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Janet Brown, soprano and Herbert Burtis, pianist are heard in a live performance recorded at the Longy School of Music, Cambridge, Massachusetts as part of the centennial celebration of the birth of Ernst Bacon. |
Worthy Tribute to Ernst Bacon's work"Most of the songs went to Janet Brown, who sang 13 of Bacon's Emily Dickinson settings, as well as a group devoted to other poets, including Burns, Brönte, and Lenau (in German). The soprano is an ideal interpreter of these works, singing with intelligence, musicality, interiority, communicative urgency, suppleness of phrase, and ravishing beauty of tone. Brown is not the most publicized American lyric soprano, but none of the famous ones sings any better than she does, and some of them nowhere near as well. She enjoyed superb collaborative support by pianist Herbert Burtis, who played with an imaginative variety of dynamics and touch." |
"Janet Brown, soprano, Amy Burton, soprano, Herbert Burtis and John Musto, pianists… This is a genuinely wonderful recording… Part of the reason the songs come across so well here, of course, is the outstanding performances they receive by all three singers and their partners. Janet Brown and Amy Burton are both lyric sopranos of the silvery sort blessed with almost perfect diction, impeccable legato, and an ability to make Bacon's occasionally awkward word setting scan musically. William Sharp is just as fine in the ten songs he is assigned. The recordings, from three separate venues, are all very fine and very well integrated, including the in-concert recording of the seven songs sung by Janet Brown." |
Also heard on the recording are Amy Burton, soprano, William Sharp, baritone, Ronald Copes, violinist, John Musto and Alan Feinberg pianists. To order copies contact http://www.ernstbacon.org/ or http://www.newworldrecords.org/ |
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one on the piano techniques of Theodor Leschititzky. |
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| Vocalizing from the Ground Up! contains numerous vocal exercises that Mr. Burtis uses
in his teaching of singers like Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, Jane Bryden,
Nathaniel Watson, Eileen Clark, and many other well-known concert and
cabaret singers. It also contains a complete survey of diction and pronunciation for the singer in English, French, German, and Italian. It is accompanied by two CDs, in which soprano Janet Brown illustrates the musical exercises and native speakers read the diction exercises. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, mezzo-soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Company, The New York City Opera, and opera houses throughout the world says: |
| "Herbert Burtis is a great teacher! As an expert vocal
technician his ability to address vocal problems and communicate simple,
direct, and effective solutions has been invaluable to me. How many times
have I gone to him with a difficult high passage, set to seemingly
awkward, throat-choking words, only to have Herb transform the
dreaded consonants into aids to a freer vocal production?
Magical!" -Lorraine Hunt Lieberson |
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"Sing On! Sing On!"
A guide for the Life-Long Enjoyment of the Voice is published by ECS Publications, Boston, MA USA, and may be ordered by contacting either the author or the publisher. ISBN 0-911318-17-8 |
| A Guide to the
Life-long Enjoyment of the
Voice | |
| Reviews: "Teacher says 'Sing
On!'" "When should a singer give up singing? The answer, according to a new book by a Boston singing teacher is 'never'. In 88 witty, wise and well-written pages, Herbert Burtis treats the subject of vocal pedagogy from a variety of standpoints, including how the voice changes over time. Burtis makes the point that many singers have retained significant abilities throughout their lives, thanks to proper training and use of the voice. One of his examples is the late Olga Averino of Boston, whom he recalls sounding just fine at the age of 91. Burtis pulls no punches, but he also makes his points with humor and style. He coins phrases like "sneaky breathing" and "The Muscle Beach School of Vocal Production." He is also likely to begin instructions for an "experiment" with a phrase like "Place your fingers as low on your abdomen as is permitted in polite society." "Sing On! Sing On!" is published in paperback by the Boston firm of ECS Publications. The book is aimed at singers, but non-singers will enjoy the many anecdotes and stories as well as the opportunity to have the mysterious art of singing made a little less mysterious."
"I recall with great pleasure my association with Herbert Burtis at Union Theological Seminary and other performing institutions many years ago. I found him to be a gentleman of talent with a delightful sense of humor. Now, many years later, he has written his first book which also displays his talent and delightful sense of humor. I am sure you will enjoy Sing On! Sing On! as much as I did. | |
| The NATS Journal said this about Sing On! Sing
On!: "'If music be the food of love, sing on.' And on and on, according to the promises made by Mr. Burtis, although in this practical little manual, prospects for vocal longevity are premised upon criteria considerably less vague and esoteric than those described in Purcell's text. This is a homey, down-to-earth handbook, written in a conversational, unpresupposing style. Fascinating chapter titles capture the reader's attention and focus upon issues in unique ways. In Chapter 3, "Now That I've Got It, what Do I Do With It?", Burtis deals with the intimacy of the voice, a concept not often enough taken into account, and, in discussing vowels shaped by the arch of the tongue, he unobtrusively introduces the International Phonetic Alphabet. Within the context of the sixteen short chapters, pedagogical principles are frequently so casually and unobtrusively introduced- the problem of passaggio is a prime example- that the reader suddenly becomes aware the s/he has grasped a matter without the usually concomitant struggle. This is perhaps the books most unique quality, rendering it a kind of master class in print, one that contains a host of useful suggestions for healthy singing." -Richard Dale Sjoerdsma From the Music Educators Journal: "A performer and teacher, Burtis discusses techniques and ideas he has used in coaching singers for forty years. He stresses musicality and beautiful tones over volume and explains the use of mental images, "silly singing" vocalises, and relaxation exercises for the voice and body." To order either book:
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| Copyright © 2008 Herbert Burtis—All Rights
Reserved You can e-mail Mr. Burtis and Alberti Productions at roodhill@fairpoint.net
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