faust_april_28_2011
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+ | Printed from the News & Observer - www.NewsObserver.com\\ | ||
+ | Published Sat, Apr 30, 2011 02:00 AM\\ | ||
+ | Modified Sat, Apr 30, 2011 03:36 AM\\ | ||
+ | ==== N.C. Opera' | ||
+ | |||
+ | BY ROY C. DICKS - Correspondent\\ | ||
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+ | Semi-staged opera in concert is an accepted alternative to the expense of full productions. N.C. Opera' | ||
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+ | Gounod' | ||
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+ | The cast heard Thursday was uniformly musical and confident. Although Faust is the one who sells his soul to the devil, his object of desire, Marguerite, gets the widest emotional range, which Mary Dunleavy expertly explored. Her warm, attractive soprano was capable of great delicacy or soaring power, as needed. Dimitri Pittas was an ardent Faust, his clear, bright tenor intelligently negotiating the role, especially its most lyrical passages. But in more emphatic sections, his voice often lacked necessary bloom and heft. | ||
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+ | As Marguerite' | ||
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+ | The 54-piece orchestra played with lush nuance under conductor Timothy Myers, whose feeling for the score gave much pleasure. Though the grandest passages, such as the " | ||
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+ | An unusual element was the presence of a giant screenover the singers for S. Katy Tucker' | ||
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+ | Nevertheless, | ||
+ | music_theater@lycos.com | ||
+ |
faust_april_28_2011.1304177035.txt.gz · Last modified: 2011/04/30 11:23 by tomgee