Mark, I particularly liked what you said here:
Quote:
Originally Posted by mark12_30
Had I not heard piano played by Donald Swan, and blessed by The Prof, would I have accepted "The Leaves Were Long, the Grass Was Green" by the Tolkien Ensemble? The piano works beautifully there. (And then once I wonder what growing up in Rivendell might have done to a young ranger's voice, Tolkien Ensemble's 'Voice of Aragorn' works better and better. )
Do I owe that to Swan? Perhaps. A very intriguing thought.
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I haven't heard the piece you mentioned, but, like you, have accepted for the same reasons the use of the piano in versions of Tolkien's songs and poems.
In terms of what Aragorn's upbringing in Rivendell might have done to his voice, that's an intriguing line of enquiry.

Another example of a Man fostered by an Elvish ruler was Túrin, fostered by Thingol. While we know how badly things turned out there, the influence of this upbring was such that, later in Nargothrond, he was called
Adanedhel, 'Elf-Man', because his speech and bearing were that of the Kingdom of Doriath.