From Phindie: "You don’t have to like classical music, but you have to like beer,” sings a lonely bassoon player..."
And from Philly.com: "One of those wonderful Fringe surprises: a show running only two nights with the unprepossessing title, SPEED DATING TONIGHT! turns out to be so good in such unexpected and charming ways."
Michael Ching's blog, pondering music, opera, and where and how it fits in, particularly in the regions. Lots of helpful links down the righthand side.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Speed Dating Tonight! goes to Seattle
SDT! goes to Seattle.
Directed and produced by tenor Robert McPherson.
It plays in Seattle September 17-21.
The details are here.
Thursday, September 4, 2014
Speed Dating Tonight! plays Philly
Best wishes to Poor Richard's Opera on their production of SPEED DATING TONIGHT! which plays tonight and next week at two different bars in Philadelphia part of the Philly fringe. Lots of detail here. It is the first production to play in actual bars. Another production on the west coast to announce shortly.
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
MIDSUMMER recording is out!
I will post reviews and blogs about it--good, bad, and indifferent. The first two have been great, from Frank Oteri at NewMusicBox and Iowa Public Radio's Barney Sherman. I made a little tour of the first of the two CD set over at SoundCloud.
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM, opera a cappella about to be released on Albany Records
The official release date is August 12th. Here's a sampler of excerpts on Soundcloud. It has selections performed by Kent Fleshman, Kristin Vienneau, Jeremiah Johnson, Emily Bodkin, Heather Jenkins, John Dooley, Charles Ponder, and Jennifer Goode Cooper.
I
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Speed Dating Tonight! in Pittsburgh
It was a pleasure to run down to Pittsburgh to see Microscopic Opera's clever and fun production of SPEED DATING TONIGHT! They produced the show in the garden of a private home and all the audience members were given dating numbers and rotating table numbers as they came in. Cast members mingled with the crowd prior to the show so it was hard to tell who was performing and who was coming to watch. The new orchestration (clarinet/flute, vibraphone/percussion, piano, bass) worked well.
Up til now, productions have been in traditional theaters or recital halls. But this fall, Poor Richard's Opera will put the show on in a couple of bars in Philadelphia.
Tuesday, June 3, 2014
TOSCA in Buffalo
TOSCA is coming up in Buffalo at Nickel City Opera. It is such a pleasure to revisit Puccini's robust and complex score.
Sunday, May 4, 2014
And beyond: 17 solo shows in 5 days
Spent last week in Southeastern Kansas participating in a humanities program based at Coffeyville Community College. Opera is great fun, but its collaborative nature is both a blessing and a curse. Performing songs--some of which you wrote--by yourself with your own gear, although a bit of a pain, is very much a chance to succeed or fail on your own merits. Miss a note? Lose the audience's attention? Nobody to blame but yourself. Get'em singing along or wishing you'd come back--take all the credit and enjoy it.
Some of the highlights of the seventeen performances for a high school, the community college, and a bunch of retirement homes:
* lady in a special care unit who shouted "That's me--I don't get around much anymore," after I played that Ellington tune.
* Staffer who said "That's my husband" when I did one of my own about guys obsessed with power tools.
* 99 year old man who said he played the Hawaiian Steel Guitar.
* Teens who responded to a writing exercise based on by Guthrie's "Ain't gonna be treated this way" and wrote "School lunch is too healthy and too small," or "I'm tired of dealing with haterz everyday."
* Folks who couldn't talk anymore, but you could still tell were enjoying it by the look in their eyes.
* Man at my last gig who came up with tears in his eyes, game me a hug, and insisted on giving me a tip.
And now back to TOSCA and THE BALLAD OF BABY DOE.
Sunday, March 23, 2014
A Visit to Tennessee, but not Memphis or Nashville
This week, I'm going to Crossville, Tennessee. A friend and soprano colleague, Brenda Frye, has gotten me involved in a celebration at Uplands Village, a unique retirement community there. They have commissioned a choral setting of a poem by James Clark. It will be part of a big concert. The poem, "The Call" has a section that goes:
Come up higher, Come up higher.
From the lowlands and the mire,
From the mists of earth's desire,
From the vain pursuit of pelf,
From the attitude of self,
Come up higher, Come up higher.
Pelf? I didn't know what that meant... Money. Dishonorable gains. Anyway, the setting gives the many residents and audience a chance to sing in the piece, with a line separate from the onstage choir. A big sing-a-long! Crossville is also home to the amazing Cumberland County Playhouse.
Oh, and if you're in North Carolina, go see GIANNI SCHICCHI and my BUOSO'S GHOST on the 28th and 29th at UNC-Chapel Hill.
Come up higher, Come up higher.
From the lowlands and the mire,
From the mists of earth's desire,
From the vain pursuit of pelf,
From the attitude of self,
Come up higher, Come up higher.
Pelf? I didn't know what that meant... Money. Dishonorable gains. Anyway, the setting gives the many residents and audience a chance to sing in the piece, with a line separate from the onstage choir. A big sing-a-long! Crossville is also home to the amazing Cumberland County Playhouse.
Oh, and if you're in North Carolina, go see GIANNI SCHICCHI and my BUOSO'S GHOST on the 28th and 29th at UNC-Chapel Hill.
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Amarillo opening of SPEED DATING TONIGHT!
Thanks to David O'Dell and Amarillo Opera for giving Dean Anthony and I the chance to do the second production of SPEED DATING TONIGHT! Over twenty singers participated--everyone who auditioned got a part. Some voice types and genders were changed from the first production. A small and effective cut was introduced and the position of the Coordinator's song was changed for the better. Dean changed some of the order of the show from the first production. The show plays well in Chamber Music Amarillo's space in the Fibonacci Building. Thanks to Tim Winn, Amarillo Opera is making their usual high quality video of the show for a delayed broadcast.
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