Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_NOV_DEC | Page 28

HANDEL MESSIAH from Paris Opera Awards, First Prize from Anneliese Rothenberger Competition and Star of the Year for La Sonnambula from Munich’s Abendzeitung. She can be heard on Elina Garanča’s Deutsche Grammophon recording Revive and the DVD of Rienzi at Théâtre du Capitole Toulouse. built a reputation as a leading exponent of English song. In 2007, she devised Kathleen Ferrier — Her Life, Letters & Music to honor the legendary English singer, a program that has been endorsed by the Kathleen Ferrier Society. Diana Moore last appeared with the BSO in Jennifer O’Loughlin last appeared with the December 2017, performing Mozart’s Re- BSO in December 2016, performing Handel’s quiem, Marin Alsop, conductor. Diana Moore English mezzo-soprano Diana Moore is lauded on both sides of the Atlantic for her “emotional depth” (The Guardian), “thrilling” technical bravura (Gramophone) and “rich, evocative sound” (San Francisco Chronicle). She enjoys a varied and international career of opera, oratorio and concert performances, and is a popular soloist at many major music festivals. Moore’s tall and graceful stature has made her the ideal trouser-role performer. With conductor Nicholas McGegan and Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, Moore performed the role of Medoro in Handel’s Orlando in an acclaimed American tour at the Ravinia Festival, Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall and the Tanglewood Festival. Recent concert engagements of note include Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony along with selections from Mahler’s Des Knaben Wunderhorn with Royal Northern Sinfonia and Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius at Royal Albert Hall and Winchester, Ely, Gloucester and York Minster Cathedrals. As a recording artist, Moore is a soloist on the premiere recording of Scarlatti’s La Gloria di Primavera released in 2016 with Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra, which was selected as an “Editor’s Choice” recording in Gramophone. Her recording of Handel’s Parnasso in Festa with King’s Consort and conductor Matthew Halls was the winner of the Stanley Sadie Handel Recording Prize. Moore’s charismatic vocal quality and training place her firmly within the fine heritage of English mezzo-sopranos. She is committed to celebrating the music and musicians of her homeland and has 26 OV E R T U R E / BSOmusic.org E S Messiah, Edward Polochick, conductor. Benjamin Butterfield Praised by The New York Times as, “clarion-voiced and vibrant,” Benjamin Butterfield is known for his performances throughout North America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia. He has performed with many of the world’s leading conductors including Sir Andrew Davis, James Conlon, Nicholas McGegan, Charles Dutoit, Leonard Slatkin, Bramwell Tovey, Seiji Ozawa, Bernard Labadie, Yannick Nezet-Seguin, Jeffrey Thomas, Trevor Pinnock, Bruno Weil and Marc Minkowski. In the 2018–19 season Butterfield makes returns to the Baltimore Symphony (Messiah), Calgary Philharmonic (Mendelssohn’s Elijah), and Vancouver Symphony (Dvorak’s Stabat Mater). He makes his debut with the Nashville Symphony singing Messiah under Giancarlo Guerrero. During the season, Butterfield also performs with University of King’s College Chapel Choir, returns to the Bach Choir of Bethlehem and performs in his hometown with Victoria Symphony, Victoria Choral Society, Victoria Philharmonic Choir. Recent performances include Carnegie Hall with Orchestra of St. Luke’s, Lincoln Center with American Classical Orchestra, Utah Symphony, Kansas City Symphony, San Diego Symphony and Orchestre Symphonique de Québec, L’Orchestre Lyrique de Montreal and Victoria Symphony. Butterfield has also appeared at Pacific Baroque Festival under conductor Marc Destrubé, Luminous Voices, Elgin Symphony and the Yellow Barn Chamber Music Festival in Vermont. He makes frequent appearances with the Bach Choir of Bethlehem including their annual 2-week Bach Festival. Most recently as an interpreter of opera, he portrayed the role of Mime in Das Rheingold with Pacific Opera and was stage director for Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi at the Amalfi Coast Music Festival. Other operatic roles include Grimoaldo in Handel’s Rodelinda and Jupiter in Semele with Pacific Opera Victoria, Frère Massée in Messiaen’s St. François d’Assise with Kent Nagano and the Montreal Symphony, Tamino in The Magic Flute with the Toronto Symphony and Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni with Calgary Opera. A prolific recording artist, he has recorded for Analekta, Dorian, CBC Records, Koch International and Timpani. He has also been featured in Messiah on ZDF at the Handel-Festspiele Halle with Trevor Pinnock and the English Concert and on CBC Radio as a guest host for This is my Music. Recently Butterfield recorded the St. John Passion with the Bach Choir of Bethlehem (Analekta), the Rhien transcription of Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde for Yellow Barn and a sixth CD of Ukrainian Art Song for the Ukrainian Art Song Project in Toronto. In fall of 2018, Butterfield was named a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the country’s highest academic honor. Associate Professor, head of voice and co-head of performance for the School of Music at the University of Victoria, he was the 2015 recipient of the UVic. Craigdarroch Award for Excellence in Artistic Expression. He has also served as guest faculty for Opera Nuova, the Amalfi Coast Music Festival in Italy, The Victoria Conservatory Summer Vocal Academy, Vancouver International Song Institute, Yellow Barn and Opera on the Avalon. Benjamin Butterfield last appeared with the BSO in November 2017, performing Mozart's Requiem, Marin Alsop, conductor. Sidney Outlaw Lauded by The New York Times as a “terrific singer” with a “deep, rich timbre” and the San Francisco Chronicle as an