Ben Heppner - biting off Siegfried

Posted by John Schultz on 02 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: News

A smart cookie, that Ben Heppner:  try out one of the most difficult roles in the heldentenor repertoire in a Wagnerian backwater.

Heppner trying on Siegfried in Aix-en-Provence

His performance at Saturday night’s premiere was in some respects a triumph and in others a work in progress.

For sheer visceral excitement, nothing beats the sound of Heppner’s lean, muscular high notes cutting through the orchestra at full volume _ and this orchestra was the Berlin Philharmonic, one of the finest in the world. The freshness and vigor of his declaration of love to Bruennhilde near the end of Act 3, “Sei mein, sei mein, sei mein!” (”Be mine!”) resonated through the Grand Theatre de Provence with thrilling clarity and punch.

That this came at the end of a long night _ three acts, each lasting more than an hour, with his character rarely off stage _ made it even more remarkable.

Heppner showed his newness to the part a few times: too much eye contact with the conductor early on, one or two missed entrances, a bit of holding back in the sword-forging scene. In Act 3 there were a few rough patches in the middle register when he had to sing softly, the only hint of vocal fatigue.

It’s ironic that Wagner wrote the role of his young superhero with such strenuous vocal demands that it can be sung only by a tenor whose voice has fully matured, typically in early middle age. Heppner, a 52-year-old Canadian with a bulky physique, is not going to make anyone think he’s a teenager, but he runs about the stage energetically and assumes a wide-eyed innocence that helps make him believable.

Guess the tenor

Posted by John Schultz on 25 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Uncategorized

Since being a tenor is not all about the high C, this is not my cup of tea.  Still, tenor voyeurs and opera enthusiasts may enjoy this from YouTube:  Guess the tenor by the High C.

 

First baritone post

Posted by John Schultz on 05 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Videos

Who doesn’t like Dmitri Hvorostovsky?   He even makes this noisy Mussorgsky song enjoyable.

A wonderful Werther recording

Posted by John Schultz on 01 Jun 2008 | Tagged as: Great Recordings

Domingo is by far the best of the three tenors - and the proof is in listening to live recordings like this one from Act III of Massenet’s Werther with a young Domingo and Brigette Fassbaender.

 

Marietta’s Lied from Die Tote Stadt

Posted by John Schultz on 30 May 2008 | Tagged as: Videos

Anne Sofie von Otter does a wonderful job, even without the tenor.

And for those of you who want to hear with the tenor, here’s the amazing James King and Karan Armstrong.  Somebody tell me where I can buy this on DVD…

Conductor does double duty as tenor loses voice

Posted by John Schultz on 30 May 2008 | Tagged as: News

Desperate times led to a remarkable solution in Verdi’s “Aida” at the Benedum Center last night: The conductor stepped in to sing for an ailing tenor.

That would be amazing enough, except that Antony Walker, the Pittsburgh Opera’s music director, didn’t leave the podium. In a rare occurrence indeed in the opera world, Mr. Walker conducted and sang the role of Radames in the final act of the opera while the tenor acted the role on stage.

“I trained as a singer for seven years and sometimes it comes in handy,” Mr. Walker said after the performance. “I never had to sing and conduct before and I hope I never have to do it again!”

Yesterday, tenor Vladimir Kuzmenko, cast as Radames, came down with the same bug that has sidelined mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe. Pittsburgh Opera management yesterday decided to fly in a tenor to sing the role if Mr. Kuzmenko couldn’t make it through the performance. But Eduardo Villa’s flight was delayed and Mr. Kuzmenko lost his voice by the end of the third of four acts.

Panic? No. Not when you have a tenor in the pit. Christopher Hahn, the Opera’s artistic director, knocked on Mr. Walker’s door and said, “Can you do it”?

“Act 4 is light and lyrical; It was feasible;” said Mr. Walker, who already had been steeling himself for the possibility. “It was the only way we could continue the opera.” …full article from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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