I'm very sorry to learn of the death of Giorgio Tozzi, the basso whose voice was among the first that I became familiar with when I started listening to opera at a very early age.
My parents had presented me with a prophetic birthday gift: a two-LP set of Verdi and Puccini arias culled from various RCA Victor recordings. Tozzi was the featured basso (the other singers were Milanov, Albanese, Peters, Bjoerling, Peerce, Merrill and Warren...what a collection of voices to cut one's operatic teeth on!) and I literally wore out the tracks of his performances of arias from NABUCCO and SIMON BOCCANEGRA. Once my voice changed I would try to sing along with Tozzi in these arias, and also with his rendition of "Some Enchanted Evening" which my mother loved so.
Giorgio Tozzi sang Don Giovanni in the very first performance I ever attended at the (Old) Met...
...and he was my very first Hans Sachs (at the 'new' Met). I saw him so many times over the years: as Daland, as Philip II, as Fiesco, as Colline, Mozart's Figaro, Ramfis and and as Count Rodolfo in LA SONNAMBULA. He sang more than 500 performances with the Metropolitan Opera (in-House and on tour) between 1955 and 1975. He created the role of the Old Doctor in Samuel Barber's VANESSA and sings in the classic recording of that opera. Tozzi sang in the final trio from LA FORZA DEL DESTINO during the gala concert that marked the end-of-an-era closing of the Old Met in 1966.
In 1978, a few years after he had left The Met, I saw Giorgio Tozzi onstage for the last time. He sang (an acted) grandly as Oroveso in Bellini's NORMA in a performance at Hartford CT opposite the thrilling Cristina Deutekom as Norma.
Giorgio Tozzi's voice became widely known outside the world's opera houses when he sang the music of Emil de Becque for the soundtrack of the film SOUTH PACIFIC (Rossano Brazzi portrayed de Becque on-screen). Tozzi later appeared in stage productions of the musical and on Broadway in MOST HAPPY FELLA.
Giorgio Tozzi sings the Old Doctor's aria from VANESSA here: "For every love there is a last farewell; for each remembered day an empty room."