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Event is Live
Carnegie Hall Presents

The MET Orchestra

Wednesday, June 15, 2022 8 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
Yannick Nézet-Séguin by Rose Callahan, Christine Goerke by Arielle Doneson, Brandon Jovanovich by Kristin Hoebermann, Eric Owens by Dario Acosta
Wagner’s myth-inspired opera Die Walküre opens with a violent thunderstorm—listen for it in the orchestra—that’s a fitting prelude to the passionate love arias and duets that follow. Don Juan was a rogue in popular stories, but R. Strauss’s music portrays the great lover as an idealist searching for fulfillment. However you view the character, the music is sumptuously orchestrated and overflowing with soaring heroic melodies. Missy Mazzoli’s Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres) resembles the solar system with loops of sound twisting and spinning about each other as beautiful melodies float above the sound of a musical drone. 

Performers

The MET Orchestra
Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Music Director and Conductor
Christine Goerke, Soprano
Brandon Jovanovich, Tenor
Eric Owens, Bass-Baritone

Program

R. STRAUSS Don Juan

MISSY MAZZOLI Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres)

WAGNER Die Walküre, Act I

Event Duration

The printed program will last approximately two hours, including one 20-minute intermission.

At a Glance

RICHARD STRAUSS  Don Juan, Op. 20

One of Strauss’s earliest and best-loved tone poems, the densely packed score of Don Juan is famously challenging for musicians. After one rehearsal, Strauss gleefully reported to his parents that “one of the horn players, who was dripping with sweat and completely out of breath, asked: ‘Dear God, in what way have we sinned so as to cause you to send this scourge!’”

 

MISSY MAZZOLI  Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres)

Contemporary American composer Missy Mazzoli says she aims to involve the listener in the process of “emotionally getting at those things that we can’t really describe—things for which we don’t have labels.” Her ineffably atmospheric Sinfonia (for Orbiting Spheres) serves as an interlude between the two lavishly orchestrated late–19th-century works on tonight’s program.

 

RICHARD WAGNER  Die Walküre, Act I

Die Walküre takes its name from the Valkyrie Brünnhilde, whom Wotan, her father and king of the gods, ultimately banishes for disobeying his orders. The first act of the opera is an extended love scene between the Volsung twins Siegmund and Sieglinde. Often performed separately, it contains some of Wagner’s most passionately expressive music.

Bios

The MET Orchestra

The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra is regarded as one of the world’s finest orchestras. From the time of the company’s inception in 1883, the ensemble has worked with leading ...

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Yannick Nézet-Séguin

Canadian-born conductor and pianist Yannick Nézet-Séguin became the Metropolitan Opera’s Jeanette Lerman-Neubauer Music Director with the beginning of the ...

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Christine Goerke

A graduate of the Metropolitan Opera’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program, American soprano Christine Goerke made her Met debut in 1995 in John Corigliano’s The Ghosts ...

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Brandon Jovanovich

Originally from Billings, Montana, tenor Brandon Jovanovich made his Metropolitan Opera debut in 2010 as Don José in Carmen and has since appeared as Bacchus in Ariadne auf Naxos, ...

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Eric Owens

Hailing from Philadelphia, bass-baritone Eric Owens has sung nearly 100 performances of 12 roles at the Metropolitan Opera, including Philippe II in the company premiere of Don Carlos, ...

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