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A PITY: Pavarotti dies at 71

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 7:58 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
Superstar tenor Pavarotti dies at 71

By Gilles Castonguay
25 minutes ago


MODENA, Italy (Reuters) - Legendary Italian tenor Luciano Pavarotti, whose gifted voice and charisma brought opera to the masses, died of cancer on Thursday aged 71.

"There were tenors, and then there was Pavarotti," said Italian film director Franco Zeffirelli.

His health had been failing for a year, but the death of the bearded tenor, known as "Big Luciano" because of his 280 lb frame, saddened everyone from impresarios and critics to fans who could barely afford the tickets to his concerts.

While past opera greats often locked themselves in a gilded, elitist world, television viewers round the world heard Pavarotti sing with pop stars like Sting and Bono in his "Pavarotti and Friends" benefit concerts.

"Some can sing opera; Luciano Pavarotti WAS an opera," Bono said on his Web site. "I spoke to him last week ... the voice that was louder than any rock band was a whisper." :cry:

London's Royal Opera House said: "He introduced the extraordinary power of opera to people who perhaps would never have encountered opera and classical singing. In doing so, he enriched their lives." Vienna's Staatsoper flew a black flag.

Pavarotti leapt to superstardom when he and two other great tenors, Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras, sang at Rome's Caracalla Baths during the 1990 soccer World Cup in Italy.

Sales of opera albums shot up after the concert. The aria "Nessun Dorma" from Puccini's "Turandot," which has the famous line "All'alba vincero"' -- "At dawn I will be victorious" -- became as familiar to soccer fans as the usual stadium chants.

At the changing of the guard ceremony at Buckingham Palace in London, the band played the aria in honor of the opera star who died on the 10th anniversary of Princess Diana's funeral.

Diana had been one of his biggest fans and her family had asked the tenor to sing at her funeral. He attended but said he was too upset to perform.

CHARISMATIC

"He was without doubt one of the most important tenors of all time," Carreras told Sweden's Expressen newspaper. "He was a wonderful man, a charismatic person -- and a good poker player."

U.S. President George W. Bush :roll: called him a "great humanitarian" who used his great talent to help the needy.

Pavarotti's father was a baker who liked to sing and his mother worked in a cigar factory. The people of Modena, a town in northeast Italy, mourned a man who remained attached to his home town even as a superstar.

Venusta Nascetti, a 71-year-old who used to serve Pavarotti coffee in a local bar when he was a teenager, remembered him as being "full of joy."

"He always loved us just like we loved him," the frail woman told reporters outside Pavarotti's house.

Hundreds of mourners broke into applause as a hearse carrying Pavarotti's white coffin arrived at Modena cathedral for the funeral at 3 p.m (1300 GMT) on Saturday.

Pavarotti's big break came when another Italian opera great, Giuseppe di Stefano, dropped out of a performance of "La Boheme" at London's Covent Garden in 1963. The house had lined up "this large young man" as a stand-in -- and a star was born.

In 1972 he famously hit nine high C notes in a row in "Daughter of the Regiment" at New York's Metropolitan Opera, which he referred to as "my home."

Metropolitan Opera director James Levine said Pavarotti's singing "spoke right to the hearts of listeners whether they knew anything about opera or not."

His last public performance was at the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics in Turin in February 2006.

Pavarotti had surgery in New York for pancreatic cancer in July last year, then retreated to his villa in Modena. He received two more weeks' treatment in hospital in Modena last month and went home on August 25.

The singer spent his final hours at home with family and friends nearby, said his manager Terri Robson.

He said that until just weeks before his death, Pavarotti devoted several hours a day to teaching pupils at his summer villa in Pesaro, on Italy's Adriatic Coast. Pavarotti opened an academy for young singers in Modena two years ago.

Although Pavarotti began singing in a church choir aged nine, his passion was soccer and he wanted to turn professional.

His mother persuaded him to be a teacher, a job he did for two years until he realized his true vocation.

In 2003, Pavarotti married Nicoletta Mantovani, an assistant 34 years his junior and younger than his three daughters, after an acrimonious divorce from Adua, his wife of 37 years.

As Nicoletta was bearing twins, the pregnancy ran into complications and their son Riccardo was stillborn. Their surviving daughter Alice is now four years old.

(Additional reporting by Silvia Aloisi, Philip Pullella, Stephen Brown and Phil Stewart in Italy, Jeremy Lovell and Paul Majendie in London and Claudia Parsons in New York)


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070906/peo ... otti_dc_11

CIAO, LUCIANO :cry: :cry:

Posted: Thu Sep 06, 2007 8:08 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
Domingo and Carreras lead mourning for Pavarotti

MILAN (AFP) - La Scala opera house fell silent Thursday and the two remaining members of the Three Tenors led a chorus of tributes by the giants of opera, presidents and rock stars after the death of Luciano Pavarotti.

A minute's silence was held at the Milan opera house where Pavarotti, who died early Thursday at the age of 71, performed 140 times in a career that spanned four decades.

His was "one of the most beautiful and most moving voices of all time," said La Scala artistic director Stephane Lissner.

Pavarotti had brought opera to the masses through appearances with rock stars and the supergroup he formed with Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras, The Three Tenors.

"I always admired the God-given glory of his voice -- that unmistakable special timbre from the bottom up to the very top of the tenor range," said Domingo.

Carreras added: "The best memories are the ones in intimacy ... We have to remember him as the great artist he was, a man with such a wonderful charismatic personality."

World leaders and the rock stars that Pavarotti rivalled for public attention also paid tribute.

US President George W. Bush hailed the 71-year-old as "one of the most accomplished and acclaimed opera singers of all time."

French President Nicolas Sarkozy said: "His artistic qualities as well as his warmth and charisma seduced the entire world."

All of Italy seemed plunged into mourning and Prime Minister Romano Prodi said: "A very great voice of the musical world and of Italy has disappeared."

Police set up a special security cordon around his villa just outside Modena where he died early Thursday after a long battle with cancer.

"We have lost a great tenor, a great singer, but I have lost a great friend," said renowned soprano Mirella Freni, who is also from Modena and who visited Pavarotti in hospital last month.

A passionate football fan, Pavarotti was also remembered by Juventus, the Turin club side he supported all his life.

"Ciao Luciano, with the black and white heart," the club, which plays in a black and white strip, wrote on its official website.

The world of pop also remembered Pavarotti, reflecting his crossover appeal which he nurtured by performing with the likes of Sting, the Spice Girls and U2.

"Some can sing opera, Luciano Pavarotti was an opera," said U2 frontman Bono.

"His opera was a great mash of joy and sadness; surreal and earthy at the same time; a great volcano of a man who sang fire but spilled over with a love of life in all its complexity."

Police frontman Sting, who also sang with Pavarotti, added: "We lost a great friend, a great voice and the world is a smaller place without the big man".

The world of opera must now find a new superstar after Pavarotti's death.

Australian soprano Dame Joan Sutherland, who formed a renowned three decade long stage partnership with Pavarotti said that the so-called "King of the High Cs" ranked among opera's all-time greats.

Describing his voice, Sutherland, who retired in 1990, told BBC radio: "It was incredible to stand next to it and sing along with it ... The quality of the sound was quite different -- you knew immediately it was Luciano singing."

In Austria, the Vienna State Opera and Salzburg Festival Hall raised black flags to mark Pavarotti's passing.

New York's Metropolitan Opera, where Pavarotti performed nearly 400 times, hailed him as grand opera's "greatest symbol."

"Luciano's voice was so extraordinarily beautiful and his delivery so natural and direct that his singing spoke right to the hearts of listeners," said its music chief James Levine.

London's Royal Opera House described Pavarotti as "one of those rare artists who affected the lives of people across the globe in all walks of life."

Japanese conductor Seiji Ozawa on Thursday dedicated a performance to the late Luciano Pavarotti, saying the Italian tenor had a voice so distinctive he could recognise it anywhere.

Ozawa, music director of the Vienna State Opera, led his Saito Kinen Orchestra at his summer mountain retreat in Matsumoto in a Ravel pavane and a world premiere by French composer Henri Dutilleux.

"I am shocked and very sad," the conductor said in a statement.

Spanish diva Montserrat Caballe recalled a man of "immense goodness" who had helped her through her own health crisis in 1985.

"He was simply a fantastic person, whom I loved a lot and admired even more," a tearful Caballe told Spain's Cadena Ser radio.

In China, top soprano Yao Hong, who performed with Pavarotti in Beijing: said: "People may not know opera well but they know who Pavarotti is ... his death is a great loss."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070906/en ... 0906170403

:cry:

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 5:56 am
by DenichMsk

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 2:14 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
Thanks, DenishMsk :wink:

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 8:26 pm
by carbomb
As a concerned muslim I really must tell you to learn about your relegion, because you are making statements and have opinions that are contrary to islam.

Muslims don't mourn kuffar.

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 9:07 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
carbomb wrote:As a concerned muslim I really must tell you to learn about your relegion, because you are making statements and have opinions that are contrary to islam.

Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Im not muslim

Posted: Tue Sep 11, 2007 9:37 pm
by DenichMsk
carbomb wrote:Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Who was a mr. Pavarotti for you? Big Enemy of Islam?

Posted: Wed Sep 12, 2007 8:42 am
by carbomb
jaishalmujahideen wrote:
carbomb wrote:As a concerned muslim I really must tell you to learn about your relegion, because you are making statements and have opinions that are contrary to islam.

Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Im not muslim
that explains a lot, things are becoming clear now. Ok my mistake.

Posted: Wed Sep 12, 2007 8:45 am
by carbomb
DenichMsk wrote:
carbomb wrote:Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Who was a mr. Pavarotti for you? Big Enemy of Islam?
I couldn't care less about pavarotti, muslims don't mourn people who wasted their lives with things other than islam. What does all the things he has done in his life will do for him at this time after his death, the answer is nothing. He turned his eyes from the truth and so we turned away from him.

But tell us what do you think of kadyrov implementing shariah in chechnya
If you chose to answer do it in the post of the article not in this topic.

Posted: Wed Sep 12, 2007 3:05 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
carbomb wrote:
DenichMsk wrote:
carbomb wrote:Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Who was a mr. Pavarotti for you? Big Enemy of Islam?
I couldn't care less about pavarotti, muslims don't mourn people who wasted their lives with things other than islam. What does all the things he has done in his life will do for him at this time after his death, the answer is nothing. He turned his eyes from the truth and so we turned away from him.

But tell us what do you think of kadyrov implementing shariah in chechnya
If you chose to answer do it in the post of the article not in this topic.
Although he was not Muslim, he passed good part of his life helping to others of the only way that he could, just singing. He brought peace and joy to the million people who love classic music, and helped to thousands and thousans of people in exchange for anything.

He was a pious person. Once worried about the people of Iraq, without mattering if they were Shiite or sunnies. He saw people suffering and tried to help them, he didnt think: “by something it will be that they get killed”, like you do every day (like nazis did 60 years ago)...
How much people you helped?, how much people you made happy?
Just take that number, multiply it per 100000 and you will realize the number of humans beings that pavarotti helped during his life

I had the great luck to know several Muslims. They were humble and wise people. They taught many things to me. I feel proud to know them. Your you are different. You are not humble. You think that you have the monopoly of the reason. Think that you have the right to attack to whatever it does not think like you.
They were pious. You´re full of hate, "carbomb"...

Posted: Wed Sep 12, 2007 3:09 pm
by jaishalmujahideen
carbomb wrote:
DenichMsk wrote:
carbomb wrote:Muslims don't mourn kuffar.
Who was a mr. Pavarotti for you? Big Enemy of Islam?
I couldn't care less about pavarotti, muslims don't mourn people who wasted their lives with things other than islam. What does all the things he has done in his life will do for him at this time after his death, the answer is nothing. He turned his eyes from the truth and so we turned away from him.

But tell us what do you think of kadyrov implementing shariah in chechnya
If you chose to answer do it in the post of the article not in this topic.
Although he was not Muslim, he passed good part of his life helping to others of the only way that he could, just singing. He brought peace and joy to the million people who love classic music, and helped to thousands and thousans of people in exchange for anything.

http://archives.cnn.com/2001/SHOWBIZ/Mu ... i.afghans/

http://www.allbusiness.com/caribbean/77 ... 554-777600

http://www.deccaclassics.com/artists/pa ... index.html

http://www.hellomagazine.com/music/2003 ... pavarotti/


He was a pious person. Once worried about the people of Iraq, without mattering if they were Shiite or sunnies. He saw people suffering and tried to help them, he didnt think: “by something it will be that they get killed”, like you do every day (like nazis did 60 years ago)...
How much people you helped?, how much people you made happy?
Just take that number, multiply it per 100000 and you will realize the number of humans beings that pavarotti helped during his life...

I had the great luck to know several Muslims. They were humble and very wise people. They taught many things to me. I feel proud to know them. You are different. You are not humble. You think that you have the monopoly of the reason. And you think that you have the right to attack to anybody who think different to you
They were pious. You´re full of hate, "carbomb"...