Amazing stories of men who sang like women. What is the difference between countertenor and falsetto and altino? What is the difference in the ranges of contralto and countertenor

Modern “farinelli” are now trained not on the operating table, but in conservatories, and are called completely differently - countertenors. A countertenor is a male voice, equal in pitch to a female contralto, mezzo-soprano or soprano, but different in sound from female voices due to differences in the structure of the male and female vocal apparatus.
Unlike castrati, the countertenor’s voice has an absolutely natural origin: after age-related mutation of the vocal apparatus, such singers retain the ability to sing soprano or alto, and, in most cases, this has nothing to do with hormonal problems or sexual orientation.

Popular about countertenors

At first glance, this is the easiest way to explain what a countertenor is to a person who has never heard such a voice. However, it should be taken into account that, firstly, this statement is essentially incorrect: a man’s voice, no matter how high it is, will always be in fact a man’s voice and will always sound different from a woman’s due to differences in the structure of the female and male voice apparatus; secondly, such a formulation incorrectly guides listeners - traditionally considering a high singing voice to be the prerogative of women, they often draw conclusions about the effeminacy or some kind of physical inferiority of countertenor vocalists. Based on these considerations, the use of the phrase “a man singing in a woman’s voice” should be abandoned.

Countertenor = castrato?

Many, hearing a countertenor sing for the first time, mistake the singer for a castrato, believing that only a castrato can sing so high. It's a delusion. The falsetto voice register, through the use of which an adult and physiologically full-fledged man can produce high-pitched sounds, is present in all men without exception, and the ability to sing in this register in the vast majority of cases is the result of the development of the innate vocal abilities of singers.

Many fans of countertenors are convinced that such voices are unique and extremely rare, to which skeptics often object something like this: “Yes, it’s just a falsetto - every man has it, every man can sing like that, and there’s nothing special or unique about it.” " Undoubtedly, every man has a falsetto voice register. However, it is worth considering the following:
Not every man, in principle, has the ability to sing;
Not every vocalist’s falsetto register has qualities that allow it to be adapted to perform a certain repertoire in a certain manner (let us remember that in the modern sense, a countertenor is a professional academic vocalist);
Not every vocalist has the desire to sing primarily in the falsetto register, develop it, and learn to sing falsetto professionally.
Alfred Deller, in one of his interviews, voiced the following observation: singers who would like to learn to sing as a countertenor often do not have the ability to do so, and those who have these abilities do not want to develop them, because they consider this style of singing effeminate. In addition, today countertenors are in much less professional demand than those with more “traditional” male voices. In particular, in the domestic musical culture there were no phenomena similar to the Italian tradition of castrate singing or the traditions of falsetto singing in England and Germany (Handel wrote 21 operas for countertenor, Mozart - several works for castrato Senesino, and Schnittke and Bernstein wrote for the same voices , and Monteverdi. Previously, the score did not include a “countertenor,” but a “soprano.” But the parts are male!), as a result of which in the works of Russian composers there are no parts for male altos and sopranos, and there are also no methods for training such singers, equally as well as interest in such voices and in the music that was written for them in a professional musical environment. This is the main reason for the notorious rarity and uniqueness of modern countertenors.

The repertoire of countertenors is most often based on the music of the Baroque era, the time meteoric rise European vocal performing arts.

Here are some names: Javier Medina, Michael Maniaci, Jorge Cano, Aris Christofellis, Radu Marian, Jörg Waschinski, Ghio Nannini.
Paul Esswood is considered one of the best.
British countertenor Michael Chance has an incredibly well-crafted voice with a very special timbre.
The name of the German Jochen Kowalski stands apart. Already long years he holds the title of the most stellar countertenor, whose CDs sell copies unprecedented in classical music.

According to known historical facts, in Russia the existence of countertenors was not suspected until the end of the 80s of the twentieth century, and throughout the world the singing of men who naturally had such high voices was initially perceived as a pseudo-imitation of castrati. By the way, a countertenor is a rarity among opera singers. There are just over 20 vocalists in Russia who have similar superpowers. What all modern countertenors have in common is their growing popularity. Increasingly, they are becoming a decoration for concerts, including concerts of pop stars.

Russian famous countertenors: Evgeny Argyshev, Oleg Bezinskikh, Yuri Borisov, Nikolai Gladskikh, Alexander Gorbatenko, Evgeny Zhuravkin, Konstantin Zbanychuk, Yaroslav Zdorov, Igor Ishchak, Vyacheslav Kagan-Paley, Grigory Konson, Artyom Krutko, Eric Kurmangaliev, Yuri Minenko, Evgeny Munko , Igor Retnev, Oleg Ryabets, Oleg Usov, Bagdasar Khachikyan, Vasily Khoroshev, Nikolay Shilintsev, Rustam Yavaev.

A little about some of them

Eric Salimovich Kurmangaliev(Kazakh Erik Salimuly Kurmangaliev, December 31, 1959, the city of Kulsary, Guryev region, Kazakhstan - November 13, 2007, Moscow, Russia) - opera singer (countertenor) and actor, owner of a unique timbre. According to some sources, the first countertenor in the USSR. In 2005, in Riga, he took part in a gala concert of five countertenors, on the basis of which the documentary film “Farinelli. Show must go on" with the participation of Eric Kurmangaliev.

Oleg Kasper has unique vocal abilities (4 octaves) - from baritone male notes to countertenor (female soprano).

Oleg Ryabets. The publication Diena called the vocalist “one of five such voices in the world, the period of mutation of which has successfully passed...” Ryabets performed in the opera halls of Lyon and Hamburg, Riga and Paris, in the royal houses of England, and in prestigious halls in Japan. Starred in the documentary film “Farinelli. Show must go on!” Oleg Ryabets has a countertenor of rare timbre and height. A recording of his voice is stored in the British National Sound Archive next to a unique recording of the last castrato of the 20th century, A. Moreschi. At the Prince of Edinburgh's 75th birthday celebrations, HRH Prince Philip awarded the singer the title "Mr Soprano".

Oleg Bezinskikh. He has a truly unique voice: his range is more than three octaves (from baritone to soprano). In the West for several years now it has been called nothing more than “ Russian miracle" He graduated from the St. Petersburg Conservatory (class of Professor Viktor Yushmanov), for the first time in its 148-year history (opened in 1862) becoming a graduate with a diploma of “countertenor-soprano.” When he sang the Fool's aria from Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov at the St. Petersburg Opera, a huge scandal broke out. A whole controversy arose in the press on the topic - “Is it possible to use such voices in opera?”

Nikolai Gladskikh has such a unique voice timbre that he is compared to the great Farinelli. Experts predict a great future for Nikolai Gladskikh.

Modern “farinelli” are now trained not on the operating table, but in conservatories, and are called completely differently - countertenors. A countertenor is a male voice, equal in pitch to a female contralto, mezzo-soprano or soprano, but different in sound from female voices due to differences in the structure of the male and female vocal apparatus.
Unlike castrati, the countertenor’s voice has an absolutely natural origin: after age-related mutation of the vocal apparatus, such singers retain the ability to sing soprano or alto, and, in most cases, this has nothing to do with hormonal problems or sexual orientation.

Popular about countertenors

At first glance, this is the easiest way to explain what a countertenor is to a person who has never heard such a voice. However, it should be taken into account that, firstly, this statement is essentially incorrect: a man’s voice, no matter how high it is, will always be in fact a man’s voice and will always sound different from a woman’s due to differences in the structure of the female and male voice apparatus; secondly, such a formulation incorrectly guides listeners - traditionally considering a high singing voice to be the prerogative of women, they often draw conclusions about the effeminacy or some kind of physical inferiority of countertenor vocalists. Based on these considerations, the use of the phrase “a man singing in a woman’s voice” should be abandoned.

Countertenor = castrato?

Many, hearing a countertenor sing for the first time, mistake the singer for a castrato, believing that only a castrato can sing so high. It's a delusion. The falsetto voice register, through the use of which an adult and physiologically full-fledged man can produce high-pitched sounds, is present in all men without exception, and the ability to sing in this register in the vast majority of cases is the result of the development of the innate vocal abilities of singers.

Many fans of countertenors are convinced that such voices are unique and extremely rare, to which skeptics often object like this: “Yes, it’s just a falsetto - every man has it, every man can sing like that, and there’s nothing special or unique about it.” " Undoubtedly, every man has a falsetto voice register. However, it is worth considering the following:
Not every man, in principle, has the ability to sing;
Not every vocalist’s falsetto register has qualities that allow it to be adapted to perform a certain repertoire in a certain manner (let us remember that in the modern sense, a countertenor is a professional academic vocalist);
Not every vocalist has the desire to sing primarily in the falsetto register, develop it, and learn to sing falsetto professionally.
Alfred Deller, in one of his interviews, voiced the following observation: singers who would like to learn to sing as a countertenor often do not have the ability to do so, and those who have these abilities do not want to develop them, because they consider this style of singing effeminate. In addition, today countertenors are in much less professional demand than those with more “traditional” male voices. In particular, in the domestic musical culture there were no phenomena similar to the Italian tradition of castrate singing or the traditions of falsetto singing in England and Germany (Handel wrote 21 operas for countertenor, Mozart - several works for castrato Senesino, and Schnittke and Bernstein wrote for the same voices , and Monteverdi. Previously, the score did not include a “countertenor,” but a “soprano.” But the parts are male!), as a result of which in the works of Russian composers there are no parts for male altos and sopranos, and there are also no methods for training such singers, equally as well as interest in such voices and in the music that was written for them in a professional musical environment. This is the main reason for the notorious rarity and uniqueness of modern countertenors.

The repertoire of countertenors is most often based on the music of the Baroque era, the time of the meteoric rise of European vocal performing arts.

Here are some names: Javier Medina, Michael Maniaci, Jorge Cano, Aris Christofellis, Radu Marian, Jörg Waschinski, Ghio Nannini.
Paul Esswood is considered one of the best.
British countertenor Michael Chance has an incredibly well-crafted voice with a very special timbre.
The name of the German Jochen Kowalski stands apart. For many years now he has held the title of the most stellar countertenor, whose CDs sell in circulation unprecedented in classical music.

According to known historical facts, in Russia the existence of countertenors was not suspected until the end of the 80s of the twentieth century, and throughout the world the singing of men who naturally had such high voices was initially perceived as a pseudo-imitation of castrati. By the way, a countertenor is a rarity among opera singers. There are just over 20 vocalists in Russia who have similar superpowers. What all modern countertenors have in common is their growing popularity. Increasingly, they are becoming a decoration for concerts, including concerts of pop stars.

Russian famous countertenors: Evgeny Argyshev, Oleg Bezinskikh, Yuri Borisov, Nikolai Gladskikh, Alexander Gorbatenko, Evgeny Zhuravkin, Konstantin Zbanychuk, Yaroslav Zdorov, Igor Ishchak, Vyacheslav Kagan-Paley, Grigory Konson, Artyom Krutko, Eric Kurmangaliev, Yuri Minenko, Evgeny Munko , Igor Retnev, Oleg Ryabets, Oleg Usov, Bagdasar Khachikyan, Vasily Khoroshev, Nikolay Shilintsev, Rustam Yavaev.

A little about some of them

Eric Salimovich Kurmangaliev(Kazakh Erik Salimuly Kurmangaliev, December 31, 1959, the city of Kulsary, Guryev region, Kazakhstan - November 13, 2007, Moscow, Russia) - opera singer (countertenor) and actor, owner of a unique timbre. According to some sources, the first countertenor in the USSR. In 2005, in Riga, he took part in a gala concert of five countertenors, on the basis of which the documentary film “Farinelli. Show must go on" with the participation of Eric Kurmangaliev.

Oleg Kasper has unique vocal abilities (4 octaves) - from baritone male notes to countertenor (female soprano).

Oleg Ryabets. The publication Diena called the vocalist “one of five such voices in the world, the period of mutation of which has successfully passed...” Ryabets performed in the opera halls of Lyon and Hamburg, Riga and Paris, in the royal houses of England, and in prestigious halls in Japan. Starred in the documentary film “Farinelli. Show must go on!” Oleg Ryabets has a countertenor of rare timbre and height. A recording of his voice is stored in the British National Sound Archive next to a unique recording of the last castrato of the 20th century, A. Moreschi. At the Prince of Edinburgh's 75th birthday celebrations, HRH Prince Philip awarded the singer the title "Mr Soprano".

Oleg Bezinskikh. He has a truly unique voice: his range is more than three octaves (from baritone to soprano). In the West, for several years now it has been called nothing less than the “Russian miracle.” He graduated from the St. Petersburg Conservatory (class of Professor Viktor Yushmanov), for the first time in its 148-year history (opened in 1862) becoming a graduate with a diploma of “countertenor-soprano.” When he sang the Fool's aria from Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov at the St. Petersburg Opera, a huge scandal broke out. A whole controversy arose in the press on the topic - “Is it possible to use such voices in opera?”

Nikolai Gladskikh has such a unique voice timbre that he is compared to the great Farinelli. Experts predict a great future for Nikolai Gladskikh.

At first it’s even hard to believe your ears, the contradiction between the sound and its performer is so vivid. Most likely, you have at least once heard how men reach heights in their singing that are usually only accessible to soprano women. At least falsetto is familiar to many. But the classic countertenor (countertenor), powerful and incredibly clear, is something that can bewitch the listener. This is a unique and impressive phenomenon that cannot be forgotten! The history of such vocals stretches back many centuries, but even in the twenty-first century, such singing occupies a very special place in music.

Return of old traditions

This style of singing arose as an independent phenomenon in the twentieth century, when the world was conquered by singers Alfred Deller, James Bowman, David Daniels and Andreas Scholl. They received recognition in the world of classical music. However, men who sing professionally as women remain a rarity. Forty years ago, only a few countertenors could be found on the international stage. IN last years interest increased again - this coincided with the revival of the Baroque repertoire, which requires a high voice. In earlier times, this role would have been performed by a castrato, and in more humane centuries, by a woman with a mezzo-soprano voice. Among the stars of the new wave are thirty-three-year-old American Anthony Roth Costanzo, thirty-eight-year-old Frenchman Philippe Jaroussky and Indian Bejun Mehta, a Grammy Award nominee and member of one of India's most famous musical families. We must also mention Iestin Davis, winner of a Grammy and other awards, who finds himself among the most captivating international stars in opera, even ahead of such celebrities as the conqueror of hearts Jonas Kaufman or the diva Anna Netrebko. Not a bad achievement for a simple English guy who sings like a girl! So what is a countertenor and why is it so great?

Features of singing by a countertenor

This is a sound that is produced without the aid of the normal spoken voice, at a high frequency, which can be achieved by the joint effort of the muscles of the throat and vocal cords. They must be arranged in a certain way so that the air passing through vocal cords, vibrated only on their thin outer layer. Many people mistakenly believe that it is just a woman's voice. In fact, all men are also capable of speaking in falsetto, it’s just that only a few always do it. And those with a countertenor are the elite, they are always able to use the highest pitch of their voice. In pop music, performers simply sing higher, using their tenor or baritone voice, and when a note is too high, the falsetto breaks through.

History of talent development

Davis has a fairly deep natural voice, which he uses when speaking, and his singing voice is a bass-baritone, the lowest possible. In his youth, he began experimenting with singing, rehearsing a role with the school choir. He had to sing quite high, his friend said it sounded great and was worth a serious try. Davis tried. He gained a place at a prestigious singing college, then graduated from Cambridge and then became a member of the Royal Academy of Music. He is in demand in the best opera houses around the world, large concert venues await him, he is constantly making new recordings - Davis has never regretted the choice he once made.

Dark stories of the past

These days, a career as a countertenor seems exciting enough for a young singer, but in the past it was a much darker pursuit. Many of the parts for church and opera singing that Davis and vocalists like him can perform today were originally created in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries for the legendary castrato Carlo Broschi, better known as Farinelli, and other similar singers. Boy vocalists were castrated before they reached puberty in order to maintain high, clear voices. In our time, it is difficult to imagine that such barbarism can be justified by the lofty goals of art, but once upon a time there were no opponents of such a technique either on the papal throne or at court. Women were not supposed to sing church parts at all - it was believed that they were only supposed to be silent in church.

Prohibitions and mysteries

In the seventeenth century, women were prohibited from performing on stage. The laws of decency in society did not allow them to appear as opera performers. Opera music as a genre began to actively develop, so castrati received role after role. In the following century, the popularity of opera increased even more, and hence the demand for castrati. Singers like Farinelli were the rock stars of the day. They were adored throughout Europe. There was even a phrase in use: “There is one God and there is one Farinelli!” However, these days the singing of castrati remains a mystery. This practice does not exist now, so we simply cannot imagine exactly how these vocalists performed their parts.

Disgust for countertenors

The element of disgust persists even in days when the grim practices of castration are a thing of the past. Philippe Jaroussky notes that his angelic voice repels some people - a fact that male body this kind of singing comes out, it seems absurd. People believe that the countertenor is a third-gender trait or something half-feminine. Davis has a more pragmatic view: he is sure that everything unusual inevitably causes fear and problems in people with prejudices. In the fifties of the last century, when Alfred Deller began working, he had to deal with even more criticism. People believed that he should not be allowed on stage as a soloist. Fortunately, society has changed its view and now you can easily enjoy the flow of Davis’s voice on stage. He performed the role of Oberon in Benjamin Britten's opera A Midsummer Night's Dream - this role was originally written for Deller. In addition, many of the new possibilities for countertenor work are borrowed from church music and the world of opera of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Modern composers are also interested in creating parts for the countertenor. Perhaps future generations will see even more impressive performances than those available to us now.

by Notes of the Wild Mistress

Modern “farinelli” are now trained not on the operating table, but in conservatories, and are called completely differently - countertenors. A countertenor is a male voice, equal in pitch to a female contralto, mezzo-soprano or soprano, but different in sound from female voices due to differences in the structure of the male and female vocal apparatus.

Unlike castrati, the countertenor’s voice has an absolutely natural origin: after age-related mutation of the vocal apparatus, such singers retain the ability to sing soprano or alto, and, in most cases, this has nothing to do with hormonal problems or sexual orientation.

According to known historical facts, in Russia the existence of countertenors was not suspected until the end of the 80s of the twentieth century, and throughout the world the singing of men who naturally had such high voices was initially perceived as pseudo-imitation castrati. By the way, a countertenor is a rarity among opera singers.

There are only three such people in Russia. One of them - Oleg Bezinskikh - has a truly unique voice: his range is more than three octaves (from baritone to soprano). In the West, for several years now it has been called nothing less than the “Russian miracle.”

Oleg Bezinskikh now lives in St. Petersburg, but gives concerts very rarely, but enjoys great success abroad, performing at the best venues in the world. Two years ago he graduated from the Conservatory (class of Professor Viktor Yushmanov), for the first time in its 137-year history, becoming a graduate with a diploma of “countertenor-soprano.”

When he sang the Fool's aria from Mussorgsky's opera Boris Godunov at the St. Petersburg Opera, a huge scandal broke out. A whole controversy arose in the press on the topic - “Is it possible to use such voices in opera?”

Handel wrote 21 operas for countertenor, Mozart wrote several works for castrato Senesino, and Schnittke, Bernstein, and Monteverdi wrote for the same voices. Previously, the score did not put “countertenor”, ​​but “soprano”. But the parties are for men!

There was recently a premiere of Monteverdi's opera in Moscow, where the countertenor parts were replaced by women. The Mariinsky Theater is performing the opera “Orpheus and Eurydice” by Gluck, where the role of Orpheus is again performed by a woman.

Rostropovich himself offered the singer a role in the opera “Alice in Wonderland” by composer Alexander Knaifel, which was staged in Amsterdam.

At the Neva film studio, together with the Walt Disney company, a competition was held to dub a 13-episode cartoon about Mickey Mouse, and Bezinskikh was unanimously approved for main role. The premiere of the cantata “Jerusalem” took place in St. Petersburg: the solo was specially written for Oleg by the St. Petersburg composer Peter Hecker.

This work was recorded with 14-year-old virtuoso cellist Nikita Zubarev for a future CD, which will include Hecker’s best works, including a cycle on poems by Omar Khayyam, also specially written for the Bezinskys.

In Moscow, in the Tchaikovsky Hall, Dmitry Bortnyansky's opera Alcides was staged with great success. Anton Sharoev, great-grandson of the great Rubinstein, founder of the St. Petersburg Conservatory, conducted. In addition, Oleg’s plans include close cooperation with the Moscow Chamber Philharmonic, whose director is Elena Obraztsova.

What other performers with a unique voice concentrate and amaze grateful listeners with their talent? Here are a few more names:

Countertenor Nikolai Gladskikh is preparing to audition for the London Covent Garden Theater, studies at the Russian Academy of Theater Arts (GITIS) with Roman Viktyuk and has such a unique voice timbre that he is compared to the great Farinelli. Experts predict a great future for Nikolai Gladskikh

British countertenor Michael Chance has an incredibly well-crafted voice with a very special timbre.

Countertenor Paul Esswood is rightfully considered one of the most significant performers of our time.

The name of the German Jochen Kowalski stands apart. For many years now he has held the title of the most stellar countertenor, whose CDs sell in circulation unprecedented in classical music.