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Sweden has given many great singers to the lyric stage, but none so
widely acclaimed and admired in this century as Jussi Bjorling.
While many other tenors have been hailed as successors to Enrico
Caruso, it was to Bjorling that Dorothy Caruso, the singer's widow,
said in 1951, "You are the only one worthy to wear his mantle, bear
Rico's crown!" Bjorling's exceptional voice, flawless technique,
outstanding musicianship, and impeccable musical taste earned him
critical acclaim and enthusiastic audiences on three continents.
These great gifts were combined with genuine humility and
simplicity; he remained unspoiled and deeply devoted to his family.
His tragically early death at the age of forty-nine ended a
professional singing career that had started when he was only five,
and he is perhaps unique among singers in having made recordings
from the acoustic era through the advent of stereophonic sound.
This book is the first English-language biography of Bjorling. In
addition to the recollections of his widow and stage companion
Anna-Lisa Bjorling, it incorporates information from the family
archives, documentation held by the Jussi Bjorling Museum in
Borlange, Sweden, and material from various operatic archives in
Stockholm, New York, London, and San Francisco. Extensive
interviews with former colleagues, associates, and friends provide
further insights into Bjorling's life and career. A chronology of
his career, compiled by Harald Henrysson, is also included.
Many authors have traveled and explored the out-of-doors, both in
life and then in their books, proving themselves stalwart,
audacious, even heroic; Andrew Farkas is not among them. He is
brave enough to admit that the outdoors isn't for him. Instead, in
these essays Farkas reports on his bold explorations of a very
different territory: the in-of-doors, the waiting rooms, kitchens,
malls, bars, theaters, roadside motel rooms, and other places that
feature temperature control, protection from rampaging predators,
and a higher degree of comfort than can be found outside. Farkas
discovers that, just as the mannered and wonderfully (gloriously)
artificial indoors influences us greatly, our lives are also
controlled much more by fiction than by anything "real." So come in
out of the weather (it's always terrible) and join the Great
Indoorsman on his adventures, where he makes fun of pretty much
everything, most of all himself.
This abridged edition includes the full original text covering Caruso's life and death, plus a current discography. When the book was originally published in 1990, Gramophone magazine hailed it as "the most complete account of the tenor's life there is ever likely to be". Drawing on the personal recollections of the Caruso brothers, archival material preserved by the-family, and extensive research, the book is a rare tribute to the man and his vocal legacy.
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