Italian Tenor Alessandro Bonci ~ Un Ballo In Maschera (1926 Electrical)
Italian Tenor Alessandro Bonci (1870-1940) / Un Ballo In Machera (
Verdi) / with
Aurora Rettoni,
Emilia Rubadi, E. Baccaloni, G. Menni &
Coro / Recorded: 1926 / Bonci is pictured much earlier in a 1910 advertisement for
Columbia Records --
Alessandro Bonci (
February 10,
1870 -- August 10,
1940): Italian lyric tenor known internationally for his association with the bel canto repertoire. He sang at many famous theatres, including
New York's Metropolitan Opera,
Milan's
La Scala and
London's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. A native of
Cesena,
Romagna, Bonci started out as an apprentice shoemaker. He secured a music scholarship to the
Rossini Conservatory in
Pesaro, working for five years with
Carlo Pedrotti (the teacher of the heroic tenor
Francesco Tamagno) and then Felice Coen. He also had private singing lessons in
Paris with the retired baritone
Enrico Delle Sedie. Alessandro Bonci made his debut in
Parma in 1896, singing the role of
Fenton in
Giuseppe Verdi's
Falstaff at the
Teatro Regio. Before the end of his first season he was engaged to sing at
La Scala, Milan, where he debuted in
Vincenzo Bellini's
I Puritani.
Appearances elsewhere in
Europe followed, including at London's Royal Opera House, Covent Garden. He first sang at
Covent Garden in
1900 and he would return there in 1903 and 1907-08. On
December 3,
1906, Bonci made his
American debut with the
Manhattan Opera Company in
New York City; again the opera was I Puritani. He stayed two seasons with the company, becoming a popular competitor to
Enrico Caruso, who was the rival Metropolitan Opera's major drawcard. Bonci himself joined the Metropolitan Opera in
1908 and, in 1914, the Chicago Opera. He also made a transcontinental tour of
America in 1910-11, giving song recitals. Bonci served in the
Italian army during
World War I, returning to America to tour for three seasons after the end of the conflict. He appeared again at the Metropolitan Opera, and sang in
Chicago during the 1920-21 season. In
1922 and 1923 he served as the principal tenor of the
Teatro Costanzi in
Rome and conducted master classes across the
United States the following year. After 1925, Bonci entered into partial retirement, devoting himself primarily to teaching in Milan. He still sang occasionally in public as late as 1935. He died in
Viserba,
Rimini, in 1940, at the age of 70. Bonci's artistry was captured on disc by the
Fonotipia,
Edison and
Columbia companies. His first recordings were made in
1905 and his last in 1926, with a handful produced between these dates (in 1913). On them, he is heard to best advantage in operatic arias by
Bellini,
Rossini,
Donizetti and
Gluck, but he was also renowned in Europe and the United States for his
Rodolfo in
Puccini's
La boheme, his Riccardo in
Verdi's Un ballo in maschera and his
Duke of Mantua in Verdi's
Rigoletto. Bonci was a demure man and his voice was not overly large. It was sweet-toned, stylish and supple, with excellent high notes and an easy high C. He sang with what at the time would have been considered a standard vibrato, though later generations (until our own) preferred a slower one. (wikipedia)
David Ewen,
Encyclopedia of the
Opera: New Enlarged Edition,
New York;
Hill and Wang,
1963 /
Michael Scott,
The Record of Singing,
London; Duckworth,
1977 /
J.B. Steane,
The Grand Tradition, London; Duckworth,
1974 /
Harold Rosenthal and
John Warrack,
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera (
Second Edition);
Oxford University Press,
1980 --
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