KorMalta Italy Tour 2022

I’m back from a week full of music were together with KorMalta we did a tour in the North of Italy that included 3 concerts and an opera!

It all started in the picturesque village of Smarano, where on the 19th of July we performed in the church of Santa Maria Assunta as part of the Smarano Academy Music Festival 2022. In the concert we were joined on organ by Maestro Edoardo Bellotti, artistic director of the International Academy of Smarano. Music by Ludovico Fogliano (1490 – 1548), Claudio Monteverdi (1567 – 1643) and Benigno Zarafa (1726 – 1804) among others was sung at this beautiful location.

Our next stop was Castell’Arquato. We stayed here for four days, and as part of the Festival Illica we performed in a concert and an opera. On the 22nd of July we sung in the Collegiata di Santa Maria Assunta. This church, built between 1117 and 1122 with various alterations added throughout the centuries, made the perfect ambient for the music performed in that night. In this concert we were also accompanied by Maestro Edoardo Bellotti.

On the day after, it was time for the opera performance of Le Maschere with music by Pietro Mascagni and an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. KorMalta together with an Italian chorus and an amazing cast performed in the beautiful square of the medieval village of Castell’Arquato under the baton of Mro. Jacopo Brusa.

Our last stop was in Bologna. As part of the Voci Nei Chiostri Festival, on the 24th of July we performed a selection of early and modern music in the church of San Procolo.

An intense and fruitful week came to an end with many memories to cherish. A big thanks to our choir master Mro. Riccardo Bianchi and to the Arts Council Malta for the opportunity!

Maltese Operas

This summer I had the pleasure to be part of the chorus in two Maltese operas; Aħna Refugjati and Belt il-Bniedem: Is-Swar.

Aħna Refugjati happened on the 31st August and 2nd September at the Granaries in Floriana. This opera was under the direction of Mario Philip Azzopardi, who was also the librettist. Music was composed by Mario Sammut and Mro. Richard Merrill Brown.

Aħna Refuġjati
Aħna Refugjati (Photo by Ivan Borg)
Aħna Refuġjati
Aħna Refugjati (Photo by Ivan Borg)

Continue reading “Maltese Operas”

Spring to Summer

It’s been some time since I’ve posted here … have been kept quite busy this year! Soon after Don Giovanni, I sang with the A Cappella Choir in La Divina Commedia, where we sang two a cappella pieces; Eric Whitacre’s Lux Arumque and Ola Gjeilo’s O Magnum Mysterium. This was part of a concert directed by Michelle Castelletti and held at the Robert Samut Hall in Floriana.

In April I then joined the pit-singers for Mamma Mia!, an FM Theatre production. We were under the music direction of Kris Spiteri with the musical being held at the MCC in Valletta.

(1) La Divina Commedia (2) Mamma Mia! (3) Aħna Refuġjati (4) Musical Adventures in Seconda Prattica

Continue reading “Spring to Summer”

Don Giovanni

In the first week of March I was part of the chorus for the opera Don Giovanni, with music by Mozart and libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte. This is the second of a trilogy written by the latter two. Like last year, the opera was directed by Jack Furness, with Mro. Philip Walsh conducting the Malta Philharmonic Orchestra. Don Giovanni was held over four nights at the prestigious Manoel Theatre in Valletta. This was my fifth opera, with the last one being Patience, in which I interpreted the role of Major Murgatroyd.

Don Giovanni
Photo by Mark Zammit Cordina

The Monteverdi Project

Back in August we had our first masterclass with Mro. Marco Mencoboni as part of The Monteverdi Project. Monthly masterclasses were held specializing in baroque music. All this culminated in a baroque concert together with VIBE (Valletta International Baroqie Ensemble) on the 21st of December at St. Gregory’s Church, Żejtun. In this concert, presented by Teatru Manoel, a 14-piece orchestra performed together with The Monteverdi Project Vocal Ensemble under the baton of Mro. Marco Mencoboni.

Continue reading “The Monteverdi Project”