Jul. 8th, 2006

Champagne!

Jul. 8th, 2006 01:15 am
pallas_athena: (Default)
The first concert of Fledermaus went well! The hall was packed, the atmosphere was actually vaguely sparkling, and nothing major went wrong. Owing to translation confusion, I did have to use the score-- but I managed not to look at it much. And all the other principals were holding scores too, so it wasn't a big deal.

After the performance I caught up with a university friend I hadn't seen in years, a lovely girl named Karen who flies for BA. In one of those bizarre twists of fate, she'd come to the show to see her ex-boyfriend sing the tenor part of Alfredo. Anyway, she's looking well and she's just made captain! Go Karen!

Meanwhile, I'm savouring the feeling of being an employed singer for the next 24 hours. Let's just enjoy this moment, shall we? Mmmmmmmmmm....

Champagne!

Jul. 8th, 2006 01:15 am
pallas_athena: (Default)
The first concert of Fledermaus went well! The hall was packed, the atmosphere was actually vaguely sparkling, and nothing major went wrong. Owing to translation confusion, I did have to use the score-- but I managed not to look at it much. And all the other principals were holding scores too, so it wasn't a big deal.

After the performance I caught up with a university friend I hadn't seen in years, a lovely girl named Karen who flies for BA. In one of those bizarre twists of fate, she'd come to the show to see her ex-boyfriend sing the tenor part of Alfredo. Anyway, she's looking well and she's just made captain! Go Karen!

Meanwhile, I'm savouring the feeling of being an employed singer for the next 24 hours. Let's just enjoy this moment, shall we? Mmmmmmmmmm....
pallas_athena: (Default)
It's really not a good week for classical music. Luciano Pavarotti's just been operated on for pancreatic cancer. His outlook sounds optimistic, so let's hope for the best.

The recording of Verdi's Rigoletto with Pavarotti, Joan Sutherland and Sherrill Milnes was one of the first opera recordings I bought. It was a box of cassettes-- that's how long ago it was. It's an oldish recording, so the singers are in their prime, and Pavarotti's Duke is just amazing-- he sounds like liquid fire. Listening to that Rigoletto helped get me into opera.

From the Washington Post article:
"There are in effect two Pavarottis. One of them is a great artist -- an ineffably musical lyric tenor whose voice suggested all the sun and sweetness in the world. The other is an overblown media attraction who sang through heavy amplification at football stadiums, lip-synced to his own recordings in concert, lolled lazily through mundane pop songs and generally did as a little work as possible for some of the largest paychecks in the history of classical music. [...]

"Even well past his 60th birthday, he retained the most sheerly beautiful tenor voice since that of the late Jussi Bjoerling, who died in 1960. And on those occasions when Pavarotti throws himself wholeheartedly into a role -- knowing every note, thinking about the music, attending all the rehearsals, working closely and sympathetically with his colleagues, shepherding his resources for the long haul -- there is nobody else like him."


Sounds like they're writing his obituary already, doesn't it?
pallas_athena: (Default)
It's really not a good week for classical music. Luciano Pavarotti's just been operated on for pancreatic cancer. His outlook sounds optimistic, so let's hope for the best.

The recording of Verdi's Rigoletto with Pavarotti, Joan Sutherland and Sherrill Milnes was one of the first opera recordings I bought. It was a box of cassettes-- that's how long ago it was. It's an oldish recording, so the singers are in their prime, and Pavarotti's Duke is just amazing-- he sounds like liquid fire. Listening to that Rigoletto helped get me into opera.

From the Washington Post article:
"There are in effect two Pavarottis. One of them is a great artist -- an ineffably musical lyric tenor whose voice suggested all the sun and sweetness in the world. The other is an overblown media attraction who sang through heavy amplification at football stadiums, lip-synced to his own recordings in concert, lolled lazily through mundane pop songs and generally did as a little work as possible for some of the largest paychecks in the history of classical music. [...]

"Even well past his 60th birthday, he retained the most sheerly beautiful tenor voice since that of the late Jussi Bjoerling, who died in 1960. And on those occasions when Pavarotti throws himself wholeheartedly into a role -- knowing every note, thinking about the music, attending all the rehearsals, working closely and sympathetically with his colleagues, shepherding his resources for the long haul -- there is nobody else like him."


Sounds like they're writing his obituary already, doesn't it?
pallas_athena: (Default)
Blueyonder have put up my latest column, about pirates!

Anyone seen the new Pirates of the Caribbean yet? What did you think?
pallas_athena: (Default)
Blueyonder have put up my latest column, about pirates!

Anyone seen the new Pirates of the Caribbean yet? What did you think?

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