Tag: Opera

  • Donizetti Birthday Opera Swordfight!

    Donizetti Birthday Opera Swordfight!

    More swordfights in opera, please!

    On Gaetano Donizetti’s 225th birthday, here’s Mario Filippeschi as Edgardo in “Lucia di Lammermoor,” taking on multiple opponents with ease. He even pushes over a candelabra.

    It all starts with “Chi mi frena”:

    The film adaptation was made in 1946. On this particular print (likely transferred from video), the soundtrack is a little out of alignment. A minor distraction. Why is it not available on DVD?

    Put this guy in a room with Errol Flynn and Stewart Granger!

    Here’s the complete film, a little darker, but not as fuzzy. The clip above starts around 1 hour and 1 minute in.

    There are no subtitles, unfortunately. But isn’t it about time you brushed up on your Italian, anyway?

    Buon compleanno, Donizetti!

  • My Mom’s Unlikely Love of Classical Music

    My Mom’s Unlikely Love of Classical Music

    My mother was not, strictly speaking, “musical.” She played no instrument, and her record collection was full of Carole King, Carly Simon, Barbra Streisand, James Taylor, and Stevie Wonder. But she was encouraging, and she exposed my sister and me to a broad array of stimuli. She did pretty well for someone who got married right out of high school to a man who could have stepped out of an Elia Kazan movie. But she was into painting and crafts and told me she mooned over a poster of Rudolf Nureyev that hung in her room when she was a teen. And when it came to her children, of course, she was very, very supportive.

    When I latched onto classical music in the wake of “Star Wars,” around the age of 11, she encouraged me to build my record collection. Had she only known how successful she was. With no children of my own, I wonder who will be interested in my 10,000+ records and CDs! We attended piano recitals and string quartet concerts at the local college and at the town theater. I scribbled furiously through many of these, as music filled my head with plentiful images and ideas for stories. And she saw to it that I got piano lessons. Yet somehow, for all my enthusiasm, I never heard a live symphony orchestra until after I left for college.

    My parents weren’t really classical music people, especially my stepfather. They got me out of school several times a year, usually on a Friday, so that we could spend the day or get a start on a weekend in New York City, but generally we would wind up catching a Broadway show. We hit the museums too, and caught the occasional foreign film, and we all read a lot, but that was about the extent of our “culture.” Once or twice a week, my parents would hit the disco. There was a Village People 8-track in the car (eventually stolen by an NYC parking lot attendant). My folks were great about letting me put on John Williams or the “Eroica” Symphony on our trips in to the city, my mom at the wheel and my stepdad reading the sports page in The Daily News. They would switch seats before we got to the Lincoln Tunnel.

    One of things that was great about my mother was that she always aspired to better herself. And she wanted the same for us. Hence, I was enrolled in Little League, intramural basketball, tennis, Cub Scouts, and Community Art League, none of which I really cared for.

    When I went to college, she too went back to school. She was enthusiastic about her music appreciation class, among other things, and I helped direct her listening. I was close to home, and would often be there on the weekends and always on holidays. I would be sent to the mall to pick up inexpensive recordings for her latest assignment. For Christmas or birthdays, she would be interested in a Baroque cassette for the car, or some Sousa marches to keep her energy up her while she jogged. Later, an opera highlights disc was a big hit.

    Of course, she repaid these gestures a thousand-fold. My birthdays and Christmases were full of opera and orchestra recordings. One memorable Easter, there were some Vivaldi LPs propped up next to my Easter basket. I hasten to add, I got Easter candy until I was about 40! She was particularly fond of the Vivaldi Guitar Concerto in D. A later Christmas brought me my first Ring Cycle. Now that I think about it, I had taken “Die Walküre” out of the community college library when my mom was taking courses there when I was a teen. I was too young for it to catch me by the throat yet. Gilbert & Sullivan was more my speed. My mom used to accompany me to the excellent Muhlenberg College summer productions of G&S too.

    During my stint as an intern with the Opera Company of Philadelphia, my parents dropped by for a couple of acts at the dress rehearsal of “The Marriage of Figaro.” They got to see me standing in the wings of the Academy of Music with my headset. They claimed never to have been to an opera before. Strictly speaking, I know that wasn’t the case, because we had attended a production of “Carmen” once at the local community college, but it was with piano. Granted, not the full opera experience! The only time we ever attended a full opera together was for a threadbare production of Boito’s “Mefistofele” at New York City Opera, by then a pale reflection of what it had been when Samuel Ramey was the reigning Dark Lord. How I wish she had gotten to attend the Met.

    My mother died 15 years ago today. She was only 59 years-old. Hard to believe she would have been 74 now. Her death was sudden and there was probably no pain. We had a very good relationship, so I have no regrets on that count. It’s only when I think that we could have had maybe another 30 years together that I feel as if I’ve been robbed. And with the erosion of that early support system I enjoyed when I was a kid, between my parents and my grandparents and my aunts and uncles, as my elders die or fade into dementia or become different people, I feel a curious sense of drifting unmoored.

    But I’ll always have those bittersweet memories of a largely happy, if not always ideal childhood. I was very, very lucky to have had my mother’s love to shield me and to guide me through a sometimes confusing, often rocky start.

    Thanks for everything, Mom. You were a woman of remarkable kindness and patience. I miss you very much.

  • Night of the Living Dead Opera A Zombified Review

    Night of the Living Dead Opera A Zombified Review

    Because you asked for it: “Night of the Living Dead”… THE OPERA.

    The composer is Todd Goodman and the librettist Stephen Catanzarite, adapting from the screenplay by John Russo and George A. Romero.

    Act I

    Act II

    The opera is sung in English, but there are no subtitles. I don’t think there’s any mistaking the action or most of the words. Still, I’m not going to discourage you from refamiliarizing yourself with “the ‘Citizen Kane’ of zombie movies.” The film is in the public domain, so it’s available for free streaming everywhere. There’s a pretty good transfer of it on the “Night of the Living Dead” Wikipedia page.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Night_of_the_Living_Dead

    Go ahead and gorge yourself on opera and offal. And don’t forget, Roy and I will discuss this undying classic on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, when we livestream (or “Dead”-stream, as it were) on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, tonight at 7:30 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

  • Verdi’s Aida Birthday and a Hater’s Refund

    Verdi’s Aida Birthday and a Hater’s Refund

    Today is the birthday of Giuseppe Verdi – Italian for “Joe Green.”

    One of his most famous works, of course, is that grandest of grand operas, “Aida.” Its first staging in Cairo in 1871 included a dozen pachyderms and fifteen camels into the bargain. A dramatic spectacle of star-crossed love in Ancient Egypt, it created a sensation among the opening night audience of dignitaries, politicians, and critics.

    Verdi himself did not attend the premiere and disliked the fact that the performance was not open to the general public. He was much happier when it was presented for the Italian people on his native soil.

    Of course, anyone who’s ever dealt with the public understands that no success is unalloyed.

    One day Verdi received a letter, by way of his publisher, from a dissatisfied customer by the name of Prospero Bertani. Bertani had traveled to Parma to attend a production of “Aida” in 1872.

    Bertani confided to the composer, “I admired the scenery… I listened with pleasure to the excellent singers, and took pains to let nothing escape me. After it was over, I asked myself whether I was satisfied. The answer was ‘no’.”

    In fact, he disliked “Aida” so much, he felt compelled to sit through it a second time, just to make sure he wasn’t missing something.

    The letter continues, “The opera contains absolutely nothing thrilling or electrifying. If it were not for the magnificent scenery, the audience would not sit through it.”

    Bertani went on to include the cost of admission, travel expenses, and the price of his meals, and demanded a full refund from the composer.

    This amused Verdi. After a moment’s reflection, he instructed his publisher to reimburse Bertani, but not to pay for his meals. Verdi responded, “…To pay for his dinner too? No! He could very well have eaten at home!”

    Happy birthday, Mean Joe Green.


    No elephants in this “Aida,” but certainly plenty of spectacle

  • Romero’s Zombies & Offenbach’s Opera

    Romero’s Zombies & Offenbach’s Opera

    I just love the fact that the father of the modern zombie movie was inspired at the age 11 or 12 by Jacques Offenbach’s “The Tales of Hoffmann!”

    George A. Romero, the animating force behind “Night of the Living Dead,” pays tribute to Powell-Pressburger’s bizarre masterpiece at the link. This is the same team that refined nightmare fuel with “The Red Shoes.”

    Offenbach was a cello virtuoso who made his fortune as a hugely-successful composer of operetta. He wrote something like 100 of them, including “Orpheus in the Underworld,” which gave us this leggy earworm:

    His only opera, “The Tales of Hoffmann,” is his magnum opus. Unfortunately, by the time it was accepted for performance at Paris’ Opéra-Comique, the composer was already in his grave. In fact, he died with the manuscript in his hand, only four months before the work’s premiere.

    Debussy noted that the musical establishment of the day had difficulty coping with Offenbach’s sense of irony. Offenbach would no doubt have appreciated the fact that, like one of Romero’s zombies, he was, in a sense, reanimated after death. “The Tales of Hoffmann” has not been out of the repertoire since its premiere in 1881.

    Happy birthday, Jacques Offenbach!

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