Stuart Stratford Vidéos
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2024-05-02
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Tonus Peregrinus Monk Stratford 2012
Provided to YouTube by NAXOS of America Magnificat · Tonus Peregrinus Music from The Eton Choirbook ℗ 2012 Naxos Released on: 2012-08-07 Composer: Bible - New Testament Conductor: Antony Pitts Choir: Tonus Peregrinus Composer: William Monk of Stratford Engineer: Geoff Miles Producer: Jeremy Summerly Auto-generated by YouTube.
Gian Carlo Menotti Soraya Mafi Jonathan McGovern Stuart Stratford Missy Mazzoli Edinburgh International Festival Scottish Opera 1947 1984 2015 2019
This version of the film has an Audio Description narration, and is preceded by a brief spoken introduction to give some background information and an overview of the main visuals. If you want to skip this, you can go straight to the start of the film at 02:46 The Telephone, or L'Amour à trois, is an opera in a single act, written for two singers and a hand-picked chamber ensemble. Menotti's 1947 work, last performed at the Edinburgh International Festival in 1984 by Washington Opera, brings together piquant humour with sly nods to the classics of grand opera. Multi-award-winning soprano Soraya Mafi and celebrated baritone Jonathan McGovern make their Edinburgh International Festival debuts as Lucy and Ben – the hapless couple whose love affair is repeatedly thwarted by a telephone. Pioneering young director Daisy Evans relocates Menotti’s mismatched lovers into today’s Edinburgh, as the story unfolds in and around the King’s Theatre. The opera becomes a witty commentary on our obsession with our mobile phones, reminding us to be present in the moments that matter. International Festival audiences are given the rare opportunity to hear this charming work performed by The Orchestra of Scottish Opera, conducted by Stuart Stratford, who has been the company’s Music Director since 2015. His expansive portfolio of acclaimed performances includes the European premiere of Missy Mazzoli’s Breaking the Waves at the 2019 Edinburgh International Festival. As a part of My Light Shines On, the Edinburgh International Festival has commissioned some of Scotland’s major national artistic companies to create extraordinary works that audiences can enjoy from their own homes. In a tribute to the enduring spirit of our Festival City, they bring light and life to sites that must stay empty this year. These unique performances for film reflect on what it means to keep a hopeful light burning in dark times.
Scottish Opera Thomas Allen Stuart Stratford Jonathan McGovern Hye Youn Lee Youn Keel Keel Watson 2019 2020 2021
Scottish Opera: Don Giovanni (http•••) Mozart’s masterpiece is one of the world’s most performed operas for good reason. Sir Thomas Allen – whose 2019 revival of The Magic Flute was a sell-out success – returns to direct his stunning production. In the backstreets of 17th century Venice, hunting ground of the amorous, Don Giovanni waits. A mercurial rogue who flits from irresistible charm to brute violence in a heartbeat, he is the ultimate anti-hero – and he is about to suffer the ultimate reckoning Music Director Stuart Stratford conducts an exciting cast that includes Roland Wood (Falstaff 2021) and Jonathan McGovern (The Telephone 2020) sharing the role of the titular anti-hero. They are joined by Hye-Youn Lee (Nixon in China 2020), Kitty Whately (Hansel and Gretel 2021), and Keel Watson. Sung in Italian with English supertitles
Scottish Opera Shakespeare Britten Stuart Stratford David Shipley Lawrence Zazzo 2022
March 2022 at the Festival Theatre Edinburgh: (http•••)/ ‘The makings of a classic’ – The Stage/ ‘Stellar performance form Scottish Opera’ – The Herald/ ‘Riveting and highly original’ – The Scotsman Scottish Opera’s five-star production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream opens in Edinburgh on Tuesday 1 March. Join us for this unmissable operatic reimagining of Shakespeare’s timeless comedy, directed by Dominic Hill of The Citizens Theatre and designed by Tom Piper. The music is some of Britten’s most atmospheric. Bringing to life fairies, lovers, and rustics – and even the wood itself – it is intense, heady, otherworldly and packed with standout moments. Scottish Opera Music Director Stuart Stratford conducts a dynamic cast that includes recent Scottish Opera Emerging Artist Catriona Hewitson as Tytania and David Shipley as Bottom. They both make their role debuts alongside internationally-acclaimed countertenor Lawrence Zazzo as Oberon. Sung in English with English supertitles Running time approx. 3 hrs 15 mins (inc. two intervals)
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