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    bizet

    Explore " bizet" with insightful episodes like "You Don't Own Me: The Myth and Magic of Bizet's Carmen", "Finding a New Voice", "Our enduring fascination with Carmen and 9/11 inspires a musical of hope", "Flower Power: Don José and Dangerous Love in Bizet's Carmen" and "San Diego OperaTalk! with Nick Reveles: Carmen" from podcasts like ""Aria Code", "Best of the Buzz", "The Stage Show", "Aria Code" and "San Diego Operatalk with Nick Reveles (Video)"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    You Don't Own Me: The Myth and Magic of Bizet's Carmen

    You Don't Own Me: The Myth and Magic of Bizet's Carmen

    Carmen is maybe the most famous heroine in all of opera. She’s a woman of Romani descent living in 19th century Spain, sensual and self-confident, aware of the power she wields over men — and she enjoys it. In her signature aria, popularly known as the “Habanera,” she describes herself as a bird who can’t be captured. True to her own word, Carmen — and what she represents — is hard to pin down.  

    When “Carmen” premiered in Paris in 1875, it was deemed wildly immoral. Carmen becomes intrigued by a soldier, Don José, who initially pays her no attention. She seduces him, Don José abandons his fiancée to run away with her, and one thing leads to another (this is opera, after all) — he winds up murdering Carmen in a fit of jealous rage. One interpretation is that this is the story of a man giving into temptation and meeting his downfall. A more modern view would position Carmen as a proto-feminist. She’s a woman who refuses to be controlled, and that puts her life in danger.

    But perhaps Carmen’s greatest irony is that she is both a complex character and a full-blown stereotype of Romani women. In this episode, host Rhiannon Giddens and guests unpack the myth and the magic of Georges Bizet’s "Carmen," and Clémentine Margaine brings it home with a performance of “L’amour est un oiseau rebelle” from the Met stage.

    THE GUESTS

    French mezzo-soprano Clémentine Margaine first performed in “Carmen” as a member of the children’s chorus. Shortly after graduating from the Paris Conservatory, she joined the ensemble of the Deutsche Oper Berlin, where she sang her first performances in the title role. Since then, she’s performed Carmen at opera houses all over the world. 

    Susan McClary is a pioneer in feminist music criticism. She’s a musicologist at Case Western Reserve University whose research focuses on the cultural analysis of music, both the European canon and contemporary popular genres. She’s authored 11 books, including "Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality" and the Cambridge Opera Handbook on “Carmen.”

    Ioanida Costache is an assistant professor of ethnomusicology and an affiliate of the Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity at Stanford University. She is of Romanian-Roma descent, and her work explores the legacies of historical trauma inscribed in Romani music, sound, and art. Her family likes to pass on the story of the time her great-grandfather performed the cimbalom for President Roosevelt at the 1939 New York World’s Fair. 

    Rosamaria Kostic Cisneros wears many hats. She is a professional dancer, dance historian and critic, Romani studies scholar, Flamenco historian, as well as a sociologist, curator and peace activist. A research-artist at Coventry University’s Centre for Dance Research, she works to bring arts and culture to vulnerable groups. She was introduced to flamenco by her Spanish-Roma mother during their frequent trips to Seville.

    Finding a New Voice

    Finding a New Voice

    What happens when life pushes you out of the spotlight – and then right off stage?  Julia Bonnett takes us on her journey through vision loss paralleling a career as an operatic soprano and music teacher.  She finds out that sometimes the best laid plans just don’t work out.  Finding a new voice might just mean making it up as you go along!  

    Backing tracks for “La Cloche a sonne” and “La Fleur que tu m’avais jetee” provided by Aberforth D. Find more at www.thesoundofopera.com

    Flower Power: Don José and Dangerous Love in Bizet's Carmen

    Flower Power: Don José and Dangerous Love in Bizet's Carmen

    You hear the message over and over in pop culture: love overcomes everything. But when Don José sings “The Flower Song” in Bizet's Carmen, you're reminded that love has a dark side, too.

    In the Season 1 finale, host Rhiannon Giddens welcomes tenor Roberto Alagna, critic Anne Midgette and psychologist Andrew G. Marshall to consider the crazy, possessive side of love and the importance of experiencing art that doesn’t have a fairy-tale ending. Then, you’ll hear Alagna sing the role of the passionate and violent Don José onstage at the Metropolitan Opera.

    San Diego OperaTalk! with Nick Reveles: Carmen

    San Diego OperaTalk! with Nick Reveles: Carmen
    Since its moderately successful premiere in 1875, Bizet's Carmen has grown in stature to become one of the world's most beloved works of musical theater. Host Nicolas Reveles guides viewers through the opera's history, from its turbulent inception to its present status as a timeless masterpiece. Series: "San Diego OperaTalk! with Nic Reveles" [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 9452]
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