Keith Phares - Carlisle Floyd: Prince of Players (2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Keith Phares
- Title: Carlisle Floyd: Prince of Players
- Year Of Release: 2020
- Label: Reference Recordings
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+booklet)
- Total Time: 95:34 min
- Total Size: 417 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD1:
01. Prince of Players, Prologue: Othello: Ay, Desdemonda
02. Prince of Players, Act I Scene 1: Not Again, Never Again! I Shall Not Be Humiliated Again!
03. Prince of Players, Act I Scene 2: Do You Know How Many Roles We've Seen You In?
04. Prince of Players, Act I Scene 3: Oh! You Startled Me!
05. Prince of Players, Act I Scene 4: The Duke of Buckingham, Your Majesty
CD2:
01. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 1: Howl, Howl, Howl, Howl, Howl!
02. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 2: Ned, Are You Alright: You Look a Fright
03. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 3: Gents, It's My Esteemed Pleasure to Introduce
04. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 4: Shall I Get a Physician:
05. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 5: Ned, Ned! It's Tom!
06. Prince of Players, Act II Scene 6: Bring Mistress Hughes to the Stage at Once
Carlisle Floyd (b. 1926) is one of the foremost composers and librettists of opera in the world today. Considered the “Father of American Opera”, Floyd’s operas are regularly performed in the US and Europe. He first achieved national prominence with the premiere of Susannah by the New York City Opera in 1956. His second opera, Wuthering Heights, premiered at Santa Fe Opera in 1958, and continues to have life decades later: a critically-acclaimed recording, released in June 2016 on Reference Recordings, was listed in Opera News’s 10 Best Opera Recordings of 2016 (FR721).
During his long career, Floyd has composed 13 operas. His most recent, Prince of Players, which premiered in March 2016 at the Houston Grand Opera, is based on the true story of the Restoration-era actor Edward Kynaston (1640–1706). Remarks about Kynaston in the personal diary of Samuel Pepys inspired a play by Jeffrey Hatcher, Compleat Female Stage Beauty (1999), which was later made into a movie, Stage Beauty (2004). The plot centres on the crisis faced by Kynaston when, by royal decree, he is prohibited from plying the craft that made him famous – playing female roles. With this Milwaukee production, the Florentine Opera gives Prince of Players its world-premiere live recording.
“On his newest work, Prince of Players (2016), composer-librettist Floyd again lays bare his passion for social justice and understanding. Though set in 17th-century england, the opera’s highly charged drama deals with issues that confront us in 21st-century America – among them, the intricacies of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the resulting societal consequences. Employing set pieces that evoke the restoration era – a bawdy tavern song, courtly dances, a folksong used as a maladroit audition piece – and calling on his tried-and-true mixture of affecting lyricism and sometimes-jarring dissonance, Floyd convincingly depicts the world of the actor Edward Kynaston. It’s an inspiring – and true – story of an artist motivated by a soul-deep devotion to his chosen art form.” – J. Mark Baker, “Carlisle Floyd and Opera in America”
During his long career, Floyd has composed 13 operas. His most recent, Prince of Players, which premiered in March 2016 at the Houston Grand Opera, is based on the true story of the Restoration-era actor Edward Kynaston (1640–1706). Remarks about Kynaston in the personal diary of Samuel Pepys inspired a play by Jeffrey Hatcher, Compleat Female Stage Beauty (1999), which was later made into a movie, Stage Beauty (2004). The plot centres on the crisis faced by Kynaston when, by royal decree, he is prohibited from plying the craft that made him famous – playing female roles. With this Milwaukee production, the Florentine Opera gives Prince of Players its world-premiere live recording.
“On his newest work, Prince of Players (2016), composer-librettist Floyd again lays bare his passion for social justice and understanding. Though set in 17th-century england, the opera’s highly charged drama deals with issues that confront us in 21st-century America – among them, the intricacies of sexual orientation and gender identity, and the resulting societal consequences. Employing set pieces that evoke the restoration era – a bawdy tavern song, courtly dances, a folksong used as a maladroit audition piece – and calling on his tried-and-true mixture of affecting lyricism and sometimes-jarring dissonance, Floyd convincingly depicts the world of the actor Edward Kynaston. It’s an inspiring – and true – story of an artist motivated by a soul-deep devotion to his chosen art form.” – J. Mark Baker, “Carlisle Floyd and Opera in America”
Year 2020 | Classical | FLAC / APE
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads