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Enrico Caruso




Enrico Caruso ( February 25 1873August 2 1921 ) was one of the most famous Tenor s in the history of Opera . Caruso was also the most popular singer in any genre in the first twenty years of the twentieth century and one of the pioneers of recorded music. Caruso's popular recordings and his extraordinary voice, known for its range, power, and beauty, made him one of the best-known stars of his time.

During his career, he made nearly 260 recordings and made millions of dollars from the sale of his 78 Rpm records. While Caruso sang at many of the world's great opera houses including La Scala in Milan and Covent Garden in London , he is best known as the leading male singer at the Metropolitan Opera in New York for seventeen years.

Born in Naples , Italy , Caruso began his career in that city in 1894 . The first major role that he created came in Giordano 's ''" Fedora "'' ( Milan , 17 November 1898 ).

In 1903 , with the help of his agent, the banker Pasquale Simonelli , he went to New York City to sing with the New York Metropolitan Opera . The following year Caruso began his lifelong association with the Victor Talking-Machine Company ; his star relationships with both the Metropolitan and Victor would last until 1920 .

Caruso was one of the first star vocalists to make numerous recordings. He and the disc Phonograph did much to promote each other in the first two decades of the 20th Century . His 1902 recording of ''Vesti la giubba'' from Leoncavallo 's Pagliacci (Clowns) was the world's first gramophone record to sell a million copies. Caruso could not sing High C , and he often transposed his roles ( La Juive , for example), down.

Caruso died in 1921, from what is thought to be complications of Pleurisy . He is buried in Naples.

His life was the subject of a highly fictionalized Hollywood motion picture, '' The Great Caruso '', in 1951 .

Since his death, Numerous Compilation Albums of his work have been created.


TRIVIA

  • Caruso performed in San Francisco in front of thousands the night before the great San Francisco earthquake of 1906. Caruso was staying at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco when the earthquake struck. He survived.



REPERTOIRE


Caruso's repertoire was the following:


Caruso also had a repertoire of some 521 songs, ranging from classical to traditional Italian folk songs and popular songs of the day.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

  • Pietro Gargano Una vita una leggenda, Editoriale Giorgio Mondadori, 1997;

  • Riccardo Vaccaro Caruso, Edizioni Scientifiche Italiane, 1995;

  • Pietro Gargano/Gianni Cesarini Caruso, Vita e arte di un grande cantante, Longanesi, 1990;

  • Caruso/Farkas Enrico Caruso My father and my family, Amadeus, 1990 with Discography by William Moran and Chronology by Tom Kaufman;

  • Michael Scott The Great Caruso, London and New York, 1988 with Chronology by Tom Kaufman;

  • Jackson S., ''Caruso'', First edition, New York, Stein and Day, 1972;

  • Key P. V. R., Zirato B., ''Enrico Caruso. A Biography'', Boston, Little, Brown, and Company, 1922;

  • Il Progresso italo americano, ''Il banchiere che portò Caruso [http://bluehawk.monmouth.edu/~psimonel/nonno3.jpg negli USA [http://bluehawk.monmouth.edu/~psimonel/nonno4jpg.jpg]'', sezione B - supplemento illustrato della domenica, New York, 27 luglio 1986;

  • Wagenmann J. H. , ''Enrico Caruso und das Problem der Stimmbildung'', (Altenburg, 1911).



MEDIA