If you’re in Coolidge Corner Saturday afternoon, you might hear the operatic longing of “O mio babbino caro” or the friendly warmth of “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.” Opera on Tap Boston, an ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by The podcast hopes to extend the appeal of opera, “an art form that comes with a fair bit of baggage,” to a larger audience. By Susanne Fowler For many ...
Tenor Jonas Kaufmann has released a new album, MAGISCHE TÖNE (Magical Sounds), featuring operetta and opera selections from ...
Classical music has endured the test of time, captivating audiences with its timeless beauty. Among its grandest components, Opera transcends reality, whisking listeners away to a world of romance and ...
Unlike many cultural pastimes, the mere thought of opera can be quite scary. The stereotypical image of a large lady in a Viking horned helmet, complete with two fat plaits belting out an ...
Their first ten years include performances for such dignitaries as Pope Francis, the Dali Lama, the Royal Family of Serbia, and the President of the UN. In the early 1920s, musician and physicist Lev ...
In 1731 Handel wrote part of Act I for an opera entitled Titus L’Empereur. For reasons that are still unknown, he then abandoned it, although he reworked its Overture and two arias for his next opera ...