Maria Meneghini Callas To Her Best At Essay

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¶ … Maria Meneghini Callas to her best at other times, in both her singing and her looks, and, thusly, gives us an overall perspective of the singer's past compared to her present. Analyzing her performance vis-a-vis the various compositions that she sang and has mastered in the past, the author indicates the range and pitch of the singer's voice. Over and again, the critic alludes to this 'unfortunate' occurrence of a sore throat. We hope that it is only transitory, but Cassidy seems to infer otherwise although that may be only drama on her part.

Cassidy, certainly, seems to have been disturbed by this impediment in her performance for she iteratively intermits her sentences with allusions to the singer's lapsed notes:

The trouble is that a treacherous dryness seems to be plaguing her throat. Her top notes are not what they were because of it, her singing line is sometimes unsteady, and last night a "Mad Scene" marvelously sung ended in anticlimax because she amputated the climactic note before it could utterly betray her.

And again: "I am told by a source that doesn't give me alibis that Callas had such a bad throat at the dress rehearsal they weren't even sure she could go on."

Cassidy also gives us a perspective...

...

Even more slender, I think, with a handspun waistline, those great myopic eyes, those long, lovely hands, that drifting serenity on stage and, that one of the kind Callas voice.
Public performers and stars often entice and disturb their fans with changes in garb and Callas seems to have been no different. Similarly too, performers seem to like to indulge in garment experiments, and from this review we gain an idea that Callas liked to, too.

The review provides us with conceptualization of her voice. The author describes it as an oboe -- "that strange, lovely voice that can command an ensemble but because of the mystery never drowns other voices out." Later, we read that she can master a grand range of techniques and sounds that make her in the critic's opinion unsurpassable:

I don't know where else you can hope to hear such exquisite coloratura, such spun silk fioriture, such gossamer chromatic…

Sources Used in Documents:

Reference

Review of Claudia Cassidy of the Chicago Tribune, datelined New York

http://archives.metoperafamily.org/archives/scripts/cgiip.exe/WService=BibSpeed/fullcit.w?xCID=173330


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