“He sang like he had already seen heaven” — Dmitri Hvorostovsky and Igor Krutoi’s final performance of La via resurfaces, and no one is ready for the weight of it

It wasn’t a concert. It was a farewell.
And it took years for the world to understand that.

When Dmitri Hvorostovsky stepped onto the stage that night beside Igor Krutoi, no one knew it would be one of his last major performances. He was already battling a terminal illness. His silver hair glowed under the spotlight, his eyes sharp with both defiance and surrender. Krutoi, seated at the piano, didn’t say a word. He didn’t need to.

Then came “La via” — a haunting, almost prophetic composition about life’s passage, choices, and the fragile beauty of existence. As Dmitri sang, it was as if he wasn’t singing to the audience… but to something far beyond them. Each phrase carried the weight of goodbye. Each breath felt like it was borrowed from something sacred.

And when he reached the final note, holding it not with strength, but with peace — Krutoi looked up at him, eyes glistening.

Some in the crowd were already crying. Others just sat frozen, unsure of what they had witnessed.

Years later, the video has resurfaced, and fans are sharing one sentiment again and again:
“This wasn’t a performance. It was a man walking toward the light — and singing while he did it.”

Dmitri Hvorostovsky passed in 2017, but in this duet — quiet, restrained, soul-deep — he left behind more than just music.
He left behind a message: There is grace, even in the leaving.

🎥 Full video below. Prepare yourself.

Dmitri Hvorostovsky obituary | Opera | The Guardian

Dmitri Hvorostovsky, opera singer – obituary

BBC Radio 3 - Opera on 3, Live from the Met, Verdi 200: Don Carlo, VERDI 200 - DON CARLO - Dmitri Hvorostovsky as Rodrigo in Verdi's "Don Carlo."