The world premiere of Part Two of LEITHIAN, an opera by by Adam Klein, will be presented Saturday, April 14, 2007 at 3 PM and Sunday, April 15, 2007 at 7 PM, at the music hall of St. Michael’s Church, 225 West 99th Street, New York City. [More]

J. R. R. Tolkien Story Is Set by American Composer

The world premiere of Part Two of LEITHIAN, an opera by by Adam Klein, will be presented Saturday, April 14, 2007 at 3 PM and Sunday, April 15, 2007 at 7 PM, at the music hall of St. Michael’s Church, 225 West 99th Street, New York City.

The cast will include soprano Tami Swartz, Metropolitan Opera tenor Adam Klein, jazz legend Valery Ponomarev, Metropolitan Opera basses Steven Fredericks and Nathan Bahny, NYGASP mezzo-soprano Dianna Dollman, baritone C. David Morrow, bass Walter Du Melle, tenor Stefan Paolini, and soprano Anita Lyons. Elizabeth Hastings will play piano and conduct a small instrumental ensemble. This will be a concert performance.

For those familiar with the recent Tolkien films but not the books, LEITHIAN, or Release from Bondage, takes place in the First Age of Middle-earth, when Sauron was but a captain of an even greater evil being, Morgoth the Black Enemy. (The stories of THE HOBBIT and THE LORD OF THE RINGS occur in the Third Age.) It is the heroic tale of how Beren and Lúthien – ancestors of Aragorn, Arwen and Elrond – achieved what the entire Elvish army could not: rescue one of the three Silmarils (luminous jewels made by the great Elf-smith Fëanor) from Morgoth’s Crown. It is also the story of the first union between Elf and Man (the last being Arwen and Aragorn).

ASCAP member Adam Klein, who studied composition with John Lessard and Donald Erb, has been a singer since age 4 and a composer since age seven. He began LEITHIAN in 1982 after reading that Tolkien had hoped his stories would be set to music. Completed in 1992, this epic opera (four and one half hours of music plus intermissions) is faithful to its source: the story was not altered and no characters were omitted or conflated. The libretto blends texts by Tolkien and the composer, the former’s being too incomplete to draw from exclusively. The concerts on April 14 and 15 will present the second half of the piece, though like THE LORD OF THE RINGS it was written as one continuous drama. The first half was premiered last July at Liederkranz Hall. Klein is son of Juilliard piano grad and former New York Times music critic Howard Klein, and American realist painter Patricia Windrow.

J. R. R. Tolkien, who began writing THE SILMARILLION in 1917, worked on it for the rest of life, never completing it. His first book, THE HOBBIT, was published in 1937. The three volumes of THE LORD OF THE RINGS were completed in 1955. It was left to Christopher Tolkien, after his father’s death in 1973, to complete THE SILMARILLION.

Tickets at the door will be $20 for adults, $10 for children 12 and under.

For further information, call 212-316-1695
Or Email: adamcjklein@adamcjklein.us
Web page: http://www.adamcjklein.us/leithianpt2.html

LEITHIAN is based on THE SILMARILLION by J. R. R. Tolkien, © 1977 George Allen & Unwin (Publishers) Ltd., and is used by permission.

The Frodo Franchise: The Lord of the Rings and Modern Hollywood (Hardcover) Author Kristin Thompson sends along word of her new book due out soon ‘The Frodo Franchise: The Lord of the Rings and Modern Hollywood’. The book is available on Pre-Order at Amazon.com: ‘”Once in a lifetime.” The phrase comes up over and over from the people who worked on Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings. The film’s seventeen Oscars, record-setting earnings, huge fan base, and hundreds of ancillary products attest to its importance and to the fact that Rings is far more than a film. Its makers seized a crucial moment in Hollywood–the special effects digital revolution plus the rise of “infotainment” and the Internet–to encourage existing fans while fostering a huge new international audience. The resulting franchise of franchises has earned billions of dollars to date with no end in sight. Kristin Thompson interviewed seventy-six people to examine the movie’s scripting and design and the new technologies deployed to produce the films, videogames, and DVDs. She demonstrates the impact Rings had on the companies that made it, on the fantasy genre, on New Zealand, and on independent cinema. In fast-paced, compulsively readable prose, she affirms Jackson’s Rings as one the most important films ever made.’ [More]

Take an early look on our ‘DVD Tuesday’ feature…every Monday! Check out some Kung-Fu on DVD goodies like ’36th Chamber of Shaolin’, ‘King Boxer’ & ‘One Armed Swordsman’. There are a few compilations out tomorrow including; ‘The Doris Day Collection, Vol. 2’ & ‘Hanna-Barbera Storybook Favorites’. The big release of the week is ‘Bobby’. Personally I’m interested in ‘Bobby’ & ‘Batman: Complete Third Season’! Check out the whole list here! [More]