Turkish artists leave their mark on Italian opera
ROMA-Anadolu Agency
Turkish soprano Simge Büyükedes and mezzo-soprano Asude Karayavuz won acclaim on Nov. 10 for their performances in the Aida and Norma operas at the Teatro Comunale Alighieri in Ravenna, Italy.
The famous opera house hosted French composer Georges Bizet’s Carmen, Italian composer Vincenzo Bellini’s Norma and Italian composer Giuseppe Verdi’s Aida as part of the Ravenna festival’s Autumn Trilogy event this season.
Büyükedes, who starred in Aida, and Karayavuz in Norma were applauded by the Italian audience.
“I find your soloists marvelous, and I admire them very much,” Cristina Mazzavillani Muti, director of the Autumn Trilogy, told Anadolu Agency.
“Asude played Adalgisa very well in Norma,” said Muti adding her voice suits the music and she sang with great elegance.
At the request of Büyükedes and Muti's suggestion, a composition based on the poem "Makber" by Abdülhak Hamit Tarhan, one of the leading poets of Turkish literature, was performed by Büyükedes onstage where Radames and Aida were left to die in the grave.
“One of the things I liked the most here was to put a Turkish piece onstage of the prayer and lament to Aida. This is not very common in Aida. We did this for the first time,” said Muti, adding she liked introducing songs from different cultures aimed at understanding the moment of the funeral before Aida's last scene.
“I asked Simge to perform Makber once again. She sang it before in a concert with my husband (Riccardo Muti) in Otranto. People were fascinated,” she said.
“The audience was shocked when she started singing Makber. They couldn't have imagined such a performance in this scene.”
Karayavuz’s great success in Norma
Karayavuz said she knows the Teatro Comunale Alighieri thanks to Cristina’s husband Riccardo, who is a famous Italian conductor.
She said she had auditioned for several operas last term and was chosen for the role of "Adalgisa" in Norma.
“Adalgisa is a somewhat complicated role because it is one of the peak roles for mezzo-sopranos. You have to sing it without losing the color of your own voice. It was a very important role for me, so it took so long to prepare,” she said.
“I am getting positive responses.”