Basso Profondo: The Orthodox Singers - Gueorgui Smirnov (choirmaster)
Classical | EACrip | FLAC + CUE + PDF | 230 MB | TT: 65:51 | 1999 | RS
Classical | EACrip | FLAC + CUE + PDF | 230 MB | TT: 65:51 | 1999 | RS
A friend of mine (now an orchestra conductor), said one day when we were students: "Human voice is a very restricted musical instrument". In a certain way he was right. Human voice has an narrow musical register; an opera singer has about two octaves, (some exceptions almost three). Some time later my friend apologize: "I just heard a chorus, it is the most wonderful thing I have heard!". He can't say another thing... He listened to the Ambrosian Chorus! A chorus is as rich in sounds as a pipes orgel, with some aditions: the word, and the emotion felt from the inner of the human body, that is itself the musical instrument Some people says the best are the russian choirs... Probably they are right. I invite you to hear this orthodox russian choir (just males) with tessiture that varie from tenor to, of course, the deepest bass. A Basso Profondo usually sings "octaved" parts, this means he sings the same of other basses but one octave lower. Do you remember Tchikovsky's "Slavic march"? You can hear the original Tsar anthem on track 13.
Popular and sacred Old Russian songs
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