Salli Terri Vidéos
artiste lyrique
- mezzo-soprano
- Canada
Dernière mise à jour
2024-05-18
Actualiser
Al Jolson Paul Whiteman John McCormack Edwards Terri Stevens 1924 1925 1958
Charted at #1 in February 1925. This Irving Berlin song (Berlin is pictured with Jolson in the video) was extremely popular in 1925, also charting at #1 for Paul Whiteman and his Orchestra, #1 for John McCormack, #6 for Cliff Edwards, #10 for Abe Lyman and His Californians and #12 for Lewis James. Later, a remake by Terri Stevens (which I've also posted) charted at #69 on Cash Box Top 100 Singles chart in November 1958. Recorded October 2, 1924. With Ray Miller's Orchestra. Written by Irving Berlin. B-side is "I'm Gonna Tramp, Tramp, Tramp" with Al Jolson and Ray Miller and His Orchestra.
Ronnita Miller Nicholas Phan Guo Morales Yasuda Terri 2021
Merola Opera Program presents What the Heart Desires. This recital, part of the 2021 Merola Summer Festival, was originally performed and filmed at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music on July 3, 2021 in front of invited donors and guests in attendance. Support the future of opera, visit (http•••) to make a gift today. Celebrating diversity in song, this recital co-curated by mezzo-soprano Ronnita Miller (Merola ‘05) and tenor Nicholas Phan will explore the many things our hearts desire. Featuring compositions by women and people of color, the program will include selections about romantic desire, physical desire, and the longing for home, for rest, for peace, and for a better world performed by select 2021 Merola young artists. For full details, including program, song text, artist bios, and program notes visit (http•••) Merola artists performing in this recital include Bryan Banowetz, Gabrielle Barkidjija, Gabrielle Beteag, Edward Graves, Erica Xiaoyan Guo, Celeste Morales, Laureano Quant, Anna Smigelskaya, Shiyu Tan, Marika Yasuda, and Tianchi Zhang. This performance of What the Heart Desires is sponsored by Amazon. Ronnita Miller is sponsored by Mr. Glenn H. Reid, and the Five Arts Foundation. Nicholas Phan is sponsored by Bob and Terri Ryan.
This educational video series will trace the cymbal selections of the great drummers from Gene, Max, Philly and Elvin, up to the present day with drummers such as Steve Gadd, Terri Lyne Carrington, Eric Harland, Bill Stewart, among many others. Throughout this evolution, you will find that the music drove the sound, and it still does. Each episode will include a discussion of the music, sound, and process that went into making the choice come alive. Join us as we take you on a cymbal sound journey that will honor the past, shape the present, and imagine the future. EPISODE 2: Steve Gadd
Francesca Caccini Caccini McIntosh Sirena O Connor Connor Bowen Dara Terri Gibson Heller Lamb Boyer 1625 1628
SYNOPSIS: Presented in One Act (no intermission) Composed by Francesca Caccini in 1625, “La liberazione di Ruggiero dalla’isola d’Alcina”, the first Italian opera to be presented in another country, is a marvelous musical action-romance with intriguing characters and a fascinating scenario. The opera was commissioned by Florence’s Regent Archduchess, Maria Magdalena of Austria. It was published under her auspices for the state occasion of the visit to Carnival by a Polish prince, Wladislas Sigismund. It celebrates his recent victory over the Turks (symbolized in the opera by the wicked sorceress Alcina). The first performance was in Florence in the Villa Poggia Imperiale on 3 February 1625, and it was revived in Warsaw in 1628. Part daring action rescue and part mystic saga, “La liberazione di Ruggerio dalla’isola d’Alcina” tells the tale of a female officer, Bradamante, serving in the occupying forces in the Middle East, who learns that her Muslim boyfriend, also an officer in her battalion, has been kidnapped by a female cult leader, known as a seductive enchantress. Unable to leave her post, her BFF, Melissa, herself a young sorceress, undertakes the mission to liberate him. To approach Ruggiero in acceptable and authoritative fashion, and reveal to him Alcina’s true nature, she takes on the appearance of Atlas, the mentor who had lovingly brought up Ruggiero. Besotted by the magic charms of his beautiful captor and drugged into submission, he remains her captive, surrounded by the living reminders of her discarded lovers, male and female. The rescue will involve subterfuge, duplicity, disguises, magic, and a final face-to-face fight between the two female adversaries. Finally, the “filthy sorceress” is vanquished, her cohorts of monsters and maidens dispersed, and the heroes prepare to return home safely. As the opera closes, all performers join together to sing the praises of loyalty and devotion. Composer Francesca Caccini was the first woman to compose an opera and also the most well-paid musician at the height of her career in the 1620s. A masterful musician, she played guitar, lute, harp, and keyboard. She was also a poet and wrote in both Italian and Latin.“La liberazione di Ruggiero dall’isola d’Alcina”, based on “Orlando furioso” - a romantic epic by 16th-century poet Lodovico Ariosto, is one of only a few of Caccini’s works that is still available today. Cast: Alcina – Rebecca Batista De Almeida Melissa – Madison Marie McIntosh Ruggerio – Daniel Kamalić First Lady, Sirena – Maria Margiolakou Second Lady – Heather O’Connor Third Lady – Allison Waggener Nettuna, Ensemble – Samuel Bowen First Tenor (Ensemble) – Rongjun Li Second Tenor (Ensemble) – Sung Shin Creative Team: Adrian Sylveen, Artistic Director, Conductor Alan Mann, Stage Director Martin Dahlin, Stage Manager Dara Blackstone – Chorus Master Joe Maturano – Lights Production Coordination: Terri Stangl – Development Coordinator Theresa MacNaughton – Public Relations Ruth Connors – House Manager Walter Gibson – Orchestra Coordinator Martin Dahlin – Stage Help & Orchestra Operations Raymund Krzyszczyk – Video Production Elias Dahlin – Assistant Video Production Sofia Sylveen – Photography Orchestra Personnel: Violins: Brunilda Myftaraj Katalin Viszmeg Viola: Jessica Heller Cello: Andrea Mills Bass: Kevin Hunn Flute: Jill Davis Oboe: Johanna Lamb Basson: Jennifer Bruening Horns: Roger Caruk Emily Boyer Trombone: Topher Logan Harpsichord: Adrian Sylveen
ou
- chronologie: Artistes lyriques (Amérique du Nord).
- Index (par ordre alphabétique): T...