroni, whom he married in 1961. When Pola
moved to Japan two and a half years later, Pavarotti became a
student of Ettore Campogalliani, who was also teaching the now
well-known soprano, Pavarotti's childhood friend Mirella Freni.
During his years of study Pavarotti held part-time jobs in order
to help sustain himself - first as an elementary school teacher
and then, when he failed at that, as an insurance salesman.
The first six years of study resulted in nothing more tangible
than a few recitals, all in small towns and all without pay.
When a nodule developed on his vocal chords causing a
"disastrous" concert in Ferrara, he decided to give up singing.
Pavarotti attributed his immediate improvement to the
psychological release connected with this decision. Whatever the
reason, the nodule not only disappeared but, as he related in
his autobiography, "Everything I had learned came together with
my natural voice to make the sound I had been struggling so hard
to achieve."
A measure of success occurred when he won the Achille Peri
Competition in 1961, for which the first prize was the role of
Rodolfo in a production of Puccini's La Bohème to be given in
Reggio Emilia on April 28 of that year. Although his debut was a
success, a certain amount of maneuvering was necessary to secure
his next few contracts. A well-known agent, Alesandro Ziliani,
had been in the audience and, after hearing Pavarotti, offered
to represent him. When La Bohème was to be produced in Lucca,
Ziliani insisted that Pavarotti be included in a package deal
that would also provide the services of a well-known singer
requested by the management. Later Ziliani recommended him to
conductor Tullio Serafin, who engaged him in the role of the
Duke of Mantua in Verdi's Rigoletto.
Pavarotti's Covent Garden debut in the fall of 1963 also
resulted from something less than a direct invitation. Giuseppe
di Stefano had been scheduled for a series of performances as
Rodolfo, but the management was aware that he frequently
cancelled on short notice. They therefore needed someone whose
quality matched the rest of the production, yet who would learn
the role without any assurance that he would get to sing it.
Pavarotti agreed. When di Stefano cancelled after one and a half
performances, Pavarotti stepped in for the remainder of the
series with great success.
His debut at La Scala in 1965, again as Rodolfo, came at the
suggestion of Herbert von Karajan, who had been conducting La
Bohème there for two years and had, as Pavarotti said, "run out
of tenors." He was somewhat resentful that the invitation did
not come from La Scala management. Also in 1965 Pavarotti made
his American debut in Miami as Edgardo in Donizetti's Lucia di
Lammermoor. Illness troubled him during his New York debut at
the Metropolitan Opera in November 1968 and compelled him to
cancel after the second act of the second performance.
Nineteenth-century Italian opera comprised most of Pavarotti's
repertoire, particularly Puccini, Verdi, and Donizetti, who he
found the most comfortable to sing. He treated his voice
cautiously, reserving heavier roles until later years. Still his
rendering of Cavaradossi in Puccini's Tosca was criticized, both
for the light quality of his voice and for his misinterpretation
of the role. He sang few song recitals, as he regarded them as
more strenuous than opera. Very few opera singers are convincing
actors and Pavarotti is not among them. He improved considerably
over the years, however, and by the mid-1980s he spent nearly as
much time on his acting as on his singing. Although by that time
he felt that he had covered the range of roles possible for him,
he had not exhausted everything inside that range. Among the
roles he hoped to add were Don Jose in Bizet's Carmen and the
title role in Massenet's Werther. In 1972 he starred in a
commercial film, Yes, Giorgio. His solo album of Neapolitan
songs, "O Sole Mio," outsold any other record by a classical
singer.
Throughout the 1980s Pavarotti strengthened his status as one of
the opera world's leading figures. Televised performances of
Pavarotti in many of his greatest and favorite roles not only
helped him maintain his status, but to broaden his appeal. He
was able to reach millions of viewers each time one of his opera
performances and solo concerts was seen. He also began to show
increasing flexibility as a recording artist. He recorded
classical operas, songs by Henry Mancini and Italian folk songs,
thus becoming the world's third highest top selling musician,
right behind Madonna and Elton John. By the time he proposed and
staged the first "Three Tenors" concert at the Baths of
Caracalla in Rome, Pavarotti was unabashedly thrilled with his
immense popularity. "I want to be famous everywhere" he told
Newsweek and he continually showed his appreciation to the fans
that made him. "I tell you, the time spent signing autographs is
never enough" he continued in the same interview.
He received his share of criticism and rejection as well. He was
barred from contracts with the Lyric Opera of Chicago 1989
because he canceled performances excessively due to bad health.
He was sued by the BBC in 1992 for selling the network a
lip-synched concert. He was booed at La Scala during a
performance of Don Carlo. He finally canceled tours and took
several months off to rest.
Pavarotti returned to the stage with concerts before 500,000
people in Central Park. Critics accused him of blatant
commercialism, but the crowds loved the performances. He learned
a new role, Andrea Chenier, for a 1996 Metropolitan Opera
broadcast. Pavarotti was praised for both his diligence, his
survival, and the fact that he undertook a new role at the age
of 61. In 1997 the three tenors - Placido Domingo, Jose Carreras
and Pavarotti - toured to mixed reviews but delighted audiences
who seemed unwilling to let Pavarotti even think of retiring.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
One of the most successful and admired opera singers of all
time, Luciano Pavarotti was king among tenors from the late
1960s through the 1990s. His voice was noted for its exciting
upper register, and tailor-made for the operas of Verdi, Bellini,
Donizetti, and Puccini, and as it darkened slightly over the
years, for the verismo composers as well. His vocal longevity,
which kept him singing youthfully well into his sixties, and
still beautifully after that, is a credit to his commanding
technique and artistry, and remarkable considering his nearly 40
years of performing.
Pavarotti's father was a baker, and his mother worked in a cigar
factory. As a boy, he sang alto in the cathedral choir, and when
his voice changed he joined the Modena city choir. He had brief
careers as a schoolteacher and an insurance agent; during that
time, his major extracurricular activity was not music but
soccer, and his play made him a local star. However, increased
involvement in the choir (which took prizes in international
competitions) led him to pursue vocal studies, and he eventually
settled on singing as his aspiration.
Pavarotti studied voice with Arrigo Polo in Modena, then with
Ettore Campogalliani in Mantua. His operatic debut was as
Rodolfo in La Bohème in Reggio Emilia (April 19, 1961), and soon
increasing success led to a debut in Amsterdam on January 18,
1963, as Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor. After singing the same
role with Joan Sutherland in Miami in 1965, he was engaged to
travel with her in the Sutherland Williamson International Grand
Opera Company, touring Australia. In 1966 he appeared at Covent
Garden as Tonio in La fille du régiment, where his seemingly
effortless handling of the nine successive high Cs in the aria
"Pour mon âme" sent his career into high orbit. He repeated the
feat at the Metropolitan Opera in 1972, and for more than two
decades after that he was a fixture on the operatic scene,
appearing in nearly every major European and American house, and
even China, where he performed Puccini's La bohème in the 1980s.
Pavarotti appeared in the first "Live from the Met" broadcast on
the PBS network and has been the most consistent draw on that
series for years. His outstanding catalogue of recordings on the
London (Decca) record label preserves nearly every role he ever
performed and will be hard to match for its quality and scope.
His charity work has including AIDS benefit concerts and world
hunger gala events, as well as his "Pavarotti and Friends"
concerts to benefit children, especially in the former Yugoslav
states. He also founded a quadrennial contest to identify
talented young singers and boost their careers. And, as one of
the "Three Tenors," he has brought operatic singing to a wider
popular audience than previously might have been thought
possible. In 2003 he released his first solo crossover CD, Ti
adoro.
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This web page was last updated on:
21 December, 2008
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