| Features:
 
 
 Description:
 
 Kiri Te Kanawa inspires a kind of affection that is accorded to few  prima donnas, for the warmth and expressiveness of her singing, for her natural  ease in operatic roles, and particularly for a sunny, outgoing personality that  is clearly projected in her stage presence. Both the voice and the personality  come through effectively in this presentation, which preserves the best moments  from two concerts she gave in 1990 and 1991, with her own introductions and  comments.
   The first, given outdoors during a homecoming tour of her native New Zealand,  shows her achieving a remarkable feat of personality to match her excellent  singing; she establishes a sense of intimate communication with an audience of  75,000. First, she sings an aria from an opera that was not otherwise part of  her repertoire: the intense, anguished "Pace, pace" from Verdi's La forza del  destino. This program is designed to show her versatility; besides arias by  Verdi and Puccini, it includes My Fair Lady's "I Could Have Danced All  Night," sung in a perfectly idiomatic style that would be out of reach for many  opera stars, and a couple of songs in New Zealand's Maori language. A nice touch  for a homecoming concert is her performance of "Home, Sweet Home" in Maori.   The second half of the program is a selection of music by Handel and Mozart,  given in a sharply contrasting environment: a snowy evening in the exquisite  baroque chapel, designed by Christopher Wren, at the Royal Naval College in  Greenwich, England. A highlight of this segment, and a rare experience, is  Mozart's Exsultate, jubilate, sung in its entirety, rather than the familiar,  brilliant "Alleluia" segment that other sopranos use by itself simply to show  off their technique. --Joe McLellan
 |