Archive for Music – Page 2

The Woman in the Wall – a new opera

Photo Credit: Emily Brooke Sandor

The Los Angeles-based nonprofit organization Overtone Industries presents the world premiere of its new opera The Woman in the Wall, with two weekends of performances, opening Friday, March 23, 2012 at the atmospheric Masonic Lodge in Culver City.

The Woman In The Wall is a new operatic work by composer O-Lan Jones and librettist Kathleen Cramer, conducted by David O. This production reunites the award-winning Overtone creative team of the critically acclaimed 2010 Songs & Dances of Imaginary Lands.

Inspired by the 14th Century tradition of The Anchoress, this new opera is a “mystery play” in the ancient tradition; it explores the openings and paths inside that are revealed when all doors are locked shut.

Over the course of seven days, which cover seventeen years, we follow The Anchoress, “Marianna” (Gretchen Johnson), as she becomes the inspirational advisor to everyone from the peasants to the king. As we follow her journey inward through her temptations, doubts, revelations, and fears, we see how she transforms the people’s questions in relation to the Seven Virtues that light her way. The production features an orchestra of 10 instrumentalists, a cast of a dozen principal singers, and a 30-member chorus from the Angel City Chorale, led by Sue Fink.

 

Photo Credit: Emily Brooke Sandor

 

Photo Credit: Emily Brooke Sandor

The Woman in the Wall

Presented by Overtone Industries

Masonic Lodge

9635 Venice Boulevard,

Culver City, CA 90232

Performances:

Mar. 23 – Mar. 31, 2012

Fridays & Saturdays at 8:00pm

Ticket prices:

$25 for Peasants (seating closest to the performers)

$40 for Royalty (seating in the middle of the performance space)

$50 for the Virtuous (reserved seating on an elevated platform)

Box Office:

Purchase tickets here or call (323) 655-2410

 

 

 

 

Newest theatre review for LA Weekly — “The Color Purple” at Celebration

Production photo by Barry Weiss.

Gentle readers!

This week’s theatre review for the LA Weekly is for the musical version of Alice Walker’s sensational saga The Color Purple, now playing at Celebration Theater in West Hollywood.

 

Click here and then scroll down a little bit to read my rave review.

 

~ OR ~

 

You can just read it here!!

Enjoy!

 

 The Color Purple

A dazzling and buoyant musical (on Broadway from 2005-08) based on author Alice Walker’s Pulitzer-prize winning and sensational saga, this feminist tale charts an oppressed Southern black woman’s struggle for empowerment during the 1930s. The whirlwind pace of the lengthy (2 hour 30 minute) show — book by Marsha Norman, songs by Brenda Russell, Allee Willis, and Stephen Bray — crams in a lot of story, although condensed at times.

Director Michael Matthews has assembled a gifted creative team and a blisteringly talented cast of 17, all with powerful voices and unlimited enthusiasm, elevating Janet Roston’s superb choreography that is beautifully realized despite tight space constraints.

(Pictured left) Cesili Williams as central character Celie provides the raw heart of the show; it’s gratifying to watch her eventually step into her power. Matthews capitalizes on the intimate space, creating elegant and fluid staging and encouraging his cast to shatter the fourth wall.

The upbeat, high-energy and unabashedly sexy show mostly keeps the mood light, glossing over the harrowing aspects of Walker’s story to emphasize the sweeter emotional scenes and comedy, especially when employing a riotous and sassy ‘Greek chorus’ of gossipy church ladies as comic relief.

Hidden behind a wooden screen upstage are five musicians (including Music Director Gregory Nabours) playing their hearts out, belting out everything from honky tonk, jazz, blues and African rhythms, as well as backing tender duets featuring heavenly harmonies. Naila Aladin Sanders has created stunning period costumes.

 Do not miss this incredible show!

The Color Purple

Celebration Theatre,

7051-B Santa Monica Blvd.,

Los Angeles

323-957-1884

Thursdays-Saturdays, 8 p.m.;

Sundays, 3 p.m.

Continues through Saturday May 26, 2012

Tickets are $34.00

For tickets, please call (323) 957-1884 for details or visit their official site to purchase tickets online or to view a complete schedule.

 

 

Vox Femina spring concert – From Shakespeare to Shamrocks

photo by Paul Kawabori.

 

Vox Femina Los Angeles continues its 15th anniversary season with From Shakespeare to Shamrocks, a spring concert celebration that brings the English and Irish together in song on Saint Patrick’s Day, Saturday, March 17, 2012 at the Zipper Concert Hall in the Colburn School of Music.

In this bi-cultural evening, Vox Femina will unite classic Shakespeare sonnets with authentic Irish music sung in Gaelic.  From classical works to folk songs, traditions new and old from England, Scotland and Ireland will be celebrated at the event.

From Shakespeare to Shamrocks –
The tradition of setting Shakespeare’s texts to music has long featured both male and female voices. Vox will be turning this convention upside down with compositions arranged purely for the female voice.  The latter part of the concert comprises Irish and Scottish music including Scottish “waulking” folk songs, traditionally sung by women as they gather to clean clothes.

Singer-Composer Moira Smiley has been engaged by Vox to perform at the event, which will include Smiley singing the solo on the traditional Irish piece “Si do Mhaimeo,” as well as performing a solo set of traditional folk songs.  The last selection of the evening, “The Irish Blessing,” was arranged for Vox, for female voices only, in 2007 by Graeme Langager as a tribute to Lynn Bielefelt, a dear friend and long-time supporter of Vox, who succumbed to breast cancer in 2001.  The original composition of “The Irish Blessing” was dear to her heart.

“Music from the British Isles is diverse and rich in story – particularly from a woman’s perspective,” says Dr. Iris S. Levine, Vox Femina’s Artistic Director, “We’re excited to bring the vibrant music of this region to Los Angeles for a special Saint Patrick’s Day celebration.”

Vox Femina Los Angeles gives women voice through the performance of quality choral literature.  Diverse in culture, age, race, belief, and sexual identity, Vox is a chorus committed to commissioning new works and raising awareness about issues that affect the family of women.  Through music, the chorus aims to create a world that affirms the worth and dignity of every person.

 

From Shakespeare to Shamrocks

Vox Femina Spring Concert

Zipper Concert Hall at The Colburn School

200 South Grand Avenue,

Los Angeles, CA 90012.

 

Public parking is available at lots adjacent to the school and limited street parking is also available within the area.

 

Performance:

Saturday, March 17, 2012

8:00pm.

Tickets:

$25-30.00 during presale,

$35.00 at the door.

Group rates are also available.

For tickets and additional information, please go to their official site.

 

Additional Vox Femina 2012 Events –

• February 2012 – Vox has been honored with an invitation to perform Mahler No. 8 Symphony of a Thousand with 14 other choirs and the Los Angeles Philharmonic on Saturday, February 4, 2012 at Shrine Auditorium.  This spectacular performance will include over 1,000 instrumentalists and singers.

• March 2012 – Vox has been chosen via blind audition to perform at the American Choral Directors Association Western Division Conference in Reno, NV on Thursday, March 1, 2012.

• May 2012 – Colors of Love: A Celebration of 15 Years with Vox Femina Los Angeles, a fundraising event on Saturday, May 12, 2012 at the Ebell Club in Highland Park, will feature live music, dancing, food, drink, and memories from 15 wonderful years of giving women voice.

• June 2012 – Celebrating the Muse will look back at the music, people, and events that have inspired Vox Femina over the past 15 years.  This special concert will be held on Saturday, June 16, 2012 at Zipper Concert Hall in the Colburn School of Music.



 

Vox Femina Background:

Vox Femina Los Angeles is a women’s choral ensemble dedicated to the performance of quality choral literature from a world perspective with an emphasis on music by women composers. The chorus was founded in 1997 by Artistic Director Dr. Iris S. Levine.  The 21 founding members of Vox Femina first appeared on stage as guest artists with the Gay Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles in Apr il 1997.

Since that time, Vox has quickly established itself as one of the premier women’s choruses in the United States with a demonstrated ability to perform highly eclectic repertoire, some of which can be heard on several recordings. It actively fulfills its mission through an aggressive schedule of performances, touring and educational outreach.

Vox has demonstrated its support and encouragement of living composers through commissioning new works.  Auditions are held every August.

Dr. Iris S. Levine, Artistic Director –
Nationally recognized for her excellence in choral conducting, Dr. Iris S. Levine is the founder and artistic director of Vox Femina Los Angeles, the city’s premier women’s chorus. Through her extensive experience with women’s choral literature and innovative concert programming, Dr. Levine has charted Vox Femina’s 15-year journey, building its prominence in the choral community by way of num erous appearances at ACDA (American Choral Directors Association) conventions, and over 100 appearances throughout the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Dr. Levine earned her Doctorate in Choral Music from the University of Southern California under the tutelage of Rod Eichenberger and James Vail, and she holds a Master’s degree in Choral Conducting from Temple University in Philadelphia, where she studied with Alan Harler.  Dr. Levine is Department Chair and Professor of Music at California State Polytechnic University in Pomona.  She is also the Artistic Director for the Master Chorus at Stephen S. Wise Temple, where her choral arrangements are often performed.  Dr. Levine is also National Chair of the ACDA Repertoire and Standards Committee for Women’s Choirs and is highly sought as guest clinician and adjudicator for choral festivals throughout the country.

~~~

Moira Smiley, Special Guest –
LA-based Singer-Composer Moira Smiley travels the world as a vocalist and creates music for dance, theater and film.  Her voice, improvisations and compositions can be heard on feature films, documentaries, BBC, PBS, and on over 40 recordings including her recent albums blink (with VOCO) and rua (solo): fiercely spare and elegantly lush collections of warped traditionals and new songcraft.

She has sung with leading ensembles and artists around the world including Paul Hillier’s Theater of Voices, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, KITKA Vocal Ensemble, New World Symphony, and Shakespeare Santa Cruz.  Featured in Lincoln Center, UCLALive, Royal Festival Hall, folk and classical music festivals across the U.S. and Canada, Smiley’s work has received praise in Billboard and Gramophone.  For more information please visit her official sites here and here.

The Colburn School/Zipper Hall:

The Colburn School’s mission is to provide the highest quality performing arts education in an optimal learning environment.  Founded in 1950, The Colburn School was established as a small preparatory school in connection with the University of Southern California’s School of Music.  The School became an independent, nonprofit institution in 1980 through the generous support of its benefactor, Richard D. Colburn.  In 1998, The Colburn School moved to its current location on South Grand Avenue.  One of LA’s most popular performance halls, the intimate 435-seat Zipper Hall at The Colburn School is home to many arts groups from the greater Los Angeles area, including the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Camerata Pacifica, Southwest Chamber Music, Monday Evening Concerts, Lark Musical Society and Piano Spheres.  For more information, please call 213-621-4514 or visit their official site.

Official Site.

Facebook.

 

 

 

The Spidey Project comes to LA – interviews for LA Stage Times

Dear Readers,

Below is a link to my in-depth article on the genesis of a fun spoof musical, The Spidey Project, including interviews with the show’s creator Justin Moran as well as the director of the Theatre Unleashed production, David Chrzanowski.

Go here to read it.

Enjoy!

 

Production info:

The Spidey Project: With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility

Produced by Theatre Unleashed

Studio / Stage

520 N. Western Ave.

Los Angeles, CA 90004

DATES AND TIMES:

March 8-April 14, 2012

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays,

8 p.m.

Special Sunday performances March 11, 18, 25 and April 17:30 p.m.

TICKET PRICES:

$20 for general admission at the door

$16 if ordered online

*** PAY WHAT YOU WANT when patron brings a new book to donate ***

Tickets also available at Goldstar and L.A. Stage Alliance

INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS:

For further information, please call: (818) 849-4039

Or check out their website here.

 

 

Theatre Unleashed partners with Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

Theatre Unleashed (TU) seeks to collect books for the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles and its ‘Literally Healing’ program during the company’s run of The Spidey Project: With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility, from March 8-April 14.

A Broadway parody, The Spidey Project follows nerdy social outcast Peter Parker as he takes on an alter ego to battle a dastardly collection of terrifying villains and perhaps his biggest nemesis of all…himself in this clever original musical.

While the show has something for all ages, the nature of the superhero show had company executives looking for a charity that worked with children.

 

“Literally Healing is an incredible cause that deserves attention and support,” said Gregory Crafts, Managing Director of TU. “They help children cope with some life-changing challenges. And like most other charities, they are always looking for help to continue doing the positive work they do…that’s where we want to help.”

 

‘Literally Healing’ is an innovative reading program at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. The program draws from a Patient Therapeutic Library of over 1,000 titles. These therapeutic books for children ‘speak directly; to the program’s patients, helping them better understand and master the sensitive issues they face daily, including: coping with their medical condition and the trauma of hospitalization, being singled out, ridiculed or excluded because of their medical condition and their fear of deformity, disability or death. ‘Literally Healing’ tackles these sensitive issues in a very non-threatening manner to ease the medical and emotional anguish that patients can experience.

The program includes the loan and gifting of books from this collection to patients, families and staff. This is where TU comes in. For the run of The Spidey Project, if patrons bring in a brand new book to donate to the program, they can name their own ticket price for the show. The company is also promoting the program and linking to the program’s website and “wish list” for books (check out their official site for the complete “wish list”).

Further, members from the cast, including Spidey himself, will make a special appearance, personally delivering the books to patients at the end of the show’s run.

“We’ve established a reputation for giving back to the community,” Crafts said. “We think it’s important, especially when you find an organization like this. We’re glad to do our part.”

 

The Spidey Project: With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility

Produced by Theatre Unleashed

Studio / Stage

520 N. Western Ave.

Los Angeles, CA 90004

DATES AND TIMES:

March 8-April 14, 2012

Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays,

8 p.m.

Special Sunday performances March 11, 18, 25 and April 17:30 p.m.

TICKET PRICES:

$20 for general admission at the door

$16 if ordered online

*** PAY WHAT YOU WANT when patron brings a new book to donate ***

Tickets also available at Goldstar and L.A. Stage Alliance

INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS:

For further information, please call: (818) 849-4039

Or check out their website here.