From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adelina Patti (19 February 1843 – 27 September 1919) was a highly acclaimed 19th-century
opera singer, earning huge fees at the height of her career in the music capitals
of Europe and America. She first sang in public as a child in 1851 and gave her
last performance before an audience in 1914. Along with her near contemporaries
Jenny Lind and Thérèse Tietjens, Patti remains one of the most famous sopranos in
history, owing to the purity and beauty of her lyrical voice and the unmatched quality
of her bel canto technique. The composer Giuseppe Verdi, writing in 1877, described
her as being perhaps the finest singer who had ever lived and a "stupendous artist".[1]
Verdi's admiration for Patti's talent was shared by numerous music critics and social
commentators of her era.