A Radio Special: Mozart’s "Abduction from the Seraglio"
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Limmie Pulliam, Peter Sellars, Jennifer Welch Babbige, Dr. Sharon Willis, Nathan Stark, Sir Willard White, Nimet Sylvia McNair, Chauncey Packer
9M ago
In the prime of his illustrious career, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ran in the realm of prominent, Black visionaries. But after composing “Zaide,” an unfinished opera depicting a slave revolt, Mozart was commissioned to create a work more palatable to the politics and pocketbooks of the late 18th century European upper class.   First heard in Vienna in 1782, “ Abduction” catered to the harsh reality of the times. As is too often the case with operas written during this time, characters of African descent are reduced to racist stereotypes, thereby oiling the wheels of Europe’s economic en ..read more
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A Radio Special: Verdi's "Otello"
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Maribeth Diggle, Thomas Hampson, Peter Sellars, Limmie Pulliam, Dr Uzee Brown, Jr. Sylvia McNair, Kevin Maynor
9M ago
“Otello” debuted in Milan in 1887, just two years after European nations gathered in Berlin to agree on a campaign to carve up and colonize the African continent for their own profit. Giuseppe Verdi’s opera, based on the play Shakespeare wrote in the very early 1600s, centers on the Moor, Otello — an African who becomes a much celebrated Venetian general for leading a successful war against his fellow Africans. As a Black man in a position of power, Otello’s status inspires praise and worship by some and searing loathing from others. How do stereotypes of Black manhood, an all-too-familiar dan ..read more
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A Radio Special: Mozart’s "The Magic Flute"
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Sylvia McNair, Dr. Uzee Brown, Kevin Maynor, Rodell Rosel, Chauncey Packer, Peter Sellars
9M ago
In this radio special of “Every Voice with Terrance McKnight,” enjoy this season’s journey into Mozart’s "The Magic Flute," its investigation into the overlooked character of Monostatos, and what his portrayal teaches us about ourselves.  With a legacy spanning over two centuries, "The Magic Flute" remains a beloved classic, captivating audiences in sold-out venues worldwide. But along with the opera’s historic success, the character of Monostatos, a Moor and chief slave to the wizard Sarastro, stands out as one of the most famous and shameful stereotypes in opera — a genre with limited r ..read more
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Abduction from the Seraglio: Revelations
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Sir Willard White, Peter Sellars, Jennifer Welch Babbidge, Chauncey Packer, Limmie Pulliam, Sylvia McNair, Sharon Willis, Terrance McKnight
9M ago
With such a dark past, what does the future look like for opera as an art form? From Verdi to Mozart, many of opera’s most celebrated works famously reduce people of African descent to racist caricatures and stereotypes with tragic fates.  In the final episode of this season of Every Voice with Terrance McKnight: we go in search of opera’s future with composers, musicians, and thinkers of today, and turn our attention one more time to Mozart's “Abduction from the Seraglio” to learn from a long-voiceless character. Joined by Dr. Sharon Willis, opera and theater director Peter Sellars, and ..read more
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Abduction from the Seraglio: A Blind Eye
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Sir Willard White, Peter Sellars, Jennifer Welch Babbidge, Nathan Stark, Terrance McKnight, Tony Phillips
9M ago
Mozart’s “The Abduction from the Seraglio” was first heard in Vienna in 1782, commissioned by Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II to cater to the German-speaking audience of the capital city. Joseph II and Mozart had more in common than just their native tongue. Joseph II championed liberal ideas, equality, and religious freedom, while some experts interpret Mozart's operas as striving to be liberatory. But 1780s Europe was financially entwined with human trafficking, and the ideals of enlightenment and freedom didn’t apply to every human.  In “Abduction,” those real-world restrictions — and the ..read more
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Aida: Red Heart, White Eyes
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Nimet Habachy, Limmie Pulliam, Maleasha Taylor
9M ago
In Giuseppe Verdi’s “Aida,” Princess Aida is torn between her homeland of Ethiopia (ruled by her father, King Amonasro) and her captor, the Egyptian leader Radamès who loves her and whom she loves in return. It’s a powerful love story, an African love story - so why are Egyptians portrayed as white and the Ethiopian as Black and enslaved?  This week on Every Voice with Terrance McKnight: We’re joined by tenor Limmie Pulliam, the first Black man to take on the role of Radamès at the Metropolitan Opera, soprano and arts activist Maleasha Taylor, and WQXR host, opera expert, and Cairo n ..read more
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Abduction from the Seraglio: A Dream Interrupted
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Sir Willard White, Peter Sellars, Jennifer Welch Babbidge, Nathan Stark, Terrance Mcknight, Tony Phillips, David Norville, Kevin Maynor
9M ago
In the prime of his illustrious career, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ran in the realm of prominent, Black visionaries, composed the radical (unfinished) opera “Zaide” depicting a slave revolt, and even shared a home with famed Senegalese / French composer Joseph Boulogne, known as the Chevalier de Saint Georges. The Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, a supporter of Mozart, was also progressive for his time. During his reign, he was known for his religious tolerance, abolition of serfdom, and public friendship with Angelo Solimon, a man of African descent. But having Black friends doesn’t mean you’re wil ..read more
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Abduction from the Seraglio: Freedom and Justice for Some
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Sir Willard White, Dr. Sharon Willis, Peter Sellars
9M ago
All too often, characters of African descent in operas written during the 18th and 19th centuries are defined as the institution of slavery and the idea of inferiority.  But today’s composers, like Dr. Sharon Willis, aim to write about Black life in order to uplift the community where she lives and works. She says she has “no use” for the depiction of Black people as “buffoons or vixens or mammies.”  This week on Every Voice with Terrance McKnight: we return to Dr. Willis’s music, and hear about a 19th century African American family that inspired one of her sixteen operas. And by co ..read more
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Otello: Black Handkerchiefs Matter
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Thomas Hampson, Limmie Pulliam, Peter Sellars, Dr. Uzee Brown, Maribeth Diggle
9M ago
Giuseppe Verdi's Otello rose from enslavement to the ranks of army general and marries an aristocratic Venetian woman. It’s difficult  to imagine the rich cultural heritage of Otello’s African past; that history is only hinted at.   Through the whitewashing of his character, some may forget that Otello is of African descent. But for Iago, the identity of his enemy, Otello, was never far from mind. To him and Verdi’s high-society audience, that assimilation signaled all the dangers of the free Black man.   This week in  Every Voice with Terrance McKnight: how a han ..read more
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Aida: America’s Confederates in Egypt
Every Voice with Terrance McKnight
by Terrance McKnight, Sir Willard White, Angela Brown, Peter Sellers, Kevin Maynor, Limmie Pullman
9M ago
When “Aida” premiered in Egypt in 1871, it delivered some not-so-subtle messaging in the dramatization of light-skinned Egyptians dominating dark-skinned Ethopians. Within two years, the man who commissioned “Aida,” Egypt’s Khedive Ishmael Pasha, lived out this fantasy of conquest, mobilizing the nation’s army with help from former American Confederate veterans..  In this episode of Every Voice with Terrance McKnight, our final installment on Giuseppe Verdi's “Aida,” we’re joined by Limmie Pullman, Angela Brown, Raehann Bryce-Davis, and Sir Williard White to revel in the drama of this ope ..read more
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