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Vocal analysis of Antonio Melandri “Faust – No, interrogo invan” In this recording, what I hear is a soft, effortless, and utterly natural old-style Italian timbre. The voice relies on no throat tension whatsoever—there is no pressed larynx, no metallic brightness, no hard brilliance. Instead, the sound is mellow, smooth, with unbroken legato lines and a breath flow that feels like a naturally forward-leaning diagonal line. This quality is almost extinct among modern tenors and is much closer to the pure bel canto tradition of the 1920s–40s. The vowels are perfectly unified. The /o/ in “No, interrogo” flows in one breath; the /a/ in “invan” is not torn open; “ombre” avoids nasal coloration. The shape of the mouth remains consistent, the jaw relaxed, and the sound travels within the same deep resonating space. This is exactly what I mean by: unmodified vowels and breath moving through a unified internal “air chamber” of the body. The breath management is entirely Italianate: no pushing, no squeezing, no chopping the line. The middle register is not artificially darkened to imitate a baritone, nor is the sound placed in the mask. The whole passage is built on a balanced, natural breathing mechanism. The most striking characteristic is the deep head resonance structure (testa profonda). The tone is not piercingly bright, but has depth and expansion, without the compression of mask placement. Words like “invan” and “ombre” especially reveal how the sound settles back and then unfolds naturally rather than being forced forward. The emotional expression is also the kind I appreciate—restrained and noble (nobiltà). There is no shouting and no exaggerated theatrics; everything is carried by the natural vibration of the breath. Overall, this performance aligns perfectly with what I consider the true Italian aesthetic: soft, natural, deep head resonance, rounded vowels, no metallic forcing, and a purely bel canto breath line.