Showing posts with label british baritone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label british baritone. Show all posts

Friday, September 1, 2017

Barihunk James Newby wins 2017 John Christie Award

James Newby (photo Ben Mckee)
British barihunk James Newby has been named as the 2017 recipient of Glyndebourne’s John Christie Award, an annual scholarship given to a promising young singer to fund private study.

Newby is a Jerwood Young Artist and was a member of the 2017 Glyndebourne Festival Chorus. He sang the roles of Marcellus/Player 4 in Hamlet, Messenger in La traviata and Notary in Don Pasquale in the 2017 festival; he also performed in the Chorus for all three of those productions, as well as La clemenza di Tito.

James Newby sings Finzi's "Come away, come away death":

A former student at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, he won the 2017 Trinity Gold Medal. He has been awarded the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment’s Rising Stars prize for the 2017/2018 season, and will perform regularly with the ensemble in programs at the South Bank, King’s Place and on tour.

In 2016, Newby won the Ferrier Award and was awarded the Wigmore Hall/Independent Opera Voice Fellowship, and in 2015 he won the Richard Tauber Prize and third prize at the Wigmore Hall/Kohn International Song Competition.

James Newby sings Schubert's "Der Jüngling und Der Tod":

The John Christie Award has been presented by the Worshipful Company of Musicians since 1965. Past winners include Gerald Finley (1989), Kate Royal (2004), Matthew Rose (2006), Allan Clayton (2008), barihunk Duncan Rock (2010) and Louise Alder (2014).

Newby was announced as the 2017 winner at the final performance of Glyndebourne Festival 2017 on August 27th.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Rodney Earl Clarke releasing debut album "Glorious Quest"

Rodney Earl Clarke
British barihunk Rodney Earl Clarke is releasing his debut album, Glorious Quest, a collection of the greatest songs from American musical theater. The album focuses on the composers that solidified the modern story-driven, integrated art genre that we now enjoy.

Selections include Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’, If I Loved You, Some Enchanted Evening and You'll Never Walk Alone from Carousel. He is joined by the pianist Christopher Gould. You can purchase a copy HERE.

You can hear Clarke live on August 23, when he performs at the Proms in Dvořák’s haunting Symphony No. 9. Originally devised by Gerard McBurney and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, this newly remounted Beyond the Score® performance combines actors, projections and live musical examples to explore the history of this enduringly popular orchestral classic. Additional information is available online.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Jonathan McGovern making two major debuts

Jonathan McGovern
Barihunk Jonathan McGovern is making a major role and house debut this season, beginning with his first performance of the title role in Monteverdi’s Orfeo at the Teatro Arriaga in Bilbao.

The opera tells the story of Orfeo's descent to Hades and his fruitless attempt to bring his dead bride Eurydice back to the living world. It was written in 1607 for a court performance during the annual Carnival at Mantua and is considered the earliest opera that is still regularly performed. Performances are on May 5th and 6th and tickets are available online.

This summer, he will make his company debut with the Garsington Opera in the title role of Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande. Andrea Carroll will sing the role of Mélisande and Paul Gay is Golaud. The British singer performed the role last season with English Touring Opera. Performances run from June 16th through July 7th and tickets and additional cast information is available online.

Monday, November 28, 2016

BARIHUNK CAST SWITCH: Barihunk James Newby replaces Jonathan McGovern as Mercurio

Barihunk James Newby (©Ben McKee Photography)
La Nuova Musica will be swapping barihunks in the role of Mercutio for their performance of Cavalli's La Calisto tonight at Wigmore Hall. James Newby will be filling in for Jonathan McGovern in a cast that also includes two of the sexiest countertenors in opera, Jake Arditti as Satirino and Tim Mead as Endomione. Bass-barihunk Edward Grint also appears as Silvano in a cast headed by early music specialist Lucy Crowe as Calisto. Tickets are available online.

Francesco Cavalli’s La Calisto, first performed in Venice in 1651, blends comedy and tragedy with music of sensuous beauty and irresistible charm.  The opera’s libretto is based on the ancient Greek myth of the nymph Callisto as related by Ovid in his Metamorphoses.

At the age of 22, Newby was awarded Third Prize overall at the Wigmore Hall/Kohn Foundation International Song Competition in 2015 and won the Richard Tauber Prize for the  the best interpretation of Schubert Lieder. Previous winners of the prize include Jonathan Lemalu and Simon Keenlyside.

James Newby sings Finzi's "Come away, come away death":

In September, Newby performed on the last night of the BBC Proms in a concert that featured international operatic superstar Juan Diego Flórez.

In the summer of 2016, Newby joined the Glyndebourne Festival Chorus and is currently  continuing his studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

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BARIHUNK CAST SWITCH: Barihunk James Newby replaces Jonathan McGovern as Mercurio

Barihunk James Newby (©Ben McKee Photography)
La Nuova Musica will be swapping barihunks in the role of Mercutio for their performance of Cavalli's La Calisto tonight at Wigmore Hall. James Newby will be filling in for Jonathan McGovern in a cast that also includes two of the sexiest countertenors in opera, Jake Arditti as Satirino and Tim Mead as Endomione. Bass-barihunk Edward Grint also appears as Silvano in a cast headed by early music specialist Lucy Crowe as Calisto. Tickets are available online.

Francesco Cavalli’s La Calisto, first performed in Venice in 1651, blends comedy and tragedy with music of sensuous beauty and irresistible charm.  The opera’s libretto is based on the ancient Greek myth of the nymph Callisto as related by Ovid in his Metamorphoses.

At the age of 22, Newby was awarded Third Prize overall at the Wigmore Hall/Kohn Foundation International Song Competition in 2015 and won the Richard Tauber Prize for the  the best interpretation of Schubert Lieder. Previous winners of the prize include Jonathan Lemalu and Simon Keenlyside.

James Newby sings Finzi's "Come away, come away death":

In September, Newby performed on the last night of the BBC Proms in a concert that featured international operatic superstar Juan Diego Flórez.

In the summer of 2016, Newby joined the Glyndebourne Festival Chorus and is currently  continuing his studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Only a month left to order your 2017 Barihunks in Bed Calendar. Enjoy opera's hottest men year around!

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BARIHUNK CAST SWITCH: Barihunk James Newby replaces Jonathan McGovern as Mercurio

Barihunk James Newby (©Ben McKee Photography)
La Nuova Musica will be swapping barihunks in the role of Mercutio for their performance of Cavalli's La Calisto tonight at Wigmore Hall. James Newby will be filling in for Jonathan McGovern in a cast that also includes two of the sexiest countertenors in opera, Jake Arditti as Satirino and Tim Mead as Endomione. Bass-barihunk Edward Grint also appears as Silvano in a cast headed by early music specialist Lucy Crowe as Calisto. Tickets are available online.

Francesco Cavalli’s La Calisto, first performed in Venice in 1651, blends comedy and tragedy with music of sensuous beauty and irresistible charm.  The opera’s libretto is based on the ancient Greek myth of the nymph Callisto as related by Ovid in his Metamorphoses.

James Newby sings Finzi's "Come away, come away death":
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At the age of 22, Newby was awarded Third Prize overall at the Wigmore Hall/Kohn Foundation International Song Competition in 2015 and won the Richard Tauber Prize for the  the best interpretation of Schubert Lieder. Previous winners of the prize include Jonathan Lemalu and Simon Keenlyside.

In September, Newby performed on the last night of the BBC Proms in a concert that featured international operatic superstar Juan Diego Flórez.

In the summer of 2016, Newby joined the Glyndebourne Festival Chorus and is currently  continuing his studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.

Only a month left to order your 2017 Barihunks in Bed Calendar. Enjoy opera's hottest men year around!

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Monday, November 21, 2016

David Jones to reprise retelling of Schumann song cycles

David Jones (Photo left: Alejandro Tamagno)
British barihunk David Jones is reprising his performance of "Unknowing," a turbulent love tale told through the interweaving of two Schumann song cycles: Dichterliebe and Frauenliebe und Leben. He originally performed the piece with Teatime Opera at Cambridge, but on November 29 and December 3, he'll perform the piece with soprano Christine Cunnold at the Tristan Bates Theatre in London.

Olivier-Award winning libretti translator and composer David Parry created the new English translation of Schumann's most well known song cycles.

David Jones performs The Salley Gardens:

Jones studied at Oxford University and Trinity Laban and was prizewinner in the 2015 AESS Patricia Routledge English Song Competition. He enjoys a fruitful ongoing collaboration with Cantata Dramatica, with whom he has given the first performances of four substantial works, most recently Nick Bîcat’s Red Dragon, White Dragon.

Operatic roles have included Jesus in Jonathan Harvey's Passion and Resurrection  at the Voices of London Festival, Edward VIII in the premiere of Josh Spear's That Woman at the Tête-à-Tête Festival, Pritschitsch in Lehar's The Merry Widow with Opera Danube, Jamie in the world premiere of The Sleeper with the Welsh National Youth Opera and Ko-Ko in Gilbert & Sullivan's The Mikado with Co-Opera Co.

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Malte Roesner

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Introducing British Barihunk Dan Shelvey

Daniel Alfred Shelvey
Liverpool native Dan Shelvey was nominated by a reader on Facebook to be in our "Barihunks in Bed" calendar and we couldn't agree more. He is currently studying opera course at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama (GSMD) where he is supported by the GSMD, the Countess of Munster Musical Trust and Musicians Benevolent.  Before attending the GSMD, Shelvey graduated from the Royal Northern College of Music with a first-class degree.

He is winner of the Richard Van Allan prize 2015, the Robin Kay 2013 Memorial Prize for Opera and the 2012 Frederick Cox Award for Singing, and was awarded second place in the Elizabeth Harwood Memorial Prize for Singers 2013.

Soprano Renée Fleming leads a masterclass with Daniel Shelvey:

A 2014 Glyndebourne Jerwood Young Artist, Dan has performed Flora’s Servant in Verdi's La traviata, covered Morales in Bizet's Carmen for Glyndebourne Festival Opera and will perform the role of the Marchese d’Obigny in their 2017 production of La traviata.  Other roles include Junius in Britten's The Rape of Lucretia  at the GSMD, Ulisse in Monteverdi's  Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria, Sid in Britten's Albert Herring, Boris in Shostakovich's Paradise Moscow at the Royal Northern College of Music, and Aeneas in Purcell's Dido and Aeneas for Silk Opera.

Shelvey has sung as a soloist in many of the UK’s leading concert venues including the Royal Festival Hall, Colston Hall and the Bridgewater Hall.  Recent solo concert highlights include Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with the Hallé and at the Royal Festival Hall for the BBC, an Oxford Lieder Festival recital, and a recital for the Glyndebourne Jerwood Young Artist recital series at Brighton Pavilion.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Nicholas Crawley in sexy Cosi fan tutte at Reisoper

Yaroslav Abaimov, Robert Davies & Nicholas Crawley (L-R)
The last time that British barihunk Nicholas Crawley was featured on this site, he was featured in nothing but a towel as Don Basilio in the Nederlandse Reisoper's production of Rossini's The Barber of Seville.  He's currently appearing in with the company in Mozart's Così fan tutte in a production directed by Dutch actor Xander Straat.

He's joined by the Ferrando of hunkentenor Yaroslav Abaimov. Straat has duo outfitted in form-fitting tattoo body suits and colored beards while disguised in an effort to prove their girlfriends as unfaithful. Performances are running from February 9 -March  19 and tickets and additional cast information is available online.


Crawley studied at the Royal Academy of Music in London where he was awarded The Independent Opera Vocal Scholarship 2012. After completing the Master of Arts in Vocal Studies and Royal Academy Opera Advanced Diploma course he joined De Nederlands Reisopera as a resident artist where he has also performed Sleep, Hymen and Winter in Purcell's Fairy Queen as well as Petrus in a staged Bach's St John Passion.

Friday, December 11, 2015

Barihunk Bradley Travis singing Masetto opposite two fellow barihunks

Bradley Travis
We introduced Bradley Travis back in October when he won the Leonard Ingrams award. This Spring he'll be singing Masetto opposite fellow barihunk George von Bergen in the title role of Mozart's Don Giovanni. The company will begin this year's tour at the Hackney Empire on March 5th and perform through June 10th, when they wrap up at the Sands Centre in Carlisle. They will also be performing Gluck's Iphigenie en Tauride and Donizetti's Pia de'Tolomei. The entire tour schedule is available online.

Shortly after the tour, Travis will join another barihunk, Jacques Imbrailo, for Don Giovanni with the Classical Opera Company at Cadogan Hall in London's Chelsea district. The June 17th performance will be the company's first production of Don Giovanni in their history.

Travis was born in Cheshire and studied at the Royal Northern College of Music. He recently graduated from the Royal College of Music International Opera School (RCMIOS) where he won the Eric Joseph Shilling Award for Opera.

Bradley Travis sings Masetto's "Ho capito...":

Operatic roles performed include Figaro in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, Don Iñigo Gomez in Ravel's L’heure espagnole, Lord Ellington in Offenbach's La Vie Parisienne, Ottone in Monteverdi's L’incoronazione di Poppea all for the RCMIOS. He has also appeared as Count Robinson in The Secret Marriage for British Youth Opera who presented him with the Basil A. Turner Award, Minos Arianna in Handel's Creta, Argenio Imeneo under Laurence Cummings for the London Handel Festival, Alidoro in Rossini's La Cenerentola for Mananan Festival Opera and Lesbus in Handel's Agrippina for Iford Opera. 

He recently made his Opera North début singing Figaro in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro and sang the Fireman in Šimon Voseček's Biedermann and the Arsonists at Independent Opera.

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Vittorio Prato, Malte Roesner & Cyril Rovery
 




Sunday, September 13, 2015

Barihunk trio in Royal Academy of Music's Marriage of Figaro

Bozidar Smiljanic and Richard Walshe
The Royal Academy of Music will present Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro under the baton of noted conductor Jane Glover on October 31 and November 1 and 2. Barihunks Bozidar Smiljanic and Richard Walshe will rotate the role of Figaro, while Henry Neill takes on the Count. Tickets and additional cast information is available online.

UPDATED POST: We have just learned that the Count is also double-cast with Haobin Wang performing on Saturday and Monday and Henry Neill on Friday and Sunday.

We introduced London born bass-barihunk Smiljanić back in March. He is currently studying opera at the Royal Academy of Music after gaining his degree in Law at the University of Nottingham.  In 2014, he made his debut at the Glyndebourne Festival Opera as A Captain in Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin. At the Academy, Smiljanić has worked on a variety of operatic roles including Leporello and Masetto in Mozart's Don Giovanni, Figaro in La nozze di Figaro, Monterone in Verdi's Rigoletto, Bartolo in Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia, Le Roi  in Massenet's Cendrillon and Superintendent Budd in Britten's Albert Herring.

Walshe was educated at the King’s School in Gloucester and graduated from the Royal Academy of Music in 2014 with first class honours. He is currently studying on a post-graduate Master of Arts degree at the Royal Academy.  During his time at the Royal academy, Walshe has performed Schumann’s Dichterliebe, Finzi’s Let us Garlands bring and Vaughan Williams’ Songs of Travel, as well as Antonio in Le Nozze di Figaro and Amantio di Nicolai in Puccini's Gianni Schicchi.  He recently performed Bach’s Cantata BWV 203 at the Royal Academy of Music, Mozart’s Mass in C at Chichester Cathedral, Bach’s St.Johns Passion with the Waverley Singers and Mendelssohn’s Elijah with St Neots Choral Society.

Henry Neill
Neill currently studies on the Royal Academy of Music Opera and previously held a choral scholarship at St John’s College, Cambridge.  He was recently awarded the Sir Thomas Armstrong Prize for English Song at the Royal Academy of Music, the Audience prize at the Maureen Lehane Vocal Awards, the Sacred Aria Prize at the Mozart Singing Competition and is generously supported by the Carr-Gregory Scholarship. With Royal Academy Opera he has performed as Marco in Gianni Schicchi and most recently the role of Smirnov in Walton’s The Bear. Last year he played the role of Friquet in Garsington Opera’s production of Offenbach’s Vert Vert.

Friday, May 15, 2015

Charles Rice to make role debut as Eugene Onegin

Charles Rice and Gelena Gaskarova in Eugene Onegin
British barihunk will be making his role debut as Eugene Onegin in Tchaikovsky's operatic masterpiece in Nantes and Angers. He previously performed the role of Zaretsky in the opera at the Iford Festival Opera. He'll be part of an all-star cast that includes Gelena Gaskarova as Tatiana, Diana Montague as Madame Larina, Oleg Tsibulko as Prince Gremin and Suren Maksutov as Lensky.

The opera will run from May 19-28 at the Théâtre Graslin in Nantes and then be performed at the Grand Théâtre in Angers on June 14 and 16.

Charles Rice in 2012 singing Eugene Onegin in recital:


Recent engagements have included Sid in Britten's Albert Herring with the English Touring Opera, Ned Keene in Britten's Peter Grimes at the Aldeburgh Festival, Morales in Bizet's Carmen at theRoyal Albert Hall and Angelotti in Puccini's Tosca for Grange Park Opera. Rice studied at the Royal Academy of Music and the National Opera Studio. He was a finalist at Les Azuriales Young Artists Competition 2009 in France and winner of the Garsington Prize 2009.

In December, he heads to the Stasttheater Klagenfurt to sing Escamillo in Bizet's Carmen.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

George von Bergen in something old, something new

George von Bergen (Photo: James Bellorini)
We recently introduced British barihunk George von Bergen in an announcement about ENO's upcoming season, where he's singing Sharpless in Anthony Minghella's award-winning production of Puccini's Madama Butterfly.

If you want to catch him in something a bit more contemporary, you can hear him as the Steward in Jonathan Dove's Flight at Opera Holland Park from June 6-19. The comic opera is based on a true story of a refugee trapped and living at a major international airport. He'll be joined by Kitty Whately as the Stewardess and tenor Jeffrey Lloyd-Roberts, both of whom he encounters in a physical way!

This will be the first professional performance of the piece in London and it will also feature fellow barihunk Nicholas Garrett, who we first introduced to readers back in 2010. The work was commissioned by Glyndebourne Opera and premiered on September 24, 1998. The first U.S. performance was at Opera Theatre of Saint Louis on June 8, 2003 in a production directed by Colin Graham.

If you want to catch von Bergen in something slightly less contemporary, you can hear him as Count Almaviva in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro with Opera Project at West Green House on July 25 and 26. Additional cast and ticket information is available online.

Have an announcement or pictures for us? Contact us at barihunks@gmail.com

Sunday, February 1, 2015

James Newby taking on ill-fated romantic leads

James Newby as Eugene Onegin in London
British barihunk James Newby is performing two very different lovers, both of whom don't see their stories end too well. He just wrapped up a run in the title role of Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin at St Andrews Church in London and will return to the venue from April 11-16 when he sings Don Giovanni with the Moon-Little Theatre. We'll have additional details soon.

We first featured James Newby back in August 2013, when the 20-year-old rugby-playing baritone was brought to our attention via Twitter (follow him @jamesn103) . He is currently in his third year of study at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London. Newby previously studied with barihunk Omar Ebrahim, who blew up our site when he went for the Full Monty in a post.

We subsequently featured him with vlogger Davey Wavey as part of the barbershop quartet Short, Back and Sides singing "To Russia With (Gay) Love.” The video showed the worldwide support for LGBT Russians from people across the globe. Check out their website and their selection of soundclips.

If you love great low voices, visiting Artist in Voice at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music Matthew Rose will perform Schubert’s Die Winterreise with pianist Gary Matthewman on February 6th as part of their Chapel Concert Series. The event is free, but requires tickets.




Saturday, August 2, 2014

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, Simon Keenlyside

Simon Keenlyside
On August 3rd, we're celebrating the 55th birthday of the seemingly ageless Simon Keenlyside, who continues to thrill audiences 27 years after his professional debut. 

Keenlyside began his singing career as a chorister at St John’s College, Cambridge. A keen ecologist, he returned to Cambridge to read Zoology, singing on a choral scholarship, and went on to study singing with John Cameron at the Royal Northern College of Music.

His career has taken him to the world’s major opera houses, singing repertory including Oreste in Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride, Figaro in Rossini's Il barbiere di Siviglia, Rigoletto, Hamlet, Ford in Verdi's Falstaff) Pelléas and Billy Budd.

A lover of German Lieder, Keenlyside also performs widely in recital, including regular appearances at London’s Wigmore Hall. His discography includes CDs of opera, operetta duets and Lieder and songs by Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Richard Strauss and Vaughan Williams. Many of his performances with The Royal Opera are available on DVD.

Simon Keenlyside sings Richard Strauss' Cäcilie:

He can next be seen on August 20th at the Edinburgh International Festival with accompanist Malcolm Martineau. The program includes Butterworth's A Shropshire Lad, a touching evocation of a vanishing pastoral England, and Vaughan Williams's Songs of Travel, which explore the innermost thoughts and longings for home of soldiers on the front line. The recital also includes works by Ireland, Somervell, Eisler, Gurney, Finzi, Schumann and Wolf. The concert will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 3 at 11am GMT/4am EST. 

Keenlyside lives on a farm in West Wales with his wife, Royal Ballet Principal Zenaida Yanowsky, and their children. His interests outside opera include planting trees, reading poetry and listening to a wide range of music including flamenco.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Duncan Rock to make U.S. stage debut with Boston Lyric Opera


The highly-anticipated U.S. stage debut of British Barihunk sensation Duncan Rock will occur not far from another rock, Plymouth Rock. The Boston Lyric Opera has snagged the charismatic fan favorite to portray the title role in Mozart's Don Giovanni next season.

Fans will have to wait a year, as the opera runs from May 1-10, 2015, but we assure you it will be worth the wait. To order a tickets, call 617-542-6772 or email boxoffice@blo.org. The remainder of their upcoming season includes Verdi’s La Traviata, Frank Martin’s The Love Potion and Janáček’s Kátya Kabanová.

At rehearsals of La bohème at English National Opera
We first discovered Duncan Rock when he was in Britten's Billy Budd at Glyndebourne and then as Moralès in a sexy production of Bizet's Carmen directed by Calixto Bieto at the English National Opera. In his young career, Rock has developed a reputation as both a gifted singer and riveting stage presence. His gender bending performance in Don Giovanni: The Opera at London's famous nightclub Heaven was a sensation. He followed that with an portrayal as an often shirtless Tarquinius in Benjmain Britten's The Rape of Lucretia at Glyndebourne, where Irish actress and theatre and opera director Fiona Shaw pushed him to new dramatic limits. His performance prompted Tim Ashley, of the Guardian to comment, "Rock undercuts Tarquinius's raffish allure with unnerving intimations of psychotic violence."
 
Duncan Rock recently finished a successful run as Marcello in Puccini's La bohème with the English National Opera in a production that was updated to 1950s Paris. European fans can catch him as the waiter in Benjamin Britten's Death in Venice at the Teatro Real in Madrid from December 4-23. The cast also includes the amazing countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo as the voice of Apollo. Tickets are available online.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Introducing British Barihunk Toby Girling

Toby Girling in Zatopek! (left) and Winterreise (right)
Some singers just seem to inspire directors to get them into various states of undress and British barihunk seems to be one of them. We originally saw the picture of him from Zatopek! (above left) when we were posting about his castmate Peter Brathwaite and then the picture of him on the right from a Bluebeard's Castle/Winterreise double bill showed up in our messages. Girling is the sole vocal performer in Schubert's Winterreise with the Vlaamse Opera, which will run in Antwerp through May 10th. Tickets are available online.

Toby Girling is a graduate of the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. He was a member of the Glyndebourne Opera Festival Chorus in the Michael Grandage production of Britten's Billy Budd, in which he also sang the role of Arthur Jones and covered the role of Donald. Regular readers may recall that Glyndebourne's Billy Budd also featured barihunks Jacques Imbrailo and Duncan Rock. 

Toby Girling sings Der Lindenbaum from Schubert's 'Die Winterreise:


He has sung at a number of major festivals other than Glyndebourne. These include a 2011 performance of Ben in Bernstein's Trouble in Tahiti at the Wexford Festival, Guglielmo in Mozart's Così fan tutte and the Sorceress in Purcell's Dido and Aeneas at the Verbier Festival, and Ceprano in Verdi's Rigoletto at the Iford Festival. He also performed in both Guglielmo in Così fan tutte and Fiorello in Rossini's the Barber of Seville to great acclaim with the English Touring Company.

He is currenlty a Studio Artist at Oper Frankfurt, where he performed as the Flemish Deputy in a revival of Verdi's Don Carlo.  Other appearances with the company include Ein Steuermann in Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Manuel in de Falla's La Vida Breve and Mann in Sallinen's Kullervo.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Question & Answer with Rodney Earl Clarke


Rodney Earl Clarke
TELL US ABOUT YOUR UPBRINGING IN ENGLAND AND YOUR EARLY MUSIC INFLUENCES.

Being the middle child of five children with three brothers and one sister, I very quickly got used to being told what to do and mastered how to do the telling. With fun loving parents, siblings, an enormous army of toy soldiers and of course our trusty Amstrad CPC 6128 computer, I was pretty much ready to stay a kid forever. I had to grow up though and education was hot on the agenda in the household. I attended a Catholic primary school in what seemed to me at the time as being way out in the sticks (in Kent). I loved the train ride though, I can still recite the stations in order (sign of things to come eh – elephant memory) but it was here that I gained my earliest performance experience.  But rewind for a bit, my first exposure to music I can remember came from the talking story book The Town mouse and the Country mouse. It was read by a man whose voice I can still imitate and set to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons I later learned. Back to primary school, I was one of few boys who could sing and it seemed I was destined to play the leading role in the Nativity Play, not Joseph but MARY. Stuffed with a basketball up my gown, I sang, as Shakespeare puts it “round wombed,” It went down a treat!

YOU SANG IN A BOYS CHOIR AS A KID, SO TELL US ABOUT THE EXPERIENCE AND WHAT YOU LOVE ABOUT CHORAL MUSIC.

Yes, I sang in the choir of St. George’s Cathedral, Southwark not to be confused with Southwark Cathedral. I draw our readers’ attention to this not because  of denominational differences but more significantly because the choir I sang in did not have lay clerks who were paid but was an entirely voluntary ensemble. This made for very interesting rehearsals. Varying abilities but with one aim to achieve high standards, we were put through our paces and I personally developed my ear and memory skills here. I cannot express how important my time was here – there was a true sense of camaraderie. I joined when I was around nine and left when I was nearly seventeen. I had a stable diet of Byrd, Palestrina, Lotti, Allegri to name but a few. Solo opportunities on major feast days in front of large congregations tested my nerves. I remember my head twitching uncontrollably at times.  Thankfully this became less and less each year I sang the solos. 

Rodney Earl Clarke
YOURE CURRENTLY PERFORMING CROWN IN PORGY & BESS AND YOUVE PREVIOUSLY PERFORMED JAKE.TALK ABOUT THE DIFFERENT ROLES. ALSO, PORGY & BESS IS THE STORY OF BLACK AMERICANS, HOW DO YOU CONNECT TO THEIR EXPERIENCE HAVING GROWN UP IN ENGLAND?

I’ve been told I have a nice smile and a kind face so playing the good, honest, hard-working, and loving Jake was kinda straightforward for me. But I do have a dark side, I mean a side that I like to channel into dark, dramatic characters. That’s the beauty of singing Crown. It’s an actors gift playing a drug addict , an alcoholic and general arse-hole. Rehearsals are fun as I work out my own interpretation of this character. There’s no fun in just rehashing material from past productions. I find it is imperative to tell the story but as Rodney playing Crown. This way, I believe the audience stands a better chance of connecting with the character and the story itself which, despite me growing up in England resonates strongly within me. My parents are from Jamaica and my ancestors suffered the same trials just like others but whose stories began in different locations as a result of which boat they ended up on.

YOU CREATED THE ROLE OF ANASTASE IN EMILY HALLS SANTE, WHICH DEALS WITH THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE. TELL US ABOUT PERFORMING IN OPERAS ABOUT CONTEMPORARY LIFE.

You have a duty as an actor and a singer to tell the story. I worked very closely with both composer and director to ensure that everyone was satisfied that respect was being shown to the subject matter. Playing a high- octane, murdering lover required careful rehearsal. I had to place a lot of trust in the director and also found myself apologising to the attending survivor of the genocide as she explained the person I was portraying slaughtered her family.

Operas which give us an opportunity to delve into modern day affairs, conflicts and dilemnas enable us as performers to examine issues from a personal stance without fear of reprisal rather like the function of the Greek Play. It also gives us as society a way into that which might be taboo.

Rodney Earl Clarke sings Some Enchanted Evening:

DO YOU HAVE ANY DREAM ROLES? FAVOURITE COMPOSERS?

Well I do love the Don and Escamillo but Javert in Les Mis would be quite cool for me I think. I know it is not opera but it is great music and would suit my voice. I’m also a sucker for Rodgers & Hammerstein and sing quite a lot of this old school musical theatre rep these days. I try to show my versatility whenever I can so from singing the Ferryman in Britten’s  church opera Curlew River to I Wont Send Roses from the musical Mack & Mabel,  I feel quite at home.

HOW DID YOU FIRST FIND OUT THAT YOU WERE ON BARIHUNKS AND WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION?

I was curious about the term BARIHUNK as it was bandied about during a rehearsal in London then thanks to google all became clear. Upon seeing myself listed my reaction was something one could only describe as being undeniably West Indian  - IRIE! (meaning WICKED). No seriously, to be on a site with so many accomplished artists is quite overwhelming.

DO YOU THINK SINGERS SHOULD BE AS CONCERNED ABOUT THEIR BODIES AS THEIR VOICES? DO YOU HAVE A WORKOUT ROUTINE?

Ok, I don’t know about you but my voice is part of my body. I sing with my body so it is impossible for me to separate the two. In terms of looking after your body, you have a duty to maintain the apparatus so that it performs at its best at all times.  Looking great and sounding great is an unbeatable combination. My routine, well that’s a secret.

Rodney Earl Clarke sings Ol' Man River:

WE COULDNT HELP BUT NOTICE THAT THEYVE ASSEMBLED A GOOD LOOKING CAST FOR PORGY & BESS. IN THE AGE OF TELEVISION, DO LOOKS AND APPEARANCE MATTER IN CASTING?

Well, as I said before, aiming to look and sound great is an unbeatable combination. When I say looking great however I mean looking great for the part! Remember what I said about telling the story? Good looks get you the role of the good looking guy,a portly person will be cast for a portly character. We are moving into a world where the audience enjoys the greater sense of reality experienced from certain casting choices but having said that I think they still want to be able to clearly distinguish between television and theatre. So, this encourages skilled acting choices and a balanced approach all round.

Rodney Earl Clarke
SOME SINGERS LIKE FERRUCCIO FURLANETTO ARE REFUSING TO WORK WITH DIRECTORS WHO HAVE GOTTEN PARTICULARY OUTRAGEOUS IN THEIR CONCEPTUALIZATIONS. ARE THERE PRODUCTIONS OR DIRECTOR REQUESTS THAT WOULD TURN YOU OFF?

Firstly, I’m not in that enviable position to decline work but moreover can’t wait to collaborate with other artists on telling another story. There it is, that word again ‘story’. As long as it is being told I don’t really have a problem, in fact I relish the bizarre, the controversial and the physically challenging production. I enjoy putting my body in odd positions whilst singing and to that extent have had a pretty good time with directors. I just have to remind myself to stay inwardly strong and keep my integrity.

HOW DO WE MAKE OPERA MORE RELEVANT TO TODAYS AUDIENCES WHILE STILL RESPECTING THE ART?

We don’t dumb down. Give them the real thing and nothing less. However, giving them the real thing doesn’t mean presenting the old, fuddy-duddy age old production all the time. You can still don a curly Mozartian wig  in a vibrant and sexy way but just do one thing and they’ll be happy – tell the story. We should have courage to present the stories truthfully allowing them to resonate in audiences as they enjoy the fantasy of going back in time or the head on, eye watering truth in operas depicting current affairs.

DID YOU INITIALLY SING AS ANOTHER VOICE TYPE BEFORE BECOMING A BARITONE? HOW DID YOU DISCOVER THAT YOURE REALLY A BARITONE?

I was a treble until the age of fifteen and then it all dropped and settled in the same summer holiday period. Since then, nothing has changed. I have made one outing as a counter-tenor but don’t get too excited, that was once and not to be repeated. My head of Music at my secondary school realised I had a voice worth training and he put me in touch with the Head of Vocal Studies at the Royal Academy of Music, London one Professor Mark Wildman. I took my father along with me to have a consultation session and after singing one baritone aria, Professor Wildman closed the piano lid and said “There would be something terribly wrong with this world if this boy doesn’t have a career”. And so that was it for me in terms of singing. 

 Rodney Earl Clarke sings Gabey's Song from Lonely Town:

WHAT DO YOU LISTEN TO WHEN YOURE NOT LISTENING TO OPERA?

After the pleasurable silence, I love to listen to people talking. I’m a great one for sipping a cappuccino in a café and just people watching. I take many mental notes of style, behaviour and emotions displayed and store them up for later use. When I work out however, Stevie Wonder gets a good hearing!

ANYTHING ELSE THAT YOU THINK OUR READERS SHOULD KNOW ABOUT YOU?

Well, I mentioned earlier my elephant memory. I actually have a photographic memory which helps me learn music as well as shock people when I remember what they wore weeks ago. I recently performed a Philip Glass opera called Sound of A Voice and the edition I had was printed on separate pages with music on one side and blank on the other. I was having trouble memorising the music until I rearranged the pages so that they were like a normal book and I could differentiate the contours of each page easily and thus commit them to memory.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

James Newby in “To Russia With (Gay) Love” video

The barbershop quartet Short, Back & Sides and featured baritone James Newby
We posted this on our Twitter feed yesterday, but we feel like it should be featured on the main site, as well. It's a video that was posted by vlogger Davey Wavey and includes barihunk James Newby as part of the barbershop quartet Short, Back and Sides singing "To Russia With (Gay) Love.” The video is intended to show the worldwide support for LGBT Russians from people across the globe.

Short, Back and Sides describes themselves as "a barbershop quartet boasting a great blend, rich tones and devilishly good hair." Even their bios have references to their hair. Newby's says, "James is Short, Back and Sides' Baritone and arguably their most Stylish member. He is 20 years old and currently studying at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance. He holds a choral scholarship at the Old Royal naval college chapel choir and sings with a number of other ensembles. James has his hair cut once a month and his preferred product is wax."

We first featured James Newby back in August, when the 20-year-old rugby-playing baritone was brought to our attention via Twitter. Newby has direct barihunk lineage, as he previously studied with Omar Ebrahim (who has been on this site in all his glory).

In the video, a quartet of young men harmonize in a beautiful a cappella rendition of the song “I Can Sing a Rainbow” as supporters in Montreal, London, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Singapore, and Melbourne write messages of hope to LGBT Russians on an oversize card.

 

The global response was prompted by President Vladimir Putin signing a law this summer that imposes fines and jail time for anyone found to be distributing or discussing "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations" in a venue accessible to minors.

Make sure to check out Short, Back and Sides' website, where you can listen to plenty of music samples. You can also follow them on Twitter @barbershopsbs or follow them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/barbershopsbs.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Introducing James Newby via Twitter


We caught some Twitter messages going back and forth between friends a few weeks ago. One friend suggested that the other should be on Barihunks. The other replied that "this accolade could complete me as a human being!"

The latter response came from 20-year-old baritone James Newby, who is currently in his second year of study at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, London. He currently studies under Alison Wells and previously studied with Robert Dean and Omar Ebrahim (who has been on this site in all his glory). We're happy to help him in his quest to become a complete human being.

Newby is due to represent Trinity Laban in the junior Kathleen Ferrier award in October after receiving the second highest mark in the year for his end of year recital.

Previous operatic experience includes Papageno in Mozart's The Magic Flute with Suffolk opera, Escamillo in Bizet's Carmen with Puzzle piece opera, Gugliemo in scenes from Mozart's Cosi fan tutte with G and T opera and covering Apollo in Trinity Laban's production of Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld. Oratorio performaces include Bach's "St John Passion" and Haydn's "Nelson Mass" with the Old Royal Naval college chapel choir, Britten's "Rejoice in the Lamb" with the Rodolfus choir and Stainer's "Crucifixion" with the Stamford endowed schools chapel choir.

We have to confess that we were also intrigued that he's been playing rugby since he was fourteen. 

James is also a member of TV star Gareth Malone's new choir, whose innovative new album will be released in November.

Gareth Malone's choir performs their rendition of Guillotine by Death Grips

You can follow James Newby on Twitter .