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Su-Lynn hated learning her part for
The Mikado but after seeing it
live was hooked! |
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Alice found that a fancy night out at
The Marriage of Figaro piqued
her interest in opera |
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Mitchell's curiosity about the
Joan Sutherland Performing Arts
Centre in Penrith led to a life-long
love for opera |
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Meg's Year 8 relief teacher
played the Queen of the
Night and she "could not believe
that such a voice existed" |
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'Soave sia il vento' was an opera trio from Cosi fan tutte which Jarryd also grew up hearing |
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Stephanie's French teacher played
the Major General in The Pirates of Penzance, and her daughter later
played the role of Mabel. |
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Jarryd's grandmother used to play
famous opera arias such as 'Un bel
di vedremo' from Madama Butterfly |
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Narelle would fall asleep on the
steps of her grandparents' house as
they played 'Nessun
dorma!' and waltzed below |
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"Even though I had no idea what
was being said, the pain and
heartache portrayed by the singer
playing Rodolfo touched my heart
and was forever imprinted in
my memory." |
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Tim found opera after buying a
Teddy Tahu Rhodes CD as
a teenager |
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Squall became hooked on Opera
after seeing Cheryl Barker
live in Otello: "hearing her
Desdemona did something to
me. Magic, if you believe in it." |
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Daniel was in love with the
famous 'Au fond du temple saint'
duet but couldn't rewind the LP
so listened to the whole of
The Pearlfishers over and
over again |
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The march in Aida was one of the
opera highlights on a CD
Daniel's grandmother gave him |
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Kate found the spooky and sexy
Salome to be a key moment in
her opera history |
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The use of music underneath the
confession of Azucena in Il
Trovatore fascinated Kate |
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Josh's grandmother, who saw
Dame Joan Sutherland live in
Lucia di Lammermoor, found
comfort in opera as her
Alzheimers progressed |
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Antonia's daughter gave her two
tickets to La Traviata on
Sydney Harbour |
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Blagorodna heard 'Song to the Moon' from Rusalka on the radio and changed her opinion of opera |
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Ann heard The Coronation of Poppea on ABC Radio and
was "gobsmacked" |
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Marita's first live opera Carmen
at the Sydney Opera House
led to her love of opera |
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Alessandra knew she was hooked
on opera after hearing 'Te Deum'
from Tosca live in
Barcelona |
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Meg walked out of her
first opera La boheme in tears,
hoping nobody would see |
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Jodie found that Don Giovanni
blew her away and removed
her worries at the time |
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Shannaye's experience seeing Of Mice and Men with her father
has led her to want to travel
the country to hear more opera |
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Seeing La clemenza di Tito
on Swedish TV led to Andrei's
love for Mozart operas |
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Productions such as Graeme
Murphy's Turandot keep Justin's
love for opera alive |
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'O mio babbino caro' was
an aria which Jarryd
associates strongly with
his childhood |
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10. Begrudgingly
seeing a performance
- Su-Lynn: When I was a student, I was learning
the violin and had to learn a piece from The Mikado. I hated it! My teacher suggested I go and see a performance of The Mikado. I was amazed with the
costumes, performers and the music and realised learning the violin was a great
start to appreciating opera.
9. Curiosity
- Alice: Shamefully, it all started with a
high school obsession with Phantom of the
Opera. I was so into the musical and Leroux's story that I decided I ought
to try listening to opera. At school, we happened to be studying Mozart, and
(following my pattern of obsession), I really enjoyed Amadeus and got into a few of Mozart's arias. As a birthday present
in year 12, my friend and I got tickets to see the Opera Australia production
of The Marriage of Figaro. We went
all-out: floor-length dresses, opera cloaks and gloves. It was a fantastic
performance, and we sat there in the 6th row, hoping Joshua Bloom would look
our way! From there, I was stuck! (I just thought from that moment that the
music drew you into the story so much more than mere drama...)
(Alice we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
- Mitchell: I live in Penrith, Sydney where
we have the Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre and one day while in
Penrith, I saw it and thought "Who is that lady and why would they name a
building after her?” When I got home, I looked up Joan Sutherland on Google and
read that she was an opera singer and I thought to myself "oh how
boring" and stopped reading. Then about a week later, I thought about it
again and decided to search for Joan Sutherland on YouTube and I heard her sing
'È'Strano... Ah, Fors’è lui... Sempre libera' from her 1960-1(?) studio
recording and was completely blown away!...I then started attending Opera Australia's
performances at the Sydney Opera House and I can't describe what I felt. It's
not as if I doubted that people could "sing like that" but to see and
hear it in person, it was a whole other thing. I thought "wow, I'm
actually right here witnessing this. It's happening right in front of me".
It felt really special. I felt like I was buzzing with energy just from the
atmosphere. Opera for me has now become more than just a love, or something I'm
"hooked on", it's now my raison d'etre.
8. Being forced to
listen to it
- Liane: I was 'force-fed' opera by my father
& his 78 rpm records. It was almost a subliminal shift from "OMG, not
more opera" in my late teens to falling hopelessly in love with the
sumptuous feast that is opera.
- Tara: I'm not sure I had any choice BUT to
become hooked on opera. My father would blare his favourites the moment my
mother left the house (at the kind of volume that could be heard halfway up the
street), so I basically had the choice of earplugs or learning to love it. It
was an easy choice :)
7. A good music
teacher
- Meg: Year 8 music many years ago now. A relief
music teacher played the Queen of the Night for us and I could not believe that
such a voice existed that sounded so much like an instrument.
- Stephanie: I come from a non-classical
family background. My first taste of opera was watching an operetta, The Pirates of Penzance, at my high
school and seeing a totally unexpected, funny, and impressive side of my French
teacher who sang the Major General! Then, many years later in Emerald, Central
Queensland, my unexpectedly-musical daughters were privileged to be in the
chorus of Don Giovanni (run by Opera
Queensland, I think) which spurred their fascination with all things opera.
Last year, one daughter played Mabel in her high school's production of Pirates of Penzance. She is now studying
Classical Voice at the Conservatorium! I now try to listen to or see as many
operas as I can, and my appreciation of the magnificent voices, and the power
and beauty of opera keeps growing.
(Stephanie we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 1999 highlights)
6. Positive association from childhood
- Hannah: All through my childhood, after a
hectic Saturday cleaning, mum would always put on an opera CD (or five!) to
relax with on a Sunday afternoon. Opera thus came to equal relaxing, lazy,
family-filled afternoons after a hectic chore-filled day. Opera music still
transports me with that special childhood feeling.
- Jarryd: When I was a child and I had trouble
falling to sleep at night, my grandmother would play classical records to calm
me down and help me fall to sleep. Most of these records included some of the
most beautiful arias in operatic history including ‘O mio babbino caro’, ‘Un
bel di vedremo’ and ‘Soave sia il vento’. All throughout my childhood, the
highlight of visiting my grandparents would be sitting on my grandmother's lap
and listening to the hundreds of operatic records she'd collected over the years.
Years later, as a teenager when looking through my grandparents' attic, I came
across these records and sat for hours listening to them. One record struck me
in particular - a recording of Puccini's La bohème, particularly the very last scene ending in the death of Mimì. Even
though I had no idea what was being said, the pain and heartache portrayed by
the singer playing Rodolfo touched my heart and was forever imprinted in my
memory. I have a very deep and personal connection to opera which is founded in
my childhood and I have listened to, attended and loved opera ever since. (Jarryd we're going to send you a CD of La bohème featuring Anna Netrebko)
- Narelle: When I was tiny I often
stayed with my great aunt and uncle, who lived in a two-story terrace house
near Bondi Beach. They were passionate about opera and each evening after the
biggest bubble bath, they would tuck me into the high double bed where I'd
listen to the strains of Mario Lanza floating up the stairs, until eventually
I'd climb out of bed and sit on the middle step watching them waltz around the
lounge room until I fell asleep. Although they had been married for nearly 60
years, Auntie Madge and Uncle Pep were the most romantic couple I've even known
and opera has been in my blood ever since. When I hear 'Ave Maria' or 'Nessun dorma!' my heart soars with memories of them
(Narelle we're going to send you a CD of La bohème featuring Anna Netrebko)
5. A catchy tune
or a standout voice
- Tim: Teddy Tahu Rhodes got me hooked when
I bought his first CD back in high school. Not an inspirational story but a
pretty damn good reason!
- Daniel: I kept listening to my
grandmother's LP of The Pearlfishers,
but it was only to hear the duet ‘Au fond du temple saint’. No such thing as
repeat on an LP! I later found a CD of operatic favourites that had the duet
from The Pearlfishers, but also introduced me to other classics such as
‘Nessun dorma’, ‘Largo al factotum’, and choral pieces like ‘Va pensiero’, and
the march from Aida. (Daniel we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
- Squall: When I really got hooked on opera
- apart from always liking it, having grown up listening to it - was seeing and
hearing Cheryl Barker live in Otello.
It wasn't my first, or for that matter favourite, opera, but hearing her
Desdemona did something to me. Magic, if you believe in it.
4. Learning to
sing
- Kate: I got hooked on opera when I got to 29
and realised that I really loved singing and would regret it if I didn't at
least try to become a singer. I first tried music theatre, which was OK, but
realised I loved the orchestration and emotional content of an opera more. The
moment when Salome first appears is
foreboding and very sexy, or the way Verdi uses the strings to evoke the fire
Azucena unknowingly burnt her child in.... And then her amazing mezzo voice
over the top... It's fascinating. (Kate we're going to send you a copy of the Ultimate Verdi highlights CD)
- Angela: I have a mother who always pushed it
down our throats when young and I resisted, until I started having singing
lessons myself aged 48 years (OK so I'm a late starter). Discovered I have a
"classical" voice and at the same time I discovered a love of the
opera genre, and I now go along to productions whenever I can. Apart from that,
opera people - singers, conductors, directors, producers, etc - are the nicest
people. I also volunteer with MTO here in Melbourne and enjoy helping out where
I can.
(Angela we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
3. A family member
or close friend
- Simone: I was just a little girl, my
grandparents used to play it when I went and stayed with them, and later to
live with them. Firstly, I think it was the dresses that drew me to it. But
then came the sound as I was introduced to Bryn and Cecilia singing, in particular
their performance of Le nozze di Figaro...Now, some 14 years later, it still resounds within me and inspires many of my
designs.
(Simone we're going to send you a CD of La bohème featuring Anna Netrebko)
- Rebecca: A very dear friend who has sadly
passed was a subscriber and would proudly sit in the front row of every single
opening night. We used to immerse ourselves in opera and I truly fell in love
with the whole concept of opera when I went to my first performance nearly 20
years ago. I don't get to many performances lately but I can always put on a CD,
close my eyes and fall in love all over again with the magic of opera.
- Josh: I came late to opera - in my 30s. My
grandmother was diagnosed with Alzheimers and as the disease progressed she
lost her ability to talk, but continued to listen to opera CDs (she loved Dame
Joan Sutherland and even saw her in Lucia di Lammermoor in Paris). She and I would sit and listen to operas (or watch
DVDs on TV) for hours on end, lost in the music. She died a few years ago but I
continue to listen to opera at home and get to as many OA and other
performances as money allows each year.
(Josh we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights, which features some of the great Joan Sutherland)
- Antonia: I love all music genres but
opera was never my favourite until my daughter started voice training and
introduced me to the magnificent world of opera. My daughter was given two
tickets to La Traviata on Sydney
Harbour because she was a volunteer. She graciously gave me the tickets, I was
overwhelmed by her generosity and then on the evening of the opera I was
transported to another world!
(Antonia we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
2. TV, Radio and
Cinema broadcasts
- Blagorodna: Even as a music teacher, conductor and classical pianist, I was not
so fussed on opera...I heard Dvorak’s ‘Song to the Moon’ from Rusalka about 25 years ago when I was
driving to work, by a soprano who had a beautiful voice, the sweetest timbre.
It is still my favourite aria and I play it, wherever I am, EVERY FULL MOON.
The Same Voice...Lucia Popp.
- Andrei: The first opera I saw was La
clemenza di Tito on TV filmed from the Drottningholm Court Theatre in
Sweden. That was in 1991, the 200th anniversary of Mozart's death. SBS ran a
series of Mozart operas and I saw Le nozze
di Figaro and Die Zauberflote
afterwards and was hooked from there onwards. I love Mozart and unconsciously
rave on about him in conversation...Too bad I
can't sing a note. I love Mozart coloratura pieces. (Andrei we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 1999 highlights)
- Marita: I got hooked by watching the screenings of the Opera at the Met series
at The Dendy, Opera Quays Sydney. A lovely friend then took me to Carmen at the Opera House for my
birthday and I was totally gone!
- Anne:
The very first time I listened to ABC FM Monteverdi's Coronation of Poppea was playing. Never having heard opera in
stereo before, I was gobsmacked.
- Dylan: The Sunday Afternoon Arts on telly...on
those rainy Melbourne days cooped up inside the house with great arts
stories...and voila there was this art form with music, theatre and text! What
more does a precocious little kid like me need? I was lost to the other world
but was reborn into this new world of opera!
(Dylan we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 1999 highlights)
1. A great first
opera (sometimes accidental!)
- Alessandra: While I was still at uni, I was
able to get some concession tickets for Tosca
at Gran Teatre de Liceu, Barcelona's opera house. After the ending of the first
act, when they sang ‘Va Tosca’ (‘Te Deum’), I knew I was hooked on opera... Was
just amazing!
- Meg: The music was always available at home
but the first opera I saw, in the flesh, was La bohème. I remember at the end walking out of the theatre (well
before the Opera House) in tears and hoping no-one would see me.
(Meg we're going to send you the Ultimate Verdi CD pack)
- Jodie: I've mentioned this here before, but
it was actually last year, seeing OA's Don
Giovanni which sealed the deal for me...I was going through a pretty rough time last year with some major stuff
going on, and I'd never been to the opera before so I thought, "why
not?" So I went and was totally transported and blown away by this
experience. So much so that I depleted my sad student bank account in order to
go again three nights later! It seriously changed my life: instant passion for
opera...it was the
fact that it completely took me out of myself and distracted me from my
"stuff" for three hours was what made it so powerful, and it made me
realise that probably everyone in that theatre (even the ones onstage,
backstage and in the pit) had things that were troubling them but we were all
able to leave the world outside for a bit and share this experience. That's
when I understood the power of opera. (Jodie we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
- Maggi: 1973 went to Ruddigore by mistake, sat on BENCHES in the Gods and have not stopped
loving it yet!
(Maggi we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights)
- Shannaye: I got hooked by seeing a play The Mikado by a small production company
in Elwood. I took my Dad to see Of Mice and
Men and Opera Australia is the best ever. I would travel all over Australia
to see a production.
- Justin: In 1988 as a penurious uni student I
went to see Porgy and Bess at
Melbourne's Spoleto Festival. It was spellbinding and totally captivating
(although there was no way that a tiny goat could move such a huge
bass-baritone, cart or not!). The following year I took out a youth
subscription to The Australian Opera and the love affair with Opera was
confirmed; I've been a subscriber ever since. (Justin we're going to send you a CD of Opera Australia 2000 highlights, but also a Cleveland Orchestra recording of Porgy and Bess!)
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It is one of the greatest show i have ever seen. It shows the real emotion of a man. Everything are presented live.
ReplyDelete----------------------------
The fake doctors notes are good for taking leave from office and are easily available on web.