Premature declarations of death have become a modern comedy cliché – think of Monty Python’s classic “Bring out your dead” skit, or Will Ferrell’s hilariously protracted death scene from the first Austin Powers movie.
We like it when people jump the gun, and we laugh when the down-and-out bounce back and refuse to go quietly into that good night.
And so it gives me great pleasure to write that modern opera, despite the doomsday claims of many, is healthy and thriving.
Updates from The Douglas Moore Fund for American Opera, a not-for-profit supporting an annual fellowship for an emerging opera/music theater creator. Named in honor of the American composer of THE BALLAD OF BABY DOE.
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Road Report #1
Most people in the room don’t have a hard time answering this question. They’re singers, stagehands, conductors, choreographers, or even wigmakers. Their roles are clear, and their presence is justified. But when I answer, “I’m a composer,” my interrogator’s brow furrows, and more questions follow.
“Do you compose operas?” Yes, I’ve written one.
“Are you writing us an opera?” Not right now, but I hope to eventually.
“Then what are you doing here?”
Monday, April 22, 2013
What's that aroma?
Congratulations to 2010-2011 Moore Fund fellow Dan Visconti for being selected one of the winners of the prestigious Rome Prize competition. Here's a link to the story on NewMusicBox.
Monday, April 15, 2013
Getting started
Although the Moore Fund first funded a fellowship in '04-'05, it hasn't been up on the world wide web. We are in the process of getting a website DouglasMooreFund.org going and it will go live by the end of the month.
The website and blog will be of interest to aspiring composers and librettists who want to learn more about breaking into the fields of opera and musical theater. It will also be of interest to fans of Douglas Moore's work and also a group of composers associated with him, including Jack Beeson and John Kander. Moore had a big influence on a generation of composers through his work producing opera at the Columbia Opera Workshop. You may be surprised to learn that the workshop premiered operas by composers such as Britten, Menotti, Thompson, and Ward.
The website and blog will be of interest to aspiring composers and librettists who want to learn more about breaking into the fields of opera and musical theater. It will also be of interest to fans of Douglas Moore's work and also a group of composers associated with him, including Jack Beeson and John Kander. Moore had a big influence on a generation of composers through his work producing opera at the Columbia Opera Workshop. You may be surprised to learn that the workshop premiered operas by composers such as Britten, Menotti, Thompson, and Ward.
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