Showing posts with label Stephanie Aguilar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephanie Aguilar. Show all posts
Monday, February 29, 2016
Tribute to Mario Lanza: Tenor Nival’s moment in time
Nomher Nival on Mario Lanza:
“I love his voice. We took him up in school. I heard him for the first time around my second or third year at the University of Santo Tomas Conservatory of Music. I love his ‘Because’ because he sang it passionately. He was so romantic and full of energy. He was one of those singers who sang full blast. Contrary to people’s impression that he was shouting, he was actually very intense.”
Read more: Tribute to Mario Lanza: Tenor Nival’s moment in time
Monday, March 16, 2015
Master class with Maestra Nelly | Vera Files
Friday, August 29, 2014
And then along comes Stephanie
Stephanie Aguilar, resplendent in her Mel Orlina gown whose color is on the soothing side of teal, on Aug. 20, the night of her professional debut concert at the Ayala Museum lobby
Her dream is to play the title role in Puccini's Madame Butterfly. Her reason is simple yet true: she wants to sing what is one of the most beautiful and passionate arias, "Un bel di vedremo." And why shouldn't this girl-woman with the voice of an angel sing of a love that waits but waits in futility?
This observer is willing to wait, too, in order to watch Stephanie "Teepee" Aguilar achieve a depth to her singing, a sign that she may have had a firsthand experience of love, of abandonment or something close to it and a willingness to do the ultimate sacrifice for someone. Or she can give the lie that she has undergone that experience. If it's the latter case, then thumbs-up for her acting chops, something an operatic singer also needs to be equipped with.
So far in her debut as solo professional singer she acquitted herself in a Puccini aria from Turandot where she sings the part of Liu, the slave in love with a prince. Liu is tortured to extract information, another of those over-dramatic elements that happen in a tragic opera. As Teepee gestured towards the end how she was about to be pierced by Turandot's henchmen, we feel that next shock of pain.
Our personal favorite is her interpretation of Rachmaninoff's "Vocalise." This one has no words/lyrics, except for "a single vowel of the singer's choosing, " according to the program notes. (By the way, the Manila Chamber Foundation must also congratulated for the pains it takes to produce instructive souvenir programs and translations of songs from their original German, Russian, Italian, Spanish, even Bisaya in Antonio Molina's "Oras nga labing mangitngit" or "Dark Hours).
Teepee was one of the voice students who was in Sumi Jo's master class at St. Scholastica's College in February this year. The evening before the class, the Korean soprano enthralled the Samsung Hall audience with her own take on "Vocalise" that, of course, gave one a vision of the rapture that follows a yearning for the Divine. The student truly learned from a master.
In an earlier interview with the blogger, Teepee described her "surreal feeling" when she shared the stage with the soprano superstar. "I only had YouTube videos as references of what she sings like. Then there she was, shaking my hands, hugging me, giving me compliments, telling me how I can better my singing."
Wilson Go, an avid voice music fan and who, with his pal Edward Yap, led the standing ovation for Teepee, exclaimed as he gestured from head to diaphragm, "Perfect instrument! Imagine how she'll sound like when she reaches 35!"
We can only agree and expect to be more astonished by her ripening.
Taking a grand and graceful bow at the close of her performance. Jade Rubis Riccio (far left), Stephanie's fellow soprano who served as page turner for accompanying artist Farley Asuncion that evening, joins the applause and ovation. Teepee obliged with two encores: "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands" and "Mutya ng Pasig."
Signing a souvenir program Photos by Babeth Lolarga
Her dream is to play the title role in Puccini's Madame Butterfly. Her reason is simple yet true: she wants to sing what is one of the most beautiful and passionate arias, "Un bel di vedremo." And why shouldn't this girl-woman with the voice of an angel sing of a love that waits but waits in futility?
This observer is willing to wait, too, in order to watch Stephanie "Teepee" Aguilar achieve a depth to her singing, a sign that she may have had a firsthand experience of love, of abandonment or something close to it and a willingness to do the ultimate sacrifice for someone. Or she can give the lie that she has undergone that experience. If it's the latter case, then thumbs-up for her acting chops, something an operatic singer also needs to be equipped with.
So far in her debut as solo professional singer she acquitted herself in a Puccini aria from Turandot where she sings the part of Liu, the slave in love with a prince. Liu is tortured to extract information, another of those over-dramatic elements that happen in a tragic opera. As Teepee gestured towards the end how she was about to be pierced by Turandot's henchmen, we feel that next shock of pain.
Our personal favorite is her interpretation of Rachmaninoff's "Vocalise." This one has no words/lyrics, except for "a single vowel of the singer's choosing, " according to the program notes. (By the way, the Manila Chamber Foundation must also congratulated for the pains it takes to produce instructive souvenir programs and translations of songs from their original German, Russian, Italian, Spanish, even Bisaya in Antonio Molina's "Oras nga labing mangitngit" or "Dark Hours).
Teepee was one of the voice students who was in Sumi Jo's master class at St. Scholastica's College in February this year. The evening before the class, the Korean soprano enthralled the Samsung Hall audience with her own take on "Vocalise" that, of course, gave one a vision of the rapture that follows a yearning for the Divine. The student truly learned from a master.
In an earlier interview with the blogger, Teepee described her "surreal feeling" when she shared the stage with the soprano superstar. "I only had YouTube videos as references of what she sings like. Then there she was, shaking my hands, hugging me, giving me compliments, telling me how I can better my singing."
Wilson Go, an avid voice music fan and who, with his pal Edward Yap, led the standing ovation for Teepee, exclaimed as he gestured from head to diaphragm, "Perfect instrument! Imagine how she'll sound like when she reaches 35!"
We can only agree and expect to be more astonished by her ripening.
Taking a grand and graceful bow at the close of her performance. Jade Rubis Riccio (far left), Stephanie's fellow soprano who served as page turner for accompanying artist Farley Asuncion that evening, joins the applause and ovation. Teepee obliged with two encores: "He's Got the Whole World in His Hands" and "Mutya ng Pasig."
Signing a souvenir program Photos by Babeth Lolarga
Saturday, August 16, 2014
Teepee Aguilar, soprano of the hour
| Teepee with her assisting artist, pianist Farley Asuncion, and her dad, architect Efren Aguilar Photos by Babeth Lolarga |
Of the adjectives that have been used to describe
the voice of lyric soprano Stephanie Anne “Teepee” Aguilar, the ones that have
captivated me best as listener-admirer are “creamy” and “radiant.”
More will be added to the list when we watch and
listen to her again at the professional debut recital of this 2012 Jovita
Fuentes Vocal Competition prize winner on Aug. 20, Wednesday, at 7 p.m. at Ayala
Museum.
The Manila Chamber Orchestra Foundation (MCO)
Foundation has made of the museum lobby its presenting stage for most of its
concerts this year (in July, it was the renamed Lanuza Hall at the Philippine
Stock Exchange bldg. in Pasig City for the memorable Mostly Mozart Festival).
And it’s also almost SOP for the MCO Foundation
workhorses (executive director Angel Reyes Nacino and consultant Joseph Uy—they
with the biblical names) to bring the talents for live patikim presentations at Bert Robledo’s noontime program, “Bravo
Filipino,” over DZFE The Master’s Touch (that’s 98.7 on your FM dial).
| With DZFE's Bert Robledo |
When he learned that she earned her first bachelor’s
degree in Hotel and Restaurant Management, major in hospitality management,
from the College of St. Benilde, he said in deadpan fashion (off the air), “Puwede ka ring singing kaldero.”
She said her mother Gigi, who’s good on the piano
and works as an interior designer, wanted her only child to take a college
course that would reassure her of a future.
But Teepee has been singing since she was
three, a soloist no less in nursery school. Her father Efren recalled how
Teepee was always chosen as choir leader during her elementary and high school
years at the Tabernacle of Faith Christian Academy in San Juan, Metro Manila.
For a time she was choir director of The Word Community Church which holds its Sunday worship at Unilab’s Bayanihall Hall in Mandaluyong.
Until a friend invited her to the University
Santos Tomas, and in 2009 she entered its Conservatory of Music. She said of that decision, “I prayed to God, telling Him singing is what I do best. Let’s
see how far God will take me.” She began as part of the big chorus in Cavalleri
Rusticana. Manong Bert quipped that the experience put her literally in the pits (orchestra pit).
| Singing live at the DZFE studio with Farley Asuncion on the piano |
Asked what makes a good opera singer, she
mentioned talent and finding good teachers who would notice the talent and hone it (in
her case, soprano Rachelle Gerodias in the beginning and now tenor Lemuel de la
Cruz), dedication, heart (“You’ve got to
love what you’re doing, memorize different languages and blockings and making
all these look flawless”), and hard work.
Again Manong Bert couldn’t help quipping that the
likes of Anne Curtis have a lot of hard work to do.
Teepee’s schedule these days include studying for roles on her own (she’s appearing in the operas Noli Me Tangere and La Boheme) before turning up for rehearsals, practicing with a pianist or whoever is teaching or directing her and the others. She said she enjoys preparing for an opera because it’s “grand, colorful and always big."
She ended her hour-long interview interspersed with singing at DZFE with “He's Got the Whole World in His Hands.” Manong Bert couldn't help saying how compelling the spiritual was in the light of Robin Williams’ suicide, saying, “There’s no need to feel hopeless, no matter what you’re experiencing or going through.” - Elizabeth Lolarga
For tickets to Stephanie Aguilar's concert, call TicketWorld
at 891-9999, the MCO Foundation at 750-0768 or 0920-954-0053 or CAEO at
762-7164 or 0918-3473027.
| Relaxing after the interview |
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