The Metropolitan Opera will perform Verdi's Requiem Mass on Thursday, September 18 at 5:00 p.m. in commemoration of the first anniversary of the death of Luciano Pavarotti, who died on September 6, 2007. Music Director James Levine will conduct the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus with soloists Barbara Frittoli, soprano, Olga Borodina, mezzo-soprano, Marcello Giordani, tenor, and James Morris, bass, in the concert at the Opera House. Tickets to the concert are free and will be distributed via a random drawing.
The concert will also be carried live on the Metropolitan Opera on Sirius Satellite Radio, channel 78, and will be streamed live at the Met's web site, www.metopera.org. "We are offering this free tribute in honor of one of the greatest artists of all time," said Peter Gelb, the Met's General Manager. "Pavarotti captivated millions with his performances at the Met and elsewhere, and his golden voice will resonate in this opera house for as long as it stands." James Levine, who collaborated with Pavarotti in 139 performances at the Met beginning in 1973, said, "Few singers in the history of the Metropolitan Opera have had the popularity with the general public and the enormous impact that Luciano Pavarotti had during his 36-year career with the company. Luciano's voice was so extraordinarily beautiful and his delivery so natural and direct, that his singing spoke right to the hearts of listeners. I will never forget the sheer magic of that voice, but I will also remember the warm, generous, and exuberant spirit of the man. He is, rightfully, a legend already - an artist whose recordings will be a reference for singers and opera lovers for a long time to come."The Met's 2008-09 season opens on Monday, September 22 at 6:30 with a gala performance featuring Renée Fleming in fully-staged acts from three operas for which she is well-known: Act II of La Traviata, Act III of Manon, and the final scene of Richard Strauss's Capriccio. In another free public event, the performance will also be transmitted live to multiple screens in Times Square and the Plaza at Fordham University's Lincoln Center campus. The opening night gala will also be the season's first The Met: Live in HD transmission to movie theaters and other venues in the Americas.
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