American tenor Brian Jagde gets last-minute call to sing in La Scala's
gala season premiere
Send a link to a friend
[December 06, 2024]
By COLLEEN BARRY
MILAN (AP) — American tenor Brian Jagde was just wrapping up Verdi’s “La
Forza del Destino” in Barcelona last month when he got a last-minute
offer to sing the same role in La Scala’s gala season premiere this
Saturday, arguably the opera world’s most prestigious gig.
Jagde’s appearance as Don Alvaro opposite soprano Anna Netrebko will
mark his third performance at Milan’s storied Teatro alla Scala. He
appeared twice as a substitute tenor opposite Netrebko, replacing
Roberto Alagna in “Turandot” this summer, and now he will replace Jonas
Kaufmann in the coveted season opener.
“I’m happy to be their guy,’’ Jagde told The Associated Press in a phone
interview.
While it is not unheard of for Americans to sing on La Scala’s opening
night, a highlight of the European cultural calendar, it remains a
rarity in an opera house where Europeans tend to dominate.
Beside Maria Callas last century, American Brian Hymel opened the 2016
season in “Madame Butterfly” and Lisette Oropesa was cast in “Lucia di
Lammermoor” but sang in a gala concert to an empty theater when the 2020
season premiere was shuttered by the pandemic.
In 2008, American tenor Stuart Neill was promoted from understudy to the
“Don Carlo” opening night cast after the headlining tenor made too many
dress rehearsal mistakes. Neill received generous applause from the
tough La Scala crowd.
“It's definitely one of the things that every artist dreams about,’’
Jagde said. “I think it is about the artist and meeting the moment at
the right time. I think that is more of what it's about than necessarily
where they are from.”
Jagde said singers are drawn to La Scala's “rich tradition.”
“Every artist wants to not just perform there, but have great success
there,” Jagde said. “The public is known to be a very devoted fanship —
and they can love you or they can hate you. You really want to be
embraced by that audience specifically.”
So far, the reviews from La Scala’s upper balconies of exacting opera
fans have been positive on his previous two outings, Jagde said, adding
that artists should accept all feedback.
“It’s our job as artists to embrace the fact that we are making people
feel something. Whatever they feel is appropriate to them," he said.
Jagde, 45, grew up outside of New York City, and started singing in
musicals in high schools and choirs in college, but never gave a thought
to the opera. He started studying computer science and business upstate
but then a classical music program at Purchase College closer to home
grabbed his attention, thinking it might lead him to Broadway.
[to top of second column]
|
American tenor Brian Jagde poses in the dressing room minutes before
performing in the general rehearsals of Giuseppe Verdi's "La Forza
del Destino", opening the season at La Scala Opera House, in Milan,
Italy, Thursday, Nov. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
“I didn’t know at the time that
classical voice meant opera," he said laughing. He got accepted off
the waiting list, and quickly fell in love with opera as the purest
expression of the unadulterated voice.
“I remember being on stage and experiencing something I had never
experienced on stage before, which was a completely acoustic,
magical sound," Jagde said. “This was completely natural, hearing an
orchestra underneath me, and my voice carrying over that. I remember
committing full-heartedly (to opera) on stage at the moment.”
His college teachers pegged him as a baritone, and he spent eight
years doing auditions and artists programs in that range until he
realized that “I was still warming up to high Cs and still had no
low notes.”
Once he started auditioning as a tenor, the offers started rolling
in. He made his principal role debut at the Metropolitan opera in
2021 in the role of Cavaradossi in “Tosca," and has sung on such
renowned stages as the Paris Opera, the Vienna Staatsoper and
Naples' Teatro di San Carlo.
During the 2023/24 season, he warmed up his Don Alvaro at the
Metropolitan Opera House and London's Royal Opera House. His La
Scala debut last spring was as Turiddu in “Cavalleria rusticana.”
La Scala general manager Dominique Meyer said his only consideration
in casting an opera is whether a singer “is up to the role.” Jagde,
he said, is among five or six tenors who could sing the Don Alvaro
role, “and he was available.”
Jagde finished his Barcelona performances on Nov. 18, and showed up
for rehearsals at La Scala the next day. Don Alvaro, he said, is a
role, "that has kind of grown with me, as I have grown as an
artist.”
Jagde said singing alongside an international opera star like
Netrebko for the second time this year will help take some of the
jitters out of the gala premiere.
“She is a wonderful colleague. She is a good person to work with,
always available to you. She is nothing but smiles and fun," he
said.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|