Francesco
Tamagno (tenor) was born in Turin in 1850. After singing in
the choir, and also a few minor roles, at the Teatro Regio
in Turin he sang his first major role in Palermo in 1874
(Riccardo in Verdi's Un Ballo in Maschera). His
international debut was at Barcelona in 1875, and he
subsequently made many appearances at La Scala, Milan and at
other Italian theatres. He was chosen (over Verdi's
objections) to create the role of Otello in 1887,
which paved the way for an international career: he sang
Otello in London, Chicago, New York and many other
countries.
His voice was was powerful and well-toned, though he had
little acting ability and, particularly in his later years,
a tendency to sing loudly all the time (a flaw not unknown
in some modern tenors). He retired in 1904 and died the
following year.
MORTE
D'OTELLO ('Otello') (Verdi) HMV
52674 recorded 1903 (2MB)
Not to get over-romantic, but consider what you are
hearing: the creator of one of the most famous roles in
opera, coming to us with remarkable clarity and vividness
across over a hundred years. Though at the end of his career,
with the voice past its best, this is still a gripping
performance. The transfer has been made at the speed
indicated in the HMV catalogue, 74rpm: this brings it out a
semitone flat, which would be an expected transposition
given the age of the performer (and certainly any higher
sounds wrong). Incidentally, the 1914 catalogue prices this
record at £1 - no small sum of money at the time. Click
here to see the label - a
yellow-green reserved for the top celebrities.
If you would like to download
this recording you can do so from this page.