Event Calendar

March 2008
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Upcoming Events

Jennifer Larmore with Apollo’s Fire

March 1, 2008 at 7:30 pm

Location: University Auditorium

Genre: Chamber, Classical

Buy tickets online!
Prices: Front orchestra/mezzanine: $30; Rear orchestra: $25; Balcony: $20.

jennifer-larmore-cropped.jpgWorld Premiere Collaboration

There will be a pre-performance discussion with Brenda Smith at 6:45 p.m.

Jennifer Larmore’s Web Site

Jennifer Larmore performing Habanera from Bizet’s Carmen on You Tube

Apollo’s Fire Web Site

To read the program, click here.

Mezzo-soprano Jennifer Larmore has performed on stages around the world, sung at the Olympic Games in Atlanta and is the most recorded mezzo in history.  Named for the classical god of music and the sun, Apollo’s Fire is quickly becoming known for their dynamic, intoxicating and sizzling renditions of Baroque music.  Sparks fly when Larmore joins Apollo’s Fire for this program devoted to the music of Vivaldi and Handel

About Jennifer Larmore

Jennifer Larmore is an outstanding American mezzo-soprano who has parlayed operatic success in Europe into international stardom. Known for excelling in the coloratura roles of the Baroque and bel canto, she has also added Romantic and Contemporary repertoire. Since the beginning of her career, Jennifer Larmore has recorded widely for the Teldec, RCA, Harmonia Mundi, Deutsch Grammophon, Arabesque, Opera Rara, Bayer, Naive, Chandos, VAI and Cedille labels in over 70 CDs to date, which has earned her the distinction of being the most recorded mezzo of all time.

Originally from Atlanta, Larmore studied at the Westminster Choir College of Princeton, New Jersey and then privately with John Bullock and Regina Resnik. She made her professional debut in the l’Opera de Nice production of Mozart’s La Clemenza di Tito in 1986. During the same period, Jennifer sang her first Rosina from the Barber of Seville in the Savary production of Strasbourg — appropriate, considering that Rosina has since become her signature role…one that she has performed more than 500 times! Her vocal talents, energetic acting and natural beauty quickly established her as an emerging star and during the next decade she performed dozens of leading roles with major European houses, including the prestigious theaters of Paris, Vienna, London, Edinburgh, Rome, Berlin, Madrid, Barcelona, Lisbon, Brussels, Amsterdam, Geneva, Milan, Buenos Aires and Salzburg.

In 1994 Larmore returned to the United States in a triumphant Carnegie Hall appearance as Romeo in Bellini’s I Capuletti e I Montecchi. This success was followed by winning the prestigious Richard Tucker award that same year, and a debut as Rosina at the Metropolitan Opera in 1995. Since then, she has been a regular attraction at the Met, singing a wide range from Handel’s Giulio Cesare, Rossini’s, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, La Cenerentola and l’Italiana in Algeri, Offenbach’s Les contes d’Hoffmann, Strauss’ Die Fledermaus, and Humperdinck’s Hansel and Gretel, to the world premiere of Tobias Picker’s An American Tragedy, and the upcoming Hamlet of Thomas.

With her frequent collaborator Antoine Palloc, she has made several international recital tours, including appearances in Amsterdam, Paris, Madrid, Hong Kong, Seoul, Tokyo, Vienna, London, San Juan, Prague, Melbourne, Brussels, Berlin, Rio de Janeiro, Lisbon, Sao Paolo, Athens and Copenhagen, as well as all the major American venues.

Symphonic repertoire plays a large role in this mezzo’s career with the works of Mahler, Schoenberg, Mozart, de Falla, Debussy, Berlioz and Barber featuring prominently. World orchestras under the direction of Muti, Lopez-Cobos, Bernstein, Runnicles, Sinopoli, Masur, von Dochnanyi, Jacobs, Mackarras, Spinosi, Guidarini, Kalmar, Rudel, Barenboim, Queler, Bonynge, Maazel , Osawa and many others have fallen under Miss Larmore’s spell.

Jennifer Larmore’s Giulio Cesare on Harmonia Mundi received the Grammophon Award for Best Baroque Opera of the year. Among her seven Grammy® nominations, titles include L’Etoile, a collection of French opera arias; Call Me Mister, a celebration of mezzo-soprano trouser roles; Amore per Rossini, a trove of Rossini rarities, some never before recorded; My Native Land, a gathering of songs by American composers; Where Shall I Fly, featuring Handel and Mozart arias; Bravura Diva, a marvelous collection of rare bel canto masterworks; Jennifer Larmore in Performance, a companion CD to the popular DVD from Video Artists International (VAI); Jennifer Larmore, A Portrait, a collection of early works from the Renaissance and Baroque periods; and Born In Atlanta, a CD of varied operatic and concert selections released to commemorate Miss Larmore’s appearance at the Closing Ceremonies of the 1996 Atlanta Olympic games. Among the dozens of full operatic recordings are the title roles of Carmen, Elisabetta, Regina d’Inghilterra, La Cenerentola, L’Italiana in Algeri, Bianca e Falliero, Orphée, Giulio Cesare, Sofanisba and I Capulet e I Montechhi.

In 2004, Jennifer Larmore was the honored guest soloist in Washington, DC at the 35th Anniversary Celebration of the landing on the Moon by the Apollo 11 astronauts. A particularly unique venture has been her satellite radio program, Backstage With Jennifer Larmore on which she has proven herself a witty and insightful interviewer and commentator. In addition to her hosting many international airline Classical Listening programs, Miss Larmore is widely sought after to give Master Classes in prestigious national and international venues. She has appeared in numerous publications including Vogue; Dog Fancy, with her miniature schnauzer Sophie; Opera News; English Opera; French Opera International; German Vogue and Max; and on a vareity of television programs around the world including, Good Morning America; Breakfast With the Arts; Classical Arts Showcase; the German Klassich; the French Jacques Martin and A cote du Chez Fred; as well as Musique au coeur; and, for the UPN Network, The 30th Anniversary Star Trek Celebration.

In 2002, Madame Larmore was endowed with Knighthood by the French Government carrying the title Chevalier des arts et des lettres in recognition of her contributions to the world of music.

 

About Apollo’s Fire 

Taking its name from the classical god of music and the sun, Apollo’s Fire is dedicated to the performance of 17th- and 18th-century music on the period instruments for which it was written. The ensemble unites a select pool of early-music specialists from throughout North America and Europe, and has been praised internationally for stylistic freshness and buoyancy, technical excellence, and for the creativity of Music Director Jeannette Sorrell’s programming.

Apollo’s Fire was founded in 1992 by Jeannette Sorrell, with the assistance of Roger Wright, then Artistic Administrator of the Cleveland Orchestra (now with the BBC). Since then, Apollo’s Fire has performed at such venues as the Aspen Music Festival, the Boston Early Music Festival winter series, the Library of Congress, the Chautauqua Institution in New York State, Columbia University’s Miller Theatre in NEw York City, the Ojai Festival in California, the New World Symphony’s Baroque Festival in Miami, the Oberlin College Artist Series, the CBC’s Glenn Gould Studio in Toronto, the Bach Festival of Philadelphia, the National Academy of Sciences and the Dumbarton Oaks series in Washington, DC, and the Gilmore International Keyboard Festival in Michigan.

Apollo’s Fire has been broadcast across the country in many holiday specials on National Public Radio. In addition, the orchestra has been featured on NPR’s World of Opera and SymphonyCast, as well as many broadcasts and two live studio interview-performances on NPR’s Performance Today. The orchestra can also be heard on Britain’s BBC Radio, Canada’s CBC and European Community Radio.

Apollo’s Fire has received critical acclaim for its 12 CD recordings on the ECLECTRA (formerly) and KOCH INTERNATIONAL CLASSICS (currently) labels. Forthcoming releases include Christmas Vespers (music by Michael Praetorius, compiled by Jeannette Sorrell).

Together with Jeannette Sorrell, Apollo’s Fire received the 1995 Noah Greenberg Award from the American Musicological Society, given for an outstanding project involving the collaboration of scholars and performers. 

 

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One Response to “Jennifer Larmore with Apollo’s Fire”

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  1. Sam Harris says:

    I am a Gator and also the treasurer of Apollo’s Fire. We are one of the best baroque orchestras in North America. I am hoping to travel south for this perofrmance with fond memories of having to attend performances like this for Humanities. Do they still do that?

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