Chandler Carter's works have been performed throughout the United States and in Canada and Europe. He has received several awards, including two grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. He holds a PhD in Composition from the City University of New York.
"A compelling musical recounting of a story with its own inherent dramatic power."
- Newsday
8:30-9:30pm
Mosheh
Music and Libretto by Yoav Gal
A multi-media recreation of the Moses story as an ancient-futuristic ritual, to be premiered at HERE in Fall 2010.
Yoav Gal is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work has been described as "indie opera" by The New York Times. He is a recipient of grants from the NEA, American Music Center, and Harvestworks, among other organizations. He holds a BA in composition from the Manhattan School of Music and an MA from Queens College.
"Music that is drawn to what's next, not what has been."
- The New York Times
VOX: SECOND LOOK
The Rat Land
Music by Gordon Beeferman, Libretto by Charlotte Jackson
VOX performs Scene 2 of this audience favorite first heard in 2007. This darkly comic and acid-tongued work depicts a dysfunctional family and its youngest member, who hides in a fantasy world she calls the Rat Land.
Gordon Beeferman is a composer, pianist, and improviser whose work has been heard in concert halls and
experimental music venues across America and Europe. He has received three BMI awards, an ASCAP Young
Composer Award, and has been a Tanglewood fellow.
"Daringly modern, gritty and intriguing."
- The New York Times
9:50-10:30pm
Séance on a Wet Afternoon
Music and Libretto by Stephen Schwartz, based on the novel by Mark McShane and screenplay by Bryan Forbes
A psychic and her husband plan an elaborate kidnapping scheme to legitimize her powers. Commissioned by Opera Santa Barbara for a world premiere in Fall 2009.
Stephen Schwartz is the highly acclaimed composer of the musicals Godspell and Pippin and the film The Prince of Egypt, among other works. His most recent musical, Wicked, is currently running on Broadway and touring both nationally and internationally.
Saturday, May 2
12:00-1:30pm
Panel Discussion: American Opera: Past, Present, Future
Moderator: George Steel, City Opera General Manager and Artistic Director
2:00-3:10pm
Invisible Cities
Music and Libretto by Christopher Cerrone
In this adaptation of Italo Calvino's visionary novel, Marco Polo describes his travels through the fantastical cities in Kubla Khan's empire.
Christopher Cerrone is a composer of orchestral, chamber, vocal, and electronic music residing in New Haven, and currently pursuing graduate studies at the Yale School of Music. He received his undergraduate degree in 2007 from the Manhattan School of Music.
"A lush, hushed beauty with graceful complexity."
- Ezra Laderman, President of the American Academy of Arts and Letters
Armide
Music by Jonathan Dawe, Libretto by Heather Raffo
A passionate political tale of Iraq in 2019, still torn apart by the clash of Iraqi and American forces, and the beautiful celebrity Armide who could quell the surging violence.
Jonathan Dawe, the youngest composer ever to be commissioned by James Levine and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, is on the faculty of the Juilliard School. He has received awards from the Koussevitsky Foundation, Fromm Foundation, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
"Envelope-pushing."
- The Boston Globe
3:30-4:30pm
Car Crash Opera
Music by Michaela Eremiásová and Jairo Duarte-López, Libretto and Animation by Skip Battaglia
A graphically beautiful and kinetically terrifying 8-minute opera set to animation about a fatal car crash.
Czech composer Michaela Eremiásová holds a degree in jazz composition from Berklee College of Music and a Master's Degree in Musicology from Charles' University in Prague, and is pursuing a PhD in composition at the Eastman School of Music.
Jairo Duarte-López was born in Bogotá, Colombia, and holds a degree in Film Scoring from Berklee College of Music, as well as a Master's degree in Composition from the Eastman School of Music, where he is currently pursuing his PhD. Skip Battaglia is an experimental animator and filmmaker whose work has been shown at the Telluride Film Festival, the AnimaMundi in Sao Paolo, and the International Festival of Animated Film in Stuttgart.
VOX: SECOND LOOK
Crescent City
Music by Anne LeBaron, Libretto by Douglas Kearney
An eclectic, electronically enhanced score tells a Brechtian tale of Marie Laveau and her voodoo gods, mobilized to save a fictional city after a Katrina-like disaster. First heard in VOX 2006.
Anne LeBaron is an internationally noted composer, harpist, educator, and author. Her awards and prizes include a Fulbright Fellowship and a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. She currently teaches at the California Institute of the Arts.
"An ambitious and alarming new opera."
- The Los Angeles Times
4:50-5:30pm
A Bird in Your Ear - VOX's 100th opera
Music by David Bruce, Libretto by Alasdair Middleton
A colorful, large-scale adaptation of a Russian folktale about a merchant's son who learns the language of birds. Originally commissioned by Dawn Upshaw for the Graduate Vocal Arts program at Bard College.
David Bruce received the Lili Boulanger Memorial Award in 2008. Recent commissions include two from Carnegie Hall, as well as a forthcoming one for the Chamber Music Society of the Lincoln Center. He received his PhD in Composition from King's College, London.
"A real operatic talent to watch."
- Opera Magazine
Since its founding in 1943, New York City Opera has been recognized as one of America's preeminent cultural institutions, celebrated for its adventurous programming and innovative, risk-taking production style. The company's wide-ranging repertory of 274 works spans five centuries of music and includes 29 world premieres and 61 American and/or New York premieres of such notable works as Bartók's Bluebeard's Castle, Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream, Shostakovich's Katerina Ismailova, Busoni's Doktor Faust, Prokofiev's The Love for Three Oranges and The Flaming Angel, Zimmermann's Die Soldaten, Schoenberg's Moses und Aron, and Glass' Akhnaten. The company has been a leading showcase for emerging artists, having helped launch the careers of more than 3,000 singers including José Carreras, Phyllis Curtin, David Daniels, Plácido Domingo, Lauren Flanigan, Renée Fleming, Elizabeth Futral, Jerry Hadley, Catherine Malfitano, Bejun Mehta, Sherrill Milnes, Samuel Ramey, Gianna Rolandi, Beverly Sills, Norman Treigle, Tatiana Troyanos, and Carol Vaness. In 1983 City Opera made operatic history when it became the first American opera company to use supertitles, an innovation that has revolutionized the way opera is produced and appreciated worldwide.
New York City Opera and New York City Ballet have undertaken a $200 million capital campaign-the first such joint venture in the companies' histories-to enhance audience amenities and provide a state-of-the-art environment for productions at their shared home, the David H. Koch Theater, recently renamed in honor of Mr. David H. Koch's $100 million lead gift to the joint capital campaign.
During the renovations, City Opera has taken to the road, bringing live music and provocative cultural conversation to more than fourteen different venues across New York City. In addition to concert presentations of Samuel Barber's Antony and Cleopatra at Carnegie Hall, highlights of the year include a concert of 20th-century vocal and orchestral music led by Music Director George Manahan, which is being performed citywide. The year also features continuation of the company's acclaimed education programs, which will introduce opera to more than 4,000 students with special performances of an abridged English-language version of Mozart's The Magic Flute.
In February 2009, George Steel, former Executive Director of the Miller Theatre at Columbia University, began his tenure as the company's new General Manager and Artistic Director. Building on the company's core mission of artistic excellence and accessibility, Mr. Steel's plans include broadening the company's adventurous approach to repertory, supporting the careers of promising new talent, and the continued development of the company's acclaimed education and outreach programs.
New York University's Jack H. Skirball Center for the Performing Arts is the premier venue for the presentation of cultural and performing arts events for NYU and lower Manhattan. The programs of the Skirball Center reflect NYU's mission as an international center of scholarship, defined by excellence and innovation and shaped by an intellectually rich and diverse environment. Since 2003, the 860-seat Center has provided a unique site for enhancing a sense of community while continuing the Greenwich Village traditions of creativity and artistic discovery with a broad range of compelling performance events at affordable ticket prices. Led by Executive Producer Jay Oliva (President Emeritus of New York University) and Director Michael Harrington, a natural and vital aspect of the Center's mission is to build young adult audiences for the future of live performance. www.skirballcenter.nyu.edu