Verdi Songs

Iím told that, if an auditioning singerís repertoire includes a Verdi piece, the auditors will very likely choose to hear it, because singing Verdi well requires the full catalogue of skills: musical exactness, dynamic range, breath control, sensitive phrasing, the ability to provide a variety of colors in the voice, and, if possible, a large enough personality to truly fill out whichever character is being portrayed.

VERDI: Macbeth

VERDI: Macbeth, melodramma in quattro parti.

Music composed by Giuseppe Verdi. Libretto by Francesco Maria Piave, based on the play by William Shakespeare.

Falsetto castrati enjoyed rock-star status

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2005-11-19T153753Z_01_MOL956231_RTRUKOC_0_UK-ARTS-CASTRATI.xml&archived=False

Mastered Mozart, Preached Janacek, Schmoozed Shostakovich

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/20/arts/music/20whit.html

DELIBES: LakmÈ

I have to admit it: this is the first time I ever listened to the complete version of this early Decca-issue of 1952 (though some sources say it was recorded one year earlier).

KRENEK: Lieder

While I was listening to this recording of Krenekís song cycles Durch die Nacht (op. 67) and Ges‰nge des sp‰ten Jahres (op. 71), I started to think about art and memory.

GLASS: Orion

I first became acquainted with Glassís music when Lyric Opera of Chicago staged his Satyagraha in the 1980s. Having grown up on a small-town Midwestern diet of Beethoven sonatas and Broadway musicals, I was blown away by his vision of Mahatma Gandhi.

Heroic Tenors

A happy feature of the King CD is the booklet in German and English: at least 7 pages full of information on the tenor. Then there is the pristine sound of the recordings. Though there is no mention of a concert source Iím fairly sure all the pieces (always followed by generous applause), are derived from the famous M¸nchner Sonntag Konzerte.

Puccini’s Western almost golden

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/features/lifestyle/sfl-mu19fanciullanov19,0,2276928.story?coll=sfla-features-headlines

The Star It Was Made For Returns to Opera at the Met

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/19/arts/music/19dess.html