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The Fidelio Podcast

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Content provided by Marie Ross. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Marie Ross or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
The Fidelio Podcast features interviews with different kinds of artists. Host, Marie Ross, talks about various topics in the arts. She interviews artists who might not necessarily be household names, but are all known and respected in their disciplines. The Fidelio Podcast deals with ideas and inspiration, what these artists' lives are like, and why they are driven to create.
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35 episoade

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The Fidelio Podcast

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Manage series 3031521
Content provided by Marie Ross. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Marie Ross or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
The Fidelio Podcast features interviews with different kinds of artists. Host, Marie Ross, talks about various topics in the arts. She interviews artists who might not necessarily be household names, but are all known and respected in their disciplines. The Fidelio Podcast deals with ideas and inspiration, what these artists' lives are like, and why they are driven to create.
  continue reading

35 episoade

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Recording engineer and producer, Dirk Fischer, chats about his career with Marie over coffee in St. Truiden, Belgium, where they have just finished recording Brahms Clarinet Sonatas and Trio with historical instruments. Dirk talks about his role in the recording process, and how it is much more artistically crucial than most people think. The sound engineer (or 'Tonmeister', which is the revered German title - literally 'Sound Master') sits apart in an enclosed booth, but is really directing the artists, listening with highly-trained ears, and making many decisions of how the final recording is put together. Some think that the recording process is magic - that a recording can make any musician sound good. And others think that a recording is just like a live concert, played once in real-time. The reality is more of a grey area, although as Dirk says, "if you can't play it, I can't produce it." Dirk has a passion for recording sound - and for collaborating with artists creatively - to produce award-winning recordings. This passion has led him to work with the most prestigious labels early in his career, and eventually to found his own label, Solaire Records. “In many respects, [Solaire Records] is going back to the early days of recording, where labels had a much stronger and all-encompassing identity. We need to have every aspect of a release work together: the artist’s intentions, a long- and short-term concept, a stimulating choice of repertoire and a deep understanding of how the recording translates all of this.” Read more about Dirk Fischer: fischerdirk.com And about Solaire Records: solairerecords.com…
 
Marie sat down with historical cellist, Claire-Lise Démettre, to talk about Romantic-period string playing and techniques. They discuss Claire-Lise's cello and set-up, what it feels like to play gut strings, portamento, different kinds of vibrato – and those special moments that don't require anything from the player, when the music is just beautiful enough on it’s own. You’ll hear excerpts from the Trio recording that begin the episode and are interspersed through the musical conversation. The Brahms Mini-Series corresponds to the recent release of a new CD of the Brahms Works for Clarinet and Piano with Marie Ross (clarinet), Petra Somlai (piano), and Claire-Lise Démettre (cello). It is available on the Centaur Records label (CRC 3760).…
 
This episode is very personal. Marie plays some short examples of various tracks from the new historically informed Brahms recording and talks about the inspirations, stories, experiences, and influences behind each example. Brahms’ inspirations for works often included nature, occasions, and the players for whom he dedicated his music. In this episode, Marie talks about her own personal inspirations for the interpretation and ideas heard on the recording.…
 
The Brahms Mini-Series corresponds to the recent release of a new CD of the Brahms Works for Clarinet and Piano with Marie Ross (clarinet), Petra Somlai (piano), and Claire-Lise Démettre (cello). It was released on the Centaur Records label (CRC 3760) on Nov. 15. In the first episode of her Brahms Mini-Series, Marie introduces some concepts of the historical performance practice of the Romantic era, in particular relating to Brahms' chamber music. She introduces the concept of the mini-series: to reveal of the stories, ideas, and background that you can't include in the liner notes! The new recording is available on Amazon worldwide. It is also in store and online at the New Zealand independent record stores, Marbecks and Flying Out .…
 
Marie shares her experiences doing something she never thought she'd do: organize a composition contest. As an early music specialist, she was venturing into the foreign world of contemporary music while still new to the foreign country of New Zealand. As the University of Auckland prepares to host its third annual "Clarinet Weekend", Marie discusses the composition contest from last year: how it got started and the impact it has had on the New Zealand clarinet community. She talks about the 48 (!!) submissions to the contest last year, and about changes she's made to how the contest will be run this time around. We hear the new compositions for unaccompanied clarinet by first and second prize winners, Joshua Pearson, and Callum Mallett. Marie chats to Joshua about his work, Teine Sa, and how it is influenced by his Samoan heritage and the stories his mother used to tell him.…
 
David Crowell is a member of the Philip Glass Ensemble, playing woodwinds, and is a genre-crossing composer in his own right, leading his own band, Empyrean Atlas. David plays guitars and saxophones in Empyrean Atlas, as well as writing the music, managing the band, and producing their 3 albums. His music has been said to be a mix of classical, jazz, pop, post-punk, African, ambient, and minimalism. David has played all over the world with the Philip Glass Ensemble, and chats to Marie about what it is like to play huge works such as Einstein on the Beach. We talk about how minimalism has influenced his own work, and a wide variety of other influences he has had during his studies at the Eastman School of Music and professional career. We hear four of David's compositions, including: Redwood, by Empyrean Atlas from the album, Empyrean Atlas Waiting in the Rain for Snow, performed by the Now Ensemble Hashimoto for Flute Trio, performed by Andrew Sterman Eye to Eye, by Empyrean Atlas from the album, Empyrean Atlas Hear more at: davidcrowellmusic.com…
 
Posy Knight is a dancer, choreographer, actor, scenic designer, director, and arts educator. She studied dance at Juilliard, and later went on to study scenic design at the University of Connecticut before moving to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where she lives now. Marie chats with her about all the threads of her artistic life, how they fit together, and how she uses her creativity to better her local community in Milwaukee. They discuss thinking and the philosophy behind a physical art form such as dance, how an artist can discover unexpected interests, making money in the arts, and Posy describes a few of the productions she has designed the scenery for. Posy Knight is the director of community programming and engagement at Danceworks, which brings the arts to people from all backgrounds in Milwaukee. She talks about her passion for arts education.…
 
This is the second part of Marie's interview with clarinetist, Franklin Cohen. If you haven't heard Part 1 yet, you can start there! This episode is all about intimacy in relationships – between musicians, between a musician and the audience, and even between a musician and the music itself. It’s about growing up, knowing when and how to come into your own and to find your own voice as an artist. Marie chats with Frank about the Munich Competition, Leopold Stokowski, and Frank even gives some practice tips - which he manages to relate back to everything else about life. In this episode you'll hear Frank's recent live performances of the Beethoven Septet, the 2nd movement of the Mozart Clarinet Concerto, and the 2nd movement of the Brahms Clarinet Quintet (all performed at Frank's chamber music festival, ChamberFest Cleveland).…
 
Marie talks with Franklin Cohen, Grammy award winning clarinetist and Principal Clarinet of the Cleveland Orchestra for 39 seasons. They chat about his experience auditioning (twice!) for the Cleveland Orchestra and Lorin Maazel, expressivity on an instrument, how to find your voice as an instrumentalist (or artist), performance anxiety and accepting yourself. We hear some samples of Frank's playing including the second movement of Peter Schickele's Quartet for clarinet, violin, cello, and piano, Messiaen's solo clarinet movement from The Quartet for the End of Time, "The Abyss of the Birds", and the third movement from Mozart's Clarinet Concerto KV 622. These are all live recordings made within the last few years. They can be found in their complete versions on YouTube or on Frank's website at: www.franklincohen.com…
 
Marie talks about her journey moving across the world to New Zealand and from being a full-time performer to also including a teaching position at The University of Auckland. She chats about some of her own teachers and influences, and how it can be possible to teach creativity through music. As well as being the Lecturer of Clarinet at The University of Auckland, Marie also teaches historical clarinet as a secondary instrument to her students. She discusses what modern classical musicians with no ambitions of becoming historical performers can learn from these instruments.…
 
Hip-hop artist and classical violinist, Miki Kekenj, joins the podcast to discuss the Concerto Köln education project, Speak!. For this project, the period-instrument orchestra, Concerto Köln combined to play the Mozart Requiem with the period-instrument youth orchestra, Jugendbarockorchester Rheinland, and the choir of the famous Cologne Cathedral, the Judgendchor am Kölner Dom. As well as playing the complete original piece, in between several movements, they also performed rap versions with classes of 8th grade students, taught and coached by Miki. He arranged the raps himself, while he taught the students to write the rap lyrics themselves. Miki taught these students about Mozart, the song-writing process, and bigger lessons of creativity and how to work together. We also talk about Miki’s musical life, which is split between what many people would think to be two opposite types of music. Miki is the concert master of the Bergische Symphoniker and discusses how he got into hip-hop as a teen, how these two types of music have shaped him into the musician he is today, and how he can use rap to bring a new audience to classical music.…
 
Josh Salsbury was a trombonist in the freelance scene in LA. He had his own ensemble and was starting to play Hollywood blockbuster movie soundtracks when he decided to give up the trombone and pursue his new dream of woodworking. Josh now works full time designing and buliding custom furniture by hand. Josh talks very honestly and openly about his journey, and the inner doubts and struggles he battled with along the way to finally having the realization that being a musician just wasn’t for him. Luckily for Josh, his passion for woodworking fulfilled all the creative aspects of being a musician that he loved, while being a better fit for him as a profession overall. Josh talks about his experiences as a trombonist, and especially the incredible experience of playing the soundtrack for Spiderman 3. He chats with Marie about the LA freelance scene and what it’s like when you finally get called to play the big movie soundtracks. We also talk about Josh’s life now – how he considers making his customized and individual pieces of furniture as a creative art like music, and how interestingly enough, the same challenges he faced as a trombonist carried over into woodworking as well. Josh works as a freelance and independent furniture maker – but he also a member working at the Offerman woodshop, a workshop owned a run by the television actor, Nick Offerman.…
 
In the second part of the interview with award-winning director, Mark Kirkland, he discusses his artistic life outside of his work for The Simpsons. He takes us inside his latest project, a silent film called The Moving Picture Company 1914. Mark wrote, directed, and produced the film (together with his wife, Letty), and shares his experiences of the film making process from the first conception of the idea through the final intricate editing and photography work that went into giving the film its silent era look. Mark is also a clarinetist, and recorded the soundtrack for the film together with composer and pianist, Greg Kellogg. Mark tells the story of how he became inspired to take up the clarinet as a teenager, what it was like to go back to it as an adult student years later - and ultimately how he got talked into recording the largely improvised clarinet part of the silent film soundtrack. Mark played period clarinets from the early jazz era and immersed himself in early jazz recordings to capture the sound of the time. He takes us through each instrument in his arsenal - from metal clarinets to sirens and slide whistles - and shares clips of his playing from the soundtrack. Mark talks about how he envisioned his clarinet playing becoming a part of the film characters. The website of The Moving Picture Company 1914 features further information about the film, photos and desciptions of Mark's cameras that can be seen in the film, and full articles that Mark has written for The American Society of Cinematographers. To see The Moving Picture Company 1914 for free online, send an email to Marie at fideliopodcast (at) marieross (dot) info. She will send you back a link and password to see the film!…
 
Three-time Emmy award winning animation director for The Simpsons, Mark Kirkland, chats with Marie about all the aspects of his career as an artist: drawing, animation, directing, and comedy. He talks about his beginnings drawing with his father, the famous photographer, Douglas Kirkland. About his time as a student learning from legendary Disney animators who worked on films like Bambi, Snow White, and Fantasia. He talks about the start of his career at Hanna-Barbera and how that prepared him for becoming a director on The Simpsons, not long after the show started, while it was still in its first season. Mark shares a lot of what happens behind the scenes to create an episode of The Simpsons, how he sits in on table reads to create new characters, how he's taken acting classes to bring reality to his animations, how he inspires his team, and how he brought in his own instrument as a model for Lisa's saxophone!…
 
Dubliners 100 is a collection of 15 short stories, just like James Joyce's original short story collection, Dubliners, but each one written by a contemporary Irish wirter. They are not re-written stories or modernizations of the original work, but editor Thomas Morris thought of the idea of making 15 "cover versions" like in pop music. Dubliners 100 was released on the 100th anniversary of the publishing of Joyce's Dubliners. While Joyce wrote about the everyday middle-class people of Dublin, the new stories reflect these people 100 years later and speaks to our time. Marie chats with Thomas Morris, the editor of Dubliners 100 about how he got the idea for the book and how the project got started. He talks about how he chose well-known contemporary Irish authors as well as up and coming emerging writers. Thomas discussed how these creative works of fiction have also become commentary and interpretation of the original Joyce. Authors contributing to the stories in Dubliners 100 are: Patrick McCabe, Mary Morrissy, John Boyne, Donal Ryan, Andrew Fox, Evelyn Conlon, Oona Frawley, John Kelly, Belinda McKeon, Michèle Forbes, Paul Murray, Eimear McBride, Elske Rahill, Sam Coll, Peter Murphy, and including an Introduction by Thomas Morris.…
 
Marie speaks with her colleagues, specialists of historical performance, about their original wind instruments. They tell the stories of their favorite instruments - where and how they got them, and what they had to do to play it again today! German oboist, Peter Wuttke, talks about the English Horn by Carl Theodor Golde that was played in the orchestra in Weimar that Liszt was conducting. He tells us about how he used this instrument for a recording of the Liszt Dante Symphony. Italian clarinetist, Luigi Magistrelli, tells us the incredible story of his set of clarinets that he acquired from the legendary player, Dieter Klöcker, just before his death. We hear all about these instruments, their history, and Luigi's personal experience of playing them and recording his CD of Brahms chamber music with them. Argentinian historical trumpet player, Alejandro Sandler, chats with us about his cornet by Thibouville-Lamy which was owned by a student of Jean-Baptiste Arban. He plays the Carnival of Venice on this cornet and on the modern trumpet so you can hear the difference!…
 
In this episode, Marie and her early music colleagues from the wind section share stories about one of their original historical instruments. These stories are not only about the instruments, but about the players who have found them, restored them, and perform on them today. In many cases, these were instruments that were covered in dust and grime and in various states of disrepair when they were found. To most musicians they would look like trash, or something to be made into a lamp - but to specailists in historical performance who know what to look for, sometimes these instruments are highly coveted. These musicians know how to clean them up and how to play these old instruments again to give them a new life. Marie shares the story of her early 20th century Oskar Oehler clarinet played in the Bayreuth Festspielorchester. Belgian horn player, Jeroen Billiet, talks about his 1847 Van Cauwelaert 3-valve horn with a "Belgian valve system". Adrian Rovatkay, German bassoonist, chats about his 1760 Schlegel early classical bassoon. And Michael Lynn, American historical flute specialist, tells us about his baroque Palanca flute!…
 
Baritone, Peter Kálmán, and Marie Ross chat at the Salzburg Festival in part 2 of their interview. Peter discusses the opera characters that he creates on stage and how he gets his inspiration from real life experiences. Theater and acting in opera is about gestures that make up character traits and the slightest color or how an emotion plays through the voice, and Peter Kalman is a master of these qualities. On stage, Peter is like a fish in water. He got his education and training back stage, watching from the wings, learning by doing, experiencing in theater and in life. You’ll get a chance now to hear him talk about it. To see videos of some of the roles that Peter has created on stage, or to hear clips from his audio recordings, visit his website: peterkalman.com…
 
Internationally renowned baritone, Peter Kálmán, joins the podcast from the Salzburg Festival where he was singing Schubert's opera, Fierrabras, with Ingo Metzmacher and the Vienna Philharmonic. Peter chats with Marie about how he came to opera through his love of acting and the theater. He is the bass-baritone of choice for Cecilia Bartoli – the one she insists on singing next to when she does an opera production or makes a recording. Peter has sung all over the world. He was a member of the Zurich Opera Company, and since then has been singing in all the biggest opera houses and most prestigious festivals – Paris, Vienna, Salzburg – just to name a few. He loves to play character roles – the buffo or the bösewicht – two common operatic characters, the comic relief or the villain. He talks with me about his favorite roles, life in the opera world today, and how he gets inspiration for characters through real life experiences – good or bad – and by simply watching people.…
 
Michael Walters started out his career as a contemporary ballet dancer with the Netherlands Dance Theater, Frankfurt Ballet, and Lyon Opera, and has since transitioned into a career as an actor. After achiveing the top level of success as a dancer, Michael talks to Marie about what it was like to start over again in a new artistic field, and what it was like to go back to school again at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London where he trained as an actor. Michael's story is so incredible that it can sometimes seem like the plot of a movie. He struggled as a teenager in Detroit, determined to become a dancer, and tells the story of how he found classical ballet against all odds and how it shaped his life. After making his transition from dance into acting, Michael has a unique perspective on artistry - and what it means to transcend any one artistic discipline. Since graduating from RADA, Michael has been seen on London stages including his major breakout role as Jean-Michel Basquiat in "A Thousand Years of History".…
 
Flute player and conductor of Les Ambassadeurs, Alexis Kossenko, demonstrates some favorite flutes from his collection. He takes us from the modern flute through the renaissance, baroque, classical and romantic periods. Some are copies of historical instruments made by modern instrument makers, and some are original instruments from the period. He tells the stories of these very special instruments, how he found them, about each of their specific idiosyncrasies, and which period and type of music they would be played for. Alexis has a collection of 65 flutes, representing each period of the history of the flute. Take this special opportunity to hear about some of the instruments from his collection!…
 
This episode is about the newly released recording of Mozart's opera, Cosi fan tutte, by Russian orchestra MusicAeterna and conductor, Teodor Currentzis. This recording was made over two weeks in January in Perm, a Russian provincial city close to the Ural Mountains. Marie talks about her experience making this recording in Perm and what it was like to play in a Russian orchestra. Playing musical clips from the recording, she recounts stories and anecdotes from the making of these CDs, and talks about the history of the orchestra, and how their philosophy is so different from other classical music ensembles today. To buy the new Cosi fan tutte with MusicAeterna and Teodor Currentzis, please check out these links: CD: http://smarturl.it/tc-cosifantutte-del iTunes: http://smarturl.it/tc-cosifantutte Vinyl: http://smarturl.it/tc-cosifantutte-vin…
 
Flutist and conductor, Alexis Kossenko, joins the program to discuss the melding of his two passions. He chats about his early life and how he got started on the flute at an unusually early age. Although he had an early and precocious interest in conducting, he explains how that came later after he had already established himself as a performer and soloist. Alexis takes us behind the scenes and describes the process he had to go through to create a successful orchestra from the ground up. He talks about some of his favorite music and some upcoming projects that he is working on for the future. During this podcast, Alexis shares with us 6 musical clips from performing the Nielsen Flute Concerto at age 19 to the latest CD that he has made with his new orchestra, Les Ambassadeurs.…
 
Goth-chic fashion designers and baroque violinists, Vivien and Olivia Steindler, join the podcast to talk about how they think about fashion as an art form and how they started their clothing and jewelry brand, Voriagh. They are sisters, and discuss their early lives, influences, and their early passions for fashion, music - and all things gothic. Vivien and Olivia have a fashion boutique called Voriagh in the center of the Bastille in Paris, where they sell their original designs. Begun in 2007, Voriagh is the first ever Parisian brand of gothic prêt-à-porter, hand-making all of its creations with high quality materials. They discuss the inspirations for their line, where they get their materials, and how the materials become an integral part of the design and expression of their pieces.…
 
It is an experience to play 4 different Rossini operas in one season. Marie talks about the four different productions that Ensemble Matheus played this season throughout Europe on historical instruments - and what the culture of theater life was like in Rossini's 19th century Italy when these works were first performed. She talks about how Rossini was the first superstar composer and how he was at the center of the chaos and excitement of 19th century theater life. That adrenaline rush is still quite prevalent in his works, and easily becomes part of the lives of performers of his music even today, 200 years later. With Cecilia Bartoli and casts of today's best opera stars, Ensemble Matheus and conductor, Jean-Christophe Spinosi played Rossini in the Théâtre du Châtelet and Théâtre des Champs Elysées in Paris, in Dortmund, Beaune, and the Haus für Mozart and Grossesfestspielhaus in Salzburg.…
 
In part 2 of the conversation with opera star, Barry Banks, he talks openly about the issues that all performers and artists deal with: confidence, nerves, the dedication it takes to be a musician, and how important it is for him to have a life outside of singing. He talks about the balance that he has struggled to achieve in his life and how he's learned how to not be too effected when things do not go as perfectly as he would like in a performance. Barry and Marie compare notes and discuss music from the different perspectives of a singer and an instrumentalist. They talk about the barriers between singers and instrumentalists and how Barry has learned to approach colleagues, instrumentalists and conductors alike. To hear some videos of Barry Banks' singing in various opera productions, visit The Fidelio Podcast's facebook page .…
 
International opera star, tenor, Barry Banks, talks with Marie in Salzburg, Austria, during their production of Rossini's Otello at the Pfingstfestspiele in June. Barry chats about his early life as a trumpet player, and how his experience as an instrumentalist and love for the trumpet and brass bands have influenced him as a singer. Barry discusses his favorite operatic roles, how he creates them on stage, and what it's like to play the villain. He reminisces about his past productions in Salzburg, and the few isolated moments that have built his career and how they have defined him as a singer. Barry Banks lives in New York and sings regularly in leading roles at the Metropolitan Opera, and the English National Opera amongst many other opera houses. He has recorded prolifically for Chandos Records. As well as being a recognized bel canto specialist, Barry Banks regularly sings a diverse repertoire ranging from Bach, Handel, and Mozart to Stravinsky, Britten, and Berg.…
 
June 16th is Bloomsday, the only city-wide celebration of a day from a work of fiction! Bloomsday is a celebration of James Joyce's Ulysses, and it is the day that the events from the book took place in Dublin. In this special episode, Marie talks a bit about the book itself and delves into some of the stories and history behind the book. She speaks with 3 guests in Dublin who are all associated with Bloomsday, but also have 3 different perspectives on the day and Joyce's work. The first guests are Maite Lopez and James Moore from the creative collective, At it Again!, a group of actors and artists who have written a guide to Ulysses, have made a Bloomsday Survival Kit, and will be performing this year in the celebration. She also speaks with Mark Traynor, a scholar of Irish literature and the director of the James Joyce Centre in Dublin. And finally she chats with Wendy Conroy, one of the head volunteers at Sweny's Pharmacy, one of the main surviving Ulysses landmarks. Marie discovers not only what Bloomsday is about, but also about the relationship that everyday Dubliners have with Joyce. ( photo of Maite Lopez from At it Again! )…
 
Michael Markwick is a Berlin based Dutch-American painter. In this episode, Marie joins him in his art studio in the Kreutzberg district of Berlin to talk with him about the inspirations, memories, and experiences behind his work. Michael's work is based in nature, and they talk about his process of creating a painting and his relationships with different natural and urban environments, while also discussing what it's like to be an artist today and the new life a painting takes on when it is displayed and viewed by others. Michael Markwick's paintings have been recently published in a new catalog from the exhibition, Geist und Form: Ten Painters from Berlin , by the Indiana University Grunwald Gallery of Art. To see the works discussed here, visit: The Fidelio Podcast facebook page…
 
Marie talks about her experience being a historical performer in Europe, what her life is like, and also about what it means to be a performer today. She explains how she got into the early music world from being a modern clarinetist in the United States, what motivated her, the process of learning a historical instrument, and how this made her a more complete musician. The lifestyle of an early music wind player is discussed - everything from travel, playing with musicians from other cultures, and the vast collection of instruments that are used regularly! Take a look at what's inside this one early musician's backpack!…
 
Michael Willens, conductor and founder of period-instrument orchestra, Die Kölner Akademie, talks about his experiences as a musician of many different genres, and explains his reasons for performing 20th century music with historical instruments. He also shares some samples of various recordings he's made with Die Kölner Akademie. Michael is the definition of a well-rounded musician, from an early focus on jazz and rock, to studying the classical bass at Juilliard, and eventually moving to Europe to found and conduct his own period-instrument orchestra. He discusses his past and how it has effected him as a historical musician and conductor today in the early music scene.…
 
Marie talks about her experience performing Rossini's opera, Otello, in Paris at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées with Cecilia Bartoli, Ensemble Matheus, and Jean-Christophe Spinosi. Recording the podcast from Paris on the night of the final performance, Marie discusses the production, Rossni's opera itself, and some of the atmosphere surrounding the controversial natures of the performances. This production marked Bartoli's return to the Paris opera scene in her first staged opera there for 20 years. Conducted by the "enfant terrible" of classical music, Jean-Christophe Spinosi, this was a production wrapped up with history, drama, and controversy.…
 
Russian-American writer, Olga Zilberbourg, talks about coming of age during the fall of the Soviet Union, moving to the United States at the age of 17, and how these extraordinary experiences have shaped her identity as an artist. Olga has been up until now mostly a short story writer, and is currently working on her first novel. She has been published in both English and Russian, and has been deeply impacted by both of her two countries. She discusses how she reconciles these two vastly different cultures in both her life and in her art, not to mention the challenges she's faced learning to write in a foreign language.…
 
Alex Lefevre, musical theater composer, pianist, and director joins The Fidelio Podcast to talk about his life on Broadway! He also shares 4 of his original story-like songs with us. Alex has worked in the musical theater world of New York City doing everything from working the lights to acting, conducting, directing, and writing the songs for his own show. He has combined all of his passions and talents to make a unique and successful career in the cut-throat world of musical theater.…
 
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