Boston
Singers' Resource News Bulletin, February
15, 2006
Artistic
Director and Conductor of Granite State Opera as well as host of 'The
Opera Hour' - a monthly New Hampshire Radio program that showcases new
and old works, Philip Lauriat has some very ambitious goals for opera
in New Hampshire and hes well on his way to succeeding.
By
Joe Stroup
Prior to his current full-time work as a conductor, Philip Lauriat maintained
an active career as a lyric tenor. He has appeared with, among other
organizations, the Boston Lyric Opera, the Merrimack Lyric Opera, Midland
(MI) Music, and the Cincinnati Opera. He has sung such roles as Rodolfo
in La Boheme, Alfredo in La Traviata, and Sam
in Susannah.
However, since 1996, this graduate of the Eastman School of Music and
Westminster Choir College has been focused on his role as a conductor
and on bringing opera of the highest quality to the Granite State. Philip
Lauriat made his conducting debut that year with the Raylynmor Operas
production of Amahl and the Night Visitors. He followed
this up with his European conducting debut in July, 1998, with the East
Slovakian State Opera in a production of Le Nozze di Figaro.
During that period he was also the Music Director of the Savoyard Light
Opera Company, putting up productions of The Gondoliers,
Of Thee I Sing, and The Pirates of Penzance.
More recently, he has been the Conductor of the Seacoast Chamber Orchestra
(now known as the Portsmouth Symphony) since Sept, 2004, and he has
returned to Raylynmor with productions of La Boheme and
a much-praised Cosi Fan Tutte.
But it was as Artistic Director of the GSO, which he co-founded in October,
1998, that he found the means to achieve his dream of bringing fine
opera to this part of New England. He sees Glimmerglass Opera, in Cooperstown,
NY, as the model for what Granite State Opera should and can be. Indeed,
he feels that, in order for GSO to succeed, it needs to aim for the
ambitious programming that Glimmerglass offers.
The GSO, based in Concord, New Hampshire, and now in its sixth season,
has not only drawn the devoted attention of local opera lovers (attendance
in New Hampshire is, per capita, twice the national average) but has
also attracted important young singers who are heard at the Metropolitan
Opera, the New York City Opera, and the San Francisco and Seattle Operas.
In addition, such well-known performers as Frederica von Stade (in her
first performance of Mahlers Ruckert Lieder) and Patricia
Racette (in her first performance of Barbers Knoxville,
Summer of 1915) have collaborated with Mr Lauriat and the Granite
State Opera Orchestra.
The kick-off to the GSOs 2005-2006 season was an Opera Gala in
September that featured finalists from The Metropolitan Opera National
Council Competition. This event was followed, in October, with two performances
of Donizettis LElisir dAmore. The second
and final Opera of the season will be Puccinis Madama Butterfly.
It will run for two performances during the first weekend of May and,
like the Donizetti, it will be sung in Italian with English supertitles.
As in previous GSO seasons, the venue for the second performance of
Butterfly in May will be the GSOs regular home, the Capital Center
for the Arts; a 1200-seat venue in Concord. However, in keeping with
their stated goal of reaching as diverse an audience as possible, the
first performance will take place at the Portsmouth Music Hall, a smaller
house. Its important to be in Portsmouth to draw an audience because,
as he sees it, The opera audiences in New Hampshire tend to think
of traveling North and South rather than West. My goal is to give them
opera that they can (almost) stay home for.
An additional feature of this years GSO season was the rare opportunity
to hear the premiere of a work still in progress. In January, Mr Lauriat
presented the first act of Oscar Wilde, an opera based on
that writers life, with music by the internationally-known, local
composer Thomas Oboe Lee and lyrics by Paul Hodes. The work was presented
at the Concord Community Music School as a workshop project to a select
audience of GSO subscribers and area musicians and featured Boston Lyric
Opera baritone David Kravitz in the title role. The cast also included
well-known Boston singers Brent Wilson*, Mark Cleveland, Molly Jo Bessey,
and Janice Edwards* who were assisted by pianist Michelle Alexander.
Ive wanted to do the premiere of a new work (with GSO),
Mr Lauriat explains. About a year ago they (Lee and Hodes) approached
us about doing the workshop and it seemed to be ideal. We got to be
involved in a new piece without having the process of searching for
a composer, hiring a librettist. The work was well-received and
drew many enthusiastic comments from the audience which the composer
and lyricist want to work into the finished score. Mr Lauriat isnt
yet ready to say how soon the work, a full-length, two-act Opera, will
be completed but progress continues.
Another way of introducing himself and opera to the New Hampshire audience
is by hosting a monthly program on the New Hampshire Public Radio station,
WKXL, 1450 AM. Called The Opera Hour, the first show aired
last August. These programs give Mr Lauriat a chance to talk about the
history of a particular opera and about the composer, and to play excerpts
from recordings of the opera.
The January program was devoted to a discussion of Oscar Wilde
with the composer and lyricist as guests. The next program, on February
20th, will be about Beethovens single foray into the genre; Fidelio.
Mr Lauriat has chosen a recording that features Christa Ludwig and John
Vickers, conducted by Otto Klemperer.
The Opera Hour airs at 2:00 on the third Monday of the month.
If you are outside the broadcast range of the station you can hear a
live stream by going to their website www.wkxl1450.com. Repeats of the
show are on Sundays at 5:00 and, beginning with the January show, you
can replay the program by going to the website and clicking on Program
Archive. From there, click on The Opera Hour. Check out
this link and hear how Oscar Wilde was conceived and developed.
Since the premiere of the opera hadnt occurred when the show was
taped, youll instead get to hear excerpts from Thomas Oboe Lees
Clarinet Concerto with the Brockton Symphony and Jonathan
Cohler as conductor and solo clarinetist.
The Granite State Opera holds auditions at various times of the year.
You will need to check their website, www.granitestateopera.org,
for details. For the present, the chorus is comprised of volunteer singers
but it is the aim of the company to evolve to having a paid chorus.
Happily, the principal roles are paid. (Mr Lauriat states that the principals,
the pit and the theater all take about equal chunks of the budget.)
What does he look for when auditioning singers? I usually have
our particular productions in mind. I listen for a big, open, easy sound
and for someone who is communicating; someone who gives me the role
and the character (of whatever aria the singer is auditioning with)
in their face and their voice. I look for that on-stage sparkle.
Mr. Lauriat has been an auditor at Boston Singers Resource Auditions
including the most recent 2005 Select Audition, held last November.
Along with his duties as conductor, artistic and music director, and
radio show host, Philip Lauriat continues to teach and coach voice,
something he has been doing for 25 years. He maintains a studio in Temple,
NH, and is in the process of re-establishing a studio in Boston as well.
He also continues to sing in smaller venues such as private homes. But
these days Philip Lauriat, who was recently named Conductor for the
Boston MidSummer Opera (Drew Minter, Artistic Director), considers his
rightful place in the concert hall to be just beyond the footlights
rather than in front of them.
=====================
Up-coming performances:
Puccini: Madama Butterfly
Theresa Cincione as Cio-Cio San
Arnold Rawls as Pinkerton
Philip Lima as Sharpless
Philip Lauriat, Artistic Director
Tickets: $18 to $58.
Call: 603-878-0539.
Thursday, May 4, 2006 at 8:00 PM
The Music Hall, 28 Chestnut Street, Portsmouth, NH.
Info at: 603-436-2400. www.themusichall.org.
Sunday, May 7, 2006 at 2:00 PM
The Capitol Center for the Arts, 44 South Main Street, Concord, NH.
Info at: 603-225-1111. www.ccanh.com.
For more information
about Granite State Opera or to contact Mr. Lauriat:
Granite State Opera www.GraniteStateOpera.org
The Opera Hour www.wkxl1450.com
Philip Lauriat plauriat@granitestate.org


