Tag: Jessye Norman

  • Remembering John Aler American Tenor

    Remembering John Aler American Tenor

    I am sorry to learn that the American tenor John Aler has died. Aler appeared with major orchestras and performed in some of the world’s great opera houses. A notable exception was the Met, whose gargantuan hall he regarded as unsuited to his leggiero voice.

    I heard him in person once, when he came to Philadelphia back in 1986, to participate in a series of concerts of Berlioz’s 90-minute symphony-of-sorts “Roméo et Juliette,” with Riccardo Muti conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Westminster Choir. Rounding out the triumvirate of soloists were Jessye Norman and Simon Estes. Happily, everyone reconvened at Memorial Hall in Fairmount Park to record the piece for EMI. If I remember correctly, there is a poster from this very series of concerts adorning the stairwell of Westminster Choir College’s Bristol Chapel in Princeton.

    Aler made some fine recordings: he was recognized with four Grammy Awards, including those for Best Vocal Soloist Performance and Best Classical Album (both for Berlioz’s Requiem) in 1986, Best Opera Recording (Handel’s “Semele”) in 1994, and Best Classical Album (Bartok’s “The Wooden Prince” and “Cantata Profana”) also in 1994.

    Certainly these were impressive achievements, and by no means isolated peaks in his discography. However, Aler makes it clear in a conversation with Bruce Duffie (linked below) that while recordings are a great resource, they are no substitute for the real thing.

    “…[T]here is nothing like being in a performance,” he says. “There’s no recording, there is no television, there is nothing like being in that hall, even when you listen to it on the radio, or when you hear a tape of it. Hearing it you think, well gee, that was great but gosh I’d have loved to have been there. I’ll never forget how really sad I felt when I heard a tape of a great performance of Turandot from San Francisco from ’70-something with Pavarotti and Caballé. It’s some of the greatest singing I’ve ever heard. As great as that tape was, I wanted to be there! That’s the exciting thing about music, about art really. I went to see the Monet exhibit at the Baltimore Museum of Art recently. We’re so used to seeing these images on posters, on postage stamps, on mugs, God, they’re everywhere! But when you go and actually see the paintings, it’s just really staggering; it’s incredible. It’s so important because it makes you remember that the work is the thing, no matter how many reproductions are made and how many calendars you pin up on your wall. You think it is pretty, but it’s not! The real thing is primarily stunning, and that’s what a great performance is.”

    Aler died on Saturday at the age of 73. R.I.P.


    “Where’er you walk” from Handel’s “Semele”

    From Rameau’s “Les Boreades”

    In duet with Mariana Cioromila (Cioromila died in June)

    From Adolphe Adam’s, “Le Postillon de Lonjumeau”

    Vaughan Williams (“On Wenlock Edge”), Bach, and Schumann

    “The Green-Eyed Dragon” by Charles Wolsely & Greatrex Newman, from a fun album called “Songs We Forgot to Remember”

    A conversation with Bruce Duffie

    http://www.bruceduffie.com/aler.html

  • Remembering Jessye Norman

    Remembering Jessye Norman

    PLAYING RIGHT NOW: Jessye Norman’s lush rendering of Ernest Chausson’s “Poème de l’amour et de la mer” (“Poem of Love and the Sea”). It’s the first of multiple performances we’ll be sharing to celebrate the late soprano, who died yesterday at the age of 74. Coming up between now and 4:00, we’ll also hear her beloved recording of Richard Strauss’ “Four Last Songs.”

    In addition, we’ll remember pianist Paul Badura-Skoda and hornist Myron Bloom, whom we also lost within the past few days.

    David Osenberg will have some Norman bonuses, some Mahler and some spirituals, later on this afternoon.

    Jessye is the voice of choice, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Remembering Jessye Norman Her Superpowers

    Remembering Jessye Norman Her Superpowers

    We all know that Jessye Norman had superpowers, but does anyone else remember her actually foiling a crime? It’s on the cusp of memory, something that happened within the past decade or so (unfortunately too recent to be within my wheelhouse), but I just can’t find anything right now, doing an internet search, beyond her countless obituaries. Norman, of course, died yesterday at the age of 74.

    This afternoon on The Classical Network, we’ll celebrate this great soprano’s artistry through a number of her recordings, including – to coincide with the Jewish High Holidays – Maurice Ravel’s “Deux mélodies hébraïques.”

    For variety’s sake, we’ll also enjoy performances by pianist Paul Badura-Skoda and hornist Myron Bloom, both of whom also died within the past several days.

    Norman’s voice was powerful yet creamy, at once opulent and seductive. She never made an ugly sound. I was lucky enough to hear her live a couple of times with the Philadelphia Orchestra, back in the 1980s. It seems as if I have the uncanny ability to remember everything from 30 years ago (that’s MY superpower), but I can’t remember what happened last week.

    In particular, her performance of Berlioz’s “Les nuits d’été” (“Summer Nights”), part of an all-Berlioz evening I attended at the height of my Berlioz mania, was exquisite. And boy, did she have presence.

    Her recordings are presents I can’t wait to share.

    First, on today’s Noontime Concert, we’ll have something completely different. We’ll travel the Silk Road from China to Spain with the Eurasia Consort in a program titled “On the Road through Dunhuang: Music from the Dunhuang Caves, the Ottoman Empire, and Medieval Spain.”

    The concert was recorded on January 3, 2018, at St. Bartholomew’s Church, 325 Park Avenue, in New York City. Free Midtown Concerts are held at St. Bart’s every Thursday at 1:15 p.m.

    Today’s broadcast is another made possible in part by Gotham Early Music Scene, or GEMS. GEMS is a non-profit corporation that supports and promotes artists and organizations in New York devoted to Early Music. For more information and a complete events calendar, visit gemsy.org.

    It’s all silk and velvet this afternoon. Prepare yourself for another Norman conquest, from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT (with more to follow with David Osenberg, from 4 to 7 p.m.), on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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