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5
Ryan Center showcases its 'Rising Stars'

Figaro's famed patter number, from Rossini's "The Barber of Seville," fell trippingly off the tongue of the smooth baritone Takaoki Onishi.

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03 April 2017www.chicagotribune.comJohn von Rhein
Grant Park premiere dances to the joyous Caribbean beat of 'Missa Latina'

The soloists had extended stretches of challenging music of their own and both did so very well. The vibrant soprano Jessica Rivera and the solidly imposing baritone Takaoki Onishi often took hieratic roles in the Mass as they led the chorus in fervent prayers, expressions of thanks, and sections that addressed the Almighty in forceful declamation. Harth-Bedoya, who is Peruvian-born, is a practiced hand at this sort of repertory and he marshalled his large contingent of performers with a firm command of the score's multilayered complexities.

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29 Juni 2017www.chicagotribune.comJOHN VON RHEIN

Frühere Produktionsrezensionen

1
Pagliacci, Leoncavallo
D: Octavio Cardenas
C: Keitaro Harada
PERFORMANCE REVIEW: Ruggero Leoncavallo — PAGLIACCI (C. Tanner, M. Whittington, K. Choi, T. Onishi, J. Karn, A. Dengler, J. Hurley; North Carolina Opera, 24 January 2020)

The scene for Nedda and her paramour Silvio contains some of Leoncavallo’s most impassioned writing, the lovers’ illicit rendezvous inspiring the composer to create several of Italian opera’s most luridly erotic pages. In baritone Takaoki Onishi’s performance in Raleigh, the depth of Silvio’s love for Nedda and the magnetism that drew her to him were palpable. Declaiming ‘Nedda, Nedda, decidi il mio destin’ with ardor and handsomely virile tone, Onishi characterized Silvio as a man whose desire for Nedda was unquestionably carnal but also viscerally spiritual. There was a pervasive sense of yearning in this Silvio’s singing, as though he was as desperate to escape from his own struggles as Nedda was to gain her freedom, but the true hallmarks of Onishi’s vocalism were the evenness of registers, the youthful ease of his ascents above the stave, and the consistent beauty of his timbre. Aided by Harada, he sang ‘E allor perchè, di’, tu m’hai stregato’ arrestingly, caressing the line with ideally-supported mezza voce, and the hushed ending of the duet with Nedda was gorgeous. In Onishi’s performance, Silvio’s lunge at Canio in the opera’s final moments was more anguished than threatening: Nedda having been slain before his eyes, his life was already at its end. Vulnerability was at the core of Onishi’s characterization, and, unusually, Silvio’s death was as wrenching as Nedda’s.

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28 Januar 2020www.voix-des-arts.comJoseph Newsome