ReportWire

Tag: Andrew Lloyd Webber

  • Catholic clergy are ecstatic about Rosalía’s songs of faith in her new album ‘Lux’

    [ad_1]

    BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — And Rosalía said, “Let there be Lux.”

    Rosalía, the global Spanish pop star loved by millions for fusing flamenco with Latin hip-hop and reggaeton, has amazed her fans with a radical shift.

    The singer and songwriter’s new album, “Lux” (“Light” in Latin), is unabashedly spiritual. Fifteen songs, sung in 13 different languages, including fragments in Latin, Arabic and Hebrew, are laden with a yearning for the divine.

    And it is receiving praise from on high.

    Xabier Gómez García, bishop of Sant Feliu de Llobregat which includes Rosalía’s hometown of Sant Esteve Sesrovires near Barcelona, was one of the first church leaders to laud her work in an open letter to his flock. Rosalía’s grandmother regularly attends mass in Sant Esteve Sesrovires, according to the diocese.

    In an interview with The Associated Press, Gómez said that while some of her songs were “provocative,” Rosalía “speaks with absolute freedom and without hang-ups about what she feels God to be, and the desire, the thirst (to know God).”

    “When I listened to ‘Lux’ and Rosalía speaking about her the context of her album and the creative process, I found myself faced with a process and a work that transcended the musical. Here was a spiritual search through the testimonies of women of immense spiritual maturity,” he said.

    From her opening lyrics sung over piano and mournful cello, “Who could live between the two/ First love the world and later love God,” Rosalía announces that this album is a rupture from its Grammy-winning predecessors. “El mal querer (¨The Bad Loving” in Spanish) and “ Motomami ” had established Rosalía as one of the leading artists in the Spanish music world with her experimental urban beats.

    Despite — or thanks to — its diversity of styles and song forms, ranging from classical strings, snippets of electronica with a cameo by Björk, a boys’ choir from a thousand-year-old monastery, an aria-like song in Italian, a Portuguese fado and, of course, modern flamenco and hip-hop beats, “Lux” is off to a powerful start among listeners. It has four songs in Spotify’s Top 50 global chart for this week, more than any artist, including Taylor Swift.

    Madonna has declared herself a fan of “Lux,” and composer Andrew Lloyd Webber has lavishly called it the “album of the decade.”

    Turning inwards

    Rosalía, 33, has said that after her success in more popular music forms, she let her long-held longing for the spiritual guide her in making “Lux.”

    “In the end, in an age that seems not to be the age of faith or certainty or truth, there is more need than ever for a faith, or a certainty, or a truth,” she told reporters in Mexico City last month.

    She said that she was guided by the concept that “an artist doubts less of his vocation when he works in the service of God than when he works in the service of him or herself.”

    Rosalía apparently has not had a revelatory “come-to-Jesus” moment common among evangelical believers in America. Like many Spaniards, she grew up in a once staunchly Catholic Spain that has quickly secularized in recent decades, especially among the younger generations, leaving churches mostly to elderly parishioners.

    Even her early music flirted with medieval religious poetry, including one video clip from 2017 when she set a poem by 16th-century Spanish poet Saint John of the Cross to music.

    While embracing Catholic symbols and expressing a fascination with female saints, Rosalía seems to eschew strictly organized practice and draws inspiration from other religions, as well. “Lux” responds to that diversity of interest, at one point quoting a Sufi poetess.

    “I have read much more than I did years ago, reading many hagiographies of feminine saints from around the world,” she said. “They accompanied me throughout this process.”

    Her style has also morphed. Gone are the hip-hop fashion and long fake nails Rosalía sported only a few years ago when she took the Latin Grammys by storm. Contrast that now with her look on the “Lux” album cover, where she is dressed in a solid white nun’s veil with her arms apparently trapped inside a white top, her gaze averted.

    Vatican’s culture cardinal joins the fan club

    Despite the potentially controversial move of comparing God to an obsessed lover in the song “Dios es un stalker” (“God Is a Stalker” in Spanish), Rosalía has won over the equivalent of the Vatican’s culture minister.

    Cardinal José Tolentino de Mendonça, prefect of the Vatican Dicastery for Culture and Education, told Spanish news agency EFE this month that Rosalía has detected a wider dissatisfaction with the secular world.

    “When a creator like Rosalía speaks of spirituality,” he said, “it means that she captures a profound need in contemporary culture to approach spirituality, to cultivate an inner life.”

    Among the songs about faith, Rosalía found the time to deliver tunes like “La Perla” (“The Pearl” in Spanish) that dishes out scorn for a former lover.

    That deft mix of both high and pop culture is part of the allure of “Lux,” said Josep Oton, professor of religious history for the ISCREB theology school in Barcelona.

    “She has succeeded in making popular music with very deep cultural roots,” Oton told the AP. “Anyone can listen to it, and people with different backgrounds can take away different things. It is pop music, but it is profound.”

    Interpreting ‘Lux’

    “Lux” can be intimidating for listeners, both due to its elaborate orchestration and smattering of esoteric lyrics that Rosalía was inspired to write after reading medieval mystical poets and their accounts of undergoing a transformative union with God through deep prayer and meditation.

    In the exhilarating “Reliquia” (“Relic” in Spanish), Rosalía compares herself to female saints, listing the parts of her body and life she has left in cities around the world as relics for others’ keeping. Her “Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti,” (“My Christ Weeps Diamonds” in Italian), brims with the extravagant Baroque image of the jewels dripping from the eyes of the Messiah.

    In “Divinize,” Rosalía sings of the “divina buidor” (“divine emptiness” in Catalan), a central concept of medieval mysticism which focused on how the soul must experience abandonment to open a space where God can enter.

    Victoria Cirlot, professor of humanities at Barcelona’s Pompeu Fabra University and expert in medieval feminine mystical tradition, liked “Lux” for its ability to introduce complex religious concepts to the general public, while noting it is “a minimalist” sample of the mystical tradition.

    Cirlot said the moving “La Yugular” (“The Jugular” in Spanish) is rich in mystical thought because the throat, the home of the voice and the breath, is associated in many religious traditions as the body’s door to the divine.

    But, for Cirlot, it’s the entire package that makes “Lux” so impactful.

    “Rosalía is not just a great singer; she is a great actress, and her body language is full of these mystical gestures like contorting her face in an expression of ecstasy, of staring into nothing,” Cirlot said. “And then we have her amazing voice, which creates a sense of flight.”

    ___

    AP writer Berenice Bautista contributed from Mexico City.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Theater Review: ‘Once Upon a One More Time’ with Britney Spears songs will drive you crazy

    Theater Review: ‘Once Upon a One More Time’ with Britney Spears songs will drive you crazy

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — You’re handed an LED wristband as you enter “Once Upon a One More Time,” a musical on Broadway stuffed with Britney Spears songs. But the gift is strangely inert for the whole show, only coming to life and gleaming at the curtain call. It’s not a wristband — it’s a metaphor. It glows in the end because you are free. Free of this bombastic, patronizing, clumsy, lazy show.

    “Once Upon a One More Time,” which opened Thursday at the Marquis Theatre, is pure summer dumb — it’s got smoke machines working overtime, weird dance breaks, tons of glitter and every song ends with a manufactured IMAX-level sonic boom. One of the main characters actually swings on a chandelier.

    Everything about it seems recycled: A fractured fairy tale that is a tired concept by now — no less a giant than Andrew Lloyd Webber failed with it with “Bad Cinderella” this spring. It’s also a safe feminist story about women writing their own story led by a creative team led mostly by men, an enduring problem on Broadway but very awkward for a story about princesses seizing their narrative.

    The musical has a story written by Jon Hartmere about classic fairy tale princesses — Cinderella, Snow White, Rapunzel and the Little Mermaid, among them, (gathered just as they were in the movie “Ralph Breaks the Internet”) — who are transformed after reading “The Feminine Mystique,” a landmark feminist text. Betty Friedan’s book helped launch the women’s movement by depicting women as prisoners of a culture that made a fetish out of motherhood and housework.

    Why Friedan has been brought low here is unclear, or even why a post-conservatorship Spears authorized this unsubtle musical, which includes many of her hits like “Oops!… I Did It Again,” “Lucky,” “Stronger” and “Toxic.” The creators have hollowed out the original song’s lyrics to shoehorn a narrative they are not suited for. They’ve then added them to a script that mixes a threesome joke, drunk princesses and references to Howard Stern with lines like “You’re not pulling my slipper?”

    Adam Godley is delightful as the droll, fussy Narrator, who is like the backstage ringmaster of fairy tales, ordering about the princesses — “Ready the wedding scene!” — and standing in the way of change or growth. “Real quick, though, this is happy ever after — right?” asks Cinderella. “Of course,” he answers. It’s not.

    The musical is directed and choreographed by husband-and-wife pair Keone and Mari Madrid, who have gone viral on YouTube for their dance videos, but here seem fascinated by weird, jerky arm movements that suggest the performer is having a seizure. For “One More Time,” they go overboard on index fingers pointing.

    That’s not to take anything from the two leads — Briga Heelan as Cinderella and former “American Idol” contestant Justin Guarini as Prince Charming — who use their pipes, physical comedy skills and tenderness to sell a script many levels below their capabilities. They are truly fairy tale heroic.

    It is a story that veers in tone from glib satire to sugary sentimentality, trying to establish a sisterhood it hasn’t earned and adding a gay-rights story that seems tacked on and distracting. There’s a remarkable shift in Act 2 that remakes the Narrator into a horrific Marvel Cinematic Universe-level villain who murders all who disobey him. A desperate attempt to make a coherent happy ending fails.

    It certainly is Spears’ moment on Broadway, since many of her hits are also in “& Juliet” — a jukebox musical now on Broadway that celebrates one of her writing partners and producers, Max Martin — including her “… Baby One More Time” and “Stronger.” That show is in every way better than “Once Upon a One More Time,” which is clearly designed to be a pre-teen magnet and sell T-shirts. Only one Spears show on Broadway is truly “Toxic.”

    ___

    Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why Andrew Lloyd Webber is worried about the future of Broadway

    Why Andrew Lloyd Webber is worried about the future of Broadway

    [ad_1]

    When asked, Andrew Lloyd Webber could not say how many Tony Awards he has won: “Oh my gosh,” he said. “I don’t know off the top of my head.”

    Which is saying something. By our count, Lloyd Webber has won seven, and earned more than 20 Tony nominations. He’s had an unbroken string of shows on Broadway for the last 43 years.

    And he likes to keep audiences guessing. “People do love to put you into a box, and they say, ‘That’s what he or she does,’” he said.

    Doane asked, “Do you think you are in a box?”

    “Well, the point is, is that I can’t be put in one. Because I wrote some Paganini variations. I set T.S. Eliot’s poems with a musical called ‘Cats.’ I then wrote a requiem mass, at the same time I was doing a silly pop musical about trains. And then I wrote ‘Phantom of the Opera.’”

    Michael Ball and Sarah Brightman perform “All I Ask of You,” from “The Phantom of the Opera”:


    All I Ask of You Michael Ball and Sarah Brightman – Royal Albert Hall | The Phantom of the Opera by
    The Phantom of the Opera on
    YouTube

    Add to that: “Evita,” “School of Rock,” and “Jesus Christ Superstar,” the 1970s rock opera phenomenon that launched his career – one of many collaborations with lyricist Tim Rice:


    Jesus Christ Superstar (1973) – Superstar Scene (10/10) | Movieclips by
    Movieclips on
    YouTube

    There have been more than half a dozen film adaptations of his work, not to mention Grammys, an Emmy, and an Oscar. His latest composition was for a stage of a different sort: the coronation of King Charles III. “The King said, ‘Would you write the anthem for the coronation?’”

    Doane asked, “How does that happen? The King calls you?”

    “Well, I was actually having a dinner with him and the Queen …”

    “As one does!”

    ” … because he’s got a lot of interest in the same sort of causes that I have, you know? And he said, ‘Well, what about an anthem from you?’”

    It’s a far cry from “Cats”!

    O, make a joyful noise
    Unto the Lord, all the earth
    Sing unto the Lord
    With the harp and the voice of a psalm 

    With trumpets and sound of cornets
    Make a joyful noise
    Make a joyful noise
    Before the Lord the King
    From “Make a Joyful Noise” by Andrew Lloyd Webber


    Make A Joyful Noise – The Coronation Anthem by Andrew Lloyd Webber (Official Music Video) by
    Andrew Lloyd Webber Musicals on
    YouTube

    “I have a deeply serious side, but I also do enjoy having a bit of fun,” he said.

    “So, what’s the secret? How did you avoid being put in that box?”

    “No secret: I just write what I want.”

    The man who helped define the Broadway blockbuster also says what he wants: “You can get a Tony Award for putting up a bit of money and saying you’re a producer,” he said. “Somebody puts $20,000 into a play or something, and then a play wins best play, and they can say, ‘Well, I’m a Tony Award-winning producer.’”

    Doane said, “The Tony Award people are not gonna like that comment.”

    andrew-lloyd-weber-invt-1280.jpg
    Composer Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    CBS News


    “But it needs to be addressed, you know, because it is a bit silly. There was that moment when sort of 30 people would come on stage, ’cause they’re all ‘producers.’”

    There were no Tony nominations this year for Lloyd Webber’s newest production, “Bad Cinderella’ – a playful, “alternative” twist on the fairy tale. It closed prematurely this past week, ending his decades-long run with a show on Broadway.

    Lloyd Webber said, “I’m completely baffled how a show in London could have probably had the best reviews of my career, what the nerve it touched in New York [was] which made everybody feel so bad about it?”

    It got some pretty scathing notices; The New York Times wrote, “Bring earplugs. … Bring eye plugs.” But the composer said he hadn’t read any of the reviews. “No, because my son, ’cause he died, you know, on the day after it opened.”

    Nicholas Lloyd Webber, a Grammy-nominated composer, died in March after battling gastric cancer. He was just 43. “I don’t think it really has completely sunk in yet,” said Andrew.

    Doane asked, “How do you deal with something like that?”

    “Well, I’m not sure I dealt with it very well,” he replied. “I mean, it’s very hard to put into words, but I think about it a lot. And you know, we hugely miss him.”

    He dedicated the final Broadway performance of “The Phantom of the Opera” to his late son.

    andrew-lloyd-webber-seth-doane-majestic-theater.jpg
    Correspondent Seth Doane and Andrew Lloyd Webber on the stage of the Majestic Theatre, days before “The Phantom of the Opera” held its 13,981st (and final) performance. 

    CBS News


    On stage in New York a few days earlier, Lloyd Webber reflected on “Phantom”‘s record-breaking 35-year run, and was asked why he thinks the show has resonated for so long. “I don’t know. I mean, if I knew this, why ‘Phantom’ has really touched so many people, then I’d do it again!”

    “It remains a mystery to you?”

    “It’s not that; there isn’t a formula.”

    And the 75-year-old composer says it is getting harder to put on a show here, creating barriers to experimentation. “I’m a bit worried about the future of Broadway,” said Lloyd Webber. “The running costs are so incredibly high. So, Broadway is going to turn into the equivalent of Fifth Avenue where, you know, if you want to create a brand, you put it on Broadway knowing you’re not ever going to really make any much money in it, but they have to be there.”

    And then, there’s the price of tickets. “You can’t sustain, as it stands,” he said. “It’ll just be very, very big hits. And it bothers me.”

    Of course, “Phantom” is one of those “very, very big hits.” It grossed an estimated $6 billion worldwide since it debuted in London in 1986. Profits from the musical helped fund the $100 million renovation of Lloyd Webber’s Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London. He’s investing in the future of the industry that he’s helped shape for the past half-century.

    As a composer, he described using music to control the evening: “Keys are really vitally important,” he said. “‘The Music of the Night’ is in fact in D flat. And it’s a wonderful key, this, ’cause it’s so warm.”


    ‘The Music of The Night’ Ramin Karimloo | The Phantom of The Opera by
    The Shows Must Go On! on
    YouTube

    Audiences may not recognize the musical devices employed by a great composer, but can most certainly relish them.

    “I love D flat,” Lloyd Webber said. “‘Don’t Cry for Me’ is in D flat.”


    Patti LuPone – DON’T CRY FOR ME ARGENTINA by
    NewNickTahoe on
    YouTube

    Doane said, “You play these songs, they’re all so memorable, they’re huge songs. And they’ve all come from you.”

    “Well, you know, that’s kind of what I do! I mean, I do love melody. Melody for me is everything – melody and story.”

         
    For more info:

         
    Story produced by Mikaela Bufano. Editor: Carol Ross.


    Watch The 76th Tony Awards presented live June 11 on CBS and Paramount+ beginning at 8 p.m. ET/5 p.m. PT; preshow on Pluto TV

    2023 TONY AWARDS: Here are the nominees


    See also:


    Broadway maestro Andrew Lloyd Webber returns

    08:02

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • “The Phantom of the Opera” closes on Broadway after record 35 year run

    “The Phantom of the Opera” closes on Broadway after record 35 year run

    [ad_1]

    Emotional and glittering farewell to “Phantom of the Opera” on Broadway


    Emotional and glittering farewell to “Phantom of the Opera” on Broadway

    02:41

    Cast and crew at the closing performance of “Phantom of the Opera” held at the Majestic Theatre on April 16, 2023 in New York City.

    Nina Westervelt / Variety via Getty Images


    The final curtain came down Sunday on New York’s production of “The Phantom of the Opera,” ending Broadway’s longest-running show with thunderous standing ovations, champagne toasts and gold and silver confetti bursting from its famous chandelier.

    It was show No. 13,981 at the Majestic Theatre and it ended with a reprise of “The Music of the Night” performed by the current cast, previous actors in the show — including original star Sarah Brightman — and crew members in street clothes.

    Andrew Lloyd Webber took to the stage last in a black suit and black tie and dedicated the final show to his son, Nick, who died last month after a protracted battle with gastric cancer and pneumonia. He was 43.

    “When he was a little boy, he heard some of this music,” Lloyd Webber said. Brightman, holding his hand, agreed: “When Andrew was writing it, he was right there. So his son is with us. Nick, we love you very much.”

    Producer Cameron Mackintosh gave some in the crowd hope they would see the Phantom again, and perhaps sooner than they think.

    “The one question I keep getting asked again and again — will the Phantom return? Having been a producer for over 55 years, I’ve seen all the great musicals return, and ‘Phantom’ is one of the greatest,” he said. “So it’s only a matter of time.”

    The musical — a fixture on Broadway since opening on Jan. 26, 1988 — has weathered recessions, war, terrorism and cultural shifts. But the prolonged pandemic may have been the last straw: It’s a costly musical to sustain, with elaborate sets and costumes as well as a large cast and orchestra. The curtain call Sunday showed how out of step “Phantom” is with the rest of Broadway but also how glorious a big, splashy musical can be.

    Sarah Brightman, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Cameron Mackintosh at the closing performance of “Phantom of the Opera” held at Majestic Theatre on April 16, 2023 in New York City.

    Nina Westervelt / Variety via Getty Images


    “If there ever was a bang, we’re going out with a bang. It’s going to be a great night,” said John Riddle just before dashing inside to play Raoul for the final time.

    Based on a novel by Gaston Leroux, “Phantom” tells the story of a deformed composer who haunts the Paris Opera House and falls madly in love with an innocent young soprano, Christine. Webber’s lavish songs include “Masquerade,” “Angel of Music” and “All I Ask of You.”

    In addition to Riddle, the New York production said goodbye with Emilie Kouatchou as Christine and Laird Mackintosh stepping in for Ben Crawford as the Phantom. Crawford was unable to sing because of a bacterial infection but was cheered at the curtain call, stepping to the side of the stage. The Phantom waved him over to stand beside him, Riddle and Kouatchou.

    There was a video presentation of many of the actors who had played key roles in the show over the years, and the orchestra seats were crowded with Christines, Raouls and Phantoms. The late director Hal Prince, choreographer Gillian Lynne and set and costume designer Maria Björnson were also honored.

    Lin-Manuel Miranda attended, as did Glenn Close, who performed in two separate Broadway productions of Lloyd Webber’s “Sunset Boulevard.” Free champagne was offered at intermission and flutes of it were handed out onstage at the curtain call.

    Riddle first saw “The Phantom of the Opera” in Toronto as a 4-year-old child. “It was the first musical I ever saw. I didn’t know what a musical was,” he said. “Now, 30-some odd years later, I’m closing the show on Broadway. So it’s incredible.”

    Confetti falls above the audience at the closing performance of “Phantom of the Opera” held at Majestic Theatre on April 16, 2023 in New York City.

    Nina Westervelt / Variety via Getty Images


    Kouatchou, who became the first Black woman in the role in New York, didn’t think the show would ever stop. “I was like, ‘OK, I’m going to do my run, “Phantom” is going to continue on and they’ll be more Christines of color,’” she said. “But this is it.”

    The first production opened in London in 1986 and since then the show has been seen by more than 145 million people in 183 cities and performed in 17 languages over 70,000 performances. On Broadway alone, it has grossed more than $1.3 billion.

    When “Phantom” opened in New York, “Die Hard” was in movie theaters, Adele was born, and floppy discs were at the cutting edge of technology. A postage stamp cost 25 cents, and the year’s most popular songs were “Roll With It” by Steve Winwood, “Faith” by George Michael and Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up.”

    Critics were positive, with the New York Post calling it “a piece of impeccably crafted musical theater,” the Daily News describing it as “spectacular entertainment,” and The New York Times saying it “wants nothing more than to shower the audience with fantasy and fun.”

    Lloyd Webber’s other musicals include “Cats,” “Jesus Christ Superstar,” “Evita,” “Sunset Boulevard” and “School of Rock.” The closing of “Phantom” means the composer is left with one show on Broadway, the critically mauled “Bad Cinderella.”

    The closing of “Phantom,” originally scheduled for February, was pushed to mid-April after a flood of revived interest and ticket sales that pushed weekly grosses past $3 million. The closing means the longest-running show crown now goes to “Chicago,” which started in 1996. “The Lion King” is next, having begun performances in 1997.

    Broadway took a pounding during the pandemic, with all theaters closed for more than 18 months. Some of the most popular shows — “Hamilton,” “The Lion King” and “Wicked” — rebounded well, but other shows have struggled.

    Breaking even usually requires a steady stream of tourists, especially for “Phantom,” and visitors to the city haven’t returned to pre-pandemic levels. The pandemic also pushed up expenses for all shows, including routine COVID-19 testing and safety officers on staff. The Phantom became a poster boy for Broadway’s return — after all, he is partially masked.

    Fans can always catch the Phantom elsewhere. The flagship London production celebrated its 36th anniversary in October, and there are productions in Japan, Greece, Australia, Sweden, Italy, South Korea and the Czech Republic. One is about to open in Bucharest, and another will open in Vienna in 2024.

    Kouatchou, who walked the red carpet before the final show in a hot pink clinging gown with a sweetheart neckline and a cut out, said the bitterness was undercut by the big send-off. Most Broadway shows that close slink into the darkness uncelebrated.

    “It kind of sweetens it, right?” she said. “We get to celebrate at the end of this. We get to all come together and drink and laugh and talk about the show and all the highs and lows. It’s ending on a big note.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Nicholas Lloyd Webber, Son Of Iconic Composer, Dies At 43

    Nicholas Lloyd Webber, Son Of Iconic Composer, Dies At 43

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK (AP) — Nicholas Lloyd Webber, the Grammy-nominated composer, record producer and eldest son of Andrew Lloyd Webber, died Saturday in England after a protracted battle with gastric cancer and pneumonia. He was 43.

    “His whole family is gathered together and we are all totally bereft,” the 75-year-old Webber said in a statement emailed by a representative. “Thank you for all your thoughts during this difficult time.”

    Nicholas died at a hospital in the south-central English town of Basingstoke, his father said. Webber, the famed composer, missed the Broadway opening Thursday of his “Bad Cinderella” to be at his son’s side with other loved ones.

    Nicholas is best known for his work on the BBC One’s “Love, Lies and Records,” which was based on the book “The Little Prince.” He also worked on his father’s 2021 “Cinderella,” earning a Grammy nod for best musical theater album.

    Nicholas is Webber’s son with his first wife, Sarah Hugill, also the mother of his older sister, Imogen. The senior Webber has four other children.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • King Charles turns to ‘Cats’ composer Andrew Lloyd Webber for flagship coronation music | CNN

    King Charles turns to ‘Cats’ composer Andrew Lloyd Webber for flagship coronation music | CNN

    [ad_1]


    London
    CNN
     — 

    Britain’s King Charles III has enlisted the help of acclaimed British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber to write the flagship anthem for his upcoming coronation.

    Charles’s coronation will take place on May 6 at Westminster Abbey in London, and will see Camilla, Queen Consort crowned alongside her husband.

    The King has personally selected the musical program for the service, which will see “a range of musical styles and performers blend tradition, heritage and ceremony with new musical voices of today,” according to Buckingham Palace.

    Twelve new pieces of music have been prepared for the occasion – including six orchestral works, five choral pieces and one organ commission – by several world-renowned composers whose styles include classical, sacred, film, television and musical theater.

    Famed composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, whose hit musicals “Cats” and “Phantom of the Opera” have been performed around the world, said he was “incredibly honoured” to be involved.

    “My anthem includes words slightly adapted from Psalm 98. I have scored it for the Westminster Abbey choir and organ, the ceremonial brass and orchestra,” Lloyd Webber said. “I hope my anthem reflects this joyful occasion.”

    A Coronation March has been written by Patrick Doyle, an award-winning Scottish composer best known for his work on films like “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire,” “Gosford Park” and “Carlito’s Way.”

    One of the more sentimental inclusions from the King is his choice to have Greek Orthodox music played during the service, performed by the Byzantine Chant Ensemble, in tribute to his father, the late Prince Philip, who died two years ago.

    Meanwhile, musical themes from countries across the Commonwealth will feature in Iain Farrington’s new solo organ commission. The other new works have been created by Sarah Class, Nigel Hess, Paul Mealor, Tarik O’Regan, Roxanna Panufnik, Shirley J. Thompson, Judith Weir, Roderick Williams, and Debbie Wiseman.

    A handpicked gospel choir – The Ascension Choir – is also set to perform as part of the service, in addition to the Choir of Westminster Abbey and the Choir of His Majesty’s Chapel Royal, St James’s Palace. They will be joined by girl choristers from the Chapel Choir of Methodist College, Belfast and from Truro Cathedral Choir. The traditional “Vivat” acclamations will be proclaimed by the King’s Scholars of Westminster School.

    Andrew Nethsingha, organist and master of the choristers at Westminster Abbey, said all coronation services are a blend of “deeply-rooted tradition and contemporary innovation” and praised the new British monarch for “choosing fine musicians and accessible, communicative music for this great occasion.”

    London's Westminster Abbey has been the location of every coronation since 1066. Since William the Conqueror, all but two monarchs have been crowned there.

    The ceremony will also include historic music featured in coronation services over the past four centuries by the likes of William Byrd, George Frideric Handel, Edward Elgar, Henry Walford Davies, William Walton, Hubert Parry and Ralph Vaughan Williams.

    Antonio Pappano, musical director of the Royal Opera House and conductor of the Coronation Orchestra, said: “His Majesty has chosen a most beautiful and varied programme that I believe will enhance the splendour of this very special celebration.”

    Buckingham Palace previously revealed the coronation will be “a solemn religious service, as well as an occasion for celebration and pageantry,” conducted by the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby.

    The three-day weekend at the beginning of May is set to include grand processions through central London, a star-studded concert at Windsor Castle in addition to celebrations across the country. Britons have been given an extra bank holiday and members of the public are being invited to join “The Big Help Out” by volunteering in their communities.

    “Everyone is invited to join in, on any day,” Michelle Donelan, UK culture secretary, said in a statement. “Whether that is by hosting a special street party, watching the Coronation ceremony or spectacular concert on TV, or stepping forward during The Big Help Out to help causes that matter to them.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ extends its long Broadway goodbye

    ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ extends its long Broadway goodbye

    [ad_1]

    NEW YORK — The masked man of Broadway is going out strong.

    “The Phantom of the Opera” — Broadway’s longest-running show — has postponed its final performance by eight weeks, pushing its final curtain from February to April after ticket demand spiked. Last week, the show raked in an eye-popping $2,2 million with a full house.

    The musical — a fixture on Broadway since 1988, weathering recessions, war and cultural shifts — will now play its final Broadway performance on April 16. When it closes, it will have played 13,981 performances.

    “We are all thrilled that not only the show’s wonderful fans have been snapping up the remaining tickets, but also that a new, younger audience is equally eager to see this legendary production before it disappears,” lead producer Cameron Mackintosh said in a statement.

    Producers said there would be no more postponements. “This is the only possible extension for the Broadway champion, as the theater will then be closed for major renovations after the show’s incredible 35-year run.”

    Based on a novel by Gaston Leroux, “Phantom” tells the story of a deformed composer who haunts the Paris Opera House and falls madly in love with an innocent young soprano, Christine. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s lavish songs include “Masquerade,” ″Angel of Music,” ″All I Ask of You” and “The Music of the Night.”

    The closing of “Phantom” would mean the longest-running show crown would go to “Chicago,” which started in 1996. “The Lion King” is next, having begun performances in 1997.

    Broadway took a pounding during the pandemic, with all theaters closed for more than 18 months. Some of the most popular shows — “Hamilton,” “The Lion King” and “Wicked” — have rebounded well, but other shows have struggled. Breaking even usually requires a steady stream of tourists, especially for the costly “Phantom,” and visitors to the city haven’t returned to pre-pandemic levels.

    [ad_2]

    Source link