RESCHEDULED: Michael Meraw Faculty Recital
This concert will now take place on February 10.
About Michael meraw
Baritone Michael Meraw has performed with companies across North America (including: Pacific Opera Victoria, the Victoria Symphony Orchestra, the Banff Centre, Edmonton Opera, the Richard Eaton Singers, Symphony Regina, the National Arts Centre, the Thirteen Strings, Opéra Atelier, Opera in Concert, Montreal Opera, Seattle Opera, Virginia Opera, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra), in repertoire ranging from Monteverdi and Handel, to Webern and Szymanowski. Not only has Meraw garnered critical acclaim in the standard repertoire, winning praise for his Figaro in Rossini's Barber of Seville and Orff's Carmina Burana, but he has also brought lesser-known works to new audiences through his incisive portrayals of such roles as King Roger by Szymanowski ("Meraw did well as Roger, with nervy urgency and gripping delivery of his increasingly anguished lines..." — Geoff Chapman, The Toronto Star) and Sir John A. MacDonald in Somers's Louis Riel ("Dealing with a vocal part that veers from sprechgesang to dramatic declamation, baritone Michael Meraw showed great vocal cut and thrust, in addition to contributing a striking stage presence." — Richard Turp, Opera Canada). Mr. Meraw has performed many of the standard baritone parts in oratorio including Mendelssohn’s Elijah, Orff’s Carmina Burana, Handel’s Messiah, Judas Maccabeas, Joshua and Israel in Egypt, and the Requiem’s of Brahms and Faure. A regular recitalist, his repertoire spans the baritone repertoire in English, French, German, Italian and Russian.
- Michael Meraw, Baritone
- Tanya Blaich, Piano
Gustav Mahler: Rückert-Lieder
Claude Debussy: Ballade de Villon a s’amye, Ballade que Villon feit à la requeste de sa mère pour prier Nostre-Dame, Ballade des femmes de Paris
Charles Ives: Walt Whitman
Lee Hoiby: Beginning my Studies
Ned Rorem: As Adam Early in the Morning
Ned Rorem: Oh You Whom I Often and Silently Come
Leonard Bernstein: To What You Said
Ernst Bacon: The Commonplace
Charles Naginski: Look Down, Fair Moon
Kurt Weill: Dirge for Two Veterans
Ned Rorem: Youth, Day, Old Age, and Night
Ernst Bacon: One Thought Ever at the Fore