Tag: Cantanti Project

  • The Cantanti Project: Far and Near

    United-Palace-Theatre-6

    Above: the grand foyer of The United Palace of Cultural Arts

    ~ Author: Oberon

    Monday June 25th, 2018 – The Cantanti Project, an enterprising collective of young singers headed by Artistic Director Joyce Yin, brought a truly enjoyable program of live music to Northern Manhattan this evening. In the fantastical lobby of the United Palace of Cultural Arts at 4140 Broadway, eight singers and an expert pianist performed operatic numbers, songs – both classical and contemporary – and tunes from the Broadway stages. That all the vocalists were women transformed the evening into a celebration of feminine pride and empowerment; when they joined for the finale – Go The Distance from Alan Menken’s HERCULES – they were really inspiring.

    The United Palace originally opened as the Loew’s 175th Street Theatre in 1930; it was an ornate vaudeville house and movie theatre. In 1969, when many of the city’s grand movie theaters were slated for demolition, the United Palace of Spiritual Arts (formerly known as United Christian Evangelistic Association) took over the property.

    I’d never been to this Palace before, but the foyer struck me an incredible ready-made setting for opera; the MAGIC FLUTE came immediately to mind, and dozens of operas from the Baroque era would look right at home there. For tonight, a grand piano had been rolled out and comfortable seating arranged in the space so that the performance seemed intimate even in such a grandiose setting. The acoustics are superb for singing: no mikes needed, thank you very much. 

    William Lewis accompanied the singers throughout the program; his playing was both supportive of the voices and very attractive in its own right.

    Mr. Lewis opened the evening with the rhapsodic introduction to the Canzone di Doretta from Puccini’s LA RONDINE; this familiar aria was then taken up by soprano Rebecca Richardson, her big-lyric voice sounding vibrantly in the space. Joyce Yin’s If I Loved You from CAROUSEL profited well through her clear diction, pretty tone, and sincere delivery. Jane Hoffman and Brittany Fowler made a nice vocal blend in the enchanting Flower Duet from LAKME by Léo Delibes; with Mr. Lewis’s lovely support, they created a charming, sisterly atmosphere.

    The distinctive voice of Tara Gruszkiewicz transformed the Aaron Copland arrangement of At The River into an almost operatic experience; her fine diction and magisterial delivery made for a winning performance. Another intriguing voice and personality, that of Aumna Iqbal, made her first appearance of the evening with Robert Schumann’s Wanderung to which she brought a dramatic lilt. Ms. Iqbal, who made such a great impression as Orfeo the the Cantanti Project’s production of Caccini’s EURIDICE earlier this year, had her arm in a sling this evening…but it didn’t hamper her singing.

    Rebecca Richardson returned for Joaquin Rodrigo’s De Ronda – an all-too-short song. Mary Kathryn Monday’s Seguidilla from CARMEN was characterful, wherein she played with the dynamics to make an enticing effect. Lee Hoiby’s The Serpent has a wonderful rhythmic start; Ms. Yin sang the song with plenty of zest, moving thru the vocalise passages to a big, sustained high note at the end. 

    With the all-female line-up of singers tonight, it was only fitting that songs by female composers should be featured. The first of these was Consuelo Velázquez‘s Besame Mucho, the voices of Tara Gruszkiewicz and Mary Kathryn Monday filling the seductive melody with nicely contrasting timbres and skillfully-managed vibratos. Jane Hoffman sang Eva dell’Acqua‘s lovely Villanelle with its coloratura vocalise passages and showy cadenzas. We don’t hear Amy Beach‘s music often enough these days; Ms. Hoffman offered Beach’s beautiful I Send My Heart To Thee which reaches a passionate climax before subsiding to a pensive ending. Brittany Fowler chose Fanny Mendelssohn‘s Nachtwanderer which seems like a quietly rapturous waltz into which a dramatic mid-section is introduced.

    Mr. Lewis’s arrangement of the traditional song Shenandoah suited Brittany Fowler well, showing off her depth of tone and commitment. The Evening Prayer from HANSEL & GRETEL benefited from an appealing blend of voices: the sweetly lyrical Angela Dixon and the steadfast, poetic Aumna Iqbal. Ms. Monday then gave an expansive and pleasing rendering of Build My House from Bernstein’s PETER PAN.

    To Dvořák’s poignant Als die alte Mutter, Ms. Gruszkiewicz brought an Olde World duskiness of timbre that was quite haunting. In Home, from Alan Menken’s BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, Ms. Iqbal’s dramatic, songful performance marked her out as a singer with something to say. 

    Mr. Lewis’s arrangement of Harold Arlen’s Somewhere Over the Rainbow is one of the best versions of that classic song I have ever heard; Ms. Richardson and Ms. Yin meshed their voices to captivating effect, finishing with a rising, harmonized passage that recalls the last phrase of Sophie and Octavian’s final duet in DER ROSENKAVALIER.

    Then came the ensemble-finale, Go the Distance, with the women soloing and duetting along the way to a concerted finish. I admit that seeing the ‘musical theatre’ pieces listed on the program gave me pause, but they ended up being some of the highlights of the evening.

    ~ Oberon

  • Cantanti Project’s EURIDICE: Gallery

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_16

    A gallery of images from the Cantanti Project‘s recent production of Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE. The photos are by Lucas Godlewski of LGod Photography. Read about the performance here, and about a rehearsal that I got to watch here.  

    Often referred to as “the first opera”, Caccini’s EURIDICE is a take on the classic story of Orfeo, the mythic singer who descends to the Underworld to rescue his beloved Euridice. Caccini gives us a happy ending: a triumph of love over death.

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_1

    La Tragedia: Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_2

    Euridice as bride-to-be: Joyce Yin

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_3

    Nymphs: Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_5

    Tom Corbeil

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_7

    Bachelors cavort before the story turns dark: Aumna Iqbal, Michael Celentano, Marques Hollie

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_8

    Dafne (Elyse Kakacek) brings news of Euridice’s death

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_11

    Daniela DiPasquale and Elyse Kakacek

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_14

    Lamenting the death of Euridice: Marques Hollie, Tom Corbeil, Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_15

    Marques Hollie

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_18

    Laura Mitchell (Arcetro) with Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_22

    Urging Orfeo to seek Euridice in the Underworld: Elyse Kakacek, Aumna Iqbal, Brittany Fowler, Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_24

    Brittany Fowler as Venere

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_40_preview

    Lydia Dahling as Prosperina

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_25

    Aumna Iqbal as Orfeo

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_29

    Friends reunited

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_31

    Lovers reunited: Aumna Iqbal and Joyce Yin

    All photos by Lucas Godlewski/LGod Photography.

  • Cantanti Project’s EURIDICE: Gallery

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_16

    A gallery of images from the Cantanti Project‘s recent production of Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE. The photos are by Lucas Godlewski of LGod Photography. Read about the performance here, and about a rehearsal that I got to watch here.  

    Often referred to as “the first opera”, Caccini’s EURIDICE is a take on the classic story of Orfeo, the mythic singer who descends to the Underworld to rescue his beloved Euridice. Caccini gives us a happy ending: a triumph of love over death.

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_1

    La Tragedia: Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_2

    Euridice as bride-to-be: Joyce Yin

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_3

    Nymphs: Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_5

    Tom Corbeil

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_7

    Bachelors cavort before the story turns dark: Aumna Iqbal, Michael Celentano, Marques Hollie

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_8

    Dafne (Elyse Kakacek) brings news of Euridice’s death

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_11

    Daniela DiPasquale and Elyse Kakacek

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_14

    Lamenting the death of Euridice: Marques Hollie, Tom Corbeil, Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_15

    Marques Hollie

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_18

    Laura Mitchell (Arcetro) with Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_22

    Urging Orfeo to seek Euridice in the Underworld: Elyse Kakacek, Aumna Iqbal, Brittany Fowler, Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_24

    Brittany Fowler as Venere

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_40_preview

    Lydia Dahling as Prosperina

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_25

    Aumna Iqbal as Orfeo

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_29

    Friends reunited

    Euridice by Cantanti @ NYC_Rush Selects-web_31

    Lovers reunited: Aumna Iqbal and Joyce Yin

    All photos by Lucas Godlewski/LGod Photography.

  • Cantanti Project: Caccini’s EURIDICE

    Caccini
    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday February 23rd, 2018 – Taking us back to the very beginnings of opera – back to where it all began – the Cantanti Project bring us a rare opportunity to experience Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE. Last Autumn, when I first read of these performances, I knew I would want to be there.

    In 1600, Jacopo Peri had written an opera to Ottavio Rinuccini’s libretto based on the story of Orfeo and Euridice; but Peri’s opera has not yet been published when Giulio Caccini took up the same libretto, and his setting of it was performed at the Pitti Palace, Florence, on December 5, 1602. Thus Caccini’s EURIDICE is often referred to as ‘the first opera’.

    Joyce Yin, soprano and Artistic Director of the Cantanti Project, kindly arranged for me to watch a rehearsal of EURIDICE a week prior to the performances. This was a great introduction to the opera, and provided me with an opportunity to get a handle on who’s who in the cast.

    The performance took place in the ‘white box’ studio of the Alchemical Studios on West 14th Street. This long and rather narrow space was well-utilized, with seating along the walls on either side, the musicians of Dorian Baroque tucked into one corner, and the singers making the most of the central playing area.

    Director Bea Goodwin’s savvy – and often touching – stage direction told the story clearly, with elements of dance woven in and all the characters vividly drawn. Stylized gestural language was beautifully rendered, especially in the scene where Orfeo pleads with Pluto to restore Euridice to life. Alexandria Hoffman’s simple and elegant Grecian-tunic costuming – all white – and the lighting design by Michael Celentano and Emma Clarkson enhanced the performance at every turn. The audience – wonderfully silent and attentive – were clearly taken with the entire presentation.

    Let me first praise the excellent quartet of musicians whose contribution to the performance’s success was vital. Dylan Sauerwald – conducting from the harpsichord – was joined by Paul Holmes Morton (theorbo), John Mark Rozendaal (viola da gamba), and Christa Patton (harp). Their instruments are beautiful, and beautifully played, giving a timeless feeling to the music. Caccini’s EURIDICE may be four centuries old, but tonight is seemed fresh and new.

    Aside from Orfeo and Euridice, the cast all do double-duty; each singer has an assigned name-role whilst doubling as nymphs and shepherds. Where to begin with the singers? At the beginning: as La Tragedia, Fiona Gillespie Jackson’s sweet, clear soprano drew us in to the story and the musical style with her lovely rendering of the Prologue. Her words – and the assignment of this music to a melodious soprano rather than a darker contralto – foretell a happy ending, despite intervening trials and sorrows.

    Joyce Yin’s lyrical and well-projected soprano, and the youthful joy of her portrayal, were just right for Euridice. At times called upon to dance, Ms. Yin took that in stride as well. Her radiant happiness a being reunited with Orfeo was lovely to behold. As Orfeo, the tall and slender Aumna Iqbal combined authoritative acting with a distinctive voice; she was thoroughly at home in the recitativo style, shading her words and colouring the tone with impressive command. As a relaxed bridegroom-to-be, Orfeo at first carouses with friends and makes a ribald reference to his wedding night. Then, Ms. Iqbal consummately caught the character’s descent from light-heartedness to despair when news of his Euridice’s demise arrives.

    As Dafne, the bearer of those sad tidings, soprano Elyse Kakacek excelled. Her vocalism combined clarity of tone with depth of feeling, and her facial expressions told of the grief her message cost her. An intrinsic sense of hesitancy in her presentation made clear her reluctance to tell the tale of Euridice’s fate. Later, though, as his friends urged Orfeo to seek his beloved in Hades, Mr. Kakacek circled the space in authentic dance moves, exhorting everyone to optimism and the hope of a happy resolution. 

    As Venere, goddess of Love, Brittany Fowler’s striking presence and commanding singing made her the perfect advocate for Orfeo at Pluto’s court. Tall and austere, Tom Corbeil as Pluto seemed thoroughly implacable at first, his singing powerful and his stature intimidating. Lydia Dahling, as Prosperina, surprisingly takes Orfeo’s side in the debate, her singing warm of tone yet urgent. Michael Celentano and Marques Hollie, with contrasting tenor voices, are Charon and Radamanto in this key scene, wherein Ms. Iqbal was superb. These are the opera’s most powerful moments, with Orfeo supplicating himself before Pluto to beg for Euridice’s return. The characters’ varying gestures of supplication, implacability, and intercession were done with authority: engrossing staging, very well-played.

    Mr. Hollie’s power and wide-range were utilized when – as Amyntas – he sought to reassure his friends that Orfeo had indeed been successful in his bid to regain his beloved and that the couple would soon appear among them again. Mr. Celentano’s lyrical sound was pleasing to hear in his interjections as the story moved to its resolution.  

    Two singers who particularly intrigued me were Laura Mitchell (Arcetro) and Sarah Lin Yoder (Nymph). Ms. Mitchell’s attractive singing was made the more ingratiating thru her lovely use of piano and her nuanced delivery of the words. Ms. Yoder, a unique beauty, displayed a voice of natural power and expressiveness.  

    Aside from the scene in the Underworld, another vignette in the opera which made a particularly strong impression on me occurred as the assembled nymphs and shepherds knelt in a circle to mourn Euridice’s death. Handsomely lit, this passage calls for finely-harmonized ensemble singing interspersed with solo lines. The blend of voices was really enchanting, both here and at the opera’s happy end. 

    ~ Oberon

  • Cantanti Project: Caccini’s EURIDICE

    Caccini
    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday February 23rd, 2018 – Taking us back to the very beginnings of opera – back to where it all began – the Cantanti Project bring us a rare opportunity to experience Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE. Last Autumn, when I first read of these performances, I knew I would want to be there.

    In 1600, Jacopo Peri had written an opera to Ottavio Rinuccini’s libretto based on the story of Orfeo and Euridice; but Peri’s opera has not yet been published when Giulio Caccini took up the same libretto, and his setting of it was performed at the Pitti Palace, Florence, on December 5, 1602. Thus Caccini’s EURIDICE is often referred to as ‘the first opera’.

    Joyce Yin, soprano and Artistic Director of the Cantanti Project, kindly arranged for me to watch a rehearsal of EURIDICE a week prior to the performances. This was a great introduction to the opera, and provided me with an opportunity to get a handle on who’s who in the cast.

    The performance took place in the ‘white box’ studio of the Alchemical Studios on West 14th Street. This long and rather narrow space was well-utilized, with seating along the walls on either side, the musicians of Dorian Baroque tucked into one corner, and the singers making the most of the central playing area.

    Director Bea Goodwin’s savvy – and often touching – stage direction told the story clearly, with elements of dance woven in and all the characters vividly drawn. Stylized gestural language was beautifully rendered, especially in the scene where Orfeo pleads with Pluto to restore Euridice to life. Alexandria Hoffman’s simple and elegant Grecian-tunic costuming – all white – and the lighting design by Michael Celentano and Emma Clarkson enhanced the performance at every turn. The audience – wonderfully silent and attentive – were clearly taken with the entire presentation.

    Let me first praise the excellent quartet of musicians whose contribution to the performance’s success was vital. Dylan Sauerwald – conducting from the harpsichord – was joined by Paul Holmes Morton (theorbo), John Mark Rozendaal (viola da gamba), and Christa Patton (harp). Their instruments are beautiful, and beautifully played, giving a timeless feeling to the music. Caccini’s EURIDICE may be four centuries old, but tonight is seemed fresh and new.

    Aside from Orfeo and Euridice, the cast all do double-duty; each singer has an assigned name-role whilst doubling as nymphs and shepherds. Where to begin with the singers? At the beginning: as La Tragedia, Fiona Gillespie Jackson’s sweet, clear soprano drew us in to the story and the musical style with her lovely rendering of the Prologue. Her words – and the assignment of this music to a melodious soprano rather than a darker contralto – foretell a happy ending, despite intervening trials and sorrows.

    Joyce Yin’s lyrical and well-projected soprano, and the youthful joy of her portrayal, were just right for Euridice. At times called upon to dance, Ms. Yin took that in stride as well. Her radiant happiness a being reunited with Orfeo was lovely to behold. As Orfeo, the tall and slender Aumna Iqbal combined authoritative acting with a distinctive voice; she was thoroughly at home in the recitativo style, shading her words and colouring the tone with impressive command. As a relaxed bridegroom-to-be, Orfeo at first carouses with friends and makes a ribald reference to his wedding night. Then, Ms. Iqbal consummately caught the character’s descent from light-heartedness to despair when news of his Euridice’s demise arrives.

    As Dafne, the bearer of those sad tidings, soprano Elyse Kakacek excelled. Her vocalism combined clarity of tone with depth of feeling, and her facial expressions told of the grief her message cost her. An intrinsic sense of hesitancy in her presentation made clear her reluctance to tell the tale of Euridice’s fate. Later, though, as his friends urged Orfeo to seek his beloved in Hades, Mr. Kakacek circled the space in authentic dance moves, exhorting everyone to optimism and the hope of a happy resolution. 

    As Venere, goddess of Love, Brittany Fowler’s striking presence and commanding singing made her the perfect advocate for Orfeo at Pluto’s court. Tall and austere, Tom Corbeil as Pluto seemed thoroughly implacable at first, his singing powerful and his stature intimidating. Lydia Dahling, as Prosperina, surprisingly takes Orfeo’s side in the debate, her singing warm of tone yet urgent. Michael Celentano and Marques Hollie, with contrasting tenor voices, are Charon and Radamanto in this key scene, wherein Ms. Iqbal was superb. These are the opera’s most powerful moments, with Orfeo supplicating himself before Pluto to beg for Euridice’s return. The characters’ varying gestures of supplication, implacability, and intercession were done with authority: engrossing staging, very well-played.

    Mr. Hollie’s power and wide-range were utilized when – as Amyntas – he sought to reassure his friends that Orfeo had indeed been successful in his bid to regain his beloved and that the couple would soon appear among them again. Mr. Celentano’s lyrical sound was pleasing to hear in his interjections as the story moved to its resolution.  

    Two singers who particularly intrigued me were Laura Mitchell (Arcetro) and Sarah Lin Yoder (Nymph). Ms. Mitchell’s attractive singing was made the more ingratiating thru her lovely use of piano and her nuanced delivery of the words. Ms. Yoder, a unique beauty, displayed a voice of natural power and expressiveness.  

    Aside from the scene in the Underworld, another vignette in the opera which made a particularly strong impression on me occurred as the assembled nymphs and shepherds knelt in a circle to mourn Euridice’s death. Handsomely lit, this passage calls for finely-harmonized ensemble singing interspersed with solo lines. The blend of voices was really enchanting, both here and at the opera’s happy end. 

    ~ Oberon

  • Rehearsal: Cantanti Project’s EURIDICE

    6Q5A0845

    Above: love triumphant as Euridice (Joyce Yin) and Orfeo (Aumna Iqbal) are reunited, to the delight of the nymphs. Photo by Travis Magee from a studio rehearsal of the Cantanti Project‘s production of Caccini’s EURIDICE

    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday February 16th, 2018 – This evening, photographer Travis Magee and I stopped in at a rehearsal for the Cantanti Project‘s upcoming performances of Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE.

    The earliest opera for which a complete score survives, this work is being presented by the singer-driven ensemble of the Cantanti Project on Februaryical Studios,104 West 14th Street, here in New York City. For tickets, click here. Once on the order page, apply this discount code when ordering: EURIDICE5OFF. This code gives the user $5 off per ticket when two or more tickets are purchased. 

    Giulio Caccini got the upper hand on his rival composer, Jacopo Peri – who had already written his own EURIDICE in 1600, but hadn’t gotten it published – by hurriedly preparing his own setting of Ottavio Rinuccini’s libretto and getting it published six weeks before Peri’s version appeared. Caccini’s EURIDICE was first performed at the Pitti Palace, Florence, on December 5th, 1602.

    Conducted by Dylan Sauerwald, with musicians from Dorian Baroque, the production is directed by Bea (Brittány) Goodwin, with costumes by Alexandria Hoffman. The singers are Michael Celentano, Tom Corbeil, Lydia Dahling, Daniela DiPasquale, Brittany Fowler, Marques Hollie, Aumna Iqbal, Fiona Gillespie Jackson, Elyse Anne Kakacek, Laura Mitchell, Joyce Yin, and Sara Lin Yoder.

    In Caccini’s setting of the immortal myth of the singer Orfeo, the hero descends to the underworld and pleads with Pluto for the return of his beloved Euridice, who has perished after having been bitten by a snake. Pluto’s wife, Prosperina, takes Orfeo’s side and persuades her husband to restore Euridice to life. Unlike the Gluck opera, where Orfeo fails to obey the command not to look at Euridice until they have left the realm of the dead – with dire consequences – in the Caccini setting the lovers return safely to their friends for a happy ending.

    28236569_10213913655168608_1635880759_n

    The Muse of Tragedy (Fiona Gillespie Jackson) sings the Prologue

    6Q5A0447

    Euridice (Joyce Yin) receives flowers from her friends

    6Q5A0485

    Nymph and shepherd (above, Lydia Dahling and Marques Hollie)

    6Q5A0567

    Orfeo (Aumna Iqbal) on the lookout for his beloved Euridice, who has wandered off

    6Q5A0651

    Daphne (Elyse Kakacek) reveals the sad news of Euridice’s death

    6Q5A0644

    The nymphs lament the fate of Euridice

    6Q5A0641

    Sara Lin Yoder and Tom Corbeil

    6Q5A0661

    Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    6Q5A0665

    Daniela DiPasquale and Elyse Kakacek

    6Q5A0700

    Arcetro (Laura Mitchell) urges Orfeo to pursue Euridice in the underworld

    6Q5A0734

    Elyse Kakacek and Brittany Fowler encourage Orfeo (Aumma Iqbal)

    6Q5A0747

    Brittany Fowler

    6Q5A0744

    Orfeo’s resolve (Aumna Iqbal)

    6Q5A0766

    Supplication: Orfeo (Ms. Iqbal) implores Prosperina (Lydia Dahling), Pluto (Tom Corbeil), and Charon (Michael Celentano) to return Euridice to him

    6Q5A0793

    Pluto (Tom Corbeil) accedes to Orfeo’s pleas

    6Q5A0803

    Euridice (Joyce Yin) lives again

    6Q5A0834

    Amyntas (Marques Hollie) assures the nymphs and shepherds that Euridice will soon be back among them

    6Q5A0836

    Her friends await Euridice’s return: Lydia Dahling, Tom Corbeil, Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

    6Q5A0854

    Sisterhood: Lydia Dahling, Elyse Kakacek, Brittany Fowler, Fiona Gillespie Jackson, Daniela DiPasquale, and Laura Mitchell

    6Q5A0887

    The opera’s happy end: Aumna Iqbal and Joyce Yin

    All photography by Travis Magee.

    ~ Oberon

  • Rehearsal: Cantanti Project’s EURIDICE

    6Q5A0845

    Above: love triumphant as Euridice (Joyce Yin) and Orfeo (Aumna Iqbal) are reunited, to the delight of the nymphs. Photo by Travis Magee from a studio rehearsal of the Cantanti Project‘s production of Caccini’s EURIDICE

    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday February 16th, 2018 – This evening, photographer Travis Magee and I stopped in at a rehearsal for the Cantanti Project‘s upcoming performances of Giulio Caccini’s EURIDICE.

    The earliest opera for which a complete score survives, this work is being presented by the singer-driven ensemble of the Cantanti Project on Februaryical Studios,104 West 14th Street, here in New York City. For tickets, click here. Once on the order page, apply this discount code when ordering: EURIDICE5OFF. This code gives the user $5 off per ticket when two or more tickets are purchased. 

    Giulio Caccini got the upper hand on his rival composer, Jacopo Peri – who had already written his own EURIDICE in 1600, but hadn’t gotten it published – by hurriedly preparing his own setting of Ottavio Rinuccini’s libretto and getting it published six weeks before Peri’s version appeared. Caccini’s EURIDICE was first performed at the Pitti Palace, Florence, on December 5th, 1602.

    Conducted by Dylan Sauerwald, with musicians from Dorian Baroque, the production is directed by Bea (Brittány) Goodwin, with costumes by Alexandria Hoffman. The singers are Michael Celentano, Tom Corbeil, Lydia Dahling, Daniela DiPasquale, Brittany Fowler, Marques Hollie, Aumna Iqbal, Fiona Gillespie Jackson, Elyse Anne Kakacek, Laura Mitchell, Joyce Yin, and Sara Lin Yoder.

    In Caccini’s setting of the immortal myth of the singer Orfeo, the hero descends to the underworld and pleads with Pluto for the return of his beloved Euridice, who has perished after having been bitten by a snake. Pluto’s wife, Prosperina, takes Orfeo’s side and persuades her husband to restore Euridice to life. Unlike the Gluck opera, where Orfeo fails to obey the command not to look at Euridice until they have left the realm of the dead – with dire consequences – in the Caccini setting the lovers return safely to their friends for a happy ending.

    28236569_10213913655168608_1635880759_n

    The Muse of Tragedy (Fiona Gillespie Jackson) sings the Prologue

    6Q5A0447

    Euridice (Joyce Yin) receives flowers from her friends

    6Q5A0485

    Nymph and shepherd (above, Lydia Dahling and Marques Hollie)

    6Q5A0567

    Orfeo (Aumna Iqbal) on the lookout for his beloved Euridice, who has wandered off

    6Q5A0651

    Daphne (Elyse Kakacek) reveals the sad news of Euridice’s death

    6Q5A0644

    The nymphs lament the fate of Euridice

    6Q5A0641

    Sara Lin Yoder and Tom Corbeil

    6Q5A0661

    Fiona Gillespie Jackson

    6Q5A0665

    Daniela DiPasquale and Elyse Kakacek

    6Q5A0700

    Arcetro (Laura Mitchell) urges Orfeo to pursue Euridice in the underworld

    6Q5A0734

    Elyse Kakacek and Brittany Fowler encourage Orfeo (Aumma Iqbal)

    6Q5A0747

    Brittany Fowler

    6Q5A0744

    Orfeo’s resolve (Aumna Iqbal)

    6Q5A0766

    Supplication: Orfeo (Ms. Iqbal) implores Prosperina (Lydia Dahling), Pluto (Tom Corbeil), and Charon (Michael Celentano) to return Euridice to him

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    Pluto (Tom Corbeil) accedes to Orfeo’s pleas

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    Euridice (Joyce Yin) lives again

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    Amyntas (Marques Hollie) assures the nymphs and shepherds that Euridice will soon be back among them

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    Her friends await Euridice’s return: Lydia Dahling, Tom Corbeil, Brittany Fowler, Sara Lin Yoder

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    Sisterhood: Lydia Dahling, Elyse Kakacek, Brittany Fowler, Fiona Gillespie Jackson, Daniela DiPasquale, and Laura Mitchell

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    The opera’s happy end: Aumna Iqbal and Joyce Yin

    All photography by Travis Magee.

    ~ Oberon