Yun-Kyoung Yi and Raul Sunico |
Featuring:
Yun-Kyoung
Yi, soprano
Arthur
Espiritu, tenor
Raul
Sunico, piano
Programme:
Antonio
Vivaldi
Alta
Aria del Vagante from Juditha triumphans
Agitata
da due venti from La Griselda
Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart L’amero from Il Re
Pastore
Giuseppe
Verdi Merce, dilette amiche from I
Vespri Siciliani
Gioachino
Rossini Una voce poco fa from Il
Barbiere de Siviglia
Two
Vocalizzi per Soprano
Renzo Rossellini V. Andante, con abbandono (come una Berceuse)
Ettore Pozzoli VI. Adagio, con molta calma
Gioachino
Rossini Si, ritrovaria io guiro from
La Cenerentola
Wolfgang
Amadeus Mozart Il mio tesoro from Don
Giovanni
Reinhold
Gliere Concerto for Coloratura Soprano
and Orchestra
I. Andante
Ambroise
Thomas A vos jeux, mes amis from
Hamlet
Back
in 2009, Korean Yun-Kyoung Yi performed with the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra and had a solo recital which became the talk of many music
enthusiasts. I was among the unfortunate ones who failed to see both
performances back then. But fortunately, Yi came back again to the
country to play Violetta in La Traviata which got the music lovers talking once more. But before that, she had a solo recital held at the Philam Life
Auditorium in which I finally experienced for myself why people talked about
her.
I
got a bit worried if I would really appreciate this recital since I wasn’t
really familiar with the concert repertoire which I only found out on the night
itself. I knew beforehand that Dr. Raul Sunico would be accompanying on the
piano but it was also during this time when I realized that tenor Arthur
Espiritu would also be part of the recital as well. I did find it very peculiar
that the audience cheered so loudly upon the entrance of Yun-Kyoung Yi on stage
and she had not sung a single note yet. I thought that there must be a reason
why people behaved this way.
I
immediately found out the reason since her voice was indeed phenomenal. Helped
by the hall’s superior acoustics, her voice projection seemed inhuman. It
didn’t matter that I didn’t know majority of the arias that she performed that
evening since I was captivated by her voice. She even made me appreciate the
leaps and turns of Agitata da venti due
by Antonio Vivaldi which is from the Baroque era and music from that time
doesn’t really appeal to me that much. Most of the first half was devoted to
music that showcased runs, turns and all that vocal gymnastics but she showed
her versatility, range and control during the second half that had a more
subdued and restrained selection of pieces.
Arthur
Espiritu sang two arias which were totally alien to me. As I’ve said, I didn’t
expect him to be a part of the recital so I wasn’t prepared for him at all. But
his performance did prepare me for his portrayal of Alfredo in La Traviata. I’ve
already heard him twice but I still find it hard to believe that his speaking
voice doesn’t offer any clue that he is actually an operatic tenor. I thought
that Arthur and Yun-Kyoung Yi would do a duet but they didn’t.
One other
thing that I thought would happen was that the entire Concerto for Coloratura
Soprano and Orchestra (well, it was just the piano that night) would be
performed. I asked Dr. Sunico before the concert if both movements would be
performed but he couldn’t give me a definite answer. Unfortunately, it was only
the first movement Andante that Yi
performed. I was really hoping that she would do the second movement Allegro which is truly a showstopper.
But the last final piece of the night, Ambroise Thomas’ A vos jeux, mes amis from Hamlet made me forget about my initial
disappointment since this is like a showstopper that morphed into an aria. She
clearly deserved all the praise from her previous performances and I knew that
I’d be telling people about how great she is as well.
The
audience wouldn’t let the night wrap up without her singing an encore and she
delighted everyone with her rendition of Frühlingsstimmen
by Johann Strauss II and Iyo Kailan Pa
Man, a lovely kundiman by Angel Peña. Maestro Jae-Joon Lee, who obviously
watched the recital, told us afterwards that Yun-Kyoung Yi only learned how to
sing the kundiman for just two days. And the talk about this kundiman lasted
for more than two days since many were moved to tears by Yi’s performance.
After
the concert, people still couldn’t get enough of Yun-Kyoung Yi as she was
mobbed by people congratulating her and asking to have photos with her as well. She accommodated a lot of her admirers to the point that her companions had to wait for her at the parking lot. Sadly, she had to dash off to join them but it’s a good thing that there was still La Traviata to look forward to after that. And the blog entry for that one
is coming next.
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