• Latest
  • Trending
  • All

Pavarotti’s Llangollen concert given new voice in lost recording

January 3, 2026

What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?

June 16, 2026

Polls open on Thursday for the Makerfield by-election

June 16, 2026

Social media ban – bold and blunt, but no silver bullet

June 16, 2026

Alessio Dionisi: Watford appoint Italian as new head coach

June 15, 2026

Fox to buy Roku streaming firm in $22bn deal

June 15, 2026

Why I sold my business to my staff

June 15, 2026

The costs and challenges facing the 2026 World Cup

June 15, 2026

New microplastics research examines River Thames pollution

June 15, 2026

Reform pledges new tax on hiring foreign workers

June 15, 2026

Gang guilty of organised crime in £4m cocaine and dirty money ring

June 15, 2026

Pensioner suffocated neighbour and recorded his dying words, court told

June 15, 2026

Reports nurses told by police to show ID to masked men during trouble – O'Neill

June 15, 2026
News
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More
Tuesday, June 16, 2026
No Result
View All Result

NEWS

3 °c
London
8 ° Wed
9 ° Thu
11 ° Fri
13 ° Sat
  • Home
  • Video
  • World
    • All
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • US & Canada

    World Cup 2026: Nestory Irankunda – the refugee who quit Bayern to make Australia history

    Trump and thousands of others watch UFC fight on White House lawn

    South African TV star arrested after allegedly kidnapping man in girlfriend dispute

    Australia demands answers after girl taken hostage is shot dead by Pakistan police

    Norwegian crown princess's son found guilty of two counts of rape

    US musician Oliver Tree dies in helicopter collision in Brazil

    US and Iran agree deal to end war as Trump says Strait of Hormuz to reopen

    'Boyfriend duties call,' Trudeau says after skipping Canada match to watch Perry

    Clinical Australia upset Turkey in World Cup opener

  • UK
    • All
    • England
    • N. Ireland
    • Politics
    • Scotland
    • Wales

    Polls open on Thursday for the Makerfield by-election

    Alessio Dionisi: Watford appoint Italian as new head coach

    Reform pledges new tax on hiring foreign workers

    Gang guilty of organised crime in £4m cocaine and dirty money ring

    Pensioner suffocated neighbour and recorded his dying words, court told

    Reports nurses told by police to show ID to masked men during trouble – O'Neill

    Starmer set to ban under-16s from major social media platforms

    Hamilton says Barcelona win beyond wildest dreams

    Sinkholes near Purley bridge halt Gatwick trains

  • Business
    • All
    • Companies
    • Connected World
    • Economy
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Global Trade
    • Technology of Business

    What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?

    Fox to buy Roku streaming firm in $22bn deal

    Why I sold my business to my staff

    Oil prices slide after Pakistan announces deal between US and Iran

    UK electric car sales target set to be weakened

    Why the US economy keeps defying the odds

    Teen plans to leave uni 'debt free' after making £35,000 selling vintage football shirts

    Beauty Pie LED mask ad banned over misleading anti-wrinkle claim

    Elon Musk becomes world's first trillionaire as SpaceX soars in stock market debut

  • Tech
  • Entertainment & Arts

    Meghan hits red carpet at Power of Women in Hollywood

    Margot Robbie unable to speak at Saltburn premiere

    Barbra Streisand: Siri can now pronounce my name

    Wes Anderson’s The Grand Budapest Hotel inspires cinema’s look

    Taylor Swift/ Travis Kelce romance reaches White House

    The Killers booed at Georgia concert after inviting Russian fan on stage

    Watch: Memorable moments from Parkinson's star-studded show

    Tom Jones: Neighbour surprised to find singer in flat below

    Black Country Folk Festival showcases local musicians

    Watch: Australians set new world record with Tina Turner dance

  • Science
  • Health
  • In Pictures
  • Reality Check
  • Have your say
  • More
    • Newsbeat
    • Long Reads

NEWS

No Result
View All Result
Home UK Wales

Pavarotti’s Llangollen concert given new voice in lost recording

January 3, 2026
in Wales
12 min read
247 6
0
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Getty Images Head shot of Luciano Pavarotti. He has black hair and a full black beard with a few signs of grey. He has dark brown eyes and is wearing a black suit jacket and white shirt. The hint of a patterned tie can just be seen. He is smiling broadly slightly to the right of the camera.Getty Images

Luciano Pavarotti had a 50-year career in music following his choir’s win at Llangollen

In 1955, a 19-year-old trainee teacher from Italy arrived in Wales with his dad and a small choir to compete in the annual Llangollen International Music Eisteddfod.

The choir consists of amateurs and has little expectation of success but the group from Modena take first place and change the course of singing history.

For that 19-year-old was Luciano Pavarotti, who would go on to become the most famous tenor in the world and, arguably, of all time.

For him, that win against the odds showed him that a future in singing might just be possible.

Fast forward 40 years and the world-renowned Pavarotti returned to the Denbighshire town where it all began for him, hosting a concert to commemorate that momentous festival.

Now, recordings of the 1995 concert have been released by the Decca record label to mark what would have been Pavarotti’s 90th year and the 70th anniversary of the original event.

Allow Google YouTube content?

This article contains content provided by Google YouTube. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read  and  before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The trip to the eisteddfod saw Pavarotti travel with his father Fernando, also a tenor, whose love of music and opera meant the young Luciano was bathed in music from birth.

He was inspired to join Fernando in the Corale Rossini, the choir made up of amateurs in his home town of Modena.

Nicoletta Mantovani, Pavarotti’s widow, said the close relationship between the two Pavarottis was an additional reason for Llangollen’s importance to him.

“Since he was a kid he was singing La Donna e Mobile [from Verdi’s opera Rigoletto] because he said ‘my father is a tenor and I am a little tenor’.

“It was in his mind this love for opera. Opera was always played at home and even in the street, so like our pop music now in a way.”

Anna Nguyen/Gulfshore Life Nicoletta Mantovani is a white woman with lightened and straightened blonde hair, which reaches just below her shoulders. She is wearing a white suit jacket and a gold necklace. Her head and shoulders are visible in the shot. She has make-up on including plum-coloured lipstick, and is wearing heavy-rimmed black glasses which come to a peak  at the sides. She is smiling and looking directly at the camera. Behind her out of focus is a light pinky-beige backdrop to the left and leaves and black metalwork, possibly a gate, to her right.Anna Nguyen/Gulfshore Life

Nicoletta Mantovani met Pavarotti in 1993, two years before the return eisteddfod concert in Llangollen

The “famous win” from 1955 stayed with Pavarotti and after he met Nicoletta – his second wife – Llangollen was a name she would come to know well.

“He was speaking about it a lot because for him it was really meaningful,” she said.

“He was a very young boy, he was turning 20. It was his first trip abroad, so something very exciting.

“He received such a welcome because they were hosted by local families with the flavour of family, not just professional. It was really a great experience from a human point of view.”

Pavarotti really enjoyed getting to know another culture through the visit, but the highlight was, naturally, his first triumph in singing.

“The win – he always described to me that moment I think 1,000 times because he said ‘we were there waiting and they didn’t call us as fifth, and then not as fourth, and then not as third. Then we start to say, impossible, impossible’. And then they won,” Nicoletta said.

“So for him that win stays in his heart for a long time because he was not in his career at that time so everything lasted longer.

“But more than everything he thought if we were able to win as a small choir from a small town in Italy, maybe I can have a chance to have my own career. So that was really a turning point for him.”

And so it was to prove.

Llangollen International Eisteddfod A black and white image of a group of about 40 Italian choristors from Corale Rossini. The men all wear suits and bow ties. The front rows are crouched down. At the centre of the photo is a young Luciano Pavarotti. A white circle has been drawn around him to highlight who he is. He is smiling straight at the camera and has short dark hair.Llangollen International Eisteddfod

A young Luciano Pavarotti, highlighted, in the middle of the Corale Rossini, taken after they won the 1955 Choir of the World competition

After Llangollen, Pavarotti focused on his musical training with a new belief.

He made his professional debut in 1961 at the Teatro Municipale in Reggio Emilia near Modena and within a few years had appeared at Glyndebourne and Covent Garden opera houses.

By 1968, he had performed in New York’s Metropolitan Opera House and went on to establish himself as one of the giants of the operatic world.

For non-aficionados it was his rousing performance of Nessun Dorma from Puccini’s Turandot, alongside fellow tenors Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras at the Italia ’90 football World Cup, that cemented him in popular culture.

The BBC used a recording of him singing the aria for their coverage of the tournament, making the song and his voice forever associated with the sport.

The return to Llangollen in 1995 was at Pavarotti’s own request, although it took several years of negotiations between the eisteddfod and his representatives to achieve it.

Getty Images Jose Carreras is on the left of the photo wearing white tie and tails. He has slightly receding dark hair and eyes and has his right arm raised in a wave. He is smiling and looking to the right of the camera. Placido Domingo is the tallest of the three in the middle. He has thick brown hair and is smiling. He is dressed the same and has the same pose but looks to the left. Luciano Pavarotti on the right has dark hair and a beard and is smiling to the left of the photo. He also wears tails. There are three microphones in front of each man. Behind them members of an orchestra are also standing but are out of focus.Getty Images

Jose Carreras, Placido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti performing for the first time as the Three Tenors to celebrate Italy hosting the football World Cup in 1990

Nicoletta said: “I knew why he wanted to go back. It was really a very important anniversary. It was so meaningful for him.”

Pavarotti was asked to be president of the eisteddfod for one day of the festival and he said he would do it, but only if he could be joint president alongside his dad.

Speaking at the time, he told the vast crowds: “When they ask me what is a day more memorable in my life and I always say that it is when I won this competition because it was with all my friends.

“With me at that time there was a person that I would like to have the privilege to introduce – my father.”

Getty Images Head and shoulders shot of Luciano and Fernando Pavarotti. Luciano is to the left and slightly behind his father. He has dark hair and a beard, and wears a black jacket with a navy blue shirt sleeve visible at the cuff. Fernando has dark slicked back hair with a few grey strands and a greying beard. He wears a white shirt and navy tie with a crest at the knot, and a navy suit with red and white thin pinstripes. Both men are smiling at the camera.Getty Images

Luciano and his father Fernando Pavarotti, pictured here in 1976

The concert that followed saw Pavarotti perform alongside the Corale Rossini once again.

As well as the 4,500 audience members, a further 3,000 watched via a screen in Llangollen, and tens of thousands attended an outdoor broadcast of the concert in Swansea.

In addition to the 1995 concert, the new release, entitled The Lost Concert (Live at Llangollen, 1995) includes two recordings from the original 1955 performance by Corale Rossini.

Nicoletta said: “I’m glad Decca decided to include the first participation in 1955 in this wonderful new recording because that was performed by a very young Luciano.

“So if we have to imagine the first time we hear Luciano it is there, even if he’s among the choir, but his first performance was this one.”

Pavarotti never learned any songs in Welsh but did attempt to show Nicoletta how to pronounce Llangollen correctly – something he had mastered.

She said with a laugh: “He did it right but we had so much fun together trying to teach me. Put the tongue in this way, try to do like ‘thl’ – I couldn’t.”

The pronunciation may have eluded her but she renewed the connection between the Pavarotti family and Llangollen this summer when she visited the eisteddfod for the first time.

She presented the Pavarotti Trophy to the winners of the Choir of the World competition, as well as the Pendine Trophy in the International Voice of the Future contest for soloists.

“It was really special for me because through the memories of Luciano, I found exactly what he told me about the people, about the places. It was like a discovery of the memory.

“I could see the people there were so full of spirit and joy like he described.”



Source link

Tags: concertLlangollenlostPavarottisrecordingvoice

Related Posts

Pensioner suffocated neighbour and recorded his dying words, court told

June 15, 2026
0

Harold Turner died on Christmas day in the confrontation in which his neighbour allegedly sat on him. Source...

Jade Jones could face Sheena Bathory after dominant second boxing win

June 14, 2026
0

Two-time Olympic taekwondo champion Jade Jones continued her switch into boxing by outclassing Argentina's combat sports influencer Federikita in...

Thousands attending annual Pride Cymru festival

June 13, 2026
0

Thousands of people in Cardiff for the annual Pride Cymru festival weekend. Source link

  • Lee McGregor: Scot seeks world title in 2025 & Nathaniel Collins bout

    677 shares
    Share 271 Tweet 169
  • Belgian footballer arrested in cocaine investigation

    533 shares
    Share 213 Tweet 133
  • Next to raise prices to help pay for rising wage costs

    531 shares
    Share 212 Tweet 133
  • South Wales Police officers injured, one arrested

    525 shares
    Share 210 Tweet 131
  • Charities to get £15m fund to save surplus farm food

    516 shares
    Share 206 Tweet 129
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Lee McGregor: Scot seeks world title in 2025 & Nathaniel Collins bout

January 16, 2025

Belgian footballer arrested in cocaine investigation

January 27, 2025

Next to raise prices to help pay for rising wage costs

January 7, 2025

World Cup 2022: TikTok brings football fever to millions of fans

0

UK economy will get worse before it gets better, warns chancellor

0

One of Central America’s most active volcanoes erupts again

0

What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?

June 16, 2026

Polls open on Thursday for the Makerfield by-election

June 16, 2026

Social media ban – bold and blunt, but no silver bullet

June 16, 2026

Categories

Business

What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?

June 16, 2026
0

One company planning to extract helium-3 from the moon is Interlune, based in Seattle. "We've spent the last four...

Read more

Polls open on Thursday for the Makerfield by-election

June 16, 2026
News

© 2023 GODJ - NEWS CORP - news.godj.com.

Explore NEWS.GODJ.COM

  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Worklife
  • Travel
  • Reel
  • Future
  • More

Follow Us

  • Home Main
  • Video
  • World
  • Top News
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Tech
  • UK
  • In Pictures
  • Health
  • Reality Check
  • Science
  • Entertainment & Arts
  • Login

© 2023 GODJ - NEWS CORP - news.godj.com.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.