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    AJ Tracey Vows to Retire as Soon as People Are Not Feeling Him Anymore

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    Speaking about his future in the industry, the ‘West Ten’ hitmaker expresses his hope to emulate 50 Cent and drop tunes occasionally rather than continue to ‘force’ himself to put out music.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Rapper AJ Tracey has vowed to retire “gracefully” when people aren’t “feeling” him any more.

    The “West Ten” hitmaker would like to emulate 50 Cent and drop tunes occasionally rather than continue to “force” himself to put out music when he’s reached his “shelf life.”

    Speaking to The Agenda Radio on Apple Music 1, AJ said, “Boy, I’ll be honest with you, I’ll retire as soon as everyone’s not feeling me no more.”

    “I’m gracefully bowing out, there’s no more forcing it, old man thing. I’ll just bow. 100 percent there’s a shelf life. We ain’t gotta say no names.”

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    “You’ve heard rappers, and you’re just like, ‘Bro, you’re like, however old you are, wearing Nike Tech like the youth dem. And on that little electric scooter, you are trying to force it. And it’s not that honestly, bro, it’s not that.’ ”

    He added, “You can hold me to that. I’m never going to be that guy, never. I’m going to do the 50 Cent thing. If I feel like putting out something random, I’ll just put something out random, but I’m not going to force the thing at all [sic].”

    In another interview, Tracey shared his thought on performing live again after COVID-19 put a halt to shows. “Honestly, not even to sound like a hippie, but just sharing moments with the fans, man. Because making music and you’re disconnected from everyone in life, just over the internet, it’s not the same is it? It’s just not the same,” he shared.

    “I just want to go out there, get the energy from the fans, give it back. And everyone who knows me like, yeah, cool, the studio thing is great,” he added. “The radio, I’m doing quite well. But my shows is where I can really show off and impress people, you know what I’m saying? I’ll turn it mad and I just haven’t been able to do that for a long time. So I’m really looking forward to getting back on stage.”

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    Artist of the Week: Jimmie Allen

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    The ‘Mercury Lane’ crooner has shattered barriers in the country music industry as he scores two consecutive No. 1 singles on Billboard Country Airplay chart.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Jimmie Allen continued to make history in the country music industry. The 34-year-old artist celebrated more milestones this year after becoming the first black musician to have his debut single sit at the first position on Billboard Country Airplay following the release of his single “Best Shot” in 2018.

    He’s back at the summit with a follow-up song “Make Me Want To”. It climbed up to the top spot after more than a year on the chart. The 58-week trek to No. 1 became the longest climb to the top in the history of the Country Airplay chart. The feat also made him the first black artist to have two consecutive chart toppers on country radio.

    ” ‘Make Me Want To’ is really just about a song about someone having feelings, catching ’em fast and not being ashamed to say [so],” Allen explained in an interview with ABC Radio. “I think being vulnerable is cool. And, you know, when you have feelings for someone else, or when you want to be with them, tell ’em. That’s really what the song is.”

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    Meanwhile, the music video was inspired by his love for Disney, Harry Potter, and the classic love story “The Notebook. “I feel like authenticity is celebrated today more than ever, so with this video, I really wanted to highlight my quirky side,” so he told CMT.

    Both “Make Me Want To” and “Best Shot” have been certified platinum for selling over a million units. The tracks are taken from Allen’s first studio album “Mercury Lane” which came out in 2018.

    If his chart history is any indication, he is expected to make another wave as a new song called “This Is Us”, his collaboration with Billy Ray Cyrus’ daughter Noah Cyrus, has been released. The track was recorded for his mini album “Bettie James” which came out last year.

    Besides dominating the country music charts, Jimmie Allen was critically lauded at notable awards show. He was nominated for New Artist of the Year at the Country Music Association (CMA) Awards last year and won New Male Artist of the Year this year at the Academy of Country Music (ACM) Awards.

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    Faith Evans' Appalling Performance at DMX's Funeral Service Sparks Twitter Backlash

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    Social media users are left impressed by the ‘All Night Long’ singer’s off-key performance and appearance during the virtual event, while others are concerned for her.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Faith Evans’ attempt to honor DMX at his “Homegoing Celebration” has earned negative responses from viewers and fans alike. The R&B veteran, who opened her set with a story of how “I Miss You”, her collaboration with the late rapper from 2001’s “The Great Depression”, came together, left social media users appalled with her off-key performance and dull appearance during the virtual event on Sunday, April 25.

    Those critics took to Twitter to sound off their disappointment, with one writing, “Faith Evans and em could’ve just sent some flowers to the fune instead of singing dry faced, shoeless and off key tearing up everybody’s songs in this damn video…”

    “I’m just going to assume that Faith Evans didn’t know she was performing virtually at DMX’s funeral today. The hair,the vocals, white socks, water bottles all over the floor,etc,” another tweeted. A third one remarked, “Faith Evans she’s flying HIGH right now!!”

    For some others, Evans’ lackluster performance seemed to raise a flag. “Watching Faith Evans looking and sounding as bad as she did…praying for her because…..,” one person reacted after watching the memorial service. Another similarly expressed concern as imploring, “So, for those of y’all that know Faith Evans personally and have her contact information, please reach out and just check in! That’s all I’m gonna say….”

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    Her lackluster performance aside, Evans vividly described her memory of DMX. “I remember the first time I met Earl, he came to my hotel room at 3 A.M.,” she shared. “The front desk called me, and he took the phone from them like, ‘Just tell her it’s DMX!’ And how could I say no to him coming upstairs? It’s DMX wanting to talk to me, so it had to be important. And he came upstairs and told me that he wanted to do this song with me dedicated to his grandmother…”

    The “I’ll Be Missing You” hitmaker went on speaking of DMX’s faith in God. She recalled, “…after he told me, we prayed together, when I went to the studio to record, we prayed together, at the video shoot, we prayed together, and every time I saw him thereafter, we prayed together. There’s a video going around of him praying on the Bad Boy tour. That day, it was my turn to pray, I walked out of my dressing room and saw X, and he said, ‘Faith, you’re an angel in my life! … Cause we always pray together!’ ”

    DMX’s life was previously celebrated at a special memorial at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. Nas, Eve and Swizz Beatz were among celebrities who paid their final respect to the late hip-hop icon at the Celebration of Life event, which took place on Saturday.

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    Joe Alwyn Collects His First Grammy for Contribution to Taylor Swift's 'Folklore'

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    ‘The Favourite’ actor has his name added to the winners’ list on the Grammys website after his singer girlfriend become the first female artist in history to win the Album of the Year title three times.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    British actor Joe Alwyn has officially been recognized as a 2021 Grammy Award winner after contributing to his girlfriend Taylor Swift’s “Folklore”, which was crowned Album of the Year.

    “The Favourite” star had originally been credited on Swift’s liner notes under the pseudonym William Bowery, helping to pen the tracks “Exile” and “Betty”, which he also co-produced, alongside four other songs on the 2020 release.

    “Folklore” claimed the top honor at music’s big night last month (March 21), making Swift the first female artist in history to win the accolade three times.

    She shared the prize with producers Aaron Dessner and Jack Antonoff, but now eagle-eyed fans have noticed Alwyn’s name has also been added to the winners’ list on the Grammys website, meaning he would have received his very own award, reports People.com.

    The stars, who have been careful to keep much of their romance under wraps, have yet to comment on the news, but Swift gave her man a special shout-out during her acceptance speech at the prestigious event.

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    “Joe is the first person that I play every single song that I write, and I had the best time writing songs with you in quarantine,” she smiled.

    The couple has been dating since 2016.

    Swift has also confirmed that Alwyn used the pseudonym William Bowery when talking to Dessner and Antonoff in Disney+ film, “Folklore: The Long Pond Studio Sessions”. She first stated, “There’s been a lot of discussion about William Bowery and his identity. He’s not a real person.”

    The 31-year-old continued explaining, “William Bowery is Joe, as we know.” She went on to gush, “And Joe, Joe plays piano beautifully, and he’s always just playing and making things up and kind of creating things.”

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    Manic Street Preachers Describe Their New Music as 'Great Pop' With 'Miserable Lyrics'

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    The James Dean Bradfield-fronted band have started recording their upcoming fourteenth studio installment which is claimed to sound like ‘The Clash playing ABBA.’

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Manic Street Preachers’ new music is like “The Clash playing ABBA,” according to bassist Nicky Wire. The Welsh indie trio spent two weeks recording its upcoming 14th LP at Rockfield Studios, Wales earlier this year (21), and although lockdown measures meant the process was a bit different, the three are very happy with the record’s “miserable lyrics and great pop.”

    Speaking to Mojo magazine, bassist and songwriter Wire said, “I recorded my entire f**king bass parts with a mask on.

    “But it’s the most rehearsed we’ve ever been for an album. The catchphrase was ‘like The Clash playing ABBA’ – The Clash when you felt they could play in any style.”

    “It’s quite a subtle record. There are, always, guitars, but it’s very restrained for us, and really tasteful. It’s the usual thing, miserable lyrics and great pop.”

    The “Motorcycle Emptiness” hitmakers knew they were going to make a “good record” when it snowed on their first day at the studio.

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    Frontman James Dean Bradfield recalled, “It was snowing. And when the first snowflake came down and you wake up to a beautiful blanket of snow, it was, ‘Yeah, this is going to be a really good record.’ ”

    And the musicians – who are joined in the band by drummer Sean Moore – admitted the coronavirus pandemic really influenced the songs.

    James shared, “I had a very smug idea of how I saw the world, but I’ve realised I’d undervalued absolutely everything in my life.”

    “I think that’s what the album became about. That’s what the music did, it found a way out of lockdown.”

    Nicky added, “There’s a lot of exploring the internal galaxies of the mind on this album, and understanding. It didn’t feel like the right time for spite. It’s more internalised, bathed in a comforting melancholia, rather than a self-defeating one.”

    “I certainly feel like these are some of the best words I’ve ever written.”

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    Young Thug's 'Slime Language 2' Reigns Over Billboard 200 Chart in Debut Week

    Eric Church’s new album ‘Heart’, meanwhile, arrives at No. 5 in this week’s Billboard 200 chart with 49,000 equivalent album units, marking his sixth Top 10 album.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Young Thug’s star-studded project “Slime Language 2” has arrived at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart. Hailing from Young Stoner Life Records, the set earns 113,000 equivalent album units in the U.S. in the week ending April 22, according to MRC Data.

    Of the number, most of them are from streaming activity. SEA units comprise 106,000 which equals to 142.68 million on-demand streams of the album’s tracks. Meanwhile, 6000 of them are album sales with 1,000 being in the form of TEA units.

    Released on April 16, “Slime Languange 2” features Gunna, Yak Gotti, Lil Duke, T-Shyne and Lil Keed. Additionally, the 23-track project also sees Young Thug collaborating with big names from outside the Young Stoner Life camp, including Drake, Lil Uzi Vert, Big Sean, NAV and Future. The album marks Young Thug’s second No. 1 album after “So Much Fun”.

    At No. 2 is Taylor Swift’s former leader “Fearless (Taylor’s Version)”. The album dips one spot after earning 7,000 equivalent album units. Morgan Wallen’s “Dangerous: The Double Album”, meanwhile, ascends one rang to No. 3 with 56,000 equivalent album units earned this week. Trailing behind is Justin Bieber’s latest album “Justice” that falls from No. 3 to No. 4 in its fifth week with 54,000 units.

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    Eric Church’s new album “Heart”, meanwhile, arrives at No. 5 with 49,000 equivalent album units, marking his sixth Top 10 album. It is also the first time for three country albums being in the Top 5 together with “Heart”, “Fearless (Taylor’s Version)” and “Dangerous: The Double Album” nabbing No, 5, No. 2 and No. 3 respectively.

    Back to this week’s chart, Rod Wave’s “SoulFly” dips from No. 5 to No. 6 with 46,000 equivalent album units earned. As for rock band Greta Van Fleet, they score second Billboard 200 top 10, as “The Battle at Garden’s Gate” debuts at No. 7 with 44,000 equivalent album units. Descending from No. 7 to No. 8 is The Weeknd’s “The Highlights”, earning 40,000 equivalent album units.

    Rounding out the Top 10 are Dua Lipa’s “Future Nostalgia” and Pop Smoke’s “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon”. While “Future Nostalgia” rises from No. 10 to No. 9 with 35,000 units, Pop’s posthumous album falls from No. 9 to No. 10 with 34,000 units.

    Top Ten of Billboard 200:

    “Slime Language 2” – Young Thug (113,000 units)
    “Fearless (Taylor’s Version)” – Taylor Swift (57,000 units)
    “Dangerous: The Double Album” – Morgan Wallen (56,000 units)
    “Justice” – Justin Bieber (54,000 units)
    “Heart” – Eric Church (49,000 units)
    “SoulFly” – Rod Wave (46,000 units)
    “The Battle at Garden’s Gate ” – Greta Van Fleet (44,000 units)
    “Highlights” – The Weeknd (43,000 units)
    “Future Nostalgia” – Dua Lipa (35,000 units)
    “Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon” – Pop Smoke (34,000 units)

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    Van Morrison Defends Anti-Lockdown Songs, Cites 'Freedom of Speech'

    WENN

    The ‘Brown Eyed Girl’ hitmaker comes to his own defense after he received ‘very negative reaction’ following the release of his anti-lockdown songs amid Covid-19 pandemic.

    Apr 26, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Veteran singer/songwriter Van Morrison is bemoaning the “very negative reaction” to his anti-lockdown protest songs last year (20), insisting he was simply exercising his “freedom of speech.”

    The “Brown Eyed Girl” hitmaker has been outspoken in his criticism of lockdown measures introduced to curb the spread of COVID-19, which halted almost all live music events in the U.K. from March, 2020.

    He dropped a series of tracks outlining his strong views, including one with rock legend Eric Clapton, called “Stand and Deliver”, which was released in support of Van’s Save Live Music campaign, raising funds for his Lockdown Financial Hardship Fund, helping struggling musicians who were unable to perform.

    However, Van is dismayed that only Eric paid attention to his plea for fellow famous artists to “fight the pseudoscience and speak up” and he is concerned people are being silenced for expressing alternative views.

    He told The Times newspaper’s Saturday Review, “The only other person who has any traction or motivation to speak out about what’s going on, to get out there and question things, is Eric.”

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    “A few people got a petition together to end the lockdown, but nobody pays attention to petitions, do they?”

    “If I can write about it, I do. Poetic licence, freedom of speech… these used to be OK. Why not now? I don’t understand it. Some people call it a cult. It is like a religion. Whether anyone agrees with me or not is irrelevant.”

    “Just as there should be freedom of the press, there should be freedom of speech, and at the minute it feels like that is not in the framework,” he grumbled. “If you do songs that are an expression of freedom of speech you get a very negative reaction.”

    And the crooner doesn’t think it’s “a given” that live music will return any time soon.

    “Your guess is as good as mine because freedom is not a given any more,” he said. “You have to fight for it. That’s where the blues come in.”

    Van’s views on the state of the world are explored on his new album, “Latest Record Project: Volume 1”, which hits retailers on 7 May (21).

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    Christa Ludwig, Mezzo-Soprano of Velvety Hues, Is Dead at 93

    She was a beloved interpreter of Strauss, Mozart and Wagner roles, but equally admired for her rendition of art songs.Christa Ludwig, who poured a lustrous voice into dramatically taut performances of opera roles — especially those of Mozart, Strauss and Wagner — and intimately rendered art songs as one of the premier mezzo-sopranos of the second half of the 20th century, died on Saturday at her home in Klosterneuburg, Austria. She was 93.Her death was confirmed by her son, Wolfgang Berry.Ms. Ludwig commanded a broad range of the great mezzo-soprano parts, including Dorabella in Mozart’s “Così Fan Tutte,” Cherubino in his “Le Nozze di Figaro,” Octavian in Strauss’s “Der Rosenkavalier,” Bizet’s Carmen and numerous Wagner roles. Often, critics were reduced to calling her the greatest mezzo-soprano of her time.But like many mezzos, Ms. Ludwig strove to lay claim to higher-voiced — and higher-profile — soprano roles. So she took on, most successfully in that category, characters including the Marschallin in “Der Rosenkavalier,” the Dyer’s Wife in “Die Frau Ohne Schatten” and Leonore in Beethoven’s “Fidelio.”She was an equal master of the intimate song — especially the works of Brahms, Mahler and Schubert. Her artistry put her in the pantheon of postwar lieder singers that included Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Elly Ameling and Elisabeth Schwarzkopf.Ms. Ludwig made her Metropolitan Opera debut as Cherubino (a trouser role, a type she said was not her favorite) in 1959, took on Octavian and Amneris in Verdi’s “Aida” at the house that year as well and sang regularly at the Met until the end of her career.Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, left, and Ms.  Ludwig in a recording studio in 1962. Both were renowned lieder singers.Erich Auerbach/Hulton Archive/Getty Images,She was associated for decades with the Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival, and worked especially closely with the conductors Karl Böhm, Leonard Bernstein and Herbert von Karajan.Ms. Ludwig rose from straitened origins in a shattered wartime Germany to the height of the singing world, aided by a sense of discipline instilled by her strong-willed mother — her only real teacher and a constant presence throughout her career.She also displayed traits of the pampered diva, with a preference for elegant gowns and opulent hotel suites (partly inspired by the hardships of her youth), fanatical attention to any hint of illness and the state of her vocal cords, and reverential fans who followed her from house to house. On performance days, she would communicate with whistles or by writing on a pad.But onstage, Ms. Ludwig brought a striking combination of acting ability, charisma and vocal beauty. Her voice had range and power, a security through all the registers and a broad array of colors.“Her unmistakable, deep-purple timbre envelops the listener in a velvet cloak,” Roger Pines wrote in Opera News in 2018, reviewing her collected recordings. “She excelled equally in intimate, legato-oriented lieder and the largest-scale operatic repertoire, where her sound expanded with glorious brilliance.”Critics often took note of her wit and comic deftness, and a personality that could fill a hall even when she sang softly. “Her presence on the Met stage was a synthesis of the dramatic arts all by itself — her voice, her wonderfully natural diction and her shadings of facial expression and gesture all conspiring to express with great emotional breadth the singular message of this singular music,” The New York Times critic Bernard Holland wrote of a “Winterreise” performance in 1983. Ms. Ludwig sang that searing Schubert song cycle some 72 times, even though it was composed for a male voice.Ms. Ludwig in 1963. She favored elegant gowns and opulent hotel suites and paid fanatical attention to the state of her vocal cords.Harry Croner/ullstein bild via Getty ImagesMs. Ludwig was born on March 16, 1928, in Berlin. Her parents lived in Aachen in western Germany, but her mother, Eugenie Besalla-Ludwig, wanted the child to be born in her family home in the capital.In Aachen, Christa’s Viennese father, Anton Ludwig, a former tenor who had sung with Enrico Caruso at the old Met, was the opera house stage director and manager; her mother sang in the company, and performed several roles under an up-and-coming conductor named Herbert von Karajan. Christa saw those performances and many others. “I practically lived in the theater,” she said in her 1993 memoir, later published in English under the title “In My Own Words.”Her mother gave her singing lessons as a girl and remained her lifelong coach, going to her rehearsals and performances and living most of her life with Ms. Ludwig. “I really owe everything to her,” she said. But Ms. Ludwig also described her mother as an inflexible and sometimes suffocating presence who dominated her life before she felt able to cut ties only at age 60.During the war, a half brother was killed on the Eastern front. Food was rationed and Christa was sent to work on a farm. The family’s home and belongings in Giessen, where Mr. Ludwig had become director of the municipal theater, were destroyed in an Allied bombing raid, leaving them homeless. With the arrival of American troops, Ms. Ludwig recounted in her memoir, she and her parents were assigned an abandoned apartment with a piano that had been used as a toilet.Christa’s mother gave voice lessons. “Studying singing was a wonderful way to forget the wretched way we lived, the ruins, the still-smoldering coal cellars, and the stink of ashes,” Ms. Ludwig wrote.The young singer soon found work singing popular tunes at the American officers club, wearing a dress she had made from a Nazi flag. She was paid in cigarettes and stole whatever food she could. Once her father, who had been a member of the Nazi party, was denazified, he was given back his job and organized variety shows around town in which his daughter was featured.Ms. Ludwig received her first major contract in 1946, at the Frankfurt Opera, and made her stage debut as Prince Orlofsky in “Die Fledermaus.” Her mother, recently divorced from her father, moved in with her in the city in an unheated room, and they began daily lessons.Along with her opera work, she sang many concerts of contemporary music amid a wave of creative freedom unleashed by the fall of the Reich. “I was cheap,” she told The Guardian in 2004. “I learned things easily and I had a good voice.” It was a shrewd move: Critics got to know her before she became famous.Ms. Ludwig as Fidelio (Leonore) in the first act of the Beethoven opera “Fidelio” at the Salzburg Festival in August 1968.Gerhard Rauchwetter/picture alliance via Getty ImagesStints in the opera houses of Darmstadt and Hanover followed, until she was summoned to audition for Mr. Böhm, the director of the Vienna State Opera. He took her on in 1955, and she quickly became a mainstay. Engagements at the world’s major opera houses followed. She met the bass-baritone Walter Berry at the Vienna opera in 1957 when they were cast in “Le Nozze di Figaro.” They married three months later and had a son, Wolfgang, who survives her, along with a grandson and a stepson, Philippe Deiber. The couple frequently appeared together in operas and joint recitals. In interviews, Ms. Ludwig said they felt occasional rivalry and were at odds in preparing for performances (she needed quiet, he less so; he liked small hotel rooms and she liked large suites).The couple divorced in 1970, though they continued to perform together. (Mr. Berry died in 2000.)Soon after her divorce, Ms. Ludwig met the actor and stage director Paul-Emile Deiber while he was preparing a production of Massenet’s “Werther” at the Met, and they married in 1972. He died in 2011.Ms. Ludwig came of age at the dawn of the postwar golden era of recordings, and her LP legacy is vast, from a 1961 “Norma” with Maria Callas to a 1962 “St. Matthew Passion” conducted by Otto Klemperer, to two complete and classic Wagner “Ring” cycles. She appears on five “Rosenkavalier” recordings, including a beloved rendition with Ms. Schwarzkopf, conducted by Mr. von Karajan.In the realm of song, critics took note of her sensitivity, smooth lines, intimacy, control and mastery of the text. “She is perhaps the reigning feminine expert at making us feel good about lonely teardrops and thwarted bliss,” The Times critic Donal Henahan wrote in 1979.Despite the care that she took with her voice, Ms. Ludwig suffered damage to her vocal cords in the early 1970s that forced her to cancel numerous performances, and even parts of whole seasons. She recovered but cut back on opera appearances. She gave a series of farewell performances in the 1993-1994 season before retiring.A few years after her vocal crisis, Ms. Ludwig made clear the pragmatic view she had about a singer’s voice.“It’s like a raw egg,” she once said. “Once it’s kaputt, it’s kaputt.” More