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    Music

    Opera Sans Fuss: Thompson Street Opera Company
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    Never mind

    Wagner’s

    Brünnhilde

    and forget Puccini’s

    Mim

    ì

    .  Thompson Street Opera Company, the newest kid on Louisville’s opera scene, only wants you to worry about composers that still draw breath.  This weekend it continues its local residency and celebration of living artists in a double billing of comedies that are sure to entertain and entice.

    So named for its former headquarters on Thompson Street in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the Thompson Street Opera Company began three years ago as the brainchild of then University of Michigan voice student Claire

    DiVizio

    who sought to present new stage works of living composers.  Asserting the notion that premiering a work is one of the most enriching experiences for young performers,

    DiVizio

    and her company have attracted enthusiastic artists and audiences that appreciate their novel approach.

    Since its inaugural production, the world premiere of Ezra Donner’s

    Antigone

    , the Company has relocated to Louisville where it has enjoyed fruitful collaborations with the composition and voice departments of U of L’s School of Music where DiVizio recently obtained her Master’s in Voice.  Given the nature of the School of Music’s passion for new music, it seems an obvious and natural fit that both it and the team of Thompson Street would enjoy mutual artistic benefits.

    And that certainly rings true with this weekend’s lineup.  First is

    The Rootabaga Stories

    , a work by recent School of Music graduate and Fulbright Scholar Yvonne Freckmann.  Based on a collection of children’s stories by Carl Sandburg,

    Rootabaga

    is “an absurdly hilarious romp through imaginary lands with strange characters.”

    Also to be showcased is

    Requiem for the Living

    by Manhattan School of Music doctoral candidate Ronnie Reshef.  Her first opera, Reshef’s

    Requiem

    follows a “hypochondriac’s end-of-life epiphany following a mistaken deadly diagnosis” and has enjoyed recent performances in New York and Texas.

    Showtimes

    are Friday, May

    29th

    and Saturday, May

    30th

    at 8 pm as well as Sunday, June

    1st

    at 2 pm.  

    All performances will occur at VAULT1031 (1031 S. 6th Street).

     Tickets are $15 for adults, $10 for students and can be purchased online here.

    (Photo courtesy of

    www.thompsonstreetopera.org

    .)

    Follow Michael on Twitter: @rackoflambert.

    Michael J. Lambert's picture

    About Michael J. Lambert

    Native Louisvillian, local musician, School of Music grad. Writing about the classical music scene in our lovely River City. If you have a question or want to debate Wagner, drop me a line on Twitter! "The only love affair I ever had was with music." -Maurice Ravel

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