Reviews

In review: Quinn Kelsey's Songs from the Heart

In review: Quinn Kelsey's Songs from the Heart

Hawaiian baritone Quinn Kelsey strode into the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre, wearing black cowboy boots with his three-piece suit, and said to the audience, "I apologize in advance for cheat sheets."

Jenna Simeonov
Fannibals in New York: One World Symphony premieres Hannibal

Fannibals in New York: One World Symphony premieres Hannibal

Thematically, the darkness of Hannibal is not an unfamiliar subject to opera. Psychopathic heroes and murderers have long taken the stage through works like Wozzeck and Salome, characters like Bluebeard and Scarpia. A lot of operas are bloody. Yet, I’m not sure the question is whether Hong is doing something new. Rather, the point is what he’s doing to make opera contextually relevant to those who otherwise might not go to the opera at all.

Kelsey Kudak
In review: La traviata at the COC

In review: La traviata at the COC

Last night the Canadian Opera Company opened its new production of La traviata, and I was officially excited. La traviata is done often, but it's another thing to hear it done really well. I got my fix at the Four Seasons Centre with the first of two casts singing the 11 shows between now and November 6th.

Jenna Simeonov
In review: The Seven Deadly Sins

In review: The Seven Deadly Sins

I'm always excited by Kurt Weill. Ever since my first exposure to Mahagonny and Down in the Valley (one of his American musicals) I've been fascinated by his work with Bertolt Brecht. On Friday, September 25th I got to re-hear one of my favourites presented by The Friends of Gravity.

Greg Finney
#COC1516: the new Ensemble Studio

#COC1516: the new Ensemble Studio

The Canadian Opera Company Ensemble Studio have kicked off the 2015/16 Free Concert Series in the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre with their annual introductory concert, Meet the Young Artists. Eight singers and two pianists performed in what's called the "death by aria" style, each singer showing off an aria that shows what they do best.

Jenna Simeonov
In review: shadow box

In review: shadow box

Last night I went with conductor, pianist, and man of Against the Grain Theatre Topher Mokrzewski to hear The Bicycle Opera Project, at, well, a bike shop. Curbside Cycle on Bloor West was the first Toronto stop along Bike Opera's tour of Nova Scotia and Ontario.

Jenna Simeonov
In review: Dissociative Me

In review: Dissociative Me

I walked into RED Nightclub to catch LooseTea Music Theatre's latest offering, "Dissociative Me". A new transladaptation of Gounod's Faust, in which we find the devious relationship with the malevolent spirit Mephistopheles has evolved into a dissociative personality disorder, where he inhabits the other part of John Faustus's psyche.

Greg Finney
In review: Obeah Opera

In review: Obeah Opera

Friday, August 7th, 2015. This is the day I finally understood why the human race began singing and dancing in the first place. I don't know how or why it started, but I was reminded of how blessed we are by its presence in our lives.

Greg Finney
Music as Theatre: a chamber concert in Banff

Music as Theatre: a chamber concert in Banff

This week at The Banff Centre, the artists of Open Space: Opera in the 21st Century collaborated with the Master Class for Strings and Winds Program for an evening of chamber music at the Rolston Recital Hall. It sounds like your average chamber concert, but I promise you, it wasn't.

Jenna Simeonov
In review: 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

In review: 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee

On Friday, June 5th I hit up Artscape Wychwood Barns to see a small production of William Finn's 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee. Based on an improvisation play called C-R-E-P-U-S-C-L-E conceived by Rebecca Feldman, this show took the Tony Awards and Broadway by storm in 2005. I love this show, so it was a no-brainer to check it out.

Greg Finney

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