Verdi Bicentennial Week on Met Opera Radio

Verdi 200th

Don’t miss this week on Met Opera Radio, devoted entirely to Verdi.

 

Monday, October 7, 2013

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6:00 AM ET 9:00 AM ET

12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET

6:00 PM ET 9:00 PM ET

Verdi: Rigoletto
2/10/1973-Levine; Wixell, Grist, Pavarotti, Macurdy, Grillo

This Month at the Met
Netrebko, Kwiecien, Radvanovsky, Muhly, Phillips, Leonard, Beczala, Gelb

Verdi: Aida
2/25/1967-Schippers; Price, Bumbry, Bergonzi, Merrill, Hines

Verdi: Un Ballo in Maschera
12/14/1940-Panizza; Milanov, Bjorling, Sved, Castagna, Andreva

Verdi: Otello
10/13/1995-Levine; Domingo, Fleming, Morris, Bunnell, Croft

Verdi: Falstaff
4/6/2002-Levine; Terfel, Mescheriakova, Tilling, Blythe, Turay, Mentzer

 

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Verdi: Simon Boccanegra
1/28/1950-Stiedry; Warren, Varnay, Tucker, Szekely

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6:00 AM ET 9:00 AM ET 12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET 7:55 PM ET

Verdi: Il Trovatore
2/4/1961-Cleva; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Dalis, Wilderman

Verdi: La Traviata
1/5/1935-Panizza; Ponselle, Jagel, Tibbett

Verdi: I Lombardi
1/15/1994-Levine; Flanigan, Pavarotti, Beccaria, Plishka

Verdi: Don Carlo
12/23/2006-Levine; Botha, Racette, Hvorostovsky

Shostakovich: The Nose (LIVE FROM THE MET) Gergiev; Szot, Popov, Ognovenko

12:00 AM ET Verdi: Macbeth
2/21/1959-Leinsdorf; Warren, Rysanek, Hines, Bergonzi

 

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

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6:00 AM ET

9:00 AM ET 12:00 PM ET

3:00 PM ET

6:00 PM ET 9:00 PM ET 12:00 AM ET

Verdi: Nabucco
3/24/2001-Levine; Pons, Guleghina, Casanova, Tarassova, Ramey

Verdi: I Vespri Siciliani
3/9/1974-Levine; Caballé, Gedda, Milnes, Díaz

Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/12/1977-Levine; Price, Domingo, MacNeil, Talvela, Elias, Capecchi

This Month at the Met
Netrebko, Kwiecien, Radvanovsky, Muhly, Phillips, Leonard, Beczala, Gelb

Verdi: Rigoletto
2/10/1973-Levine; Wixell, Grist, Pavarotti, Macurdy, Grillo

Verdi: Aida
2/25/1967-Schippers; Price, Bumbry, Bergonzi, Merrill, Hines

Verdi: Un Ballo in Maschera
12/14/1940-Panizza; Milanov, Bjorling, Sved, Castagna, Andreva

 

Thursday, October 10, 2013

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6:00 AM ET 9:00 AM ET

12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET

Verdi: Otello
10/13/1995-Levine; Domingo, Fleming, Morris, Bunnell, Croft

Verdi: Falstaff
4/6/2002-Levine; Terfel, Mescheriakova, Tilling, Blythe, Turay, Mentzer

Verdi: Simon Boccanegra
1/28/1950-Stiedry; Warren, Varnay, Tucker, Szekely

Verdi: Il Trovatore

6:00 PM ET 9:00 PM ET 12:00 AM ET

2/4/1961-Cleva; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Dalis, Wilderman

Verdi: La Traviata
1/5/1935-Panizza; Ponselle, Jagel, Tibbett

Verdi: I Lombardi
1/15/1994-Levine; Flanigan, Pavarotti, Beccaria, Plishka

Verdi: Don Carlo
12/23/2006-Levine; Botha, Racette, Hvorostovsky

 

Friday, October 11, 2013

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6:00 AM ET

9:00 AM ET 12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET

6:00 PM ET 7:25 PM ET

12:00 AM ET

Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/12/1977-Levine; Price, Domingo, MacNeil, Talvela, Elias, Capecchi

Verdi: Macbeth
2/21/1959-Leinsdorf; Warren, Rysanek, Hines, Bergonzi

Verdi: Rigoletto
2/10/1973-Levine; Wixell, Grist, Pavarotti, Macurdy, Grillo

Verdi: Nabucco
3/24/2001-Levine; Pons, Guleghina, Casanova, Tarassova, Ramey

This Month at the Met
Netrebko, Kwiecien, Radvanovsky, Muhly, Phillips, Leonard, Beczala, Gelb

Britten: A Midsummer Night’s Dream (SEASON PREMIERE – LIVE FROM THE MET)
Conlon; Kim, Davies, M. Rose, Kaiser, DeShong, Simpson, Wall, Costello

Verdi: I Vespri Siciliani
3/9/1974-Levine; Caballé, Gedda, Milnes, Díaz

 

Saturday, October 12, 2013

6:00 AM ET Verdi: Aida
2/25/1967-Schippers; Price, Bumbry, Bergonzi, Merrill, Hines

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9:00 AM ET

12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET

6:00 PM ET 9:00 PM ET 12:00 AM ET

Verdi: Un Ballo in Maschera
12/14/1940-Panizza; Milanov, Bjorling, Sved, Castagna, Andreva

Verdi: Otello
10/13/1995-Levine; Domingo, Fleming, Morris, Bunnell, Croft

Verdi: Falstaff
4/6/2002-Levine; Terfel, Mescheriakova, Tilling, Blythe, Turay, Mentzer

Verdi: Simon Boccanegra
1/28/1950-Stiedry; Warren, Varnay, Tucker, Szekely

Verdi: Il Trovatore
2/4/1961-Cleva; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Dalis, Wilderman

This Month at the Met
Netrebko, Kwiecien, Radvanovsky, Muhly, Phillips, Leonard, Beczala, Gelb

 

Sunday, October 13, 2013

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6:00 AM ET 9:40 AM ET 12:00 PM ET 3:00 PM ET 6:00 PM ET 9:00 PM ET 12:00 AM ET

Verdi: Don Carlo
12/23/2006-Levine; Botha, Racette, Hvorostovsky

Verdi: I Lombardi
1/15/1994-Levine; Flanigan, Pavarotti, Beccaria, Plishka

Verdi: La Traviata
1/5/1935-Panizza; Ponselle, Jagel, Tibbett

Carnegie Hall Concert
Levine; DiDonato, MET Orchestra

Verdi: Macbeth
2/21/1959-Leinsdorf; Warren, Rysanek, Hines, Bergonzi

The Met on Record: Verdi: Luisa Miller (1991)
Levine; Millo, Domingo, Chernov, Quivar, Plishka, Rootering

Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/12/1977-Levine; Price, Domingo, MacNeil, Talvela, Elias, Capecchi

A Petite History of the Critical Review and Recent Perspectives about the Met Opera Season

James Jordan

Fabulous and Renown Opera Critic and Aficionado, James Jorden

It’s always interesting to read various reviews about opera performances and even more interesting to see the contrasting opinions of different reviewers.  The Critical Review has been a subject of controversy and yet an aspect of historical record in the music world since the mid 1800s when Hector Berlioz and Robert Schumann began reviewing concerts.  More related to my own area of Italian Opera in Verdi and Puccini’s time, critical reviews became part of the historically legacy of the period, and composers like Amilcare Ponchielli and Arrigo Boito were two who remained fervently devoted to the accurate retelling of a musical event.

Hector Berlioz     Robert Schumann

Where the Metropolitan Opera is concerned, of note the leading opera house in North America, the “Big Three” news sources that are looked  to for critical reviews are:  The New York Times, The New York Post, and The New York Observer.  External to this, I believe that the Washington Post is the next most highly considered.  Why these papers?  It’s not just that these are based in New York and so they are devoted to what exciting events are taking place at their hometown opera house, it’s because of the critics who write the reviews.  The most prominent being:  Anthony Tommasini of the New York Times, Vivienne Schweitzer of the New York Times, Zachary Woolfe of the New York Times and New York Observer, James Jorden of the New York Post and New York Observer, Alex Ross of the New Yorker Magazine, and Anne Midgette of the Washington Post.

Amilcare Ponchielli

Amilcare Ponchielli

Arrigo Boito

 Arrigo Boito

What is controversial about the opera review is that it relies heavily on the musical and historical knowledge of the reviewer but also their own personal tastes and so when you’re seeking an understanding of what went on in a performance, it’s probably a good idea to consult more than one review just to balance out the varying opinions.  Reviewers are human beings and like us, they have personal preferences.  Each one has their own manner of reviewing, their own language of discussion, their own syntax, their own flavour–if you will, and the art of opera singing and performance has been linked to these diverse tastes both in the past and today.

My inspiration to talk about reviewing was James Jorden’s recent article in the New York Observer, and while I could have chosen any of the above mentioned critics because they are all wonderful, I chose Mr. Jorden’s review because I personally like his style and the honesty with which he relays his opinions, which I find to be based on a fervent knowledge of singing, historical performance practice, and just plain love of this art.  It is in no offence to any other critic.  Mr. Jorden reviewed the recent events that transpired in the Met’s opening week and I found his assessment refreshing and honest.  Please read his review below by clicking the link.

My own personal opinion on the occurrences of the past week (which has nothing to do with Mr. Jorden’s article or his own opinion) is this:  I think that the problem with opera singing today, and I’m not perfect by any means as a singer (but I sure try to stay close to what is authentic from a historical standpoint), is that we sometimes lose track of what the vocal fachs were when these operas were written and the kinds of voices that were meant to sing them.  It’s very obvious in today’s current climate that voices are not being produced like the voices of the past, especially where intelligibility of the text is concerned, or rather more, attention to the vowel.  When I listen to singers like Mafalda Favero or Tito Schipa, or Caruso even, EVERY word is understood without having the score in front of your face, rather than the fluttering and sustaining of lines via a quick vibrato rather than on the vowel, sul fiato that is more prominent today.  In my opinion, several performances have become unintelligible. Callas used to say, “Speak the text…go around and speak it everywhere.” Ponselle, used to hum everything in the front of her masque in perfectly placed position, and then she would explode that sound into ravishing colour on stage.  What did Callas mean when she said, “speak it?”  She did not mean trill it out and just keep fluttering away on a line that is disengaged from a vowel.  Maybe I’m old-fashioned, but I think opera has a message and that message is in the story, in the word, enveloped by a beautiful voice that vibrates like a perfectly tuned violin.  To me, it is the expression of that text that is the heart’s blood of opera.  I just wish that this was a greater priority today.

And huge huge respect to Maestro Levine whose return to the podium brought tears to my eyes.  From the first two chords of Cosi Fan Tutte, one heard the Met Orchestra of old.  He is a master and knows how to steer that beast of an orchestra like an expert.  We have missed him and I’m so happy for his return and continued good health.  Bravi tutti, singers, conductors, and critics alike.

Levine

“Onegin’s Opening Night: Anna, Norma, and a Giant Nose: Protesters Stole the Opening Night of Onegin…But No One Can Take the Met Away From James Levine” by James Jorden (New York Observer)

Verdi’s Don Carlo to Open at La Scala on October 12

teatro-alla-scala

Conductors: Fabio Luisi, Piergiorgio Morandi

Staging and sets: Stéphane Braunschweig

Costumes: Thibaut Van Craenenbroeck

Lights: Marion Hewlett

PapeRene Pape as Filippo

Kocan

Stefan Kocan alternates as Fillippo and Il Grande Inquisitore

Filippo II, re di Spagna:  René Pape (12, 16, 19, 23, 26), Stefan Kocán (29)

Don Carlo, Infante di Spagna: Fabio Sartori

Rodrigo, Marchese di Posa: Massimo Cavalletti

Il Grande Inquisitore, cieco nonagenario: Štefan Kocán (12, 16, 19, 23, 26), Rafal Siwek (29)

Un frate: Fernando Rado

Elisabetta di Valois: Martina Serafin

La Principessa d’Eboli: Ekaterina Gubanova

Tebaldo, paggio d’Elisabetta: Barbara Lavarian

Il Conte di Lerma: Carlos Cardoso

Un araldo reale: Carlo Bosi

Voce dal cielo: Roberta Salvati

Deputati fiamminghi: Ernesto Panariello, Simon Lim, Davide Pelissero, Filippo Polinelli, Federico Sacchi, Luciano Montanaro

Link to Don Carlo at the Teatro alla Scala

Metropolitan Opera: A Midsummer Night’s Dream Broadcast Live Saturday, October 11th

Midsummer

 

ConductorJames Conlon
TytaniaKathleen Kim
HelenaErin Wall
HermiaElizabeth DeShong
OberonIestyn Davies
LysanderJoseph Kaiser
DemetriusMichael Todd Simpson
BottomMatthew Rose
PuckRiley Costello

Midsummer

 

Kathleen Kim

 

Coloratura Soprano, Kathleen Kim is Tytania

Click here to Listen Live

Levine and Cosi Fan Tutte LIVE BROADCAST Tonight: Listen Live

COSI-articleLarge

Listen live to Levine’s return to the Met Podium.

Live broadcast begins at 7:25pm and can be heard by clicking below or on Sirius/XM Radio on The Met Opera Channel

 

Danielle de niese

Danielle De Niese as Despina

ConductorJames Levine
FiordiligiSusanna Phillips
DorabellaIsabel Leonard
DespinaDanielle de Niese
FerrandoMatthew Polenzani
GugliemoRodion Pogossov
Don AlfonsoMaurizio Muraro

Levine

Click here to LISTEN LIVE from the MET

Norma Live at the Met tonight on Sirius/XM Radio (Met Opera Radio)

Norma Angela

Tonight begins the battle of the two Normas at the Metropolitan Opera.  Soprano’s Angela Meade and Sondra Radvanovsky take on the role that made so many sopranos legends in the role.  Very large shoes to fill in this regard.  Tonight, the Met Orchestra, which played exquisitely under the baton of Maestro Levine last week, will be conducted by Maestro Riccardo Frizza and Norma will be sung by Sondra Radvanovsky, Adalgisa by Kate Aldrich, Pollione by Aleksandrs Antonenko, and the illustrious James Morris will sing Oroveso.

Norma 1970

Whenever I think of Norma, I think of the magnificent Joan Sutherland and either Marilyn Horne or Tatiana Troyanos as Adalgisa, or more specifically, Rosa Raisa, Claudio Muzio, or Rosa Ponselle in the title role.  Of course, one cannot forget the magnificent technical mastery of the role from La Divina, Maria Callas.  We’ll see how Ms. Radvanovsky fairs in the role this evening.  Historically, the role of Norma was meant for a large voice with incredible agility, a buoyant middle voice and squillo. Taxing is the role because of its weight and the requirement to move the voice fluidly through each melisma, and so it will be interesting to see which of these two sopranos, Ms. Meade or Ms. Radvanovsky, most suits the role.

Norma is a tragedia lirica  in two acts by Vincenzo Bellini with a libretto by Felice Romani after Norma, ossia L’infanticidio (Norma, or The Infanticide) by Alexandre Soumet. First produced at La Scala Milano on 26 December 1831, it is generally regarded as an example of the supreme height of the Bel Canto tradition.

Click here to access Sirius XM Radio

New Poll: What is your favourite International Opera House?

With all the talk of closing opera houses and companies, I thought it appropriate to ask this question.

Which house gives you chills just by walking in the door?

Is it because of who sang there?

Is it because of who conducted there or which opera premiered there?

Is it because of the history associated with the building?

Tell TLV which of these fabulous houses is your favourite!

The Metropolitan Opera

Met

Teatro Alla Scala (Milano)

La Scala Interior

Wiener Staatsoper

Vienna Staatsoper

Berliner Staatsoper

Berlin Staatsoper

Bayerische Staatsoper

Bayerische Staatsoper

Canadian Opera Company

coc

Royal Opera House (London)

Royal Opera House

Paris Opera (Palais Garnier)

Palais Garnier

Sydney Opera House

Sydney_Opera_House_-_Dec_2008

La Fenice (Venice)

La Fenice

Hungarian State Opera (Budapest)

Budapest-Opera-House-Final

Bolshoi Theatre (Moscow)

Bolshoi

Liceu Barcellona

Teatre-del-Liceu

Semperoper Dresden

Semperoper Dresden

Bayreuth Festspielhaus

Bayreuth-festspielhaus03

Teatro Municipal (Rio de Janiero)

teatro_municipal_do_rio_de_janeiro

Boston Opera

Boston Opera

War Memorial Opera House (San Francisco)

San Franscisco Opera

Teatro dell’Opera (Roma)

Roma

Opera Bastille

Bastille

New Survey: What do you think of the possible demise of New York City Opera?

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Tell TLV what you think:

Click here to take the survey

Some excellent comments from various readers. It’s important that supporters of opera are allowed to voice their opinions and here are just a couple.  More to come as you write in.

Comment:

The demise of the NYCO has been a steadily downward since it cut it’s season and lost the Lincoln Center venue has a home. But what is the economic enviroment that surrounds the arts at all levels today and the current attitude of the political and financial aritocracy that controls the resources to maintain our arts organzations. Symphonies and museums have been cut across the country for the want of a few million dollars while billions are spent daily on wars, and trillions are poured into the Wall Street coffers. The first academic areas that are cut in our public schools are music,art,libraries as school districts have decreasing property taxes after the 2008 Financial meltdown and massive home forclosures and values of homes plunged. Aid has been cut at the Federal and state levels. Corporate donations to the MET and other cultural entites has lost its appeal.
The crisis at the DSO is part of a national phenomenon. Budgets for arts groups and arts education are under relentless attack from governments in the US at all levels, while wealthy individuals and corporations are reducing their financial gifts. Pay cuts have been imposed at symphony orchestras in Phoenix, Houston, Cincinnati, Seattle, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Baltimore, Atlanta, Virginia, North Carolina and Utah, among other cities and states.

Comment:

I grew up at the old City Center Opera and saw things there I had not seen performed in this country for many years after that. What an adventurous company it was. I could afford those tickets and could scarcely afford a family circle ticket at the Met so I went often and saw many future opera stars at NYC Opera. A shame that the “peoples” opera and the Amato Opera Theater both will have been closed down. That basically leaves the Met at prices that I can only afford infrequently. Even the Santa Fe Opera out here in the west is now at Met prices. Thank goodness for HDTV broadcasts as that is about the only way I can see an opera “live” these days. Thank goodness for regional companies like Central City and Des Moines with reasonable prices and good performances and adventuresome repertoire. Of course, while I admire the daring of doing the Anna Nicole opera, I have to wonder if that was the wisest thing to do given their financial problems. I think that was a huge mistake.

 

Published in: on September 29, 2013 at 3:14 pm  Comments (1)  
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Sad News for New York City Opera: What of Beverly Sills’ Legacy?

CityOperaattheNewYorkStat

Past home of the NYC Opera

This article in the Wall Street Journal brings more bad news for opera as a whole.  The New York City opera has filed for bankruptcy and if they don’t reach their financial fundraising goal by Monday (which seems unlikely) the company will likely be defunct.  How sad this situation is.  Certainly, City Opera does not present at the level of the Metropolitan Opera or other international companies, but it had it’s place in the echelon of opera, often presenting modern productions and new operas. Perhaps what is most disturbing is that NYC Opera was a place where young singers got their feet wet and experienced stage craft before embarking onto bigger things.  It is truly disturbing that yet another company is being flushed away when there are businessmen in NYC who could save this company single handedly.  Are you out there people?  It’s much more fun to buy a hockey team or invest in Apple than invest in opera right?  What could you possibly get out of saving an opera company?

More than you could ever know.

Drama Behind City Opera: Wall Street Journal

According to the article, “in the hopes of shaking off years of financial turmoil, New York City Opera embarked on a controversial reboot of the company in 2011, leaving its long-time home at Lincoln Center and cutting its season to a fraction of its former length. The reboot didn’t work. Two years later, as it prepares to wind up its affairs, company officials, former board members and experts in the field say the very steps City Opera took to save itself may have hurt it as much as they helped.”  I really can’t fathom to read these words, “wind up its affairs..” and it just means nothing to most people, but not to anyone who loved opera in NYC.

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Apparently, City Opera’s board voted on Thursday to file for bankruptcy-court protection and dissolve the 70-year-old company if by Monday it hasn’t achieved its emergency fundraising goal of $7 million, a figure officials said they were unlikely to reach. “We had to shrink in order to survive,” City Opera Chairman Chuck Wall said in an interview earlier this week. “But you lessen or reduce the cultural footprint in the city, and people wonder if you’re going to survive. It’s a catch-22.”

Beverley Sills

It seems that since Beverly Sills passed away, this company has gone downhill faster than one might’ve imagined.

After retiring from singing in 1980, she became the general manager of the New York City Opera. In 1994, she became the Chairman of Lincoln Center and then, in 2002, of the Metropolitan Opera, stepping down in 2005. Sills lent her celebrity to further her charity work for the prevention and treatment of birth defects.

In 1978, Sills announced she would retire on October 27, 1980, in a farewell gala at the New York City Opera. In the spring of 1979, she began acting as co-director of NYCO, and became its sole general director as of the fall season of that year, a post she held until 1989, although she remained on the NYCO board until 1991. During her time as general director, Sills helped turn what was then a financially struggling opera company into a viable enterprise.

One of the major issues was that the company couldn’t afford to stay at Lincoln Center. The departure, and the bruising labor fight that followed, allowed the company to balance its budget for the first time in a decade. Arts management experts and leaders of other cultural organizations said that plan may have been prudent, but it cost the company dearly. Unlike the past two seasons, when its productions began in February, City Opera this year had a production planned months earlier,in September. That left less time to raise money before payroll bills came due, Mr. Wall said.

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The opera was “Anna Nicole,” a co-production with the Brooklyn Academy of Music based on the life and death of the tabloid star Anna Nicole Smith. In late August, City Opera scrambled to pull together the cash for its $1.3 million share of the $4 million total production cost, asking board members to chip in and calling other pledges in early. The closing performance of “Anna Nicole,” on Saturday night appears likely to be the company’s last. City Opera had waited too long to reinvent itself, Mr. Steel said. “I wish we had gotten to the business at hand faster.”

I still don’t understand why when a company is in this much trouble they would chose to mount an opera that is so controversial, rather than perhaps picking repertoire that is more widely known and loved.  You want to get operagoers in your seats because they want to hear something they know and love, not because it’s controversial.  That, in and of itself, is a gamble that NYCOpera obviously lost.  It is disheartening to know that in the last two days, this opera company is shutting down, unless a miracle happens (and we’re all hoping for one), and news that La Scala is in jeopardy of closing as well.  WHAT IS GOING ON PEOPLE!!!?  Frankly, I don’t think La Scala will close because the entire country of Italy would be closing its doors on the house that supported their leading composers and singers.  It would probably cause a revolution and be a very stupid move on the part of the government, but that we have to continue to read about struggling artistic organizations is both infuriating and frustrating.

What can we do?  We can continue to go and listen to LIVE opera, not just opera in the movie theatre.  Support the LIVE EVENT.  We can continue to learn opera, we can continue to sing it, and for those of you who are like me (and there are many), you can devote yourself to this genre that is the greatest all-encompassing artistic vehicle in the world in whatever ways you can in order to see its preservation.  Here in the Vetere Studio, I see a good number of singers per week.  Some of them have come to opera in the traditional way, having gone to school for singing and now they are adopting a better technique and learning roles that will propel them further into their art and dreams, and some have come to it from other avenues like Rock and Pop singing.  Regardless of where they came from, this wonderful group of singers has become a literal army for the preservation of opera and in a small town like Niagara Falls Canada managed to sell-out performances because, guess what?  PEOPLE LOVE OPERA!!!  If you bring it to them in a way they can digest it and not overwhelm them, they come….like in the movie “Field of Dreams.”  I choose to contribute to this genre personally as a singer, but also by bringing productions to a small region where opera is not so common, and the long and short of it is that the general public comes back.  They call to find out when the next production is…and this is Niagara Falls, so what is the problem with larger areas like NYC or Milano? Something is wrong somewhere.  Perhaps we live in a technologically charged society and people just can’t relate to sitting in a theatre to watch people sing without electronically enhancing the voice or using a 10,000 watt sound system.  Which is more exciting to you, listening to guitars clad with distortion and a crazy wild light show (the method that most popular bands are using now) or watching a human being with nothing but their God-given gift, the weight of their soul, and the two folds in their throat project emotions that are larger than life, in stories that withstand the test of time, supported by an equally acoustic orchestra to 3000 people?  Maybe many would chose the former…but for me singing opera, listening to opera, participating in opera in any way, even as an audience member is opening yourself to its message:  Love.  Now that is the sexiest and most invigorating thing on earth.

Let’s keep wishing for someone who feels that way to come and save this company that has been a staple of the arts in NYC.

NYC Opera Website

Listen Live to the Met Opera Broadcast of “The Nose”: Sat, Sept 28th at 12:55pm

The Nose 2

Click here to listen live

CAST

ConductorValery Gergiev 
Police InspectorAndrey Popov 
The NoseAlexander Lewis 
KovalyovPaulo Szot

The Nose 1

THE PRODUCTION TEAM

Production: William Kentridge 
Stage Directors:  William Kentridge, Luc De Wit 
Set Designers: William Kentridge, Sabine Theunissen 
Costume Designer:  Greta Goiris 
Video Compositor and Editor: Catherine Meyburgh 
Lighting Designer: Urs Schönebaum

The Nose

 

OPERACHAT LIVE: The Nose – Join Now! (LIVE Try Relay: the free SMS and picture text app for iPhone.)