The tenor and the ballerina pitch in for Yolanda victims

Update: Press briefing of Secretary Rene Almendras and Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa on efforts for Yolanda victims.

http://www.gov.ph/2013/11/13/summary-of-the-press-briefing-of-secretaries-almendras-ochoa-and-ndrrmc-on-relief-operations-for-typhoon-yolanda-november-13-2013/

The tenor

The tenor

Artists are also doing their share. World -class tenor Arthur Espiritu , who is preparing for his Dec. 3 Christmas concert at the Ayala Museum, announced in Facebook that he and his wife are organizing relief goods to be sent to Llorente in Samar.

He said Llorente’s population is about 20,000. “ So far, no one has reached this area for the past few days now. They need our help now. Feel free to donate to Red Cross Philippines, UNICEF, and any know organizations that would make sure your donations and help will reach the people who needs the help the most.”

The Ballerina in La Bayadere

The Ballerina in La Bayadere

Prima ballerina Lisa Macuja-Elizalde also announced that all proceeds from ticket sales to her Swan Song Series Year 3 shows will be donated to relief operations for the victims of Typhoon Yolanda.

The Swan Song Series, Macuja-Elizalde’s three-year retirement plan in which she is bidding goodbye to her favorite full-length ballet classics, is on its final year with performances of La Bayadere and The Nutcracker.

In her Twitter and Facebook, Macuja-Elizalde said, “Honestly, I almost cancelled Swan Song Series Year 3 because of this horrible catastrophe. (But) the shows will go on. ALL proceeds will be donated.”

Ballet Manila said all tickets sold via Ticketworld for the November 14, 15 and 16 performances of La Bayadere; and for the November 29 and December 1 shows of The Nutcracker will go to the Philippine National Red Cross and DZRH’s Operation Tulong. All shows – also featuring Ballet Manila and the Manila Symphony Orchestra – will be presented at 7:30 p.m. at the Aliw Theater, CCP Complex, Pasay City.

“I am just grateful that I have the means to contribute in this manner. My husband Fred has supported my decision 100 percent,” the ballerina said

Bel canto live from Ayala Museum

By Pablo A. Tariman, VERA Files

Tenor Arthur Espiritu with pianist Najib Ismael

Tenor Arthur Espiritu with pianist Najib Ismael

Like it or not, bel canto (the art of beautiful singing) is the most-quoted word in the opera circle.

Teachers brandish it as though it were a vocal talisman and some students think it is the key to instant vocal stardom.

If you are active in the conservatory circuit, you realize very few singers live up to it. A few sing to impress, not to communicate. Still many relish the bravura moments in Puccini and Verdi arias and end up doing the opposite of bel canto.

For lack of solid technique compounded by bad teachers, some students — who wanted to absorb the angelic resonance of bel canto — end up as pedestrian singers who think acting can cover up for a singing style way below the standard of how it should sound.

The truth is bel canto is better heard than lectured.

“An Evening of Bel Canto” — the closing season concert of the MCO Foundation, Inc. heard at the Ayala Museum last Saturday — gave that special audience the essential, if, substantial qualities of the art of beautiful singing.

Soprano Elainne Vibal

Soprano Elainne Vibal

Interestingly, it featured the four pillars of bel canto – namely Handel, Rossini, Bellini and Donizetti.

It was a pleasant surprise to hear soprano Elainne Vibal sing Handel’s Tornami Vagheggiao (from Alcina) with graceful phrasing obviously coached on the essence of breath control. It is not yet a well-focused timber but the way she eschewed line and giving it a lovely cover and ending with breath-taking light tone, one realized she is getting good nurturing from one who knows the art and live it.

The presence of pianist Najib Ismail gave the recital a special touch the way he could blend with the singers with such precision and artistry demanded from those pieces.

Hopping to Bellini’s Que la voce and Prendl, l’anel ti dono from La Sonnambula and later to Donizetti’s Chacun le sait, Vibal’s entranced as she slowly conquered and literally assured an audience bel canto is alive and kicking in her generation.

Again, Ismail provided the sense of harmony and drama and making the piano an equal partner of the singers.

Soprano Stephanie Aguilar charmed her way in Mozart’s Ruft sanht (from Zaide) and was totally focused in William Tell’s aria, Sombre fore and awed everyone with her young and fresh vocal output.

Espiritu with soprano Myramae Meneses.

Espiritu with soprano Myramae Meneses.

Of the three sopranos, Myramae Meneses stood out with a voice that easily dazzled starting with her Puritani duet, Vienne fraquesta with tenor Arthur Espiritu and her solo aria, Quel gardo il cavalieri by Donizetti. The soprano has incredible range and a magical tone that took the breath away. The way she sings and enunciate and caress those notes made her a virtual stand-out.

One who can lecture on bel canto and demonstrate it to the hilt you can find in the singing of tenor Espiritu.

Nursing a slight cold that evening, the tenor turned to solid technique for partial relief and demonstrated his world-class qualities without effort. That was a hair-raising, ringing sound in the aria, Ah come mai non senti from Rossini’s Otello and his acting sent shivers in one’s spine. You realize he isn’t just a fine soloist but an all-giving chamber musician who can share a lot in the duets with Aguilar, Vibal and Meneses and making all of them feel worthy of his vocal presence.

Espiritu with soprano Stephanie Aguilar.

Espiritu with soprano Stephanie Aguilar.

His closing aria, the technically demanding Ah, mes amis from Donizetti’s La Fille du Regiment, was special because he was just as appealing in the lower and middle notes. One was sure that wasn’t his best high C’s.

But this Filipino tenor has a lot more to offer than those high C’s in that popular workhorse. His singing teaches everyone that bel canto is not about competing but drawing the best in one’s voice and delivering the message of beautiful singing without fanfare.

As earlier noted, you can’t pull a first-rate bel canto recital without the presence of a pianist who knows the artistic demands of the art.

Pianist Ismail can get through the spirit of the arias with as much ardor as the singers. Indeed, he is one of the few artists in Manila’s music scene who can command respect without resorting to self-advertisements. His excellent rapport with his singers is testament to his credential as a collaborating artist with a capital C.

For this reason alone, MCO Foundation’s “An Evening of Bel Canto” is my recital of the year. One doesn’t see anyone getting as close to the vocal standard that he and his young talents have set in that Ayala Museum concert.

(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for “true.”)

Arthur Espiritu soars in ‘The Poet Speaks’


Text and photos by Elizabeth Lolarga, VERA Files

A standing ovation for Arthur Espiritu and Najib Ismael.

The sixth of this month will linger long in the head and hearts, like the “last song syndrome,” of those who watched tenor Arthur Espiritu as he breathed life into the lyrics of poets and the music of the masters.

The Ayala Museum lobby in Makati City was filled with sparkling anticipation as the perfumed set and casually dressed culture vultures took unnumbered seats. The glass-walled, tall-ceilinged museum had been there for some time as venue for launchings of Jaime Zobel de Ayala’s de luxe books; it has hosted fashion shows of the likes of Josie Natori and Inno Sotto and similar worthy endeavors that enrich the city’s cultural life. But as venue for a concert like MCO Foundation Inc.’s “The Poet Speaks?” Now we’re talking!

The US-based Espiritu has consistently enthralled the operatic and fine music crowd with his prince-like stance, his “beautiful legato”, a critic once wrote. These qualities were present that enchanted evening when he interpreted art songs and cycles of poetry. Handel’s music from the opera Semele comes with lyrics of besotted god Jupiter offering his mortal lover Semeleall the loveliness that his powers could execute for her: “Wher’er you walk / Cool gales shall fan the glade / Trees where you sit / Shall crowd into a shade …/ Where’er you treat / The blushing flowers shall rise / And all things flourish…”

Complementing Espiritu’s fascinating performance was Najib Ismael’s virtuosity on the keys. Music critic Pablo Tariman said, “On the whole, the recital of tenor Arthur Espiritu with pianist Najib Ismail gave us a clear magic relationship between the four elements of a song recital: the poet, composer, singer and accompanist.”

Click here (VERA Files) for the rest of the story.

A Master Class by a world-class Filipino

Arthur Espiritu in a CCP Master Class

By Charmaine Deogracias, VERA Files

When the Cultural Center of the Philippines launched master classes last year as part of their artist education program, it was honored by no less than world-class Filipino artist, Arthur Espiritu. Not only was it CCP’s first voice masterclass offer, it was also a rare first to have a tenor conduct a masterclass.

A voice master class which is an expert’s one-on-one coaching session with advanced students in performance and technique, is most often conducted by sopranos. But for the Philippines and the Filipino artists, Espiritu gamely trained students from different conservatories who were mostly sopranos.

Melissa Corazon Mantaring, Head of Music Division of the Performing Arts of CCP’s Artist Training said it was a privilege and an honor that a sought-after,internationally-renowned tenor took time out to train the country’s potential opera singers in their first master class for voice.


“It is deemed a need to actively train artists under an arts education department which takes charge of bringing audiences for the arts. We really need to educate the public in the arts and culture of the country to make art matter for every Filipino,” Mantaring said of the rationale of CCP to offer master classes along with other training programs.

Among those who joined the master class was Raymond Roldan, 40. He said, he doesn’t want to miss the chance of learning from one master tenor as tenor teachers are so rare in the Philippines. Espiritu to him was the “real thing.” Aside from the new concept of support he learned, his best lesson was to be encouraged that he can still do it despite delving late in to classical singing.

But for Elaine Marie Vibal, 22, a fifth year student from the University of the Philippines College of Music, while it was initially intimidating for a master with that stature listen to her perform, but it was a delight for her to learn how to sing her favorite aria in a different technique.

Espiritu himself has trained in young artist programs with leading opera companies including Santa Fe Opera, Opera Theatre of St. Louis, Pittsburgh Opera, Opera North, and Utah Festival Opera. He earned his Artist Diploma from Oberlin College Conservatory of Music and earned both a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Music from the University of New Orleans.

He is a winner of the distinguished 2009 George London Award and also a recipient of the La Scala Award as part of the Belvedere Vocal Competition in Vienna, Austria.

His credits include Teatro alla Scala, Piccolo Teatro di Milano and Opera Fuoco (Paris) and principal role debuts with Theatre St. Gallen in Switzerland in the 2009-2010 season. This Fil-Am talent had been applauded in the main stages of the Pittsburgh Opera, Theatre du Champs Elysees, The New Israeli Opera (Tel-Aviv), Brucknerhalle (Linz), Concerthaus Oulu (Finland), La Verdi Sonfonia in Milan, Gotham Chamber Opera, Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra, Connecticut Opera, Opera North, Ashlawn Opera, Opera Memphis.

Commitments all over the world make an Espiritu performance in the Philippines rare and not to be missed. On Feb.6 (weds.) at 7 p.m. he will be at the Ayala Museum on Greenbelt 4 with Najib Ismail on the piano for a recital dubbed, “The Poet Speaks.”

(VERA Files is put out by veteran journalists taking a deeper look at current issues. Vera is Latin for truth.)