MISSION
We are here to encourage the development of gifted young singers and to stimulate the growth of New York City's invaluable chamber opera companies. But we will not neglect the Metropolitan Opera either. Get ready for bouquets and brickbats.
Showing posts with label Felicia Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Felicia Moore. Show all posts
Saturday, November 17, 2018
A CLOSE SHAVE, A NOT-SO-ILL WIND, AND SOME GLITTERY GAIETY
Friday, November 16, 2018
GETTIN' MESSIE
Thursday, November 8, 2018
OPERA INDEX RECITAL
Friday, May 18, 2018
KISSED BY EUTERPE
Thursday, May 3, 2018
THE DON AND THREE COMPLEX WOMEN
Friday, March 23, 2018
HONORED BY JUILLIARD
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Chris Reynolds and Natalia Kutateladze |
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Chris Reynolds and Felicia Moore |
Last night we attended the Juilliard Vocal Arts Honors Recital at Alice Tully Hall. Voice teachers nominate singers to audition for this honor and the competition is keen. One of the judges happened to be Jennifer Zetlan, a Juilliard alumna whom we just reviewed last night in On Site Opera's Morning Star.
Each singer chose her own program and both were accompanied by the talented collaborative pianist Chris Reynolds.
The ravishing mezzo-soprano Natalia Kutateladze opened her half of the program with a chanson by Jules Massenet; The text by Louis Pierre Gabriel Bernard Morel-Retz, entitled "Amoureuses" was highly romantic and Ms. Kutateladze performed it in perfect French with spot-on phrasing.
A set of songs by Tchaikovsky showed how they sound at their very best, sung by someone so comfortable in the language that the songs are more inhabited than performed. Although we do not speak or understand Russian, we were able to appreciate the marvelous marriage of music and text.
"None but the Lonely Heart" is a setting of a Russian translation of Goethe's text "Nur wer die sehnsucht kennt" from Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre, a text so potent that it appealed to a list of composers longer than the text. We mostly know it as one of the Mignon songs.
"Was I Not a Blade of Grass in the Field?" struck us with the sadness of a young woman married off to a man she does not love. She compares herself to a blade of grass that was mowed down.
Tolstoy's text "Amidst the Din of the Ball" motivated Tchaikovsky to write a most marvelous and memorable melody. A man sees a woman at a ball and thinks he has fallen in love with her.
With all that gorgeous melody, we still think the Pushkin text "Don't Sing to Me, My Beauty" is our favorite Russian song. Rachmaninoff gave it a haunting melody that could make anyone homesick. Each and every one of these Russian songs was sung with artistry and deep emotional commitment.
The final set on the program comprised Manuel de Falla's Siete canciones populares españolas. The advantage for us was that we understand Spanish and thus were able to appreciate Ms. Kutateladze's skill for word coloration and the creation of a mood. We adore this cycle, the first song of which gives us an ironic metaphor for men's negative attitude towards women's sexual expression. "El Paño Moruno" describes a cloth that has lost its value because of a stain.
The same judgmental attitude appears in "Seguidilla murciana", only this time the metaphor is a coin that has passed from hand to hand so much that it has become blurry and no one will accept it!
"Asturiana" is a song of deep sorrow and the search for consolation in nature, whereas "Nana" is a tender lullaby. "Canción" tells of lost love in a mournful way, whilst "Polo" tells of lost love in an angry bitter way.
It was a revelation to hear Ms. Kutateladze create the right mood for each song and to color each important word in a way that extracted every ounce of significance. With her gorgeous instrument, vital stage presence, intense involvement, and consummate musicianship, this is an artist to watch, one destined for stardom. Watch for her in the upcoming Juilliard Opera next month.
Soprano Felicia Moore walks onstage with such presence that one knows in advance that one is in for a treat. Of course, having heard her many times before, we have advance knowledge. We can tell when a singer loves to sing!
One doesn't get enough Sibelius at song recitals so we were happy that Ms. Moore decided to invest so much energy into learning to sing in Swedish. From Five Songs, Op. 37, she sang one we'd never heard "Soluppgång", and two we know and love.
"Flickan kom ifrån sin älsklings mote" tells of a girl who hides the signs of a lovers' meeting from her mother until she suffers from her lover's abandonment. "Var det en dröm" is a song of nostalgia in which the poet recalls his lost love as a dream. Ms. Moore invested each song with depth and meaning.
Her gleaming instrument was put to good use in songs from Wagner's Wesendonck Lieder. We particularly loved the way collaborative pianist Chris Reynolds created a meditative mood for "Im Treibhaus" in which Wesendonck uses the metaphor of plants in a hothouse to represent the feelings of someone who is far from their homeland. We speculated that she herself was away from home but we were wrong. She was German through and through.
In "Stehe still!", Mr. Reynolds hands created the pianistic equivalent of a perpetual motion machine, indicating the rushing of time. Ms. Moore responded in beautiful partnership. By the fourth verse, things have calmed down and both artists responded with lyricism to the concept of souls sinking into each other.
"Traume" recreates the evanescent world of dreams in a highly poetic way and gave Ms. Moore another opportunity to create a sound world of delicacy.
Her program ended with selections from Aaron Copland's Twelve Poems of Emily Dickinson. We confess to no great love for poet or composer, which didn't stop us from appreciating Ms. Moore's superb performance. There were little touches that lent a high degree of artistry such as the enhanced vibrato on the final word of "Nature, the Gentlest Mother" and the way she left the final note of "The Chariot" hanging in the air.
The cutest song was the most timely--"Dear March, Come In!" a cute sentiment that made us want to like Dickinson more than we do. It is just a fact that each of us has his/her taste and ours leans toward any language but English and any period prior to (but including) Richard Strauss!
That being said, Copland wrote some very interesting figures for the piano part of "Nature, the Gentlest Mother", and Mr. Reynolds' smashing piano technique and interpretive artistry brought them out.
Like nearly all the singers coming out of Juilliard Vocal Arts Department, Ms. Moore evinces those Juilliard qualities--presence, dramatic skills, expressive vocal technique, fine phrasing, and linguistic skills. There must be something in the water!
(c) meche kroop
Saturday, January 27, 2018
MAESTRO YANNICK NÉZET-SÉGUIN'S MASTER CLASS AT JUILLIARD
Thursday, November 30, 2017
ANOTHER JUILLIARD LIEDERABEND
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
POLISHING THE GEMS
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
JOYCEEEEEEE
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
KATYA KABANOVA AT JUILLIARD
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
JUILLIARD DOES MOZART
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Bass Alex Rosen, Tenor Matthew Swensen, Mezzo-soprano Kelsey Lauritano, and Soprano Julia Wolcott |
Sunday, March 3, 2013
GEORGE LONDON FOUNDATION AWARDS
Competitions are stressful for the applicants and also for the witnesses. We hear someone who connects with the material and with us; we want so badly for that singer to win a top prize. Should the distinguished judges agree with us, we feel vindicated in our superb taste; if they overlook our favorites we ache for that person whose excellence was only minimally rewarded.
No one could have overlooked baritone Nicholas Pallesen whose "È sogno? O realtà?" from Verdi's Falstaff was as superb vocally as it was dramatically. Mr. Pallesen won an Encouragement Award last year and we were happy to see him "promoted". Likewise, tenor Dominic Armstrong, who won an Encouragement Award in 2008, blew us away with his mad scene from Britten's Peter Grimes. His tenorial vibrato and his acting chops were highly affecting. Baritone Jamez McCorkle, only 24 years old, evinced a fine French and admirable phrasing in "Avant de quitter ces lieux" from Gounod's Faust. Tenor Noah Baetge had a lovely quality in "Walter's Preislied" from Wagner's Die Meistersinger, and is well-remembered from his appearance last year when he was an Encouragement Winner.
On the distaff side, the big winners were three: soprano Jessica Muirhead, who sang "Non mi dir" from Mozart's Don Giovanni with some lovely sounds in her upper register; soprano Felicia Moore who used her expansive instrument well in "Einsam in trüben Tagen" from Wagner's Lohengrin; and soprano Marcy Stonikas who used her large voice to animate "In questa Regggia" from Puccini's Turandot.
In the category of the $1000 awards, a curious event occurred. Two singers won for the same song! Soprano Shirin Eskandani and mezzo Rihab Chiaeb, both Canadians, sang "Parto, parto ma tu ben mio" from Mozart's La Clemenza di Tito, giving the audience a golden opportunity to hear the same aria sung by a different voice type. Marina Costa-Jackson won with her "Stridono Lassù" from Leoncavallo's Pagliacci; there was some thrilling resonance and brilliant tone that made us want to fly with her.
Male winners in the $1000 category were baritone John Brancy who sang "Pierrot's Tanzlied" from Korngold's Die Tote Stadt with superb phrasing and German diction and a mature sound that belies his 24 years. "Look! Through the port..." from Britten's Billy Budd was given a compelling performance by baritone Jonathan Michie, who seems to be on his way to becoming a Britten specialist, having excelled in Albert Herring at the Santa Fe Opera. Another baritone, Steven LaBrie, performed admirably in Silvio's aria ("E fra quest' ansie") from Leoncavallo's Pagliacci And finally, tenor Adam Bonanni sang "Una Furtiva Lagrima" from Donizetti's L'Elisir d'Amore, showing a fine command of dynamics.
We were thrilled for all the winners but a bit disappointed that some fine performances received only Honorable Mention. We particularly enjoyed soprano Deanna Breiwick's charming "En proie a la tristesse" from Rossini's frivolous Le Comte Ory and soprano Miriam Khalil's "Si mi chiamano Mimi" from Puccini's La Bohème. And bass Ben Wager's delivery of "Aleko's Cavatina" from Rachmaninoff's Aleko made us yearn to hear the entire opera.
In sum, it was a thrilling afternoon and we hope to hear more from these gifted young artists. Major props to The George London Foundation for helping advance their careers, a goal we share and support. And much gratitude to Linda Hall for her fine consistent accompaniment.
(c) meche kroop
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