Joyce DiDonato, Philip Cutlip, Frederica von Stade, Measha Brueggergosman - Heggie: Dead Man Walking (2012)
BAND/ARTIST: Joyce DiDonato, Philip Cutlip, Frederica von Stade, Measha Brueggergosman
- Title: Heggie: Dead Man Walking
- Year Of Release: 2012
- Label: Parlophone Records
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
- Total Time: 02:21:28
- Total Size: 766 / 360 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD 1
Dead Man Walking
1. Prelude
2. Prologue
Act 1
3. He Will Gather Us Around
4. Heavens! Look At The Time
5. Be Careful, People Have Always Told Me
6. This Journey. This Journey To Christ
7. Sister Helen? I've Been Waiting For You
8. Some Of Them Didn't Look So Bad
9. I Don't Like That Man
10. Woman On The Tier!
11. Thank You
12. Are You Frightened?
13. You Ever Been With A Man?
14. Five More Minutes, De Rocher
15. The Defendant's Mother, Mrs. Patrick De Rocher
16. Joe, My Joe, Is Not A Bad Boy
17. What You All Say My Joe Did Is So Terrible
18. It's A Good Sign When They Take So Long To Decide
19. You Don't Know What It's Like
20. I'm Sorry. So Sorry
21. Guess Your Nun Ain't Comin' Back, De Rocher
22. I believe in the here and now
23. The Bible Says "the Truth Will Set You Free" - Excuse Me. Do You Have Any Change?
24. He Will Gather Us Around
25. What Happened?
CD 2
Act 2
1. Prelude
2. 3.. 3.. 33...
3. Everybody hear that?
4. The Girl. I Remember The Girl
5. Oh!... Now and at the hour of our death. Amen
6. God's Love And Forgiveness - Well? Well?
7. What Time Is It?
8. Joseph! - I'm Scared, Ok?
9. The New Ford Mustangs Are So Cool
10. All Those People Out There
11. Don't Say A Word
12. Who Will Walk With Me?
13. Good Evening
14. I've Said Some Harsh Things
15. You're A Regular Illustrated Man, De Rocher
16. How Much Longer? How Much More Time?
17. We'd Been Drinkin' And Smokin' Weed At The Road House
18. I Killed Her
19. Dead Man Walking! - Our Father
20. He Will Gather Us Around, All Around
Performers:
Joyce DiDonato (Sister Helen Prejean)
Philip Cutlip (Joseph de Rocher)
Frederica von Stade (Mrs de Rocher)
Measha Brueggergosman (Sister Rose)
Cheryl Parrish (Kitty Hart)
Susanne Mentzer (Jade Boucher)
Jon Kolbet (Howard Boucher)
Houston Grand Opera & Chorus
Patrick Summers
CD 1
Dead Man Walking
1. Prelude
2. Prologue
Act 1
3. He Will Gather Us Around
4. Heavens! Look At The Time
5. Be Careful, People Have Always Told Me
6. This Journey. This Journey To Christ
7. Sister Helen? I've Been Waiting For You
8. Some Of Them Didn't Look So Bad
9. I Don't Like That Man
10. Woman On The Tier!
11. Thank You
12. Are You Frightened?
13. You Ever Been With A Man?
14. Five More Minutes, De Rocher
15. The Defendant's Mother, Mrs. Patrick De Rocher
16. Joe, My Joe, Is Not A Bad Boy
17. What You All Say My Joe Did Is So Terrible
18. It's A Good Sign When They Take So Long To Decide
19. You Don't Know What It's Like
20. I'm Sorry. So Sorry
21. Guess Your Nun Ain't Comin' Back, De Rocher
22. I believe in the here and now
23. The Bible Says "the Truth Will Set You Free" - Excuse Me. Do You Have Any Change?
24. He Will Gather Us Around
25. What Happened?
CD 2
Act 2
1. Prelude
2. 3.. 3.. 33...
3. Everybody hear that?
4. The Girl. I Remember The Girl
5. Oh!... Now and at the hour of our death. Amen
6. God's Love And Forgiveness - Well? Well?
7. What Time Is It?
8. Joseph! - I'm Scared, Ok?
9. The New Ford Mustangs Are So Cool
10. All Those People Out There
11. Don't Say A Word
12. Who Will Walk With Me?
13. Good Evening
14. I've Said Some Harsh Things
15. You're A Regular Illustrated Man, De Rocher
16. How Much Longer? How Much More Time?
17. We'd Been Drinkin' And Smokin' Weed At The Road House
18. I Killed Her
19. Dead Man Walking! - Our Father
20. He Will Gather Us Around, All Around
Performers:
Joyce DiDonato (Sister Helen Prejean)
Philip Cutlip (Joseph de Rocher)
Frederica von Stade (Mrs de Rocher)
Measha Brueggergosman (Sister Rose)
Cheryl Parrish (Kitty Hart)
Susanne Mentzer (Jade Boucher)
Jon Kolbet (Howard Boucher)
Houston Grand Opera & Chorus
Patrick Summers
“Cathartic, uplifting and humanizing” wrote the Houston Chronicle, reporting on this Houston Grand Opera production of Jake Heggie’s Dead Man Walking. Joyce DiDonato as Sister Helen Prejean, who becomes a counsellor to murderer on death row in Louisiana, shares the stage with her idol, veteran mezzo Frederica von Stade, here making her farewell to opera.
“Joyce DiDonato returns to her New York City Opera role as Sister Helen and her life-changing portrayal proves an absolute revelation,” wrote the Houston Chronicle when the American mezzo soprano assumed the role of the nun Sister Helen Prejean in Jake Heggie’s opera Dead Man Walking, premiered in 2000 in San Francisco and staged with DiDonato at Houston Grand Opera in late 2010.
Like Tim Robbins’ Oscar-winning 1995 movie of the same name, which starred Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn, the opera draws on Sister Helen’s real-life memoirs: a leading advocate for abolition of the death penalty in the USA, she acted as a counsellor to a prisoner on death row in Louisiana. “However great an operatic and theatrical experience,” continued the Houston Chronicle, “Dead Man Walking makes its greatest impact as a purely human one.”
As Joyce DiDonato told the New York Times: “I first did Sister Helen at New York City Opera in 200 It was extraordinary as a young American to be involved in something that so directly reflects things our society is going through. Dead Man Walking poses questions directly applicable to our society today … I’ve never felt a piece hit an audience so hard. There was an electricity in the theatre.”
Quite apart from the power of the opera itself, the production had a special personal significance for DiDonato. Her career was launched in the late 1990s with her three years on Houston Grand Opera’s young artists programme, and in this production she was sharing a stage with her idol, fellow mezzo soprano Frederica von Stade. Playing Mrs de Rocher, the mother of the convicted murderer, von Stade made her farewell to the operatic stage with this production.
“The rafters [shook] …” wrote Opera magazine, “thanks to the ovations for Joyce DiDonato, Philip Cutlip [playing the convicted Joseph De Rocher], the music director Patrick Summers and perhaps especially for Frederica von Stade, whose recreation of the role of the convicted murderer’s grieving mother in this run ended this beloved artist’s 41-year operatic career … DiDonato sang luminously, affectingly conveying the altruistic nun’s conflicting emotions … Von Stade was dramatically and musically heartbreaking in a role written for her, Measha Brueggergosman’s glowing soprano and spunky acting enriched her portrayal of Sister Rose … Summers … was in total sync with Heggie’s churning, throbbing, colourful score … Leonard Foglia’s staging was … chillingly effective.”
To return to the words of the Houston Chronicle: “Absolute in its skill and devastating in its power, Houston Grand Opera’s Dead Man Walking more than lives up to the reputation that this uncompromising and thoroughly engrossing work has acquired since its world premiere at San Francisco Opera a decade ago… Jake Heggie and librettist Terrence McNally have stared unflinchingly into the dark heart of its difficult subject matter. Despite the fact that much of the action is unbearably painful, they find light and transcendence amid that darkness, thanks largely to the ennobling influence of their protagonist. Dead Man Walking wipes you out, yet its final impact is cathartic, uplifting and humanizing. … Heggie and McNally have written the most deeply and genuinely spiritual new work to inhabit either opera or theatre stages in many years.”
“Joyce DiDonato returns to her New York City Opera role as Sister Helen and her life-changing portrayal proves an absolute revelation,” wrote the Houston Chronicle when the American mezzo soprano assumed the role of the nun Sister Helen Prejean in Jake Heggie’s opera Dead Man Walking, premiered in 2000 in San Francisco and staged with DiDonato at Houston Grand Opera in late 2010.
Like Tim Robbins’ Oscar-winning 1995 movie of the same name, which starred Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn, the opera draws on Sister Helen’s real-life memoirs: a leading advocate for abolition of the death penalty in the USA, she acted as a counsellor to a prisoner on death row in Louisiana. “However great an operatic and theatrical experience,” continued the Houston Chronicle, “Dead Man Walking makes its greatest impact as a purely human one.”
As Joyce DiDonato told the New York Times: “I first did Sister Helen at New York City Opera in 200 It was extraordinary as a young American to be involved in something that so directly reflects things our society is going through. Dead Man Walking poses questions directly applicable to our society today … I’ve never felt a piece hit an audience so hard. There was an electricity in the theatre.”
Quite apart from the power of the opera itself, the production had a special personal significance for DiDonato. Her career was launched in the late 1990s with her three years on Houston Grand Opera’s young artists programme, and in this production she was sharing a stage with her idol, fellow mezzo soprano Frederica von Stade. Playing Mrs de Rocher, the mother of the convicted murderer, von Stade made her farewell to the operatic stage with this production.
“The rafters [shook] …” wrote Opera magazine, “thanks to the ovations for Joyce DiDonato, Philip Cutlip [playing the convicted Joseph De Rocher], the music director Patrick Summers and perhaps especially for Frederica von Stade, whose recreation of the role of the convicted murderer’s grieving mother in this run ended this beloved artist’s 41-year operatic career … DiDonato sang luminously, affectingly conveying the altruistic nun’s conflicting emotions … Von Stade was dramatically and musically heartbreaking in a role written for her, Measha Brueggergosman’s glowing soprano and spunky acting enriched her portrayal of Sister Rose … Summers … was in total sync with Heggie’s churning, throbbing, colourful score … Leonard Foglia’s staging was … chillingly effective.”
To return to the words of the Houston Chronicle: “Absolute in its skill and devastating in its power, Houston Grand Opera’s Dead Man Walking more than lives up to the reputation that this uncompromising and thoroughly engrossing work has acquired since its world premiere at San Francisco Opera a decade ago… Jake Heggie and librettist Terrence McNally have stared unflinchingly into the dark heart of its difficult subject matter. Despite the fact that much of the action is unbearably painful, they find light and transcendence amid that darkness, thanks largely to the ennobling influence of their protagonist. Dead Man Walking wipes you out, yet its final impact is cathartic, uplifting and humanizing. … Heggie and McNally have written the most deeply and genuinely spiritual new work to inhabit either opera or theatre stages in many years.”
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