Talking with singers: Giorgio Caoduro

Talking with singers: Giorgio Caoduro

"I fell in love right away for the voices, especially the low voices. I remember like it was yesterday: 'I want to become a baritone or a bass and I want to sing in big opera houses!' Little did I know that in very few years I’d begin studying and making my professional debut. This year I will actually celebrate my 20th year of career."

Jenna Simeonov - Feb 13, 2020
Wild, untamable strangeness: Alice's Adventures Under Ground

Wild, untamable strangeness: Alice's Adventures Under Ground

Clocking in at about 55 minutes, this bit-sized, child-friendly opera is perfect for a family outing. It’s outrageous, laugh-out-loud humour can be enjoyed by all ages. There is no doubt that Barry has created a masterpiece of modern opera. His frenetic, ambitious writing does not feel overly academic or unapproachable; there is a slightly wild and surprising nature to his music which immerses the listener into the world that McDonald has created onstage.

Alessia Naccarato - Feb 13, 2020
Martínez creates an empowered Cio-Cio San at Lyric Opera of Chicago

Martínez creates an empowered Cio-Cio San at Lyric Opera of Chicago

Puccini’s Madama Butterfly hardly needs any introduction, being one of the top 10 operas performed yearly in both the U.S. and Europe. The story of a young geisha jilted by a selfish, predatory American naval officer has gripped audiences since the first decade of the 20th-century, as has Puccini’s masterful score.

Michael Pecak - Feb 11, 2020
Virtuosic vocals reign supreme in Opera Omaha's Abduction

Virtuosic vocals reign supreme in Opera Omaha's Abduction

Opera Omaha’s production of The Abduction from the Seraglio brings vintage nightclub glam to Mozart’s beloved comedic Singspiel. The audience gets to enjoy the playful plot without all the dated humor and Turkish stereotypes that came with the original opera setting, a choice that allowed the virtuosic vocals to reign supreme.

Meghan Klinkenborg - Feb 11, 2020
#2021COC

#2021COC

There's beauty in the Canadian Opera Company's freshly-announced 2020/21 season. It's symmetrical; there are three revivals - pretty recent-history ones, too - and three Interesting Productions. Of course, there are interesting things about each production, but the three new items on the season line-up have a special sort of intrigue.

Jenna Simeonov - Feb 11, 2020
Transcendent music & uneven staging in HGO's Aida

Transcendent music & uneven staging in HGO's Aida

Throughout the production, one could see many of these geometric shapes infiltrating the scene at many different points. Characters maneuver around them and discuss plans in their shadow. This rendered the Act III trio somewhat difficult to follow if you were seated on one of the sides of the theatre, given the lines of sight.

Andrew Schneider - Feb 9, 2020
A feast for the eyes in the COC's new Hansel and Gretel

A feast for the eyes in the COC's new Hansel and Gretel

A wild visual ride from start to finish, it's great lighter fare to warm you up in the winter. I really appreciated the gestures (blunt as they were) to the fact that this started as traditionally holiday fare in Europe, yet didn't feel out of place a month after Twelfth Night.

Greg Finney - Feb 8, 2020
Surprisingly political Marriage of Figaro a bubbly delight

Surprisingly political Marriage of Figaro a bubbly delight

The sum of all its parts coalesced into an evening that was immensely fun for the whole audience, and even got surprisingly political in the way Beaumarchais meant. Perhaps some of the orchestral playing was shaky in spots, but otherwise this production had barely a blemish on it anywhere. It is Le nozze di Figaro at its finest, and it was a comedic romp that is one for the ages, as far as this opera goes.

Arturo Fernandez - Feb 8, 2020
A handful of the Met's Porgy and Bess

A handful of the Met's Porgy and Bess

Even with Gershwin's best intentions in demanding that this opera only ever be produced with an all-black cast, it is nonetheless apparent that this was and is an opera written for the white gaze. Be it the cringe-inducing libretto, the caricatured depiction of Southern accents (both white and black), the depiction of the hyper-saturation of religion in black communities (on and on with talk of the "promised land") and the gross exaggeration of Bess as the quintessential portrait of semper femina.

Michael Zarathus-Cook - Feb 4, 2020
Chronicle of Nine a slow-building triumph

Chronicle of Nine a slow-building triumph

The music, while still adhering to some trappings of the medieval stylings, began to explore outside the bounds of its medieval stylings in order to do something new. The libretto, already full of pathos for its subject, finally found its stride as far as moving the plot at a good clip.

Arturo Fernandez - Feb 3, 2020

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