Showing posts with label at. Show all posts
Showing posts with label at. Show all posts

Alagna, Gheorghiu ring in the New Year at the Met

NEW YORK, Jan 2 — At the end of Giacomo Puccini’s “La Rondine”, an enamoured woman jilts her ardent but poor lover, saying she can’t give up her old life as a rich man’s mistress.

And, she says, she doesn’t want to financially ruin her soul mate.

But on New Year’s Eve, after the Metropolitan Opera’s gold curtain fell, there was a second ending: The two lovers went off together into the Manhattan night.

The stars of the company’s first production of Puccini’s work since 1936 were soprano Angela Gheorghiu and tenor Roberto Alagna — married in real life.

“We can say to the audience, ‘OK, they will be separated in the story, but not in real life!’” Alagna said in a backstage interview.

“And we can go to the New Year’s party together!” added Gheorghiu.

The musical power couple has fertilised opera’s overripe gossip world over the years — most recently in 2007, when Gheorghiu was fired from Chicago’s Lyric Opera for missing rehearsals, saying she wanted to support her husband during his Met appearances. Months earlier, he had a dustup with Milan’s Teatro alla Scala after walking out of a performance of “Aida” because some fickle audience members booed.

But there’s no doubt that the two, who first met 16 years ago on the stage of London’s Covent Garden, share a vocal synchronicity and an emotional electricity that keeps an international audience riveted.

They proved it on Wednesday in a performance of “La Rondine” that would be difficult to match — singing with ravishing, tender voices and onstage intimacy they say is not feigned. Their 1997 recording of Puccini’s work is considered the best by many critics.

Alagna and Gheorghiu were married at the Met in 1996 by then New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.

On Wednesday evening, their love story again spilled onto the stage.

First, she appears at a party as a worldly Parisian woman, Magda, who questions her existence with a wealthy older man while reminiscing about a brief youthful infatuation with a handsome stranger at a dance hall. She barely notices one party guest, a newcomer from the countryside named Ruggero — Alagna.

Reading Magda’s future in her palm, a poet friend tells her she will someday fly off like a swallow in search of a new true love — hence, “La Rondine”, meaning swallow in Italian.

In this first scene, Gheorghiu sings the opera’s most famous aria, “Chi il bel sogno di Doretta” (Doretta’s Dream Song) — a fictional woman’s dreamy longing for love lost summed up in two falling intervals: a perfect fifth followed by a tritone. Gheorghiu’s soaring, gem-like phrases created some magical moments of music.

Magda returns alone to the dance hall, where she by chance encounters Ruggero. They fall in love and she abandons her role of pampered mistress.

This second act at Bullier’s dance hall matched the evening, with an oversized mirror ball dangling from the ceiling as Alagna’s thrilling upper register opened up for the love duet. Ruggero invites Magda to dance to the strains of “Nella dolce carezza della danza” (“In the soft caresses of the dance”), with tenor and soprano singing sensuously in each other’s arms as though transported.

Knowing one another as husband and wife doesn’t make working together easier, Alagna said.

“The problem is, when you go onstage, you must be surprised,” he said. “But we know one another very, very well. I know exactly what gestures she’ll make.”

Surprise is replaced by a more interesting experience for the audience: the feeling of being allowed to peek, unnoticed, at a couple in love — at home.

For years, Gheorghiu was more “ashamed” kissing her husband onstage than any colleague, “because the whole world sees my intimacy,” she said, adding jokingly, “With a colleague, it’s ‘Mua, mua, mua — salut, ciao, arrivederci!’”

For the endless kisses on this New Year’s Eve, the Met stage must’ve been filled with mistletoe.

“La Rondine”, premiered in 1917 in Monte Carlo, packs some of opera’s most beautiful melodies into just over two hours, along with some complex, modern psychology.

In the final act, the deeply-in-debt lovers are living happily together when Ruggero proposes, sending Magda into an emotional spin. She declares herself unworthy of him because of her tawdry past, and despite his pleas, abandons him for the life to which she’s accustomed.

Alagna embodied Ruggero’s pain with throbbing heartache, his burnished voice blossoming into Gheorghiu’s for the ending.

The pleasure of performing the scene together “is double”, said Alagna. “I cry because all of a sudden, at that instant, it’s no longer Magda who is leaving — it’s as if Angela was leaving.”

The current Met production was first created for them at Covent Garden in 2002, and repeated in 2007 at the San Francisco Opera.

Making his Met debut on Wednesday was Gheorghiu’s fellow Romanian Marius Brenciu, whose clarion tenor fit the role of the poet with velvety lyricism.

The veteran bass Samuel Ramey’s rich, but now rather wobbly, aging voice was also right for the role of Magda’s wealthy lover.

Conductor Marco Armiliato led the orchestra, drawing out Puccini’s lilting melodies with elegant effervescence. — AP

Female newscaster, actress among 26 arrested at sex party

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 1 — Police arrested a female newscaster of a private television station, an actress and 24 others who took part in a sex party at a hotel room in Jalan P. Ramlee here today.

The two woman and seven others — six men and a woman — tested positive for drugs, said ASP Mahani Ahmad of the police’s vice, gambling and secret society branch.

All those arrested during the 3.30 am operation aged between 18 and 31 years, she said when contacted.

She said the police also found liquor and various drugs like ketamine, cocaine and syabu in the room on the 11th floor of the hotel and a 20-year-old student of a Kelana Jaya private college believed the drugs supplier was among those held.

During the raid, three couples were on the bed while the rest were entertaining themselves believed intoxicated, she said.

She said preliminary investigations showed the sex party was hosted by two men and those who attended it knew each other through Friendster, a social network in the internet.

Those arrested were taken to the Kuala Lumpur contingent police headquarters.

Meanwhile, about 40 people were arrested for various offences during the New Year’s eve party in Bukit Bintang where several fights took place between drunken youths.

A number of people including foreign tourists also lost cash, passports and electronic gadgets to pickpockets and 10 police reports were lodged at the mobile police station deployed there. — Bernama

Female newscaster among 26 nabbed at sex party

KUALA LUMPUR Police arrested a female newscaster of a private television station and 25 others who took part in a sex party at a hotel room in Jalan P. Ramlee on Thursday.

Nine tested positive for drugs, said ASP Mahani Ahmad of the vice, gambling and secret society branch.

All those arrested during the 3.30am operation aged between 18 and 31 years, she said when contacted.

She said the police also found liquor and various drugs like ketamine, cocaine and syabu in the room on the 11th floor of the hotel.

A 20-year-old student of a private college in Kelana Jaya, believed to be the drugs supplier, was among those held.

During the raid, three couples were on the bed while the rest were entertaining themselves and believed to have been intoxicated, she said.

She said preliminary investigations showed the sex party was hosted by two men and those who attended it knew each other through Friendster, a social network in the internet.

Those arrested were taken to the Kuala Lumpur contingent police headquarters. Meanwhile, about 40 people were arrested for various offences during the new year's eve party in Bukit Bintang where several fights took place between drunken youths.

A number of people including foreign tourists also lost cash, passports and electronic gadgets to pickpockets and 10 police reports were lodged at the mobile police station deployed there. - Bernama

American folk music legend Odetta dies at 77

Prominent voice from the civil rights movement succumbed to heart disease



Image: Odetta
Paul Hawthorne / Getty Images File
Odetta attends the premiere of "Lightning in a Bottle" at the DGA Theater in October 2004 in New York City.

NEW YORK - Odetta, the folk singer with the powerful voice who moved audiences and influenced fellow musicians for a half-century, has died. She was 77.

Odetta died Tuesday of heart disease at Lenox Hill Hospital, said her manager of 12 years, Doug Yeager. She was admitted to the hospital with kidney failure about three weeks ago, he said.

In spite of failing health that caused her to use a wheelchair, Odetta performed 60 concerts in the last two years, singing for 90 minutes at a time. Her singing ability never diminished, Yeager said.

"The power would just come out of her like people wouldn't believe," he said.

With her booming, classically trained voice and spare guitar, Odetta gave life to the songs by workingmen and slaves, farmers and miners, housewives and washerwomen, blacks and whites.

First coming to prominence in the 1950s, she influenced Harry Belafonte, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and other singers who had roots in the folk music boom.

An Odetta record on the turntable, listeners could close their eyes and imagine themselves hearing the sounds of spirituals and blues as they rang out from a weathered back porch or around a long-vanished campfire a century before.

"What distinguished her from the start was the meticulous care with which she tried to re-create the feeling of her folk songs; to understand the emotions of a convict in a convict ditty, she once tried breaking up rocks with a sledge hammer," Time magazine wrote in 1960.

"She is a keening Irishwoman in `Foggy Dew,' a chain-gang convict in `Take This Hammer,' a deserted lover in `Lass from the Low Country,'" Time wrote.

Active in civil rights movement
Odetta called on her fellow blacks to "take pride in the history of the American Negro" and was active in the civil rights movement. When she sang at the March on Washington in August 1963, "Odetta's great, full-throated voice carried almost to Capitol Hill," The New York Times wrote.

She was nominated for a 1963 Grammy award for best folk recording for "Odetta Sings Folk Songs." Two more Grammy nominations came in recent years, for her 1999 "Blues Everywhere I Go" and her 2005 album "Gonna Let It Shine."

In 1999, she was honored with a National Medal of the Arts. Then-President Bill Clinton said her career showed "us all that songs have the power to change the heart and change the world."

"I'm not a real folksinger," she told The Washington Post in 1983. "I don't mind people calling me that, but I'm a musical historian. I'm a city kid who has admired an area and who got into it. I've been fortunate. With folk music, I can do my teaching and preaching, my propagandizing."

Among her notable early works were her 1956 album "Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues," which included such songs as "Muleskinner Blues" and "Jack O' Diamonds"; and her 1957 "At the Gate of Horn," which featured the popular spiritual "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands."

Her 1965 album "Odetta Sings Dylan" included such standards as "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right," "Masters of War" and "The Times They Are A-Changin'."

In a 1978 Playboy interview, Dylan said, "the first thing that turned me on to folk singing was Odetta." Dylan said he found "just something vital and personal" when he heard an early album of hers in a record store as a teenager. "Right then and there, I went out and traded my electric guitar and amplifier for an acoustical guitar," he said.

Belafonte also cited her as a key influence on his hugely successful recording career, and she was a guest singer on his 1960 album, "Belafonte Returns to Carnegie Hall."

She continued to record in recent years; her 2001 album "Looking for a Home (Thanks to Leadbelly)" paid tribute to the great blues singer to whom she was sometimes compared.

Odetta's last big concert was on Oct. 4 at San Francisco's Golden State Park, where she performed in front of tens of thousands at the Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival, Yeager said. She also performed Oct. 25-26 in Toronto.

Odetta hoped to sing at the inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama, though she had not been officially invited, Yeager said.

Born Odetta Holmes in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1930, she moved with her family to Los Angeles at age 6. Her father had died when she was young and she took her stepfather's last name, Felious. Hearing her in glee club, a junior high school teacher made sure she got music lessons, but Odetta became interested in folk music in her late teens and turned away from classical studies.

She got much of her early experience at the Turnabout Theatre in Los Angeles, where she sang and played occasional stage roles in the early 1950s.

"What power of characterization and projection of mood are hers, even though plainly clad and sitting or standing in half light!" a Los Angeles Times critic wrote in 1955.

Occasional acting roles
Over the years, she picked up occasional acting roles in TV and film. None other than famed Hollywood columnist Hedda Hopper reported in 1961 that she "comes through beautifully" in the film "Sanctuary."

In the Washington Post interview, Odetta theorized that humans developed music and dance because of fear, "fear of God, fear that the sun would not come back, many things. I think it developed as a way of worship or to appease something. ... The world hasn't improved, and so there's always to sing about."

Odetta is survived by a daughter, Michelle Esrick of New York City, and a son, Boots Jaffre, of Fort Collins, Colorado. She was divorced about 40 years ago and never remarried, her manager said.

A memorial service was planned for next month, Yeager said.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

‘Circus’ at Britney’s 27th birthday party?

Plus, Kidman coy about having more kids; baby boom on ‘Mother’ set

Image: Britney Spears
Lucas Jackson / Reuters
Britney Spears receives a birthday cake after performing on ABC's "Good Morning America" in New York on Tuesday, Dec. 2.

By Courtney Hazlett
The Scoop
msnbc.com

December 2 was a big day for Britney Spears: she performed live on “Good Morning America,” her new album “Circus” dropped, and it was her 27th birthday. Spears celebrated in a way that came as a surprise to some: with a party at Tenjune, a rather trendy Manhattan nightclub.

“She’s been so careful with her image lately, it came as a surprise that she’d turn around and have her party at a club,” said one person in the Spears inner circle. “We don’t expect anything bad to happen, but it just sounds like trouble on the surface.”

That said, “Everyone’s really excited that Britney’s back,” says another person who was privy to some of the party planning. “And it’s not about it (the party) being at a nightclub, it’s about what’s going to happen in the space.”

From the looks of things, a space conducive to — what else — a circus, was the main qualifying characteristic for venue selection. Throughout the day, circus-themed accouterments were being delivered to Tenjune.

Nicole and Keith on more kids
“She’s amazing,” Nicole Kidman told Us magazine of her and husband Keith Urban’s 5-month-old daughter, Sunday. “She’s an easy baby.”

When the subject of more kids came up, though, Kidman wasn’t as direct. The magazine reports that her answer to the question of adding days of the week to the clan was a playful gaze toward the heavens, and “It’s not up to me. ...”

When Kidman discovered she was pregnant while shooting “Australia,” she confided in director Baz Luhrmann and costar Hugh Jackman, both longtime friends of the actress. “She said, ‘I’m pregnant,’ and honestly she burst into tears, and so did I,” recalls Luhrmann. “And then there was a whole secret that Hugh and I had to keep.” Urban supported Kidman at her “Australia” premiere in Paris on Dec. 1.

The ‘How I Met Your Mother’ baby boom

Something seems to be in the water on the set of “How I Met Your Mother.” Show co-star Alyson Hannigan is pregnant and due this spring, and now comes news her co-star Cobie Smulders is pregnant, too. While it’s not clear yet whether the pregnancies will be written into the show’s storylines, show creator Craig Thomas is good natured about the announcements.

“If you're trying to start a family, please come visit the set of ‘How I Met Your Mother.’ Just come by and hang out for a day or two. We can't legally guarantee anything, but by the time you leave, you will almost certainly be pregnant,” Thomas told TV Guide.



Double the mojo at No Black Tie

By N. RAMA LOHAN


If you know where to look, good music can be found. Plying their blues trade are Karen Nunis and Julian Mokhtar, and the duo will turn it up at No Black Tie this weekend.

Times they must be changing because, apparently, the music climate isn’t as bleak as we think it is.

“I don’t think it’s as bad as it looks. There’s a lot of talent out there among the young and what’s great is there is a lot of underground stuff happening where people get to do their thing and develop a following.

“I find a lot of the musicians who’ve been playing for a long time don’t know the younger ones, so there is clearly a void between the two. But there is still appreciation for these younger musicians, they are playing at gigs, and they are getting hits on Myspace and more,” says folk singer Karen Nunis.

Karen Nunis and Julian Mokhtar to perform at No Black Tie on Dec 6.

Having plied her trade for a fair number of years across different parts of the world (Japan, United States, etc), Nunis is a fair judge of the status quo in her native Malaysia.

“A lot of people don’t understand blues as a musical form. People think its a slow, 12-bar thing with drunk guys participating in this interminable jam session. What’s not seen is there are so many styles – rock n’ roll, R&B – and there’s a lot of fast stuff, too. It’s all one web of music going through, really,” says Mokhtar, finding himself compelled to defend the genre he holds so dearly.

Nunis and Mokhtar will be showcasing their appreciation for the blues idiom at No Black Tie (NBT) on Saturday in a show titled Mississippi to Chicago. Both artistes will trade sets and then sit in with each other, along with Mokhtar’s band, the Soul Doctors, with guest Nan Blues on harp hauled in for good measure.

“It works on a few levels. The simple word, ‘blues’, covers a lot of ground, musically and geographically speaking, as well as over time, and the theme of the night, Mississippi to Chicago, expresses that variety,” explains Mokhtar.

“There are many different styles, from New Orleans at the mouth of the Mississippi river all the way up to Chicago, from early 1920s acoustic Delta blues through to modern electric urban styles,” he adds.

“We’re not doing a museum piece performance ... where it’s just running through the blues classics. I’ll probably do a couple of acoustic style things. But it’s not going to be direct copies of anybody in particular but my take on the Delta Blues. The rest of it is going to be on electric guitar, from 50s style of Muddy Waters to Stevie Ray Vaughan, Texas-style stuff and in no chronological order. It’s going to be high energy,” Mokhtar says, disregarding any need for a history lesson during the show.

While Mokhtar and Nunis both share an innate love for the blues, there is a fine line that draws them apart.

“I think blues is what we have in common and some of the off-shoots as well. If you listen to my music, it’s not all blues. In fact, someone described my first album as blues-inflected but the second one is a bit of a departure from that,” Nunis relates.

“We hope the show conveys the whole range of the music genre we are doing ... not just geographically, as in from Mississippi to Chicago, but also through time since this took a while to develop the way it did,” explains Mokhtar.

Beyond paying homage to the blues, Mokhtar does feel that audiences should be educated about it because it is a musical form that has received a lot less exposure than it used to. “If people stop listening to the blues, I’ll be out of a job,” he quips, though fully aware of the truth behind his words.

An experience in Japan has left Mokhtar cooing over the audiences there; “Just like kabuki or something similar, the Japanese will always show respect to an ariste performing. They are quiet during the performance and clap appreciatively at the end of songs.” The bluesman is looking to face a similar audience at NBT this weekend.

Popular music has played a small hand in perhaps providing blues with a foothold among younger listeners, courtesy of a new crop of singer songwriters.

“I would say people like Amy Winehouse, Duffy and Joss Stone have done well, people who have given R&B a bit of a shot in the arm,” Nunis shares.

Should the blues evolve to suit a younger generation of listeners, then? “Well, it has always evolved, it started off with acoustic players like Robert Johnson and all and went on to Muddy Waters and later Eric Clapton and after that Robert Cray ...” Mokhtar reasons.

Mississippi to Chicago sounds like a night of rip-roaring fun ... one to savour, a tip of the hat perhaps to the legends who have given the blues so much credibility and appreciation over the years.

Whether it’s the sad wail of a harp or the metallic clangour of a resonator guitar that seeps into a listener’s soul, only No Black Tie and its denizens will know for sure on the night what this art form has always had to offer.

Karen Nunis and Julian Mokhtar perform at No Black Tie on Saturday. Showtime is 10.30pm and admission is RM30. No Black Tie is located at 17, Jalan Mesui (off Jalan Nagasari), Kuala Lumpur. Call 03-21423737 or e-mail noblacktie2003@yahoo.com.