Tag: Opera

  • Boheme Opera NJ Celebrates 30 Years with Aida

    Boheme Opera NJ Celebrates 30 Years with Aida

    Boheme Opera NJ will celebrate its 30th anniversary with two performances of Verdi’s “Aida” at The College of New Jersey, this Friday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m.

    Joseph and Sandra Pucciatti staged their first production – a skeletal performance of “I Pagliacci” – in a Trenton parking lot, back in 1981. From this unlikely acorn sprang central New Jersey’s most enduring opera company, which gave its first main stage performance in 1989.

    Opera is a colorful business. Read all about the Pucciattis’ incredible journey, from “Hey! Let’s put on a show!” to the Radamès’ triumphal march, in my article in this week’s U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo, out today.

    https://princetoninfo.com/boheme-opera-celebrates-30-with-triumphal-march/


    PHOTO: Marsha Thompson will head the cast in this weekend’s “Aida”

  • Gianni Schicchi From Opera Hero to Hellbound?

    Gianni Schicchi From Opera Hero to Hellbound?

    Here’s Gianni Schicchi as you’ve never seen him before.

    (Under)worlds away from Giacomo Puccini’s quick-witted, charming scapegrace, the Schicchi of Dante’s “Inferno” is condemned to hell for the very reason we cheer him in the opera – for impersonating Buoso Donati, in whose guise he alters Donati’s will, much to his own advantage.

    Of course, Dante’s wife happened to be a descendant of Donati, so you might say he had something of an axe to grind. Also, the celebrated poet being of noble ancestry, he would have had been predisposed to finding the peasant Schicchi’s behavior reprehensible.

    What would Lauretta think of her “babbino caro” now?


    Schicchi exhibiting some downright vampiric tendencies in William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s “Dante and Virgil,” 1850

  • Kiri Te Kanawa Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    Kiri Te Kanawa Birthday Celebration on WWFM

    We’ll begin on a high note this afternoon on The Classical Network.

    Today is the 75th birthday of soprano Kiri Te Kanawa. We’ll listen to some of Dame Kiri’s great recordings as part of an all-operatic 4:00 hour. We’ll also celebrate the birthdays today of bass-baritone Norman Treigle and opera conductors Sarah Caldwell and Julius Rudel. In addition, we’ll continue our remembrance of the late Andre Previn, as he leads some orchestral selections from the operas of Benjamin Britten.

    The 5:00 hour will bring recordings of conductors Kiril Kondrashin and Lorin Maazel, also born on this date.

    And at 6:00, we’ll hear one of Franz Schubert’s late masterpieces, the String Quintet in C major, on the next “Music from Marlboro.”

    Frankly, my dear, we give a Dame, from 4 to 6 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Dominick Argento A Remembrance

    Dominick Argento A Remembrance

    American composer Dominick Argento died on February 20 at the age of 91. Acclaimed particularly for his vocal works, Argento was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music for his song cycle, “From the Diary of Virginia Woolf,” in 1975. This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” I’ll offer a remembrance of the man and his achievements.

    Argento was born in York, PA, to Sicilian immigrant parents, who were inn-keepers and restaurateurs. However, it was in the Twin Cities that he would flourish. He became a professor of music at the University of Minnesota and one of the founders of what is now Minnesota Opera.

    He was recognized as a master of modern opera, the most significant American operatic composer between Gian Carlo Menotti in the 1950s and Philip Glass in the 1970s. His success is all the more remarkable, considering Argento spent virtually his entire career very far away from the artistic centers on either coast.

    Largely self-taught as a child, he was accepted into the Peabody Conservatory, after service in WWII. There, among his teachers, were Nicolas Nabokov and Hugo Weisgall. Later, he continued his studies with Luigi Dallapiccola in Florence. Howard Hanson, Bernard Rogers, and Alan Hovhaness were also important mentors. Argento received his doctorate from the Eastman School in 1958. He then moved to Minneapolis, where he lived for the next six decades, summering in Florence with his wife, the soprano Carolyn Bailey.

    In Minneapolis, he worked closely with the newly-formed Guthrie Theatre. His local successes attracted national nation and led to commissions from major opera houses from all over the country. His song cycles were championed by some of the great singers, including Frederica von Stade, Janet Baker, and Håkon Hågegard. “Casa Guidi,” a song cycle on texts of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, was recorded by Von Stade and received a Grammy Award in 2004 for Best Contemporary Classical Composition.

    Beginning in the early ‘70s, Argento also devoted himself to choral music, in large part because of his association with Philip Brunelle and the Plymouth Music Series of Minneapolis’ Plymouth Congregational Church.

    In common with Benjamin Britten, Argento’s musical language could be, on occasion, a little quirky, yet always he strove for accessibility. Among his own students were Libby Larsen and Stephen Paulus.

    We’ll hear music from one of his 14 operas, “The Dream of Valentino,” from 1993. Accordionist William Schimmel will strut and slither in “Valentino Dances.”

    That will be followed by “Six Elizabethan Songs” from 1958. Originally scored for voice and piano, it was subsequently arranged by the composer in 1962 for voice and Baroque ensemble. The added colors of flute, oboe, violin, cello, and harpsichord lend the work a kind of refracted authenticity, conjuring a loosely apposite sound world to the individual texts by Thomas Nash, Samuel Daniel, William Shakespeare, Henry Constable, and Ben Johnson. The performance will be by Patrice Michaels and the Rembrandt Chamber Players.

    Finally, Argento was composer laureate of the Minnesota Orchestra, having been commissioned to write no less than seven works for the ensemble. We’ll hear “A Ring of Time,” conceived for the 1972-73 season, the orchestra’s 70th anniversary. Argento considers different measurements of the passage of time – the seasons of the year and the times of the day – in the work’s four movements: “Spring,” “Summer,” “Fall,” and “Winter.” The Minnesota Orchestra will be conducted by Eiji Oue.

    Time has passed for Domenick Argento. I hope you’ll join me for an hour of musical remembrances on “Argento Mementos,” this Sunday night at 10:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Dominick Argento Pulitzer-Winning Composer Dies

    Dominick Argento Pulitzer-Winning Composer Dies

    The American composer Dominick Argento has died.

    Argento, who won the Pulitzer Prize for his song cycle “From the Diary of Virginia Woolf” in 1975, is remembered principally for his 14 operas, including “Postcard from Morocco,” “The Voyage of Edgar Allan Poe,” “Miss Havisham’s Fire,” “Casanova’s Homecoming,” “The Aspern Papers,” and “The Dream of Valentino.”

    Another song cycle, “Casa Guidi,” on texts of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, received a Grammy Award in 2004 for Best Contemporary Classical Composition.

    Though he was born in York, PA, to Sicilian immigrant parents, he flourished in Minneapolis, where he was a professor of music at the University of Minnesota and one of the founders of what is now Minnesota Opera.

    Argento died yesterday at the age of 91.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/dominick-argento-composer-who-was-a-modern-master-of-opera-dies-at-91/2019/02/21/909b7f90-35f3-11e9-854a-7a14d7fec96a_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.70a41204924f

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