Aria's Awakening


Book Description

Aria never expected to meet a male, much less be abducted by one. I was awed. I was terrified of his intentions and enchanted by his form. Is this what all of the males looked like? How many of his kind were there? More importantly, why did he bring me here? He stayed as still as a statue. If his antennae were not moving, I would have believed that he was one. Then my stomach decided that it was a good time to loudly growl. It finally made him move, bringing his head down to stare at my abdomen. At least I thought he was. It was hard to tell when his eyes were black and fixed. He started humming again, the noise causing his throat to vibrate. None of the women aboard the Earhart 4500 have ever seen a male before, not to mention one with wings. They arrive at Terra Lucifer intending to colonize the beautiful garden world. The moment Aria steps off of the ship onto the new world, she is immediately swept up into the air by a four-armed male who ignites feelings in her that she never thought were possible. Aria must figure how to get this uncivilized male to return her to her ship before this dangerous world can kill them all.




Opera Coaching


Book Description

"Opera Coaching "is the first practical guide for pianists, singers, and opera producers to this important--and often neglected--career. The opera coach is a teacher who helps singers not only meet the physical and vocal demands of a score, but--like the dramatic coach--shapes their entire performance. The opera coach must have a wide knowledge, from a full understanding of human physiognomy and the human voice, to the many languages used in Western vocal music, to the entire expanse of the opera repertoire, from its roots in 17th century sung drama through today's most modern compositions. "Opera Coaching "covers all of these topics and more, making it the ideal resource for anyone interested in this fascinating career.




Aria's Awakening


Book Description

A deadly alien arena isn't the place to fall in love... For the last three years, Special Agent Aria Taylor's nights have been filled with images of battling alien beings in a foreign land with purple skies and two suns. She thought they were just strange nightmares, but when a therapist suggests lucid dreaming, she wakes to find herself trapped in an alien arena, forced to fight in gruesome tournaments as one of their gladiators. She needs to escape that place, but if she's going to have any chance of success, she needs help.Hazy memories push her to find two males. She doesn't know their names, or where they're from, but she recognizes them the moment she sees them, and her heart tells her they are hers just as much as she is theirs.Together Aria, Tirox, and Kix fight to free the beings enslaved with them and take down the Overlord, all while trying to understand the soul-deep bond they share.A deadly alien arena isn't the place to fall in love, but Aria isn't sure she can help herself.Aria's Awakening is a full-length SFR novel that was previously published as Taken. It kicks off a brand new series set in the universe of the Chosen Series by Stacy Jones.




An Interpretive Guide to Operatic Arias


Book Description

A premier singer and master teacher here tells other singers how to get the most from 151 famous arias selected for their popularity or their greatness from 66 operas, ranging in time and style from Christopher Gluck to Carlisle Floyd, from Mozart to Menotti. “The most memorable thrills in an opera singer's life,” according to the author's Introduction, “may easily derive from the great arias in his or her repertoire.” This book continues the work Martial Singher has done, in performances, in concerts, and in master classes and lessons, by drawing attention “not only to precise features of text, notes, and markings but also to psychological motivations and emotional impulses, to laughter and tears, to technical skills, to strokes of genius, and even here and there to variations from the original works that have proved to be fortunate.” For each aria, the author gives the dramatic and musical context, advice about interpretation, and the lyric—with the original language (if it is not English) and an idiomatic American English translation, in parallel columns. The major operatic traditions—French, German, Italian, Russian, and American—are represented, as are the major voice types—soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor, baritone, bass-baritone, and bass. The dramatic context is not a mere summary of the plot but is a penetrating and often witty personality sketch of an operatic character in the midst of a situation. The musical context is presented with the dramatic situation in a cleverly integrated way. Suggestions about interpretation, often illustrated with musical notation and phonetic symbols, are interspersed among the author's explication of the music and the action. An overview of Martial Singher’s approach—based on fifty years of experience on stage in a hundred roles and in class at four leading conservatories—is presented in his Introduction. As the reader approaches each opera discussed in this book, he or she experiences the feeling of participation in a rehearsal on stage under an urbane though demanding coach and director. The Interpretive Guide will be of value to professional singers as a source of reference or renewed inspiration and a memory refresher, to coaches for checking and broadening personal impressions, to young singers and students for learning, to teachers who have enjoyed less than a half century of experience, and to opera broadcast listeners and telecast viewers who want to understand what goes into the sounds and sights that delight them.




Archangel's Awakening


Book Description

Read the third and final installment of The Cursed Angels Series, following the lives of Aria, Philippe, and Cedric. Are you ready for the epic end? War is coming and innocent lives are at stake. Aria fights her angel while Cedric declares war to the ones who have kidnapped his mate. In the middle of all this, Philippe fears for the life of the woman he loves and does everything to convince the Prince of the Angels that they need to join forces to survive. As the real enemy shows itself and threatens to destroy everything that the angels sacredly protect, Aria needs to find out more about the origin of her power and decide who her heart truly belongs to. What would you sacrifice for the one you love? Find out in Archangel's Awakening, the last installment of Aria, Cedric, and Philippe’s story. The Cursed Angels Series is a Young Adult Paranormal Angel and Vampire Romance. It’s a coming of age novel intended for younger audiences. If you loved the Iron Fey and the Twilight Saga, you’ll love this story and fall in love with the characters. This book is for anyone who loves: *Angels & Vampires *Shifter Romance (Werewolves) *Teen and Young Adult Paranormal Romance *New Adult Paranormal Romance *Magical Powers and Supernatural Creatures *Alternative Reality and Alternative History *Tales of forbidden love *Fiction involving princesses, charming princes, dark kings, and fated mates. This is BOOK THREE in The Cursed Angels Series. You need to read in order: BOOK ONE, Archangel's Kiss BOOK TWO, Archangel’s Fire BOOK THREE, Archangel's Awakening.




Music and the Queer Body in English Literature at the Fin de Siècle


Book Description

Drawing on an ambitious range of interdisciplinary material, including literature, musical treatises and theoretical texts, Music and the Queer Body explores the central place music held for emergent queer identities in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. Canonical writers such as Walter Pater, E. M. Forster and Virginia Woolf are discussed alongside lesser-known figures such as John Addington Symonds, Vernon Lee and Arthur Symons. Engaging with a number of historical case studies, Fraser Riddell pays particular attention to the significance of embodiment in queer musical subcultures and draws on contemporary queer theory and phenomenology to show how writers associate music with shameful, masochistic and anti-humanist subject positions. Ultimately, this study reveals how literary texts at the fin de siècle invest music with queer agency: to challenge or refuse essentialist identities, to facilitate re-conceptions of embodied subjectivity, and to present alternative sensory experiences of space and time. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.




George Frideric Handel


Book Description

Exceptionally full, detailed study of the man, his music and times. Childhood, music training, years in London; analysis of Messiah and other works; much more. Introduction. Includes 35 illustrations.




Opera's Orbit


Book Description

Tcharos illustrates opera's engagement in a larger musical sphere of Arcadian Rome, where opera inspired debate and fuelled ideological reform.




Guide to the Aria Repertoire


Book Description

An invaluable guide to some of the most demanding aria excerpts




Changing the Score


Book Description

This study seeks to explore the role and significance of aria insertion, the practice that allowed singers to introduce music of their own choice into productions of Italian operas. Each chapter investigates the art of aria insertion during the nineteenth century from varying perspectives, beginning with an overview of the changing fortunes of the practice, followed by explorations of individual prima donnas and their relationship with particular insertion arias: Carolina Ungher's difficulties in finding a "perfect" aria to introduce into Donizetti's Marino Faliero; Guiditta Pasta's performance of an aria from Pacini's Niobe in a variety of operas, and the subsequent fortunes of that particular aria; Maria Malibran's interpolation of Vaccai's final scene from Giulietta e Romeo in place of Bellini's original setting in his I Capuleti e i Montecchi; and Adelina Patti's "mini-concerts" in the lesson scene of Il barbiere di Siviglia. The final chapter provides a treatment of a short story, "Memoir of a Song," narrated by none other than an insertion aria itself, and the volume concludes with an appendix containing the first modern edition of this short story, a narrative that has lain utterly forgotten since its publication in 1849. This book covers a wide variety of material that will be of interest to opera scholars and opera lovers alike, touching on the fluidity of the operatic work, on the reception of the singers, and on the shifting and hardening aesthetics of music criticism through the period.