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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT0274>
<title>
Sep. 27, 1993: Two Knights At The Opera
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 27, 1993 Attack Of The Video Games
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MUSIC, Page 82
Two Knights At The Opera
</hdr><body>
<p>As they toast 25 years at the Met, Pavarotti and Domingo are
still opera's supertenors
</p>
<p>By MARTHA DUFFY--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles
</p>
<p> It was a night to remember last May at the Italian restaurant
Bice in downtown Tokyo. The room was agog because among the
diners were two middle-aged men, one burly, the other downright
fat. They sat around jawing about sports -- soccer, tennis,
Formula 1 auto racing. At one point they turned to chat about
fashion with a neighboring party of awed Italians. The cause
of the stir was that the two amiable gents were the world's
most famous opera singers and among the richest and best-known
entertainers in any field: Placido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti.
</p>
<p> Much ink has been spilled in the press about a supposed enmity
between the two superstars. It isn't so. As Domingo puts it,
"We are friends -- and rivals." The astonishing thing is that
two such careers should blossom at the same time. This is the
Golden Age of the tenors' art -- to be savored because both
men are in their 50s and no successors close to their caliber
are in sight.
</p>
<p> They had met before the Tokyo schmooze session -- notably during
the 1990 World Cup soccer finals in Rome, where they were joined
by Jose Carreras in what might be called the tenor superbowl.
The CD of that event has been on the charts for three years,
selling an unheard of 8.1 million copies. On Sept. 27, onstage
at New York City's Metropolitan Opera, Pavarotti and Domingo
will meet again: for a gala opening night, celebrating their
common 25th anniversary at the Met. (In 1968 Domingo made his
debut in Adriana Lecouvreur, Pavarotti in La Boheme.) The Met's
jubilee sounds like an inspired negotiation. Domingo, who lately
has been turning to the German repertory, will lead off singing
the first act of Die Walkure. Then comes Pavarotti in the first
act of Otello, new for him, though it is Domingo's signature
role. The finale will feature both men in the third act of Il
Trovatore, with its famous double-barreled tenor aria.
</p>
<p> The event, to be on the radio internationally, will be a colossal
one even by Met standards. The tenors have no firmer fan than
their maestro for the evening, Met music director James Levine.
He bridles when critics chant the over-the-hill blues -- that
Domingo has lost his top notes or that Pavarotti phones in the
arias. Says Levine: "When Pavarotti sings L'Elisir d'Amore with
such youth and spontaneity or Domingo explores the depths of
Parsifal, now that is artistry."
</p>
<p> In addition to consistent quality, the Spaniard Domingo and
the Italian Pavarotti have some other things in common -- among
them sound technique and astute judgment in knowing what to
sing and, more important, what to avoid. Technically, both are
masters of breath control; both know how to "mark," that is,
rehearse at half-voice and still give the conductor an exact
idea of how their performance will sound at full volume. Singers
who can't do that wear themselves out in preparation. Just as
important, both have a personality that draws crowds, and both
command a larger-than-life persona that turns fans into true
believers. Finally, both are rich; each man's wealth is conservatively
estimated at more than $25 million. Pavarotti's commercial success
is probably unparalleled by any classical artist in history.
His fee for a single outdoor gig is several hundred thousand
dollars. (By comparison, for a night at the Met each gets a
mere $12,000.)
</p>
<p> The differences between the two are equally striking. It would
be as hard to confuse their voices as to mistake red wine for
white. Domingo's has a dark quality (he began as a baritone);
Pavarotti's is higher, light and lyrical. Domingo is a nonstop
go-getter. He has a needlework pillow that says, IF I REST,
I RUST. He has sung about 70 roles, and he will not be satisfied
until he has attacked Tristan (Vienna, 1996), probably the greatest
voice killer of all. It could be a rare and costly lapse in
judgment, but he is insouciant: "I can resist everything but
temptation. Anyway, you carry the load for which you have the
shoulders." Singing is the heart of his career, but he is expanding
his schedule as a conductor; he was in Los Angeles last week,
conducting La Boheme as well as singing in Un Ballo in Maschera.
Also on his shoulders are two administrative jobs, as artistic
adviser to the L.A. Music Center Opera and Teatro de la Maestranza
in Seville.
</p>
<p> Pavarotti has no wish to run an opera house or to lead its orchestra.
Or to tackle the heavy German roles. He is the hedgehog to Domingo's
fox: he wants to do only one thing, and that is sing, especially
the Italian repertory. His schedule is less crowded -- about
45 performances a year, and he avoids Domingo's transcontinental
marathons. In fact, he boasts, "I have just completed six weeks
of doing nothing at all -- except vocalizing, of course. Always,
always."
</p>
<p> For Domingo, singing remains something of a worry. "I am aware
of every nuance, every legato, every staccato, every crescendo,"
he says. "I know so well, in my mind, how well I should sing."
Sir Georg Solti, who at 80 is the world's premier maestro, burbles
at the result of all that fretting about crescendos: "I love
musical singers. Placido has a gift for phrasing that borders
on the miraculous." Solti remembers conducting Domingo's second
Otello in 1976. "It was an amazing experience," he says. "It
was already so wonderfully perceived -- almost as good as it
is today." And that was 200 Otellos ago.
</p>
<p> Maestro Solti goes way back with Pavarotti too, and his simple
statement may get to the heart of the matter. In a 1967 Verdi
Requiem, Solti remembers "a slim young man with a beautiful
voice, one that is still unsurpassable." Unlike Domingo, Pavarotti
is a slow learner. Though he does not admit it, he probably
can't even read a score. But as an artist he is keenly intelligent,
with flawless theatrical flair. And he produces silken sounds
with utter naturalness and innate musicality. Gildo Di Nunzio,
an assistant conductor at the Met, recalls how Pavarotti warms
up before a performance: "I usually arrive at his apartment
around 5:45, as he is awakening from a nap. After a while he
says, `Proviamo' -- let's try. At first there is some roughness,
but within 10 minutes I hear gravel turn into gold." To music
lovers, that is the alchemy that has burnished the past 25 years.
</p>
<p> If Domingo's strength lies in his actor's skill at portraying
a great range of parts, Pavarotti is always Pavarotti. His secret
is perhaps not even his sublime voice but his extraordinary
contact with a listener. In even the simplest and most hackneyed
Italian street song, he grips the audience like a benign bear.
</p>
<p> Both men have well-oiled promo machines, with Pavarotti's the
more unbridled. His white handkerchief is as familiar as Michael
Jackson's glove. But as Beverly Sills, an acute observer of
the opera scene, says, "Forget the hype. Once they get out there,
they have to produce, or the hype will just vanish."
</p>
<p> It may be a dog's life, out there beyond the hype with only
two little vocal cords to depend on. But the sporting life,
which both men cherish, is their release. Nobody, for example,
dared approach Pavarotti last week, because he was directing
a horse-jumping competition in his hometown of Modena. He wasn't
riding -- what horse save Bucephalus could carry him? He doesn't
care: "I have always loved being around horses, and now I'm
crazy about them."
</p>
<p> As for Domingo, he will shut down his professional life for
a month or so next May while he follows the World Cup soccer
competition with a manic intensity. Later, at the Los Angeles
finals, both men will participate in another spectacular supertenor
superbowl. At a million a man, it's a sweet way to sing for
your supper. And get breakfast too.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>