Mathilde Marchesi

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Mathilde Marchesi
Mathilde Marchesi

Mathilde Marchesi (born: Mathilde Graumann; March 24, 1821November 17, 1913) was a mezzo-soprano, teacher of singing, and exponent of the bel canto technique.

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[edit] Biography

Marchesi was born in Frankfurt-am-Main (now in the German state of Hesse). In her adolescence her family fortunes failed, so she travelled at 22 to Vienna to study voice. Thereafter she went to Paris and studied with Manuel García II, who was to have the foremost influence on her. Around the same time she married Italian baritone Salvatore Marchesi and had a short career in opera and recital. Her voice, however, was only adequate, so she moved to teaching.

It was in this field that she would become famous. She taught at conservatories in Cologne and Vienna and in 1881 opened her own school in Paris, where she was to remain for most of her life. Ultimately, she was best known as the vocal teacher of several great singers. The most famous among them is perhaps Nellie Melba, but she also trained Emma Calvé and Emma Eames. She died in London.

Today Marchesi is remembered not at all for her singing career. Rather, she is known first as the teacher of a surprising number of great singers and also as the voice teacher who carried the bel canto technique into the 20th century. Her ideas are still studied, primarily by female singers, especially the sopranos with whom she specialized.

[edit] Teachings

Marchesi was clearly committed to the bel canto style of singing. Despite this, she did not particularly identify herself as a bel canto teacher. She asserted that there were only two styles of singing: "the good...and the bad" and argued that a properly trained vocalist could sing the old bel canto style just as easily as the then newer, more dramatic style.

She was generally an advocate of a naturalistic style of singing: she called for a fairly instinctive method of breathing and argued against the "smiling" mouth position that many teachers of her day preferred. She was particularly concerned with vocal registration, calling it "the Alpha and Omega of the formation and development of the female voice, the touchstone of all singing methods, old and new." She also repeatedly expressed disdain for the teachers of her day who offered methods that they asserted would fully develop the voice in only a year or two. Instead, she felt that vocal training was best approached at a slow and deliberate pace.

Two of the most distinctive features of her teachings were her "analytical method" and her insistence on very short practice times for beginners. Her "analytical method" placed great importance on intellectually understanding both the technical and the aesthetic nature of everything sung, from grand arias to simple vocal exercises. She argued that rote practice without understanding was ultimately harmful to the artistic use of the voice. Most distinctively, though, she insisted on very short practice times for beginners, as little as five minutes at a stretch three or four times a day for absolute beginners. Of course, as the voice matured those times could and should be expanded.

[edit] Pupils

Among her pupils were:

[edit] References

Marchesi, Mathilde. Bel Canto: A Theoretical and Practical Vocal Method. Dover (1970). ISBN 0-486-22315-9

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