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Martti Talvela

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Birth name
  
Martti Olavi Talvela

Role
  
Educator

Name
  
Martti Talvela


Years active
  
1960–1989

Occupation(s)
  
Albums
  
Requiem

Martti Talvela httpsiytimgcomviV6BlIvZVCDchqdefaultjpg

Born
  
February 4, 1935Hiitola, Finland (
1935-02-04
)

Died
  
July 22, 1989, Juva, Finland

Children
  
Kirsi Talvela, Tuomo Talvela, Johanna Talvela

Similar People
  
Wolfgang Windgassen, James King, Nicolai Ghiaurov, Gerhard Stolze, Karl Bohm

Martti talvela sings ha wie will ich triumphieren


Martti Olavi Talvela (February 4, 1935 – July 22, 1989) was a Finnish operatic bass.

Contents

Martti Talvela Fuga Musiikki FUGA 9260 Martti Talvela Visions

Born in Hiitola, Finland (now in the Republic of Karelia), the eighth of ten children he studied in Lahti and Stockholm, and made his operatic debut in Helsinki in 1960 as Sparafucile. He trained as a boxer in his youth and developed the stamina necessary for the biggest roles. Originally Talvela was educated as a primary school teacher in Savonlinna, Eastern Finland (1952–1956), and he worked in that occupation at three schools (1957–1960). He sang at the Stockholm Royal Opera in Sweden from 1961 to 1962, before becoming a regularly employed singer at the Deutsche Oper of Berlin in 1962, the same year as his debut at Bayreuth.

Martti Talvela Martti Talvela Karjalan Kunnailla YouTube

In 1970, the Senate (government) of West Berlin formally granted him the rank of Kammersänger. He was especially acclaimed as the title character in Boris Godunov, a role he performed 39 times at the Metropolitan Opera between 1974 and 1987, and as Pimen from the same work, as Paavo Ruotsalainen in The Last Temptations, as a Wagner singer who frequently performed at Bayreuth (King Marke, Hunding, Fasolt, Fafner, Hagen (one critic described his Hagen as an "elemental force") and Titurel), as the Commendatore, Sarastro, Dosefei, and Prince Gremin, as King Phillip II, the Grand Inquisitor and, in the later part of his career, the title character in Glinka's Ivan Susanin. As his final record he left, terribly thinned out by illness, a warm and heartfelt version of Schubert's Winterreise. He also left at least two recorded performances of Mussorgsky's Songs and Dances of Death – one with full orchestra and one with piano accompaniment.

Martti Talvela 271 Teeman Elv arkisto Martti Talvela Teemat Yle

Talvela possessed a "voice of immense size and wide range" and was able to bring to his roles a combination of both "grandeur and gentleness". A large man, 6 feet 8 inches (203 cm) tall and weighing nearly 300 pounds (140 kg), he was a fine vocal actor who brought an air of dignity to his roles, even to pure-evil roles like Hagen and the Grand Inquisitor.

Martti Talvela Martti Talvela Wikipedia

He can be seen performing on video as Boris Godunov, as Sarastro, as Osmin, as the Grand Inquisitor (in German) and as Don Fernando, and in the CBS special Beethoven's Birthday: A Celebration in Vienna, released on DVD as Bernstein on Beethoven: A Celebration in Vienna.

Martti Talvela

Talvela was the first artistic leader of the Savonlinna Opera Festival in Finland, from 1972 to 1979, and had been appointed general director of the National Opera in Helsinki just before his death.

During the last eight years of his life (1981 to 1989), he worked as a farmer on the Inkilänhovi (Inkilä manor) farm in Juva, Eastern Finland, while continuing his official career as an opera singer. His health had begun to decline in 1975, when he was diagnosed with diabetes and gout. In 1982 alone, he suffered two heart attacks at the Metropolitan Opera. Stomach problems also plagued him at times in the 1980s.

Talvela died of a heart attack at age 54 while dancing at his daughter's wedding in Juva.

Martti talvela finnish bass schumann 2


References

Martti Talvela Wikipedia