Fire Shut Up in My Bones Archives - Cultural Attaché https://culturalattache.co/tag/fire-shut-up-in-my-bones/ The Guide to Arts and Culture events in and around Los Angeles Thu, 24 Nov 2022 00:37:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Angel Blue Comes Home with “Tosca” https://culturalattache.co/2022/11/23/angel-blue-comes-home-with-tosca/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/11/23/angel-blue-comes-home-with-tosca/#respond Thu, 24 Nov 2022 00:40:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=17422 "Any woman who can put herself into Tosca's shoes, make it through the whole evening and come off stage with their head held high - you've done a great thing."

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If you’ve either attended productions of Porgy and Bess or Fire Shut Up in My Bones at the Metropolitan Opera (or seen the Live in HD screenings of those works) you are familiar with soprano Angel Blue. She’s performed many of the great soprano roles in opera houses around the world, including Bess in Gershwin’s opera and a trio of roles in Terence Blanchard’s.

But her story begins in California. She was raised here and went to UCLA. Her education was financed by entering and winning several beauty pageants. Blue won the titles of Miss Hollywood in 2005 and Miss Southern California in 2006. She spent three years in the Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist Program at LA Opera. From there the world welcomed her with rave reviews and this year Blue was named the winner of the Richard Tucker Award.

Angel Blue and Ryan McKinny in “Tosca” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy LA Opera)

She is back in Southern California as the lead in the LA Opera production of Puccini’s Tosca. She appears with tenor Michael Fabiano (through December 4th) and Gregory Kunde (December 7th – 10th) as Tosca’s lover, Cavaradossi. Ryan McKinny sings Scarpia. This John Caird production, first seen in Houston in 2010, made its debut at LA opera in 2013.

Last week, after the dress rehearsal for Tosca, I spoke with Blue who was at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. She was being followed around by a documentary film crew from Germany.

Our conversation took place via Zoom. What follows are excerpts from that conversation that have been edited for length and clarity. To see the full interview, please go to our YouTube channel.

Before we talk all things Tosca, I want to congratulate you on this week’s Grammy nomination for Fire Shut Up in My Bones

Thank you.

I saw the opera through Live in HD and found it incredibly powerful and incredibly moving. What made that opera special for you? 

I think for me it was the historical aspect of it. It was the first time that the Metropolitan Opera had done an opera written by a Black composer [Terence Blanchard]. Of course, coming back after COVID and having the opera be shut down for a whole year like that, I think all of those historical moments made it what it was for me. I just felt very blessed to be a part of it because it was such a moving moment in time for me. 

And a moving one for the audience as well. What challenges did composer Terence Blanchard give you that you feel are unique to the way he writes opera?

I think the biggest challenge for me was that on the first day of rehearsal he told all of us, “You guys are classical musicians, so I know that you’re going to do what is on the page, how it’s written.” And he said, “I want you to do what is on the page. But I also want you to go back to your roots.”

When he said that I thought about my dad and how I grew up. I did grow up singing opera and listening to classical music. But I also grew up in church, playing the bass guitar and listening to gospel, singing gospel, hearing my father sing gospel, having my father sing classical music as well.

He made basically a blueprint for all of us to follow. Then within that blueprint, he said, I want you to kind of come out of the confines of the blueprint and make it your own by being able to sing something like Peculiar Grace with more of an R&B gospel style. [That] was something that I never get to do in an opera. So it was a challenge in that we wanted to honor what Terence had written, but we also wanted to bring in our roots. So it was definitely a challenge to be able to put the two together, to give myself the freedom to do that in an opera on a stage like the Met. It was awesome.

Now let’s talk Tosca. If my research is correct, this production in Los Angeles is only the second time you’ve sung Tosca. Part of that was because you had two different productions canceled during the pandemic that you were scheduled to do. So after the disappointment that I’m assuming comes along with those cancelations, what does finally being able to revisit this role mean to you now?

Angel Blue in “Tosca” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy LA Opera)

First I want to say I wasn’t disappointed. I wasn’t. To be honest with you I felt like, and I still feel, that when something like what happened with COVID and all of those cancellations, what that afforded me was not just a break, but it also afforded me the time to sit back and think. Maybe this is not the right time to be singing these pieces back-to-back like that in one season. So I wasn’t so disappointed with it because I’m happy with how it is now. I have this production and then I do it again next summer.

I don’t believe in coincidences, so I think that was perfect. This production is very, very traditional. It’s so helpful to sing Tosca in such a way that allows for me to actually really invest in who the character is and really, I think, become Tosca. 

The first production you did would not be defined by anybody as a traditional production. Does this almost feels like this is your first, I don’t want to say conventional, but traditional Tosca anyway?

This is definitely my first conventional Tosca – you’re fine to say that it is. I’m happy to do it. For me the music has always had the same meaning. The singing has always been the same in terms of the challenges. It’s all the same music. Being able to express it in this way is something that I’m very thankful for. It’s a special time and it is the right time – that’s more important. 

What makes it the right time?

It’s just kind of like with COVID; if it wasn’t supposed to happen, it wouldn’t have. It’s the right time and everything is right. I’m at the right age for it. I feel right in my body about it. I’m back in Los Angeles where it couldn’t possibly be more comfortable to be singing this role. This is a role that comes with a lot of, for lack of a better word, a lot of stress. You have to be vocally prepared and ready, also dramatically prepared and ready. As my band Radiohead says, everything is in its right place.

If the schedule had happened as it was planned to this would be your fourth Tosca instead of your second. Is your approach to this opera any different today than it might have been had that schedule actually played out as as originally scheduled?

I think if it was my fourth Tosca production, I think maybe I would have been honestly less excited. I’m just being honest. I probably would have been less excited. Not less excited because of the opera or what have you. For example, I’ve done eight productions, I think, now of La Traviata and it’s not that I’m not excited by the opera. But at some point the artist grows out of something and you grow into something else.

I see myself having the opportunity to really grow into Tosca. The journey is really just starting and that’s good because it’s the right time for it to start. And I hope it’s the beginning of a very wonderful run of Toscas for years to come.

Let me ask you about that 2019 production in Provence that you did – the Christophe Honoré production. There was a new character introduced and you were wearing a hoodie. Not how I normally look at Tosca, but to each his own. What did you learn from that first experience that is informing what you’re doing as a singer, as an actor, in this one?

Flexibility. We have to be flexible as opera singers. It’s important to be able to sing, of course, that’s what our job is. What I really loved about Christophe was that his imagination was just all over the place. It was wild and it was everywhere. And what I loved about it was that he wanted us to go on that wonderful journey with him. Because of that I had to know the music really, really well. What I was saying and what I was singing did not go along with the dramaturgy. It didn’t go along with the staging. So I had to make sure that I knew my music well.

Then on top of that I had to take my imagination to another level of my Tosca being this student, learning from the prima donna who was played by Catherine Malfitano. So I enjoyed it because it stretched my imagination and it made me realize that I’m an opera singer. But I feel like I’m so much more than that because of that production and hopefully the flexibility and the the open-mindedness that I had to learn doing that production. I hope I bring that into this production, even though it is traditional. 

I looked at an interview that John Caird gave to the Los Angeles Times when this production was first performed at LA Opera. Caird said something that I thought was really interesting: that the opera could have benefited from a second female character. He then went on to say, “There are things that are not terribly well done, but you can’t worry too much about the infelicities and the dramaturgy. The music sorts out all the problems.” Do you agree with John Caird? Do you think that it’s a rocky dramaturgical piece of work, but that Puccini’s music compensates for that? 

Angel Blue in “Tosca” (Photo by Cory Weaver/Courtesy LA Opera)

I’m very fortunate because I have sung the opera with another soprano and not just any soprano, she’s a legendary Tosca. Who knows if sopranos really want to share the role of Tosca. But I think there would be something if there was another protagonist maybe in the show. But Puccini’s heart, everything about this man, every ounce of his being, comes out in the music. I don’t want to say it like this, but I don’t know how else to say it. Perhaps the drama doesn’t fail. Maybe that’s not the right word. But I’ll say this. The music is constantly going. It doesn’t ever really stop. So I’ll say that when the drama sort of slows down, that’s when the music kind of kicks in and keeps it going. So I would agree with him.

In 2019 you did an interview with with Gramilano and you mentioned that Violetta and Tosca were your favorite characters, your favorite roles and that Don Giovanni and Tosca were your favorite operas to watch. From a spectator’s point of view and being in your shoes, what makes Tosca so special for you to watch? 

I enjoy the drama. I enjoy the brass. I love the brass section of the orchestra. Actually I should have said my favorite opera is Turandot. I love the brass section. Puccini, Strauss, Wagner, they use the brass section like none other. And Terence Blanchard, too! I know that because I had to sing with them.

But I love the way he writes for the orchestra in Tosca. The singers just being able to, if I may say it this way, accommodate what he’s written. You can actually listen to the whole opera of Tosca – just the orchestra. Take out everything else: take out the voices, all of it, the choir, and you can listen to it and I imagine it would play the same. That’s why I said we’re there to accommodate. We’re there to almost, in a way, backup the orchestra. Maybe I’ve always felt that way about Tosca. I don’t know how correct that is to say as a singer, but that is my impression of the opera. 

I think for any soprano the shadow of Maria Callas is is unavoidable. In 2021, BBC’s music magazine, Classical Music, named Callas’s 1953 recording of Tosca as the finest recording ever. How long is her shadow and at what point do you think you and other sopranos are not going to have to face the the Callas of it all?

I can only say that I greatly admire her dedication, diligence and devotion to her craft. If it happens that she is the quintessential Tosca for the rest of humanity, then so be it. I’m happy to say that I’ve lived in her shadow. I don’t mind that. I can only say that I’m grateful that I’ve been able to sing the same music that she sings. I was singing, of course, with my voice and with my heart and my experience.

Tosca is one of the greatest opera roles ever. From my perspective any woman who can put herself into Tosca’s shoes, make it through the whole evening and come off stage with their head held high – you’ve done a great thing, regardless of who has the finest recording. In the moment that I’m singing Tosca and whoever else is singing Tosca, that’s our moment. And we honor Maria Callas. We thank her. I honor her and I thank her for the role that she’s played for us sopranos. But if it’s a shadow, I’ll stand in it.

I’m going to finish by asking you about something that Callas is quoted as having said. She said, “An opera begins long before the curtain goes up and ends long after it has come down. It starts in my imagination. It becomes my life and stays part of my life long after I’ve left the opera house.” Do you feel similarly to Maria Callas? 

Angel Blue (Courtesy angeljoyblue.com)

I was a young artist here at Los Angeles Opera 15, 16 years ago. Going from being a young artist to singing such a role where I was a young artist – I’m where I want to be. I don’t know if I can, honestly say, “Oh, I have this great dream to sing Tosca here or there or wherever.” I just know that I’m grateful to sing it here.

I agree with her in that the opera starts way before the curtain goes up, because we have to be thinking about it all of the time. I’m constantly working on the music. I’m constantly studying and that will never change. I will be studying until, you know, God takes me out of here.

But I differ from from Ms. Callas in that the opera does stop, because it can’t be my whole life. I have a family. I have a husband. I have a stepson. I have people in my life. That curtain must go down so that I can be Angel. I’m not always Angel Blue singing.

As soon as we’re done with this Zoom and I leave this opera house, I’m going to go eat. I’m going to do my thing. And the curtain will definitely be down. It’ll be down good, too, you know? And it doesn’t come back up until I have to come back and do my job, if that makes sense. But I’m thankful for Tosca. It’s brought me back home. Literally all I can think about is that I’m home.

To see the full interview with Angel Blue, please go here.

Main Photo: Angel Blue (Photo by Dario Acosta/Courtesy Askonas Holt)

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This Is The Golden Age of Terence Blanchard https://culturalattache.co/2022/08/02/this-is-the-golden-age-of-terence-blanchard/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/08/02/this-is-the-golden-age-of-terence-blanchard/#respond Tue, 02 Aug 2022 07:15:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16679 "It goes back to that whole thing of find a balance between all of those things, you know, allowing yourself to be in the moment and allowing yourself to be free to respond to things that you may not have thought of."

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Is jazz musician and composer Terence Blanchard riding the biggest possible wave right now? His opera Fire Shut Up in My Bones was a huge success at the Metropolitan Opera. He received two Grammy nominations for his album Absence, a tribute to legendary musician Wayne Shorter. He received an Emmy nomination for his score for They Call Me Magic. He’s just completed a series of concerts with Herbie Hancock throughout Europe.

Blanchard has scored the upcoming film The Woman King, which marks his first epic film score. Next March the Los Angeles Philharmonic will dedicate an entire evening to his film scores for director Spike Lee.

But wait, there’s more! He begins a tour on August 4th with The E-Collective and the Turtle Island Quartet that will find him performing music from Absence and many of his other albums. They’ll also perform music from Fire Shut Up in My Bones (see more about that below) in San Francisco.

Which means this was a great time to catch up, once again, with Blanchard. We spoke via Zoom last month while he was on the road with Hancock. Blanchard was in Sant Feliu de Guíxols, Spain. What follows are excerpts from that conversation that have been edited for length and clarity. To see the full interview, please go to our YouTube channel.

Q: This is our third conversation over the course of several years. Each conversation we’ve had, we’ve always talked about whether the world is getting to be a better place for jazz music. In 2015 you thought we were in the dirty part of the recovery. In 2019 you said, “I think we recovered a great deal.” Three years later where are we?

I think extremely healthy. You look at all the young people who are making records and doing a lot of great things. I didn’t see that necessarily happening this way when I first got in the business in the eighties, but to see it now, it’s like extremely exciting. Ambrose Akinmusire, the list is endless: Walter Smith, Theo Crocker, there are so many young people who are doing a lot of great things that I’m looking at them to see what’s going to happen next.

I listened to new albums by Tyshawn Sorey or Gerald Clayton or Joel Ross. I’m struck by how there’s so much calm and a quieter approach to their music right now. Even your album, Absence, has a lot of calm music in it. Do you think that’s a coincidence or is that a reaction to the upheaval that we’ve experienced in the last few years? 

I think it’s kind of a reflection of what’s happening with where we are as a society. With everything that’s been going on within the last five to ten years we started to have demonstrations again. Prior to that there was a lot of things going on and we weren’t in the streets like we were in the sixties, you know. But I think once we hit well past the 2000s people started coming out again.

And I think you’ll start to see that in the music. Actually you are seeing it in the music. It’s just that these guys have a different way of approaching it and dealing with it. It’s not about screaming and yelling, it’s about dealing with facts. It’s about dealing with issues and dealing with them head on. So I think that’s something that’s reflected in what’s going on with the music.

You’re working right now with Herbie Hancock, an artist who has had a major impact in the world. Your recent album, Absence, was a tribute to Wayne Shorter. When you have been working with and around these guys who have had incredible careers, do you consider what your own legacy might be when you’re at that age and is that important to you?

I’m not thinking about it now. I’m thinking about how does he do what he does every night? You know what I mean? It’s crazy, man. I can’t pin him down to anything. He plays differently every night. He’s always stretching and he’s always finding new ideas. And it’s pretty miraculous when you think about it, because he’s 82 and he’s had enough hits where he could just sit out and go and play his hits and just be cool. But that’s not what he’s about. He’s a true artist in terms of trying to find new things all the time.

Speaking of trying new things, I wish I lived in San Francisco because I know you’re doing four nights with the Turtle Island Quartet of music from Fire Shut Up in My Bones with vocalists. How are you reimagining some of that music for that configuration of musicians?

I love David Balakrishnan’s writing and arranging, so I hired him to do the arrangements and we sat down and talked about what it is that we want to do. And I told them I’m not trying to mimic what the orchestrations are in the opera. This is a chance for us to show the world what The E Collective and Turtle Island is along with this music so people can re-imagine this music in a different way. And I’m really excited about what he’s coming out with, man, because it’s going to be very unique. It’s going to be very different. 

Is that something that you can foresee recording at some point? 

Definitely. I mean, it’s something we’re talking about for sure. 

I’m sure that would appeal to people who see the word opera and get scared.

I’m trying to demystify that. Look, it’s the same thing used to happen with some of our friends when you said the word jazz. “I don’t know anything about jazz.” I didn’t ask you if you did. I just want you to come and check out the music.

You should just go experience music, whether you think you like it or not, because you never know what you’re going to respond to.

Of course. But in this world that we live in, and especially in the pop culture side of our existence, there’s always these kind of images that people have of whether it’s jazz or whether it’s opera, anything, [they] take a small snippet of an idea and try to portray it as being the entire thing. So people always get the wrong impression about what these things are. A lot of my friends would come to see the opera in New York. [They] got really excited about opera because they’d never been before. And I was trying to tell them, “Listen, man, you have to experience this. It is the highest form of musical theater you could ever experience in the world.

Fire Shut Up in My Bones was a huge success for the Met. I’m wondering what that says to you about new works and what impact they can have versus the classic repertoire and maybe in particular about works by Black composers? 

Well, I think really what it boils down to is just trying to be as honest as you can in your writing. You know, one of the things Art Blakey used to tell us, “Man, you never want to be too hip when you when you’re composing music”. And he said “Two hips make an ass.” That was always his thing you know. And it’s one of the things that I try to live my life by.

I’m not trying to write music that goes over people’s heads. I’m trying to write music that’s right with them in their souls. I think when you do that the music can have an effect on people and it’s what people are looking for. It’s what we need in this world. We need music that’s not going to intimidate you.

The other thing Art Blakey used to always say was “The easiest thing to do is to write something that nobody can understand – that’s easy to do.” He said the hardest thing to do is to write something that touches people in their soul and still have your own identity within it, you know? That’s what’s been on my mind. The thing that’s been driving me throughout my career is to be right with the public who’s listening to the music and hopefully create something that everybody can enjoy.

When we spoke in 2019, which was which was before Fire was at the Met, you said that you were under no illusion that you were standing on the shoulders of a lot of people who didn’t have the same opportunities that you did. With your first opera, Champion, coming up next season as well, your shoulders are the ones that are now supporting other musicians who perhaps thought the glass ceiling at the Met could never be broken. 

That really hasn’t hit me as of yet. I’m still thinking of William Grant Still. I’m still thinking of people who should have been at the Met, who deserved to be there. I read that ledger that had all of these names of rejected projects. Then to see his name in it three times and listen to some of and read some of the excuses as to why his music was turned away, it’s infuriating. Because you start to think to yourself there’s somebody who doesn’t know anything about opera claiming that he doesn’t know anything about opera when actually he’s revolutionizing opera with what he’s written.

So those things make me really determined to make sure that what we’re doing is going to live up to the legacy of those guys and hopefully open the door for other composers to come through later on. Which we already know is already happening. Peter Gelb has made it his mission to open up the doors to all different races, every gender, to express themselves on the stage. I think this has been a profound thing and it should be an eye-opening thing for everybody across the globe in the opera world to see that people are clamoring to see themselves on a stage.

Portrait of musician Terence Blanchard at his home in New Orleans, LA. (Photo by Cedric Angeles/Courtesy Blue Note Records)

The Santa Fe Opera has a world premiere of a new opera inspired by the play M. Butterfly. I think it’s incumbent upon institutions to give opportunities, but also not just be one and done and say, well, we’ve done it.

The other thing, too, is not only one and done, but not only be one and done with composers. Writing an opera is a very arduous thing, obviously. As soon as I had written my first one and it premiered, there was a certain amount of clarity that came over me the night of the premiere that went into the development of the second one, you know what I mean? And I look at it and think to myself, had I been one and done, I wouldn’t have gotten a chance to make Fire better.

Now with Champion going to the Met, I get a chance to go back and revisit that and even kind of beef that up based on what I did the first time. So I think it’s incumbent upon these companies to really understand that it’s really about trying to develop the talent, not just giving them a chance, but to also help them to develop their craft. 

One of the things I love about about Absence, going back to this album, is that it isn’t a traditional tribute album. You’ve said before in interviews that Wayne Shorter instilled in you the idea that he didn’t want to hear you do what he did. He wanted to hear you do what you do – to paraphrase. Now that you’re going on the road with The E Collective and Turtle Island Quartet, how are you giving new life to the compositions so that you aren’t doing just what you did on the record, but you’re doing what you need to do live?

I mean, it’s one of those things where those guys play it differently every night. And I can’t explain it to you. You have to experience it. There are people who have come to hear us play at a club date when we play a few nights and they come to hear us on different nights and can’t believe that we’re the same band. And that’s what I take from Wayne. That’s what I take from Herbie. You know, I’ve been around those guys where you can’t have any expectations because it’s really about being in the moment.

I know teaching is important to you. How much are you learning from guys like David Ginyard, Charles Altura and David Balakrishnan? [Members of The E-Collective]

You can’t even put it in the words because I feel blessed to be around those guys because they bring in ideas that I never would have thought of. They are so creative in their approach, not only to composition, but improvisation that it becomes a really a big challenge man just to be on a stage with them. If you make a musical statement, they respond to it in a way where now you have to be flexible. You have to be able to just shift on a dime with these guys. And it’s been a learning experience of which I’m grateful for and I feel truly blessed to be experiencing right now.

Is it nice to know at this point in your career that there’s still new stuff to learn and that there always will be or to be reminded of that? 

Of course. I would quit if it weren’t that way. I couldn’t just do the same thing night after night just to make a dollar. No, no, no, no, no. Because this isn’t all about money, but about uplifting my spirit and my soul. What’s going to help other people to hear, you know? So that’s really what it’s about.

I do want to ask you about something that Wayne Shorter said in a 2005 interview with Abstract Logix. He said, “It’s okay to be vulnerable, to open one’s self and take chances and not to be afraid of the unknown. And that goes for the audience wise, too. Because we’re going to have to deal with the unexpected from now on.” How much does the unexpected inform who you are today and the work you do? 

It’s one of those things where you’d like to think that it’s a huge part of it, because you want to be open to what’s going on in the universe. But the reality of it is that we do have a style and a sound. Just by merely having a style means that you’ve already eliminated other things that are possible for you to play because you’re playing within a context and that’s what dictates your style.

It goes back to find a balance between all of those things, you know, allowing yourself to be in the moment and allowing yourself to be free to respond to things that you may not have thought of, but are really a part of what’s going on in music at that time. Because that’s one of the things that we have to do as a community as well.

I always think jazz is probably the best representation of how we should live as a community. We all have ideas about what it is that we want to do, but at a certain point it’s really about the music. So I have to throw away some of my ideas if they’re not relevant to what’s going on at that particular time. That in itself is a thing that excites me because it keeps you on your toes and it keeps you guessing and it makes you quick. You know, it keeps you moving. 

To watch our full interview with Terence Blanchard, please go here.

For tickets and more information about Blanchard’s four shows (August 4th-7th) at SFJAZZ, please go here. For tickets and more information about Blanchard’s August 8th performance at Kuumbwa Jazz in Santa Cruz, please go here. For tickets and more information about the August 9th performance at The Ford in Los Angeles, please go here. For tickets and more information about Blanchard’s August 12th appearance at the Telluride Jazz Festival, please go here. For additional tour dates, please go here.

Photo: Terence Blanchard (Photo by Cedric Angeles/Courtesy Blue Note Records)

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Walter Russell III: I Want to Be an EGOT https://culturalattache.co/2022/07/08/walter-russell-iii-i-want-to-be-an-egot/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/07/08/walter-russell-iii-i-want-to-be-an-egot/#respond Fri, 08 Jul 2022 07:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16595 "I mainly have been following Wayne Brady's lead when it comes to this role. And then coming back to that to myself and also expressing myself as how I want to be."

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At the age of 13, Walter Russell III has already had the kind of career many aspiring actors would dream of having. He has played Simba in touring company of The Lion King. He was Char’es Baby in the Metropolitan Opera production of Terence Blanchard‘s opera Fire Shut Up in My Bones. He’s just finished playing Little Michael in MJ The Musical. Not that his run in that show is over. When Russell rejoins the company next week he’ll be playing Little Marlon.

I’ve seen him in Fire Shut Up In My Bones and MJ The Musical. He’s enormously talented.

Russell is on a two-week break from MJ The Musical so he can play the role of Young Lola in the Hollywood Bowl production of the musical Kinky Boots from July 8th – July 10th. Not bad for a thirteen-year-old, is it?

Walter Russell III in “Fire Shut Up In My Bones” (Photo by Ken Howard/Courtesy Metropolitan Opera)

So how does this young man approach roles that involve molestation (Fire Shut Up In My Bones), depict an enormously popular worldwide superstar like Michael Jackson (even if the show overlooks most of the controversy surrounding him) and now the younger version of a drag queen?

These were just a few of the things I discussed with Russell who wants to be an EGOT (winner of an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Award). What follows are excerpts from our conversation that have been edited for length and clarity.

How much do you look at what Wayne Brady is doing in his performance to try to figure out how you can be a believable younger version of who his character grows up to be?

So to be the younger version of Wayne Brady it’s just so amazing. And when I’m acting, I normally play younger versions of these people, so I try to practice their actions and like the way they express and like their movements a lot. 

What do you what do you think this show has to say to people your age?

I think to just be yourself and express it as much as possible, especially during like this time. I think this is a very important show, especially during Pride Month.

Tell me about the boots and the experience of being in them. 

It gives me height, which I love. And it’s just mainly about stretching like the heels and the knees and it’s mainly balance. When it comes to wearing the heels, it’s just practice, practice, practice right now.

You’ve got Jerry Mitchell, who’s the director choreographer since day one of this show. You also have Wayne Brady, who’s been in the show before. Jake Shears has been in the show before. What advice are you getting from them? What are you learning from them about this show and the role of young Lola?

I mainly have been following Wayne Brady’s lead when it comes to this role and how this character expresses in a certain form and how a lot of people express themselves and play in different forms as well. And then coming back to that to myself and also expressing myself as how I want to be. And it might be different. It might be the same, but it’s mainly just the process of switching myself into a different character.

Unlike other shows you’ve done, this whole production gets put together in two weeks and is done. What’s that process like for you? 

For me it’s mainly just thinking straight and really focusing on what I have to do during this time. So when it came to MJ and Fire, we had a bit more time. It was like a month at least. And I had more of a chance to discover the role. When it comes to Kinky Boots, it’s fictional so I have a little bit more freedom. But it’s more focusing on this play and to just get it done and be ready.

What’s the difference for you when you’re playing a real person versus a character that’s been created solely for the show? 

When it comes to playing a fictional character, I do have more a little bit more freedom than playing someone who is a nonfiction character. When it comes to playing real people we have to study them and practice their emotions. When it comes to fiction, it’s kind of like something that I could choose.

Walter Russell III (center) and the company of “MJ The Musical” (Photo by Matthew Murphy)

Fire Shut Up In My Bones is really intense material. You can make an argument that there is intense material in MJ just by virtue of the controversy around who you are portraying in the show. How do you, at your age, process all of this stuff that you’re being asked to do? 

Normally before I do the show I sit down with a parent or guardian and just think about what do you think about it and talk about it. And that it’s just a play, it’s not real. But the events have been real. I think it’s very serious, but it’s also very emotional and very important.

Are there any of the characters that you’ve played the most like you? 

Oh, probably the most like me has been MJ, but when I was younger, Simba has been like the closest to me.

I’m sure you were happy for Myles Frost when he got the Tony Award. (Best Actor in a Musical for MJ)

I was ecstatic. There is a video of us like going crazy about it. I wanted him to win. But of course, there was some doubt because there were these huge stars: Billy Crystal, Hugh Jackman. So him winning, it was just surreal and it was so exciting.

When I saw you in the show, I saw his understudy, Aramie Payton, who I thought was amazing. I couldn’t imagine Myles being any better than that because I thought the understudy was so good.

I know. That’s what I love. He was amazing to me. And that’s just the understudy. The level that they’re both on is just so good and I’m just so happy that I’m able to work with them.

When you look at what Myles has been able to accomplish or what Will Liverman (Fire) has been able to accomplish, or, you look at Wayne and Jake in this show, what do you see in them that you would like your career to be?

I’m only taking the little things from all those people and put them into my experience and what like level I want to reach.

Where do you want to go from here?

I want to be an EGOT.

So where do you start? What’s the first one to get and how are you going to do it? 

Just, of course, originating a role and just something that I love to do. What I want to do is getting a Tony first. So hopefully that does happen.

And where does opera fit into this?

Hopefully it’s in the Grammy selections because Porgy and Bess did win. So hopefully [Fire] will go into that.

Have they made a recording of Fire? You’ve been in the studio or was it from Live in HD?

Yes. It was a live deal. It was very is very exciting. They had to put mikes on me I think three times. It was just very fun knowing that I’ll be able to be on the opera album.

Do you want to do more opera? 

I do.

There’s nothing you don’t want to do, is there?

No, not really. 

So what’s next is going back into M.J… 

Yeah and hopefully just more Broadway shows and more TV shows or just more movies in general.

One last question for you. When you do Kinky Boots at the Hollywood Bowl you’ll be in front of more people that can fit into a Broadway house for an entire week. And that’s just in one show. What do you have to do as a young actor to just be in the moment and do the show and have fun and not worry about however many people might be there? 

So you know there’s a fourth wall. I think of it as no wall. It’s just the center and back. And it’s mainly just keeping my mind on the show and not what everyone else is thinking outside.

Photo: Walter Russell III (Photo courtesy his Facebook page)

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Latonia Moore Once Again Faces Down Verdi’s “Aida” https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/19/latonia-moore-once-again-faces-down-verdis-aida/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/19/latonia-moore-once-again-faces-down-verdis-aida/#respond Thu, 19 May 2022 22:30:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16373 "I feel like my place in a business like this is to show you that what you look like as a person will never matter more than what it is you can create as an artist."

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There’s a stereotype of opera singers, particularly women, that they are divas. That they can be very quiet and reserved. While that hasn’t usually been my experience, nothing prepared me for soprano Latonia Moore’s reaction when I told her that I had never seen a production of Aida in person and that I will finally do so on Saturday at LA Opera’s opening night of Verdi’s masterwork. Her response? “I’m going to pop your Aida cherry!”

Moore is playing the title character in this Francesca Zambello production that is the first Aida to be performed at LA Opera in over 15 years. She’s very familiar with the part having first performed it in 2009. Moore made her Metropolitan Opera debut in the role in 2012 as a last-minute substitute for Violeta Urmana who was sick.

Since then, in addition to Aida, she’s regularly performed the role of Cio-Cio San in Madama Butterfly and was seen in the Met Opera productions of Gershwin’s Porgy and Bess and Terence Blanchard‘s Fire Shut Up In My Bones. Italian operas are her passion, but as you’ll see from this interview, her jazz background earlier in her life has been the gift that keeps on giving.

What follows are excerpts from our conversation earlier this week that have been edited for length and clarity.

You’re 13 years into singing this part and 10 years after your Met debut as Aida. What’s your relationship to Verdi’s opera today?

When I first started doing the role, I didn’t know if that was really for me vocally. I thought my voice was a bit light for it. So as the years went on, I started getting more [performances] added. I was doing it all over the world. The more I did, the deeper I fell into the character. By about 2016 my voice caught up with where I should be vocally with the character.

Every time I do it I find something new. I tend to put my own stamp on it and try to break away from the traditional way of doing it and singing it and provide the audience with something they’re not used to hearing. I feel like such a staple like this is done mostly one way for so many years. Every time I go out on the stage, even within a production – even within one performance – I like to spice it up and do something that’s more Latonia.

What have you learned or discovered about the character in that time?

Aida, you really hear about who she really is and her struggle and things like that. But one thing that I’ve learned about a character like hers is she’s a lot more like her father than I ever thought. She’s very much an outsider. The more I delve into the text and the way I’m singing and the way I’m saying words, it’s becoming a lot more visceral than it ever was before. She’s the daughter of a warrior, she’s been trained to fight, she knows how to do it. She’s an animalistic person by nature, but has been forced to seem like something submissive. She actually is not and I think that I’ve embraced more of the power of a person like that. 

In previous interviews you’ve discussed your concern that you were only being cast in Aida because you are Black. Do you still feel that way?

I still believe that, especially initially, it was definitely the color of my skin, because vocally I was not right for Aida when I first started doing it. The people who hired me knew that, but they didn’t care because they wanted someone Black. I started to wrap my head around the fact that maybe I was being cast for Aida because I was appropriate for the role was four years after my Met debut. I was just like, you know what? I’m a pretty good Aida. This actually fits now, but it didn’t before. Maybe it took having a couple kids for my voice to settle into it a a little more and then make it a bit deeper of a sound for Aida.

Do I still think that people cast me because I’m Black? Yes. I think that’s why I’m here in L.A. I don’t think that it was only because I’m a good Aida. I think they wanted to cast a good Black Aida. And hopefully that’s what they got. But yes, that’s the factor here because I’m Black and I think that continues to be. I think that for many companies, especially in this climate, they’re just like we have to cast the Black Aida because, you know, we don’t want any pushback for it. You know, casting a white Aida right now in the climate here in America, it’s dicey.

Does that become limiting for you and the roles you can play?

This is where I’ve become a bit up in arms with the casting, because I see where they’re coming from. You know, it’s like they have to have a Black Aida. But does that mean that I can’t be Madame Butterfly anymore? That it has to be an Asian one? Because my whole reason for getting into the business was so I could be someone Japanese. I could be a Venetian. I played Leila in The Pearl Fishers, a Sri Lankan. That’s what I love about an art form like this that is so exotic and I can transform into anything. So when people are saying, yes, we should cast a Black Aida, you know, that doesn’t sit right with me because it feels like where I’m then limited.

The moment everyone is waiting for in Aida is o patria mia. What’s your approach before and during the singing of this aria?

Any soprano that sits there and says they’re not thinking about it; I think one of two things about that. Either one, they have done therapeutic things to change their mindset or two, they’re lying to try to convince themselves that it’s not torture. Every single soprano, and this is for everybody that’s about all these sopranos, we all know y’all are thinking about it, too. Surely Maria Callas, when she got there, started thinking and you can hear it. You can hear the people start thinking about it. You can’t completely throw caution to the wind because there’s a lot riding on it. What’s giving everybody so much anxiety about it is exactly what you said – the expectation. It’s that everybody’s waiting on you to stick the landing. To this day it will always terrify me. Always. I’m not going to sit here and pretend Oh, no, I’ve mastered it. No, no, no. I’m going to go to my grave having never mastered that part of it.

I do feel like one difference between the way I used to think about o patria mia and now. Now I’m not so focused on whether or not I stick the landing. Either it’s going to happen or it’s not, but I have to use this character to my advantage no matter what. A lot of times people are expecting it to sound like something off a recording that they heard. Can she do it like Leontyne Price? Can she do it like Zinka Milanov? I’m never going to be able to do it like them. However, you know what I am able to do that maybe not a lot of people are able to do is convince you that I am that person doing it. Even if I crash and burn and bust all over the high C it’ll still be Aida doing it, not Latonia. So that’s one thing that I had to retrain my brain about it. No matter what I end up doing, if she’s going to bust a note, she’s busting it because Aida wanted to.

How would you compare the joy that you get in singing a classic role like Aida or singing Madama Butterfly to the opportunity to sing new work like Fire Shut Up in My Bones?

I’ve always thought of myself as an Italian soprano, one that just focuses mostly on Italian opera. However, I have a big jazz background and I switched to opera while I was in college. But jazz is really my focus. I don’t particularly like singing in English, but what was so appealing about these works, like Fire Shut Up in My Bones and the upcoming Champion, is that they are jazz operas. And this goes for Porgy and Bess, too. It goes back to me saying that Leontyne was beamed down for the planet to sing Aida. That’s what she was here for. I feel like the reason I started in jazz and came into the opera the way I did was for the work that I’m doing right now on Fire Shut Up in My Bones and stuff like Porgy and Bess, Champion and whatever comes in that vein.

I love Italian opera. I’ll never give it up if I can help it. But some people fit right in the pocket of something. I’m the one that fits in the pocket of being the soprano in these Black jazz operas. I guess I find myself on the planet at the right place, right time. I feel like it’s what I was meant to do.

On your Instagram account earlier this year, you quoted Charles M. Blow’s memoir that served as the inspiration for Fire Shut Up in My Bones. You quoted, “I would have to learn to accept myself joyfully, fully as the amalgamation of both the gifts and the tragedies of fate as the person destiny had chosen me to be.” So today, Latonia, in 2022, who is the person destiny has chosen you to be? 

I’m a beautiful example of somebody that may be viewed as an underdog, but an example of somebody that no matter what you look like, no matter what you’ve gone through or what you said, you still persevere. I feel like I’m here to be an example to other people.

I hope that every other kid like me sees what I’m doing and knows that they can do it, too. I feel like my place in a business like this is to show you that what you look like as a person will never matter more than what it is you can create as an artist. I’m simply put here to create and make art for people, to encourage them, to hear them, to show them that they can do it. Yes, you can have children. Yes, you can go up there and you can look like anything and transform into something else. Yes, you can go up and help the youth and you can help them lift up into a great career.

I feel like I’m a very good example in this business of what perseverance can really get you. I’m the sort of person that is like if you streamline your energy toward what you want and you believe it with unwavering faith, you’re going to make your mark. Period. But it has to be unwavering faith. Be patient and don’t care how long it’s going to take. It’ll happen.

There are six performances of Aida at LA Opera from May 21st through June 12th

All photos of Latonia Moore in LA Opera’s production of Aida by Cory Weaver. (Courtesy LA Opera)

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Leslie Burrs Gives Voice to “I Can’t Breathe” https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/12/leslie-burrs-gives-voice-to-i-cant-breathe/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/05/12/leslie-burrs-gives-voice-to-i-cant-breathe/#respond Fri, 13 May 2022 04:00:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=16352 "If this helps to open your eyes to what is more just, what is more equal, then that is one of the things to take away from this experience today."

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Transitions: (Sung Stories); VANQUI; Portrait of a Nude Woman As Cleopatra. Do any of these operas sound familiar to you? Unfortunately they aren’t well-known even though one quite-distinguished composer, Leslie Burrs, wrote them. Awards and accolades can only take you so far. But Burrs has an idea why you probably haven’t seen or heard them

“I think it’s a tragic perspective that for all of the years of of opera existing and then in America and then for the Met[ropolitan Opera]. That this one person gets, as you say, maybe not the door down, but the reality is there was William Grant Still, there’s Leslie Adams.”

Burrs is alluding to the Metropolitan Opera finally performing the work of a Black composer this year with the staging of Terence Blanchard‘s Fire Shut Up in My Bones. But he doesn’t hold out much hope for change.

Composer Leslie Burrs (Courtesy Pacific Opera Project)

“There’s no reason for me to put faith in that. You know, I tend to be candid and so I’ll be candid here. It’s been my experience that they designate a Negro for the year. And what I mean by that is and so that you can then transfer into a decade, into a century. Then the blackness might only be the people on stage, but it’s George Gershwin that’s written it. You know what I’m saying? Now that all of that has advanced to a great extent. But this idea of will the door get open? It’s been my observation, my experience, that door get’s cracked open for somebody to get in. Then it is just quietly, if not outright, closed again until the next set of sociological circumstances insist that there’s a change.”

Burrs continues writing and composing and fighting for what’s right. His latest project is a perfect example. I Can’t Breathe had its world premiere at Marble City Opera in Knoxville, Tennessee in February of this year. The opera features a libretto by Brandon J. Gibson. It is a co-production with Opera Columbus, Cleveland Opera Theatre, and Pacific Opera Project. The latter company presents three performances this weekend at the El Portal Theatre in North Hollywood.

Speaking via Zoom last week with Burrs relayed how the opera came to be.

“Katherine Frady and Brandon Gibson with Marble City Opera were very concerned with what they were experiencing through this period of of police brutality and the deaths of African-Americans, particularly with George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and a few others. Katherine was asking, ‘What can what can we do about this? We can’t just sit here. And the only thing I have control over is the access to my opera company.’ They were trying to determine if there was a work that already existed that could address it. They could not find something that they’d be satisfied with. Katherine came up with the brilliant idea. ‘Brandon, could you write an opera about this?’ Brandon said, ‘Well, yes.’ He’s a writer, but he’d never written a libretto.

“Then it was time to find a composer. One of their board members was very familiar with my work as a composer. She suggested that maybe they should consider reaching out to me. And of course, I said yes.”

I Can’t Breathe depicts the lives of six characters; each of whom is given a generic name like the mother, the athlete, the thug, the scholar, the father and the lover. Each also experiences circumstances that will be familiar to anyone who has paid attention to well-known incidents of police violence against Black people. Burrs says there was absolutely a reason for this structure in the opera.

“There’s an effort that’s always made in society to lump us as African-Americans into just one category. And the way [Brandon] was doing it by putting this heading is there’s going to be so much depth to each of the characters that he wanted to make sure people understood how our everyday lives play themselves out each day.”

Musically that allowed Burrs to create themes for each of the six characters who appears on stage in solo scenes before the final sequence in I Can’t Breathe.

Breyon Ewing in the World Premiere production of “I Can’t Breathe” (Photo by Kyle Hislip/Courtesy Marble City Opera)

“At its bare minimum the opera can be presented with only one person per scene, which is even more challenging in its own right. So I wanted to make sure that the audience was not going to get lulled into thinking they would know what’s going to happen next because the same themes would carry through for all six scenes, it might even shut them down. I brought all the motifs together for the finale because each of the characters did not interact ever prior but, in effect, in the last section of the opera they get to know each other.”

Artists like H.E.R., Dax and Terence Blanchard have all responded to the concept of being unable to breathe since these incidents started getting national attention. Janelle Monae had the song Say Her Name. Burrs feels there is a place for I Can’t Breathe to offer something different in the way it addresses similar themes and issues.

“We want people to be able to be reflective of what they’re experiencing and to be open to having their perspectives expanded in a way that allows for a better community, a better society – a more humanistic, caring society. Sometimes, too, if you’re white, you’re looking at certain things and you don’t even know that you’re looking at something that is absolutely detrimental to anyone other than you. And that’s fine because you get to benefit from that. But if this helps to open your eyes to what is more just, what is more equal, then that is one of the things to take away from this experience.

“For the experience down the line? You hope that people will sit and say, ‘Oh my God, I couldn’t believe that the world was like that.’ That hasn’t happened in our 400 years or whatever years of history of America for the moment, because we’re seeing things that are so reminiscent of the period of slavery and frankly, that are utilized right to this moment. The opera, VANQUI, represents that. So here we are today from VANQUI about slavery and abolitionists to I Can’t Breathe and the same issues are at hand is troubling. So down the road as history goes on, we hope that people will sit and say, ‘I can’t believe society ever worked like that. But I’m glad this piece is here to remind us of what what life was like and what we should never aspire to because it will be so detrimental.’ Or they’ll sit there and say, ‘Oh my God, nothing has changed and what can I do to help make this change?’ That’s what I’d like to see happen with the experience of I Can’t Breathe.”

To see the full interview with Leslie Burrs, please go here.

Main photo: Jayme Alilaw in the world premiere production of I Can’t Breathe (Photo by Kyle Hislip/Courtesy Marble City Opera)

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Top 10 of 2021 https://culturalattache.co/2022/01/03/top-10-of-2021/ https://culturalattache.co/2022/01/03/top-10-of-2021/#respond Mon, 03 Jan 2022 08:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=15666 Happy New Year to everyone. Very soon we’ll begin new interviews and highlights for 2022. But before we do, here is my list of the Top 10 of 2021: #1: The Return of Live Performances There isn’t any one show that could top the fact that we were able to finally return to the glorious […]

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Happy New Year to everyone. Very soon we’ll begin new interviews and highlights for 2022. But before we do, here is my list of the Top 10 of 2021:

#1: The Return of Live Performances

There isn’t any one show that could top the fact that we were able to finally return to the glorious experience of live performance in theaters, concert halls, outdoor venues and more. As great as streaming programming, it could never replace the centuries old practice of communal celebration of life through plays, musicals, concerts and dance.

Yes there were new rules to get accustomed to. Some required masks, others didn’t. Proof of vaccination became required (and that’s a good thing in my book). The first time I returned to a theatre and found my seats was the best possible therapy for my soul. If you read Cultural Attaché I’m sure you feel the same way.

Walter Russell III and Will Liverman in “Fire Shut Up In My Bones” (Photo by Ken Howard/Courtesy Met Opera)

#2: Fire Shut Up In My Bones – Metropolitan Opera

While I wasn’t able to see Terence Blanchard‘s powerful and moving opera in person, I did take advantage of the Metropolitan Opera’s Live in HD series to see a live transmission from New York. Blanchard and librettist Kasi Lemmons have taken the memoir by Charles M. Blow and created an opera that is going to be performed around the world.

So rich is the storytelling, so brilliantly was the production directed by James Robinson and Camille A. Brown (who also choreographed), so spectacular was the singing, Fire Shut Up In My Bones was easily the single most impressive performance of the year.

Hopefully the Met will add additional showings of Fire Shut Up In My Bones via their Live in HD series or make it available for streaming online.

The opera will be performed at Lyric Opera of Chicago beginning on March 24th of this year. For more details and to get tickets, please go here.

Sharon D. Clarke and Arica Jackson in “Caroline, or Change” (Photo by Joan Marcus/Courtesy Roundabout Theatre Company)

#3: Caroline, or Change – Roundabout Theatre Company at Studio 54

I’ve been a fan of this Jeanine Tesori/Tony Kushner musical since I saw the first production (twice) in New York at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre in 2004. I loved the show so much I saw it a third time when it came to the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles later the same year.

Color me pre-disposed to like this revival. What surprised me most was that even though this Michael Longhurst production was more lavishly produced than the original, it never lost one bit of its heart. Hugely contributing to the emotional wallop of this show was Sharon D. Clarke’s towering performance as Caroline. She’s definitely going to receive a Tony Award nomination and deserves to win for her remarkable work.

Caissie Levy, Kevin S. McAllister, Harper Miles and N’Kenge all made incredible impressions. Plus it’s always great to see Chip Zien on stage – I’ve been a fan of his since Into the Woods.

If you are in New York or going this week, you still have time to catch this amazing production before it’s last performance on January 9th. For tickets go here.

Santa Fe Opera (Photo by Craig L. Byrd)

#4: Santa Fe Opera 2021 Season – Santa Fe Opera

I had never attended a production at Santa Fe Opera prior to this summer. I don’t intend to miss any seasons going forward. This is a truly magical place to see opera. This summer found a smaller line-up than in non-COVID years, but the four consecutive nights in early August were a great introduction to this wonderful tradition.

On tap this year were The Marriage of Figaro, A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Benjamin Britten), the world premiere of The Lord of Cries (John Corigliano and Mark Adamo) and Eugene Onegin. My personal favorite was Britten’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s play.

Each night, however, had plenty of joys to be found: whether it was my second time seeing Anthony Roth Costanzo in a opera (the first being Ahknahten), revisiting the joys to be found in Tchaikovsky’s brooding opera, enjoying the staging of Mozart’s classic opera or experiencing the tailgating experience that is de rigueur before each performance.

I’m excited about this summer’s season as my favorite opera, Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, is being performed at Santa Fe Opera for the first time.

“West Side Story” Publicity Photo by Ramona Rosales

#5: West Side Story

I was completely skeptical about what Steven Spielberg would do with one of my favorite musicals. That he had Tony Kushner working with him gave me some optimism. Try as I could to wrangle details from colleagues who were working on the film, I was completely unable to glean any information about what kind of updating and changes were being made.

When I saw the movie on opening weekend I was thrilled to discover that my concerns had all been for naught. Simply put, I think this is a vastly superior film than its Oscar-winning predecessor. I’ve always found this Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents musical emotional (let’s face it, it’s Romeo and Juliet), but seeing it so close on the heels of Sondheim’s passing probably intensified my emotional response.

Sondheim said how excited he was for audiences to see what had been done to West Side Story. I know he wasn’t a fan of the original film – feeling it was too close in presentation to the stage version – so I had my fingers crossed he was right. And he was. If you haven’t seen the film yet, do so. It’s the kind of film that must be seen on a big screen with terrific sound.

Lea DeLaria and Alaska 5000 in “Head Over Heels”

#6: Head Over Heels – Pasadena Playhouse

If you had asked me what the odds were that a jukebox musical using the songs of The Go-Go’s would be a show I would see at all, let alone twice, I would have given you huge odds against that happening. And I would have lost my shirt! What Sam Pinkleton and Jenny Koons did with this production was create the best party of the year.

Alaska 5000, Lea DeLaria, Yurel Echezarreta, Freddie, Tiffany Mann, George Salazar, Emily Skeggs and Shanice Williams put their hearts and souls into this story of family, acceptance and love. The all-female band rocked the house.

Both times I saw the show I opted for the on-stage/standing room seats and I wouldn’t have had it any other way. At the first performance Lea DeLaria made a comment during the show about my pants. For the second performance I had a better idea where to position myself to have an even better time than I did at the first performance.

This was a party I never wanted to end.

James Darrah, co-creator and director of “desert in” (Photo by Michael Elias Thomas/Courtesy Boston Lyric Opera)

#7: desert in – Boston Lyric Opera

This streaming opera/mini-series is definitely not your parent’s opera. It is guided by its own rules as it tells the story of a unique group of strangers (or are they) who congregate at a seedy motel.

The music was composed by Michael Abels, Vijay Iyer, Nathalie Joachim, Nico Muhly, Emma O’Halloran, Ellen Reid, Wang Lu and Shelley Washington. The libretto was written by christopher oscar peña.

Appearing in desert in are mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard (for whom the project was written), soprano Talise Trevigne, Tony-nominated performer Justin Vivian Bond (Kiki & Herb Alive on Broadway), actors Carlis Shane Clark, Alexander Flores, Anthony Michael Lopez, Jon Orsini, Ricco Ross and Raviv Ullman with vocal performances by tenor Neal Ferreira, Tony Award-winner Jesus Garcia (La Bohème), baritone Edward Nelson, tenor Alan Pingarrón, soprano Brianna J. Robinson, mezzo-soprano Emma Sorenson and bass-baritone Davóne Tines.

The project was directed by James Darrah who also oversaw the Close Quarters season of films from Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra; directed a production of Les Enfants Terribles for Long Beach Opera (that took place in a parking lot) and, underachiever that he is, also directed The Lord of Cries at Santa Fe Opera.

You can still stream desert in. Go here for details.

Cécile McLorin Salvant (Courtesy Kurland Agency)

#8: Cécile McLorin Salvant – The Ford

Without a new album to promote jazz vocalist Salvant took to the stage at The Ford in Los Angeles for a concert with Sullivan Fortner that was nothing short of pure joy. She and Fortner have such a musical bond that she can make up the setlist on the spot and he’s ready to dive right in to dazzle the audience. As they did on this late September evening.

The only problem with seeing Salvant perform is you can never get enough. Truly. Rare is the performer who can so thoroughly enrapture an audience with their skill the way Salvant can.

That should come as no surprise for an artist who has won three consecutive Grammy Awards for her three most recent albums. Her newest album, Ghost Songs, is being released by Nonesuch Records in March. No doubt the next Grammy Awards season will find Salvant’s latest album on their list of nominees.

#9: Billy Porter: Unprotected

Porter’s memoir was released in the fall and it is one of the most inspirational and entertaining memoirs I’ve ever read. He’s a Tony Award (Kinky Boots), Emmy Award (Pose) and Grammy Award (also Kinky Boots) winning performer. He’s also been setting the fashion world on fire with his inventive and creative looks on runways from the Academy Awards to the Met Gala in New York. Let’s just say he knows how to make an entrance.

In Unprotected Porter details the many obstacles put in his way through challenges at home to being subjected to harsh criticism from his church to casting directors who thought he was too much. Though it all he remains steadfast in his individualism and his talent. It’s a lesson we can all use. As he says in his memoir, “My art is my calling, my purpose, dare I say my ministry.” I, for one, found a lot to learn from his ministry.

Gay men and women are not the only audience for Porter’s ministry. The life lessons he endured and his response to them is precisely the nourishment our souls need today. You can also clearly hear Porter’s voice in the book. So engaging and entertaining is his book I read it in one sitting. I found it impossible to put down. I think you will, too.

Ledisi

#10: Ledisi Sings Nina Simone – Hollywood Bowl

Anyone who is brave enough to tackle material made famous by the incomparable Simone either has a lot of guts or a lot of talent. Ledisi proved she had both in this memorable concert at the Hollywood Bowl in July (which she performed elsewhere as well.)

Ledisi wisely chose not to emulate her idol. Instead she made each song her own while still retaining a sense of what Simone’s original recordings offered. She released a seven-track record, Ledisi Sings Nina Simone, but added more songs to her concert. It was particularly interesting to her performance of Ne Me Quitte Pas and then hear it performed by Cynthia Erivo less than a week later at the same venue. Who sang it better? Let each who saw both shows answer that question.

Runners up: Vijay Iyer’s latest album Uneasy; Veronica Swift for her album This Bitter Earth; The Band’s Visit touring production at The Dolby Theatre in Hollywood; Jason Moran solo piano performance as part of LeRoy Downs’ Just Jazz series; Springsteen on Broadway; MasterVoices’ Myths and Hymns and Cynthia Erivo singing Don’t Rain on My Parade at the Hollywood Bowl.

Here’s hoping there’s even more to see and hear in 2022. What’s on your list? Leave your choices in the comments section below.

Happy New Year!

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Baritone Davóne Tines Speaks Boldly About Julius Eastman https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/04/baritone-davone-tines-speaks-boldly-about-julius-eastman/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/11/04/baritone-davone-tines-speaks-boldly-about-julius-eastman/#respond Thu, 04 Nov 2021 21:00:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=15448 "All of the aspects of identity that he outlined, I also embody. So by being able to realize his words, I’m able to be very closely in conversatoin or community or connection with his aspirations."

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My friend Bruce Schultz is fond of using the expression, “Sometimes you eat the bear. Sometimes the bear eats you.” That definitely suits my relationship to technology last week when it definitely ate me during my interview with the amazing baritone, Davoné Tines.

We spoke by phone last week as he was driving with Yuval Sharon. The two men had just spent time at Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. We had a terrific conversation. Tragically the app I was using only recorded the first ten minutes of that call. Thankfully those first ten minutes were rich – as you will see.

Tines is a Juilliard graduate and a fierce advocate of works by new composers. He originated the lead role in the world premiere of Terence Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones in 2019 at Opera Theatre of St. Louis. He’s also performed compositions by Kaija Saariaho, David Lang, Matthew Aucoin, John Adams and more.

His work to confront racism is best represented by The Black Clown, a music-theater piece he created with Michael Schachter that was adapted from Langston Hughes’ poem of the same name. Tines has also become a leading proponent of the work of composer Julius Eastman whose works have been gaining in prominence over the last decade. 

Eastman was a minimalist. He didn’t adhere to the style of contemporaries like Phillip Glass. Eastman’s music was aggressive. It was political. It was, at times, confrontational. And it was rarely written down. Much of what he did write down was sadly scattered to the winds as he battled homelessness and drug addiction. 

From the film “The Holy Presence of Joan D’Arc” (Photo byWilla Ellafair Folmar/Courtesy CAP UCLA)

One of his most significant pieces is The Holy Presence of Joan D’Arc which is being presented in a film starring Tines that is part of this year’s The Tune in Festival from CAP UCLA. The film closes out the on-line festival on Sunday, November 7th

There’s a prelude to The Holy Presence of Joan D’Arc which finds the soloist performing a series of repeated phrases over the course of 13 minutes.

Tines has performed the pieces several times, including a performance in 2017 at Zipper Hall in Los Angeles.

Early in our conversation I asked him how his relationship to the work has evolved since that time.

“When I was first doing it, it was more about the visceral aspects of surviving through those 13 minutes. Trying to give those short, important words, as much support and clarity as I could. To have the interpretation of the piece come from the actual doing of it. Meaning, he organically outlined things to break down over time or lower in register and stretch out in time. And now that I’ve had that visceral experience a number of times, it’s like I have a body or emotional memory of where those places are. 

“Doing the piece, it’s not exactly exhausting, but I definitely do feel the kind of tension that I think Eastman is trying to invite the performer into. So I can grow into the piece and in other ways. One way has been to focus very intently on what I think the raison d’etre of the piece is where he says, ‘When they question, you speak boldly.’ That sentence is, I think what the entire preceding eight and a half minutes is building toward.”

Composer Julius Eastman (Courtesy New Amsterdam Records)

Tines went on to illuminate what Eastman was doing with The Holy Presence of Joan D’Arc.

“Eastman is inviting everyone into the role of Joan of Arc and then giving the same instruction that’s poured fourth through her own spiritual ancestry into our current time.  So realizing and sitting with, more deeply, what it might mean to try to inform people in the larger trajectory in history to speak boldy and to understand how my own personal values align with that. I see the piece as a conduit for delivering a message that resonates within myself, but was also set forth by an ancestor.”

In notes before the premiere of The Holy Presence… Eastman wrote, “Dear Joan: When meditating on your name, I am given strength and dedication. I shall emancipate myself from the materialistic dreams of my parents. I shall emancipate myself from the bind of the past and the present. I shall emancipate myself from myself.”

Tines agrees that those thoughts seem particularly timely as we try to extricate ourselves from the trauma of the last nearly two years.

“It seems like even listing a lot of things that are, perhaps, secondary to one’s existence and, I think, maybe people articulate their lives or find their identity through many things that he’s listed. But maybe he’s getting at the idea that it’s important to allow those things to fall away and see what actually remains there. One’s self from one’s self, I guess, is one of the most nuanced ones. Maybe releasing the picture of what one feels one is and trying to actually allow some reality or some sheer engagement with reality.

“Given the reality of the pandemic, as you say, I think we’ve all had at least some encouragement, if not space or impetus, through violent and intensive means to do that sort of work.”

There was so much more of our conversation that, like many of Eastman’s compositions, remains but a memory. But I began my interview with Tines by asking him about something else Eastman had said and it seems the most appropriate way to conclude this story.

Eastman said in a 1976 interview “What am I trying to achieve is to be what I am to the fullest. Black to the fullest. A musician to the fullest. A homosexual to the fullest.” How does performing his work allow Tines to do the same?

“It allows me to do the same because our identities are deeply aligned in that way. All of the aspects of identity that he outlined, I also embody. So by being able to realize his words, I’m able to be very closely in conversation or community or connection with his aspirations.

“I’m meaning there are a lot of times where, you know, reference for a work is somewhat removed from you and it’s your job to figure out how to embody that. With Eastman’s work, it’s really a beautiful opportunity for me to do something that kind of pulls a certain specific identity along or finds something that I’m more closely connected with.”

To hear a rare interview with Julius Eastman, we suggest you listen to this 1984 interview he did with David Garland.

CAP UCLA’s The Tune In Festival runs November 4th – November 7th. You can find the full schedule here.

Photo of Davóne Tines by Bowie Verschuuren/Courtesy CAP UCLA

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Fire Shut Up in my Bones – Terence Blanchard’s Second Opera https://culturalattache.co/2021/09/26/fire-shut-up-in-my-bones-terence-blanchards-second-opera/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/09/26/fire-shut-up-in-my-bones-terence-blanchards-second-opera/#respond Sun, 26 Sep 2021 18:35:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=5769 "I did resonate with how his family labeled him a peculiar kid. I experienced that growing up, not from my family, but the neighborhood."

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Will Liverman and Angel Blue in “Fire Shut Up in my Bones”

In June of 2019 we spoke with composer and musician Terence Blanchard about the world premiere of his second opera, Fire Shut Up in my Bones at Opera Theatre of St. Louis. On Monday, September 27th, the opera will have its first performance at the Metropolitan Opera in New York. This marks the first opera written by a Black composer to be performed at the famed New York venue. The opera will be performed eight times. The final performance on October 23rd will be streamed into theaters as part of their Met Opera Live in HD series.

The cast for the Metropolitan Opera production features Angel Blue, Will Liverman and Latonia Moore.

This is a great time to re-visit our conversation with Blanchard about Fire Shut Up in my Bones. 

Last week we spoke to Grammy winner Terence Blanchard about his gig with the E-Collective at the Playboy Jazz Festival. We also mentioned in that interview that his second opera, Fire Shut Up in my Bones, is having its world premiere this weekend at Opera Theatre of St. Louis.

Blow's memoir, "Fire Shut Up in my Bones" is the basis for Terence Blanchard's second opera
Charles M. Blow

The opera is based on Charles M. Blow’s memoir of the same name. Blow is an Op-Ed columnist for The New York Times. The title comes from a passage in the Bible from Jeremiah 20:9. The King James version has it as:  “Then I said, I will not make mention of him, nor speak any more in his name. But his word was in mine heart as a burning fire shut up in my bones, and I was weary with forbearing, and I could not stay.”

Collaborating with Blanchard on Fire Shut Up in my Bones is filmmaker Kasi Lemmons. Blanchard scored her films Eve’s Bayou, The Caveman’s Valentine and Talk to Me. He’s also writing the score for her new film, Harriet, about freedom fighter Harriet Tubman.

Fire Up in my Bones is Blanchard’s second opera. His first, Champion, was written with Michael Cristofer and was based on the life of boxer Emile Griffith. Champion had its world premiere in 2013.

In this column we pick up our conversation from last week and focus on Fire Shut Up in my Bones.

You’ve said that writing film requires you to put aside your ego. What does writing opera require of you?

Prayer. [He lets out an enormous laugh.] It’s hard to say. Writing opera is such a different animal. It requires a high level of focus and dedication. With this new opera, that’s two years of my life sitting down writing these melodies and putting this whole show together. It also takes great collaborators. Kasi Lemmons wrote a beautiful libretto. Jim Robinson, the director, is putting together an amazing show. 

Your life and journalist Charles Blow’s would seem to be very different. What resonated about his story and did you find commonality in his life experiences?

Obviously the first thing in the book was being molested by a family member, which is a tragic thing to go through. I’ve never been through that, but that had to be such a traumatic thing for any kid to go through. I did resonate with how his family labeled him a peculiar kid. He was smart, he had different interests. I experienced that growing up, not from my family, but the neighborhood. There weren’t too many kids going to piano lessons on Saturday and who had a father who sang opera. [Joseph Oliver Blanchard] I don’t know how to explain it. I knew those things were different, but it didn’t mean I hated those things. I loved opera. I knew others wouldn’t listen to it. I can see the same thing in Charles, his character. That’s what resonated. When you’re a kid you don’t know which way your life is going to go, but you can look back and look at those as an amalgamation of all those events.

Memoirs cover a lot of ground. How did you as Kasi Lemmons narrow the focus to make a manageable story for the opera?

A lot of that was due to Kasi. We did have a meeting with Charles Blow at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis where we sat down and talked to him and let him talk to us. He was open about major events in his life. Kasi used that session as a springboard to send her in a direction.

This is your second opera. What does writing for that form offer you that your other writing does not?

It’s different in that I have more control of the creative process. When I’m working on a film I’m helping someone else do a story. When it’s the E-Collective, it’s my own thing, but it’s within the confines of that sonic palette. With opera I have words, voices and a full orchestra at my disposal. The wild thing about it is I sit in my room and in my studio and create this music. Then you get to the point where singers are moving about the stage. It’s a phenomenal experience. Every time when we’ve gotten to this stage it blows my mind. I don’t know. It takes so much energy. One of the singers said to me, “For your third opera” and I said “Whoa. Slow your roll. This is a lot of work.”

Will Liverman in “Fire Shut Up in my Bones”

Charles Blow said, “Trying hard and working hard is its own reward. It feeds the soul. It affirms your will and your power. And it radiates from you, lighting the way for all those who see you.” Do you agree and how does that apply to your career and life to date?

Oh yeah. This is what I try to tell my students. If you have passion for something and you work hard and study hard and put forth the effort, the sky’s the limit. One thing I believe as an artist is when you’re honest about what you are creating, you are creating something that will touch other people who are dealing with the same issues. How many times have you heard, “That songs speak to my soul?” Or “I went to a performance I was swept away and was in tears?” That only comes from people who are honest about what they do. To get there you have to get over the hump of technique and theory. You learn and you refine, but those are just tools to where we can speak clearly in a musical fashion.

Main Photo:  Walter Russell III and Will Liverman in Fire Shut Up in my Bones

Photos from Fire Shut Up in my Bones by Ken Howard/Courtesy Metropolitan Opera

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LA Opera’s Signature Recital Series Has Begun https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/14/la-operas-signature-recital-series-has-begun/ https://culturalattache.co/2021/04/14/la-operas-signature-recital-series-has-begun/#respond Wed, 14 Apr 2021 07:01:00 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=13916 LA Opera Website

Now - July 1st

Available Now: Russell Thomas/Susan Graham/Christine Goerke/Julia Bullock/J'Nai Bridges

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Lest one think that the Metropolitan Opera has a monopoly on recitals by opera’s biggest names, the Los Angeles Opera just launched their Signature Recital Series and it is guaranteed to please opera fans.

There are five recitals in the Signature Recital Series and once they debut they will be available for streaming through July 1st.

Tenor Russell Thomas (Courtesy LA Opera)

Up first – in a recital that debuted last Friday – is tenor Russell Thomas.

Filmed at Atlanta’s Spivey Hall, his recital finds performances of works Adolphus Hailstork, George Frideric Handel, Roberts Owens and Robert Schumann. He’s accompanied by pianist Mi-Kyung Kim.

Thomas was recently named an Artist-in-Residence with LA Opera. That announcement falls in line with something he told me was important for real progress in the performing arts when I interviewed him in 2018. At that time he was preparing to sing Verdi’s Otello with Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl.

“What happens when you diversify the back office then the stage will become diversified and then the audience. You can’t expect audiences to be diversified if they don’t see themselves on stage. …I understand everything is about dollars and cents, but I think the long term survival of classical arts is at stake. If you look around the room and everybody looks the same, there’s a problem.”

I attended that performance of Otello. Thomas is the real deal.

Thomas will be seen in Verdi’s Aida with the LA Opera during the 2021-2022 season.

Mezzo-soprano Susan Graham (Photo by Dario Acosta/Courtesy LA Opera)

The second recital is by mezzo-soprano Susan Graham and it will debut on April 23rd. She will be showcasing the work of composer Kurt Weill in this recital filmed at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles.

Amongst the songs she performs are I’m a Stranger Here Myself, Lonely House and September Song. Graham is accompanied by pianist Jeremy Frank.

She is one of those rare singers who embraces music from multiple periods of music. Graham is just as comfortable singing the work of Handel and Mozart as she is works by contemporary composers such as Jake Heggie and Tobias Picker.

Her next appearance at LA Opera will be in a performance of Bach’s St. Matthew Passion in the spring of 2022.

Soprano Christine Goerke (Photo by Arielle Doneson/Courtesy LA Opera)

The third recital is by Wagnerian soprano Christine Goerke. This is billed as an intimate performance from New Jersey’s Art Factory with pianist Craig Terry accompanying her. The debut of her performance is scheduled for May 7th.

Goerke’s diverse program will include works by Brahms, Handel and Strauss, show tunes, Italian art songs and a song cycle by Carrie Jacobs-Bonds called Half-Minute Songs.

If you’ve watched any of the Met Opera streaming productions you might have seen her in Turandot and as Brunhilde in Die Walküre. I saw her sing excerpts from Götterdämmerung with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and was seriously impressed with not just the power of her voice, but also the quieter and softer tones as well.

Soprano Julia Bullock (Photo by Allison Michael Orenstein/Courtesy LA Opera)

The fourth recital is by soprano Julia Bullock with pianist Laura Boe. The performance was filmed at Blaibach Concert Hall in Germany. This recital will debut on May 21st.

On Bullock’s program are works by John Adams, Margaret Bonds, Robert Schumann, William Grant Still, Kurt Weill and Hugo Wolf. The finale is a series of songs from Rodgers and Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music.

Another singer who embraces both classic works and contemporary works, Bullock in the past few years has appeared in the world premieres of John Adams’ Girls of the Golden West at San Francisco Opera and Terence Blanchard’s Fire Shut Up in My Bones at Opera Theatre of St. Louis.

In 2019 she opened the Los Angeles Philharmonic season with a performance of Samuel Barber’s Knoxville. This was also a concert I attended and I can’t wait for an opportunity to see Bullock in a fully-staged production.

J’Nai Bridges (Courtesy LA Opera)

The last recital is by mezzo-soprano J’Nai Bridges beginning June 4th. Accompanied by pianist Howard Watkins, Bridges’ recital was filmed at Harlem School of the Arts in New York. The program has yet to be announced.

If you’ve seen any of the multiple streams of Philip Glass’ Akhnaten, you know how amazing she is. She also appeared in the composer’s Satyagraha at LA Opera during the 2018-2019 season.

How can you watch the Signature Recital Series? They are available as a package for $45 for non-subscribers and $30 for LA Opera subscribers. Single tickets are not available. However, regardless of when you purchase the package you will have through July 1st to watch each of the concerts. Tickets are available here.

Photo: Russell Thomas from his Signature Recital Series performance (Courtesy Los Angeles Opera)

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Champion: An Opera in Jazz https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/21/champion-an-opera-in-jazz/ https://culturalattache.co/2020/10/21/champion-an-opera-in-jazz/#respond Wed, 21 Oct 2020 13:44:44 +0000 https://culturalattache.co/?p=11300 SFJAZZ Website

October 21st - October 25th

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Composer/musician Terence Blanchard is perhaps best know for the scores he writes for Spike Lee’s movies. He’s also a highly regarded jazz trumpeter. To add to his resume, Blanchard wrote a jazz opera called Champion that had its premiere at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis in 2013. Starting tonight, SFJAZZ, who co-produced a production of Champion in 2016 with Opera Parallèle, will stream their production of the opera for members.

Blanchard’s opera, written with librettist Michael Cristofer (Pulitzer and Tony Award winner for his play, The Shadow Box), tells the story of a boxer named Emile Griffith who was very successful in the ring. But he harbored a secret, he was bisexual. During the weigh-in and subsequent press conference for a match in 1962 with Benny “Kid” Paret, his opponent called Griffith a “maricón,” slang for a homosexual.

During their match, Griffith pummeled Paret and won the fight. But shortly after the fight was called in the 12th round as a technical knockout for Griffith, Paret fell to the floor. He would be hospitalized and died 10 days later never having regained consciousness. Griffith would be haunted by this fight for the rest of his life .

Champion is told in a series of flashbacks as an elderly Griffith is getting dressed to meet Paret’s son.

Sarah Bryan Miller, writing in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, said of Champion when it first debuted, “Champion may be the single most important world premiere in the 38-year history of Opera Theatre of St. Louis. On Saturday night in the Browning Theatre, Terence Blanchard’s much-heralded ‘opera in jazz’ lived up to the hype, its powerful story and score propelled by a dynamic cast and production.”

For the 2016 production that is being streamed, Arthur Woodley, who originated the role of the older Emile Griffith, returns to the part. Kenneth Kellogg sings the role of the young Emile. Victor Ryan Robertson sings the role of Paret and his son. Andres Ramirez sings the role of Luis Rodrigo Griffith, Emile’s adopted son and caretaker. Karen Slack sings the role of Emile’s mother.

Brian Staufenbiel directed Champion. Nicole Paiment conducts the orchestra which combines a jazz trio with 13 principal orchestra members and a chorus.

Of the 2016 production, Steven Winn, writing for the San Francisco Classical Voice, said, “Fearless, graceful, full of sly musical feints and bravura dramatic feats, Champion – “An Opera in Jazz” scored a resounding triumph on its opening weekend at the SFJAZZ Center.  Anyone in doubt about the power of great music theater to reach and move an audience at the deepest levels must see and hear this remarkable hybrid opera…”

Blanchard’s latest opera, Fire Shut Up In My Bones, had its world premiere at Opera Theatre of St. Louis last June. The opera is scheduled to open the Metropolitan Opera’s 2021-2022 season. This will mark the first production of an opera by a Black composer on the Met Opera stage.

Champion will begin streaming at 9:00 PM EDT/6:00 PM PDT on October 21st. It will then be available on demand beginning at 11:30 PM EDT/8:30 PM EDT on the 21st and remain available until October 25th at 11:59 PM PDT.

You must be a member of SFJAZZ to see Champion. Membership is $5/month or $60/annual. Membership also gives you access to their weekly Fridays at Five concerts.

Photo: A scene from Champion: An Opera in Jazz (Photo courtesy SFJAZZ)

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