Drown out your hangover with Wagner

Drown out your hangover with Wagner

However you spent your last hours of 2015, it's an unwritten rule that the first day of the new year should be spent on a couch, either recovering from the past or preparing for the future. What better way to get swept up and distracted than with Wagner's Ring Cycle? You can get started with this video playlist of the complete Der Ring des Nibelungen, directed by Patrice Chéreau and conducted by Pierre Boulez at the Bayerische Staatsoper in 1980.

Jenna Simeonov - Jan 1, 2016
10 student opera productions to catch this winter

10 student opera productions to catch this winter

We've already set you up with 2016's big-gun opera picks across Canada, but the New Year brings even more opportunities to hear today's emerging artists onstage. We've compiled 10 student opera productions to catch in Canada and the United States, and the variety of opera, traditional and contemporary, is pretty exciting.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 30, 2015
Spotlight on: Jeremy Bowes

Spotlight on: Jeremy Bowes

"The singing world is rich with possibility, and it needs every part of the machine to fire in order to succeed. That said, do not blend in, for heaven’s sake. Ruffle some feathers! If I hear tisking from one end of a panel, and see ear to ear smiles from another, I know I am on the right track."

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 30, 2015
9 ways to fend off a Canadian winter

9 ways to fend off a Canadian winter

After all the food is cleared away, the bottles recycled, and once the days of the week start to mean something again, it's time to get back to real life. For us, real life means going to see lots and lots of shows. It's hard to bundle up in the dead of winter and brave the cold for a few hours of music, but we hope to convince you of some of our cold weather picks across Canada to kick off 2016.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 29, 2015
Good ideas: rehearsal-as-performance

Good ideas: rehearsal-as-performance

For those involved in the creation of opera, we know that there's a less-glamourous method of reaching that finished product; so, we're able to experience the joy of watching a singer achieve something we watched her struggle to do, or admire how things like set, costume, and lighting design can turn a regular old opera scene into utter magic.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 29, 2015
5 times Handel got weird

5 times Handel got weird

There's something about Handel's operas that seems to lend a particularly blank slate to directors. Some of the wackiest takes on opera by the most Regie of the "concept" directors happen in Baroque opera, and Handel's works get their fair share. That's not to say that none of these ideas work well, but they sure can be weird.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 29, 2015
Who are our comprimarias, & why aren't they funnier?

Who are our comprimarias, & why aren't they funnier?

I have a sneaking suspicion that labels like "Charaktersopran" or "Charaktermezzosopran", as pure equivalents to *comprimario* tenors or *buffo* basses, are slightly off-putting to women. It may be because the available supporting roles for women seem too serious, or too important to the plot, to be "downsized" with the "character" classification.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 28, 2015
Gems: who wins "Wälse"?

Gems: who wins "Wälse"?

Today's find is oddly satisfying. Opera-loving YouTuber rexeterna posted this compilation of ten Heldentenors, each singing the infamous "Wälse! Wälse!" cry from Act I of Wagner's Die Walküre. My vote is Vickers (go Canada), but Lauritz Melchior wins for sheer duration.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 28, 2015
The Ghost of Christmas Carols Past

The Ghost of Christmas Carols Past

People listen to substantially different music at Christmas than during the rest of the year. How different? Consider the information I found in this article in Time, listing the 19 most recorded holiday songs since 1978 (the earliest data they had). Those songs were, on average, around 164 years old, and the newest was 65 years old. They were basically a bunch of older religious songs, and a few secular ones composed around the 1940’s.

Rich Coburn - Dec 26, 2015
Seriously sung Christmas carols

Seriously sung Christmas carols

Merry Christmas, readers! This week marks the obligatory Christmas-type post, where our attention goes to snow, pretty lights, overindulgence, and Christmas songs. Love them or hate them, you can always count on opera singers to melt the heart strings with their opera-sized carolling. Happy holidays to all of you, and enjoy the schmaltz.

Jenna Simeonov - Dec 22, 2015

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