
Originally Posted by
waldhorn
I didn't mind the vibrato-laden, wobbly
solo singers that much in the Matthews, but, oh dear oh dear, they were a total liability in the Mozart / Suessmayr Requiem!

Are there no conductors these days with sufficient 'clout' to ask their vocal soloists to
'cool' the vibrato? I have long suspected that this very sort of 'pitch altering' vibrato is a sort of pathetic excuse for poor intonation.
if the Trombone soloist/ obbligato player in the 'Tuba Mirum' had employed as much vibrato as the vocal soloists he/ she would surely have been chided by the conductor ( and probably 'laughed out of court' by his/ her colleagues, and rightly so!)
I only caught the Mozart tonight and this was my impression as well. The soprano, in particular, had a vibrato so wide it's a wonder it got into the hall. Excellent and incisive choral singing, though.
“Every piece of music is a rehearsal of one’s life,” - Sir Colin Davis