almaviva90: (Default)
It's the 18th of October 2009 and yes, it's a date to celebrate something (in my own little way, of course)...it's 40 years exactly to the day that TA announced his presence to the wider opera world for the first time as Figaro in Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia. And since 40 years is a definite milestone in a career that has been as rich and versatile as his, I think a hearty congratulations are in order!

*gives three cheers but doesn't resort to raising a toast with a goblet of wine like he did on the 40th anniversary of the Queen's coronation during a performance of Don Giovanni at the ROH since she doesn't have a goblet*

almaviva90: (danilo)
Hahahaha, just opened my monthly e-newsletter from the arts, drama and opera photography website Arenapal and was grinning at the second entry:



At least, they're paying attention to one of the great milestones of his career!

But I am a bit surprised that they copied almost word for word of the text from Wikipedia (I can recognise it instantly since I was the one who actually added the whole 'widely admired...one of the best lyric baritones of the late 20th Century' bit on the entry!)
almaviva90: (don alfonso)
I think I'm suffering from something I call 'Don Giovanni' on the brain...XD

Why, why WHY is it that I think that Rowan Atkinson in the second series of Blackadder (where for once, his character looks suitably dashing in 16th century ruffs, tunics, breeches, etc and with a goatee) looks uncannily similar to TA's Don Giovanni at times?! Their physiques and looks are nothing alike (though by eerie coincidence they both come from Durham) and yet at certain angles, Atkinson looks unbelievably similar to TA's Don. O___o

It's only recently I've noticed this, I think. It must be the beard or something...or the costume that's making me constantly refer back to Don Giovanni. *facepalm*

And these pictures aren't really helping, lol...



And why am I still awake when I'm supposed to be resting myself after journeying for 1 1/2 hours to Taiwai and taking another hour to come back home? Gah...

almaviva90: (Default)
My current obsession?  I'm following the Wigmore Hall/Kohn Foundation International Song Competition in London...

www.plushmusic.tv/channels/D8Y/wigmore-hall-international-song-competitions-channel.html

And yeah, you can guess why I'm following this so intently...

It's because TA is one of the jury...OTZ

And the final (Sept. 10) is on his 65th birthday...what a coincidence!

If they can get a video interview with him, I shall be be quite satisfied for the rest of the week, I think.

Plus it must be really satisfying for him to see and hear firsthand all the young talent who will basically be opera and lieder's future stars...it's almost like passing the torch as it were. 40 years ago, he was the one being auditioned and judged by a jury when he started out his career at the Welsh National Opera and now the tables have turned indeed. It must be really gratifying...I can imagine a small sense of accomplishment at achieving this honour. But as he said, he doesn't plan or expect things so everything that has come to him during his career has always been 'a pleasant surprise'.

I think that is a very good outlook on life and work. Don't be too expectant and over-ambitious...just take life one day at a time and let things come to you. =)
almaviva90: (the merry widow)
Can I say once again how lovely Thomas Allen and Felicity Lott are as an operatic couple? Brilliant singers and brilliant chemistry.

Watched the entire ROH '97 production of The Merry Widow - yes, the one that got me into opera in the first place - and I can see why I was drawn to it. Why? Because the acting from these two singers is marvellous...I almost forgot I was watching an operetta and was actually watching a play instead. One scene which I have never seen before on Youtube was so touching. It's the scene in Act II where Danilo (Allen) and Hanna (Lott) are teasingly suggesting places they might visit in Paris from the Pontevedrian Embassy to the more lively places like Maxims. Although it starts out all comedic and light-hearted, the atmosphere quickly turns into a very tangible sense of unspoken love between the two characters, especially so when he, in particular, doesn't want to admit it. You could basically live and breathe it in the air JUST by watching these two act. Such a beautiful moment. Flott and Allen can basically do everything - from comedy to romance to strained relationships, e.g. their Count and Countess in Le nozze di Figaro and still make it seem so natural and non-wooden.

Okay, I'm rambling...I'm returning to internship work this morning...and despite not sleeping (I really can't sleep these days, damn), I think I'll manage (hopefully).

Hurrah~

Aug. 17th, 2009 03:06 pm
almaviva90: (danilo)
Finished my sketch from yesterday...and it's probably the best one of this particular person I've done so far in my opinion. (Well, anyway...hopefully...)

And I think the name in the link (and the tags) is pretty self-explanatory as to who it is...XD

phantomphan1990.deviantart.com/art/Sir-Thomas-Allen-133670359


almaviva90: (Default)
I can't sleep...AGAIN.

So what am I doing now? Well, the title pretty much says it all...as for what or who I'm drawing -- at the moment, I really have no idea.

And who knew that opera could be so funny? If you told me a year ago that opera could be comedic, I would have thought you mad. But I'm proved wrong yet again when one watches operas like Le Nozze di Figaro or Cosi and operettas like Die Fledermaus and Die lustige Witwe.

Here I am trying to sketch and listen to Mozart's Cosi fan tutte at the same time and then I get slightly bored and play my copy of the 1996 MET Cosi with TA, Mentzer, Vaness and Hadley (I'm sorry I can't remember the baritone who played Guglielmo...oops). I get to the scene where the two officers are saying farewell to their lady-loves...and I'm giggling non-stop at the the antics the singers get up to. Guglielmo is overacting his 'despair' at leaving, Hadley's body language (he plays Ferrando) clearly tells Guglielmo to get a move on and isn't too keen to deal with his hyperactive and overemotional fiancee (played wonderfully by Susanne Mentzer; definitely one of the most prettiest Cherubinos, Zerlinas and Dorabellas around. Von Stade obviously gets first place over Mentzer for singing but acting-wise, I simply adore Mentzer who is simply adorable when she gets into character). Vaness as Fiordiligi is trying her best to play older sister but also is frightened at the news of her fiancee going away to war while TA, as usual, plays Don Alfonso with all the sly cynicism and charm. What always makes me laugh is when the two couples are tearfully saying their farewells, he's more interested in pouring the sand out of his shoe (the set does indeed have sand since it's set on a pier/beach) XD

And the Allen/Vaness/Mentzer trio of Soave sia il vento is sublime...so is Francisco Araiza's Un' aura amorosa on my Cosi CD. Sometimes I really prefer Araiza to great tenors like Pavarotti or Domingo for some reason. Domingo was basically the first tenor I listened to (when I bought a highlights CD of  Bizet's Carmen during QBS...we were listening to the darn thing in music lessons for some weird reason) but I wasn't really impressed with a tenor's voice until the first time I saw Araiza sing Dalla sua pace on the 1987 Don Giovanni. I liked Jose van Dam (the Belgian bass-baritone) as Escamillo but again, my mind didn't click with baritone voices till the introduction of a particular British baritone as Count Danilo on Youtube. Really, it's all Jeremy Brett's fault for getting me into opera since it was his singing of the English translations of the songs in Die lustige Witwe that got me looking for other singers singing the same thing. XD

Ah, but I've rambled too long...back to sketching!

Gloomy...

Aug. 14th, 2009 08:33 pm
almaviva90: (TA 1998 Barcelona)
I feel like I'm living the life of an insomniac hermit this past week. I haven't gone out for about 4-5 days straight. and my internal body-clock has definitely been messed up...waking up in the late afternoon after getting to sleep around 6-8 in the morning. -__-

But the bloody problem is that no matter how much I want to (and force myself to) sleep at what are considered normal sleeping hours; I can't. Grr...well, I won't pretend that I don't know why I'm behaving like this...alas, a bout of mild depression has settled in again and I can't seem to shake it off. This bout is definitely the longest one I've had so far and what really isn't helping to get my spirits up is that HKU starts in 2-3 weeks.

So to combat this I'm just going to overwhelm myself with music...Purcell's Ode for the Birthday of Queen Mary is sort of helping...the finale ('See Nature, rejoicing') of this wonderful Baroque piece is quite uplifting. It's been a while since I've listened to Baroque music after listening to a lot of Mozart operas. It's amazing that only about 70 ish years separate Baroque operas to Mozart ones and yet the sound/tone seem quite different. But I can definitely say that baroque stuff is not easy to sing with a very considerable number of trills to do...probably the most difficult period to sing for professional singers. So the apparent ease with which Flott and TA sing these pieces is astonishing.

almaviva90: (carmina burana)
I'm still up.

So you can guess what I've just been doing.

Yes, I decided to stay up and listen to the Prom anyway...the atmosphere there at the Royal Albert Hall sounds phenomenonly fun and exciting. Wish I could have been there...sounds like everyone's enjoying themselves immensely and the John Wilson Orchestra was appropriately jazzed up playing the good ol' oldies of musical theatre.

As for the singers? All very professionally sung, of course...TA still in wonderful voice and doing very well singing musical numbers as well as having lots of fun at the same time. He didn't have much to sing on the programme but when he was onstage, he nailed every song beautifully. The rest of the singers sung their respective songs/repertoire fantastically...one surprise of the night was the man who created Family Guy, Seth Macfarlane (who I think is the voice of Stewie) who sang such numbers such as 'Singing in the Rain'. Very pleasant singing voice. Obviously not an opera singer but very suited to musical theatre...it was interesting to hear him sing parts of the classic song 'That's Entertainment' with a Stewie voice...the audience reaction can be imagined. XD

I'm thankful that TA usually makes his voice customarily louder when the orchestra gets a bit loud or else I wouldn't be able to hear him over the music!

Again, thank goodness for the power of radio! *goes away to thank BBC Radio 3 for being online*
almaviva90: (Default)
I think I'm waaay too into two people nowadays...

1. Snape (or rather Alan Rickman as Snape)...the past few days I've come up with a video www.youtube.com/watch and a new one shot on ff.net...www.fanfiction.net/s/5244125/1/The_Last_Part_of_the_Princes_Tale

OTZ

2. TA...but what the hell, you knew that already! But I think my TA mania has increased crazily after a fellow TA fan from Poland sent me some DVDs of him as Ulisse (Odysseus/Ulysses) as well as a rare 1986 documentary of him...plus some equally fascinating programmes from 2000 - one which involves him cooking pasta (O_O...but I must say he has brilliant knife technique...his response to that? "Well, I come from a very long line of murderers..." XD) while another is a very insightful and amusing masterclass. I loved his frequent jibes about tenors...

TA (to soprano): People don't really cry in operas...well, apart when Mimi (from 'La boheme') dies or something like that but I think that you should cry to register the emotion you're feeling. (turns to tenor) Um...you're not crying. You're just...*gestures with mock-exasperation*...being a tenor. I'll tell you what...tenors don't need to cry since they make the most money!






almaviva90: (thoughtful TA)
Finally getting round to reading stuff that I should have read before...but then again, it's TA and opera I'll have to be thanking for actually getting me to read them. Currently making my way though a very readable translation of Homer's 'The Odyssey' and though the various Greek names, places and people are sort of confusing, it's so far been enjoyable (and yes, I'm reading this after I saw some clips of TA singing Odysseus in Monteverdi's opera, 'Il ritorno d'Ulisse in Patria'. *head slam*

And due to a change of schedule, it seems that I am free at least until the beginning of August when the internship kicks in again. *sigh* The ever-changing cycle of life...
almaviva90: (carmina burana)
OMG...the world really does work in mysterious and uncanny ways that really gets to you without you expecting it.

Here I am, just minding my own business watching stuff on Youtube and looking at any new TA vids being uploaded. There's one where he sings 'Silent Worship'...first thought: 'God, what an utterly bland title of a song which probably isn't very interesting.' I pass over it (despite it being sung by TA in the early 80s) then come back to it since I just want to have a listen to what it is.

And yes, I get egg splattered all over my face once again...since he sings a song I used to love enormously when I watched the 1996 version of 'Emma'.

[livejournal.com profile] enserric , if you remember that song you liked from the film..you'll know exactly what song I'm talking about: the one that Emma (Gwyneth Paltrow) sings at the piano at the party...

My favourite baritone plus Austen-related songs...*sigh*

And my fangirling JUST needed something to make it even more worse, eh?

almaviva90: (TA evening dress)
I think I'm waaaay too into TA now...I can recognise his voice anywhere now. Got a recording of Le nozze di Figaro recently but had no idea who were the singers in it. Just played a random track where Figaro says two very brief lines to Susanna about winning the case against the Count and the second Figaro came on...*click*...instant recoginition. OTZ

But I believe you knew that already, lol.

almaviva90: (the merry widow)
Since I missed out on seeing Flott and TA in May...the gods above have given me a chance to see them again later this year. In Bath!

Wow, and in the Assembly Rooms too at Bath which is a famous setting/location in Jane Austen's novels like Northhanger Abbey and Persuasion. OMG...Austen and my favourite opera singers together in one place...bloody fantastic.

www.bathmozartfest.org.uk/events/18th-november-2009-at-7-30pm/

I am so making myself go this time in November. *immediately makes plans to force her mother to go with her*

I'm such an evil daughter XD

almaviva90: (maestro)
Just listened to a recording of the 2003 ROH production kindly put up on Youtube by a fellow TA fan I've made friends with.

The verdict? Thomas Allen is magnificent as Sweeney Todd. I'm not saying this because of the fact that I'm a fan of him but that he basically blew Johnny Depp's interpretation (an excellent one too when I saw it) out of the water on an emotional level. I thought Depp's performance was powerful but compared to Allen - the latter's interpretation is full of agony, anguish and anger. He was literally howling when he realises that he's just killed his wife in his blind lust for bloody revenge. A year ago, I thought opera singers couldn't even reach the heights of emotional pain that professional actors could. But now I've just been proved wrong...once again by a singer who really could take a job at the National Theatre if he ever gets tired of singing (which I doubt he'll ever do).

It was delightful to hear 'A Little Priest' with TA and Felicity Palmer...it was longer here than in the film but infinitely more amusing - made more so by the audience reaction to the countless double entendres here and there. 'Pretty Women' sounded much better than the film one though I miss Rickman's Turpin. TA's 'Epiphany' sounded deranged as fitting the growing madness of Todd while admittedly, it was also a slightly eye-brow raising moment when I heard the words 's***' and 'piss' being uttered by one of the most charming Don Giovannis, Count Almavivas and Count Danilos around! Okay, okay...I confess that I was also very interested in hearing him say such words (not that I have a fetish for this, god, no) but was wondering whether he'd ACTUALLY say them or if the opera house actually allowed their singers to say it. First time it came out 'spit' so I thought...'Ah, they edited it out...clever.' Then he said it at the end of the song. Ha, talk about being taken utterly unaware. Oh, and I also wanted to listen to this since it was said that he used his native Durham accent in this. Sounded quite rough indeed. Almost sounded Scottish in places. His voice was still cheerful as his usual voice and I was wondering at times whether he could pull off the darker side of the character. Needn't have worried...for the agonising sobbing (I think he was genuinely crying) was enough to prove that he was in character entirely.

Felicity Palmer as Mrs Lovett was quite different from Bonham Carter's one and she had a much lower voice than I expected. Didn't like it at first but after getting used to it and admiring her acting skills, she was an excellent Mrs. Lovett. I prefer Alan Rickman as Turpin than the bass in the opera...hahahahahaha, what an amusing image...two of my favourite people playing enemies onstage and both of them having the same height. What a towering Todd TA must have made. I certainly don't want him standing over me with a razor...

Interesting that the opera house version included the continuous ballad of Sweeney Todd and that there was always an instrumental cue pointing out the turning points of the story. The orchestra was brilliant...as to be expected in an opera house orchestra.

I just wish that they actually made a video of this rather than just a sound recording...it's obvious from the sounds that they did have a swivelling chair as they did in the film to 'dispose' of the bodies but how on earth do you do that onstage where you can't hide anything basically?

Anyways...a very enjoyable recording.
almaviva90: (don alfonso)
I think I've gone a LITTLE bit crazy with the uploading of TA vids on my Youtube account...47 directly related to him so far.

www.youtube.com/user/schweitzer006325

Gah, I think my favourite Mozart opera is quickly becoming 'Cosi fan tutte' after seeing TA do it in the 1970s...I've been listening/watching it more times than I expected myself to do since it really wasn't my favourite Mozart opera compared to 'Figaro'.

almaviva90: (carmina burana)
I think the saying's true: that you CAN learn something everyday.

Because I found out that TA was actually the model for the character Billy Elliot in the play/movie/musical of the same name. See here: www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/3667821/If-Billy-Elliot-had-been-a-painter.-.-..html Reading the synopsis again on Wikipedia, it makes sense (because the setting is in Durham [which I didn't know before], there's a mining community [also related to TA since his family was mostly made up of miners] and that there's this boy striving to do something artistic when it's not really done or praised in that sort of community [dance and music are similar enough to make a connection, lol].

Interesting. =D

almaviva90: (TA Guglielmo 1981)
Gah...just finished watching the 1975 version of 'Cosi fan tutte'. Certainly it's not the most action-packed opera of all of the Mozart ones I've seen so far (at the moment, I'm thinking that there were too many songs being sung by the two sopranos playing the sisters and not enough solos for the men, particularly Guglielmo [yes, I'm biased since that's the baritone part =P]).

Overall, it ended up being approximately 2 hrs and 40 minutes long...perhaps a little too long for a relatively simple storyline and ONLY six characters....three men and three women. To put the story briefly - basically the philosopher Don Alfonso declares that all women are the same and are ultimately unfaithful and incapable of being otherwise. His two soldier friends, Ferrando and Guglielmo challenge him to a duel since he has launched a direct attack on their beloved fiancees and he is given two choices: either to prove their infidelity or face their over-amorous and confident lovers in a duel. 100 pieces of gold is placed as a bet on the part of the two soldiers and Don Alfonso takes up the challenge. He concocts a devilish plan - pretend to get rid of the two soldiers by giving them false orders condemning them to battle and trick the two women by dragging the soldiers back again...in disguise as Albanians. Ferrando and Guglielmo end up doing all kinds of things to 'seduce' the sisters; mocking death by arsenic, getting cured by a magnet for the latter, sighing and despairing in their 'anguish' as the sisters initially ignore them. It seems that their confidence in their betrothed is not misplaced. Don Alfonso has other plans...while he deals with the men and orders them what to do, he pays the sisters' maid, Despina to do her bit with the ladies and urging them to amuse themselves with their new admirers. What happens? The sisters give in...one by one - to the point that they're getting married to them the next day. You can imagine the mens' reaction...PLUS the fact that each other's fiancee is now getting married to the other... -____- However, at the end, all is revealed and the lovers are seemingly reconciled - slightly bruised and battered emotionally - but wisened nonetheless.

Normally if the acting was 80% good, 2 hrs 40 minutes might not be so bad. In fact, it might even pass away so quickly if you were really captivated by the singing and acting. Unfortunately, not all opera singers possess imagination and acting skills. In this production, what probably saved me from falling asleep during mostly the soprano parts/arias was Frantz Petri as Don Alfonso and of course, TA as Guglielmo. Petri as Alfonso was a delight...a smug but charming characterisation that kept reminding the audience of the ludicrousness of the comedy being played out before us and that HE really was the puppet-master around here. His singing was confident, his intonation excellent and his voice strong. TA as Guglielmo...he could literally act everyone (Petri excepted) off the stage. Even at such an early stage in his career (only about 6 years into his professional career), he could seriously act. Facial expressions - perfect. Body language - perfect. Charm - as always sublime and that too goes for his voice. I can see why people call him a gifted comedian since he was the main source of comedy during otherwise dull and uninteresting moments. The tenor playing Ferrando seemed to have a little trouble keeping his high notes strong...his voice seemed thin and barely audible at higher registers. The sopranos playing the sisters had the irritating habit of staring rather absently into space as they sang...even when their betrothed were dragged off to 'war', their faces didn't particuarly strike me as being grief-stricken. Despina had a slight tendency to overact. There were scenes when literally everyone was SITTING DOWN during a rather unnecessarily long aria by one of them saying that she will not betray her love for her beloved, etc, etc. Where are they in that scene? Ferrando sitting on a box, Guglielmo sitting cross-legged (!) on the floor since there's no place to sit, Despina and Don Alfonso are leaning rather boredly against the wall and the other sister looks as if she wants the song to end as soon as possible. Ha, and I thought only the audience was bored...

The costumes could have been better...bright shades of red and blue for the soldiers was not entirely flattering but I don't know whether that was due to 70s era film cameras or the costume design. But they weren't too bad (at least they were better than the 2006 Salzburg version I watched with TA as Don Alfonso...seriously, I wanted to kill the costume designer there for making him look as unattractive as possible which is a shame because he really isn't bad looking in real life. How bad, you say? Well, his costume strongly reminded me of the Penguin in the older Batman film with Danny DeVito...it was NOT helped by the fact that the tailcoat (and trousers) he was wearing were made of leather AND the fact that he had to wear a wig which made him look bald AND he had to wear lipstick...O____o...and yes, I was repeatingly bashing my head against the table when I was watching that version.) However, the staging was small and rather cozy as befitting the storyline, giving me quite a different feeling I got when I watched the 1987 'Don Giovanni' where basically the stage seemed too big and empty for the characters.

The production simply cries out that is comes from the 70s though...the slightly unnatural tinge of film colour and the hair especially. Particularly TA's...see...





I still don't get why on earth that particular hairstyle was so popular during the 70s. But thank goodness, it isn't an afro...XDDDDD
I was discussing with my mum that at this stage in 1975, he looked too young and naive to play the ultimate baritone 'scroundrel' Don Giovanni (he did end up playing his first Don two years later also at this same venue, I think) but weirdly, with a beard or moustache he suddenly looks entirely suitable for that part. It instantly makes him look more mature...even when it's not even a real one.



Yeah, his outrageous 'Albanian' disguise...but that expression there is a very signature Allen look seen in almost every opera production I've seen of him, particularly when he's playing the Don. And as you can see, the addition of a fake set of beard and moustache instantly changes his impression. Strange.

Will I watch this DVD again? Most probably. But probably just for the sake of TA and Petri...



almaviva90: (maestro)
It's weird how things really pop up when you're LEAST expecting them...

Gah, went to look around HK Records in Admiralty yesterday...not really expecting much since I've basically bought/seen nearly every TA related thing I could get my hands on. But I *was* looking for the 1975 version of 'Cosi fan tutte' for the longest of times and had given up hope on ever finding it there - probably I had to order it.

Ha, then I looked at the discounted DVD section in the Classical Music area...whaddya know? TWO TA related DVDs just right in front of me...one of them was even the first DVD in the row. XDDDD

And the other JUST had to be the version of 'Cosi fan tutte' I was looking for...O.O

And you can guess my reaction then...lol

Weird how life turns up REALLY unexpecting things...
almaviva90: (carmina burana)
CRAP.

I am ALREADY keenly aware that there is going to be a BIG recital in Oxford on 2nd May with TA and Felicity Lott (one of my fav sopranos after I saw her with TA in a previous recital and the 1997 ROH production of 'The Merry Widow').

Which I already know I CAN'T go to.

But does this website/news report have to rub this sad fact in? Seriously?

www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/leisure/4329447.Preview_of_Music_at_Oxford_s_25th_anniversary_gala/

Also, the nice big picture of TA isn't helping...

Plus the fact that "they don't [perform together] terribly often" and that due to the special event, "they're going to be talking to the audience a bit as well" isn't exactly lifting my spirits either...

DAAAAAAMMMMMMMNNNNNNNNNN.... -______-

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