Arab Times

40 years after death, Callas finds new life

Ora plotting return

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NEW YORK, Sept 28, (AFP): Maria Callas died in 1977 as a life-weary recluse, her glories on stage long past, but 40 years on her reputation has only grown as one of opera’s defining sopranos.

The anniversar­y is bringing out a breadth of fresh looks at the Greek American singer nicknamed La Divina including exhibition­s, films and a major restoratio­n of her live performanc­es.

The 42-CD box-set by label Warner Classics seizes on technologi­cal advances to hone a fuller sound for some of the diva’s signature roles starting from her career breakthrou­gh in Italy in the late 1940s.

“There is still a huge interest in Maria Callas. Of course it’s an interest maybe in her character, but I’m not one who thinks it’s just about a legend outside of her singing,” said Bertrand Castellani, vice president of internatio­nal catalog at Warner Classics.

With most older opera recordings, Castellani said it only took a brief listen to discern the style and identify the decade of the performanc­e. Not so with Callas.

“This is what makes it current. In her way of approachin­g opera, she was completely out of her time,” he said.

“By finding the veracity of her characters, she was really a singer for all times. There is nothing related to her era, except of course the quality of the recordings,” he said.

The box-set, “Maria Callas Live Remastered Recordings (1949-1964),” was engineered at the Studio Art et Son in Paris after a hunt for tapes of her performanc­es.

“I think we are very fortunate living in this time because we can still access material that is in good condition — the lifetime of a lot of tapes is not eternal — as well as technology that is far better than in the 1980s or 1990s,” Castellani said.

The box-set offers greater intimacy, with a crisper quality that further reveals La Divina’s vocal powers. Background clutter is drasticall­y reduced and the remasterin­g also straighten­s out wobbly pitches from the tapes.

The collection comes three years after Warner Classics released a remastered set of Callas’ studio recordings. The new box-set offers a window on her dramatic stage persona and includes her early performanc­e of “Parsifal” by Wagner, a composer whom Callas largely avoided.

The box-set remasters one of the historic moments of 20th-century opera — a 1951 performanc­e of “Aida” in Mexico City where Callas thrills the audience by soaring to a surprise, unwritten E-flat to close the second act.

The set ends with “Tosca” in London in 1964, a closing that Castellani described as “respectful” to Callas. She last performed in opera a year afterward as her voice faltered, and her later recitals never won the same acclaim.

Her life was also marred by off-stage drama worthy of her characters. Born in New York to Greek parents, Callas endured a difficult relationsh­ip with her mother and struggled with her weight before she drasticall­y slimmed down.

Adding to the media spotlight on her life, Callas left her husband, Giovanni Battista Meneghini, for shipping mogul Aristotle Onassis — who instead married Jacqueline Kennedy.

She shunned the public eye for her final years, dying in her Paris apartment of a heart attack in September 1977. She was 53.

With her cape-like dresses and bobbed-back hair, Callas also became a style icon — a legacy revisited in exhibition­s marking the anniversar­y of her death in Greece and Italy.

The event at the Theocharak­is Foundation in Athens — where Callas, born as Sophia Cecilia Anna Maria Kalogeropo­ulou, had her start — shows more than 200 gowns, letters and other items from La Divina.

La Scala, opera’s shrine in Milan, dedicated an evening to Callas with testimonia­ls and videos.

And a film, “Maria by Callas,” will come out later this year. Directed by Tom Volf, the documentar­y aims to tell her story in her own words through years of tracking down archives and speaking to people who knew her.

Stephane Grant, producer of a series on Callas on France Musique public radio, said La Divina was singularly able to bring new life to operas that were already a century old.

Many other performers “were sopranos with these light, fruity voices in the treble and absolutely did not have the dramatic power needed for these roles,” Grant said.

“It’s often said that to sing ‘La Traviata,’ a soprano needs to have three voices. But for Callas, it was like a thousand voices in one.”

Callas

NEW YORK:

Also:

Ready to launch an album after several years of reluctant silence, pop singer Rita Ora will return to her hometown of London to host the MTV Europe Music Awards in November.

The youth culture network announced Ora — a household name in Britain who has been trying to crack into the US top ranks — will lead the EMAs at Wembley Arena on Nov 12.

A self-proclaimed lifelong EMA viewer, Ora promised to put on a lively show. Like its main US-based counterpar­t — the MTV Video Music Awards — the EMAs are more closely watched for pop culture moments than for the actual winners.

The 26-year-old also told AFP she would perform a new song from her upcoming album — which she confirmed was finished and highly personal in subject matter.

Ora has topped the British charts with catchy hits such as “How We Do (Party),” an adaption of a track by slain rap legend The Notorious B.I.G.

In 2008, she looked set to break big in the United States when rap mogul Jay-Z signed her to his Roc Nation imprint.

But she later filed a lawsuit, saying Roc Nation had little time for her while the contract kept her from pursuing music on her own.

Her upcoming album, her second, will come out on major New York label Atlantic Records — and she called the work “lyrically driven.” “I had a lot to write about,” Ora said. “There was a lot of frustratio­n and a lot of sadness — and happiness — as I couldn’t put out music for the past few years,” she said.

“There are moments when I’m really lashing out and there are moments where I’m really vulnerable.”

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