-
of her PROMS debut at Royal Albert Hall (UK) 8
Aug 2009
"VIVICA GENAUX DAZZLES IN HER PROMS DEBUT
Virgin Classics' Vivica Genaux was met with a standing ovation at
the Royal Albert Hall in her BBC Proms debut."
-EMI
Classics headline
"Two
Rossini arias brought a stellar performance from the Alaskan mezzo
Vivica Genaux, whose substantial, steel-tipped voice filled the Albert
Hall as easily as if it were the Wigmore, and dispatched the vocal
gymnastics with ease and charm."
- Erica Jeal, www.guardian.co.uk, August 7, 2024
"The
star turn before the interval came from Vivica Genaux in virtuoso
accounts of two Rossini arias; showstoppers from La donna del lago
and La Cenerentola with lavish and intricate ornamentation…she
negotiated the coloratura with breathtaking ease…”
- Hugo Shirley, www.musicalcriticism.com, August 8, 2024
“…’Non più mesta’ from La Cenerentola
was delivered with a winning girlish glee.”
-
Kieron Quirke, Evening Standard, August 7, 2024
“It
was followed up with a pair of Rossini excerpts - an aria each
from La donna del lago and La Cenerentola - sung with flair
by Alaskan Rossini specialist Vivica Genaux.”
-
Tristan Jakob-Hoff, BBC Music Magazine-Proms Diary, August 7, 2024
- of her ARSACE in Caramoor Festival's Semiramide
“...
the mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux, a passionate, theatrically compelling
Arsace, who sang with rapid-fire, jaw-dropping (but tasteful) ornamentation.”
-Vivien Schweitzer, The New York Times, August 4, 2024
“Vivica
Genaux was in outstanding form in the trouser role of Arsace. The
rich voice has an evenness from top to bottom that allows the many
low-lying phrases consistently to sound warm and true. Her way with
coloratura was simply dazzling, but no less telling was the intensity
she brought to Arsace’s pivotal scene in which he is at once
made aware that Semiramide is his mother and that he must avenge his
father’s murder."
-GeorgeLoomis,
MusicalAmerica.com,
August 5, 2024
“By
her [Angela Meade’s] side for two duets, a couple of arias and
another duet was a Caramoor (and world) favorite, mezzo Vivica Genaux
as Arsace. With Marilyn Horne’s grand footsteps to fill, Ms
Genaux had nothing to worry about: her voice remains stunning and
thoroughly fluent in the most demanding music; her low notes boomed
and high notes shone. Her singing was always expressive.”
-Robert
Levine, www.ClassicsToday.com,
July 31, 2024
“Her
voice is extraordinarily sensitive, and her inventions sounded spontaneous.”
“Their recitatives together produced fire, their second duet,
sweetly tuned, was as beautiful and tender as anything in this opera.
In fact, by the end of their second duet, Ms. Meade and Ms. Genaux
threw themselves into the roles not like Queen and Commander or Queen
and Son or Queen and Lover, but as two adoring sisters.”
-
Harry Rolnick, www.ConcertoNet.com,
July 31, 2024
“…the
sound and articulation are impressive, and she never seems to tire
in a role that goes on and on — longer than Semiramide’s
part, I think, and because it lies in so low a register (Arsace’s
music, I mean) harder to project.”
-La
Cieca (a.k.a James Jorden), Parterre
Box, August 4, 2024
- of her Concert with the Venice Baroque Orchestra
at Carnegie's
Weill Recital Hall
"The
mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux has a fondness for Baroque opera, and
more important, a sense of the style and how it can be used. That
isn’t just a matter of technique. Knowing how and where to ornament
and what kind of sound works best for a Baroque piece is important,
but lots of singers are schooled in those things now. Ms. Genaux’s
strength is her combination of lively musicianship and the kind of
personality that adapts easily and believably to the concerns of the
character she is singing, even if she inhabits that character for
the space of only a single aria.
In her concert at Weill Recital Hall on Wednesday evening, Ms. Genaux
touched briefly but persuasively on arias from Vivaldi’s “Tamerlano
(Bajazet),” Hasse’s “Senocrita,” Broschi’s “Idaspe” and two Handel
operas, “Giulio Cesare” and “Ariodante.” She maintained certain hallmarks
throughout the performance — most notably, pinpoint clarity in the
most florid writing, precisely articulated texts and a commanding
sense of line.
But she also gave each aria a distinct coloration, depending on the
level of emotion the piece embodied, whether desperation (as in Vivaldi’s
“Sposa son disprezzata”) or heroics tempered by vulnerability (as
in Broschi’s “Qual guerriero in campo armato”). .
Ms. Genaux was supported by members of the Venice Baroque Orchestra,
an ensemble with a free-spirited approach similar to her own. "
-
Allan Kozinn, New York Times, January 17, 2025
- of her concert with Concerto Köln in Lyon, FRANCE
Headline:
Emotion, the real thing - Vivica Genaux: breathtaking in virtuosity
and expressivity.
“The
mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux was the very incarnation of Baroque sensuality
in a dazzling program, in which the ensemble Concerto Köln supported
her with panache.”
“Going from Handel to Hasse, while passing through Vivaldi,
the mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux and Concerto Köln offered Lyon
a concert in which the American singer's sensitivity and deeply felt
interpretations combined with the ensemble's elegance and flair for
an evening rich in emotions.”
“…Vivica Genaux appeared, glamorous but classic in high
heels and a bright apple-green jacket.”
“Smoldering, with a sensual temperament, she boldly embodied
the Handelian roles: ‘Sta nell'ircana’ from Alcina linked
to ‘Cara speme’ from Giulio Cesare were breathtaking in
virtuosity, in mastery of breath control, in expressivity and in melodic
density. The standing ovation was fully earned.”
-Sandrine
Khoudja, Le Monde de la Musique, January 2009
- of her Hasse Concert at the Ludwigsburger Schlossfestspiele
(Sanctus Petrus et Sancta Maria Magdalena / Miserere )
"With
her glowing mezzo, Vivica Genaux finely expresses the extreme emotional
mood of the situation."
"The harmonious interplay of the three female singers created
an exceptional listening experience."
-
Dietholf Zerweck, Ludwigsburger Kreiszeitung, November 25, 2024
"Vivica
Genaux endowed the role of Maria Salome with her well-articulated
mezzo voice."
- Marten Mezger, Esslinger Zeitung, November 25, 2024
-of
her recital at the Tannery Pond Concerts
“Outstanding
vocal performances, many of them by mezzo-sopranos, have been among
the defining features of this summer’s musical life. But one
of the most remarkable and fascinating of these took place last Saturday
evening at Tannery Pond, when Vivica Genaux accompanied by Craig Rutenberg,
performed an unusual program of works little-known in the classical
mainstream.
Genaux’s program was full of revelations. But you’ll not
find a more compelling introduction to this [Zarzuela] repertoire,
or any of the other works on the program than Ms. Genaux’s,
whose artistry brings us back to the grand old times, when singers
gave free rein to expression and emotion
For Vivica Genaux, producing the melodic line, technique, phrasing,
interpreting the text, and acting are all one. It seems only natural
for her to address them as a unity - and all to the utmost.
As with certain great singers of the past, she sings each note and
each phrase with full comprehension and expression. Add to that her
splendid mezzo voice with its amazing variety of color and nuance,
and you are in for something quite unique.
[In Haydn’s ‘Arianna a Naxos’] Daring harmonic modulations
follow Ariadne’s intense shifting moods.” “This
was a powerful introduction to Ms. Genaux’s vivid dramatic imagination
and her ability to immerse herself in the emotions of her characters:
operatic to the core, she created a character with each work she sang.”
“Ms. Genaux focused her large, operatic voice on each phrase
and melody, which constantly demanded hairpin turns of shading and
color. Haydn’s classical, but intensely emotional treatment
of a classical subject, made Genaux’s grounding in the eighteenth
century absolutely clear.
Ms. Genaux entered into each song [of Loewe’s setting of ‘Frauenliebe’]
as if it were a small, intimate scene on the stage. After each one,
she extracted herself and adjusted her state of mind for the next,
approaching each song afresh, and committing herself with all her
heart and soul. Loewe’s keen psychological perception and her
intelligent and intuitive response made a compelling case for this
superb work. …his [Loewe’s] setting is robust and
deeply moving, especially in Ms. Genaux’s penetrating and passionate
interpretation.
Vivica Genaux turned from the Germanic world to Spain [in songs of
Garcia, Rossini, Serrano, Chueca & Valverde and Gimenez] -
a milieu especially close to her through her Mexican mother.”
“Again, Genaux created not only a unique mood for each song,
but a character and a setting, which she acted out through expressive
gestures, and this she continued to do throughout the rest of the
evening.” “Even for Rossini, the verve and spirit of these
imitations of the Spanish style is astonishing, as were Genaux’s
performances. Her articulation of bel canto ornamentation was sharply
etched and brilliant.
Ms. Genaux had all the energy, imagination, and charisma to span the
full range of intense moods and colorful scene-setting these treasures
[zarzuelas] demand.
Genaux, inundated with applause, gave two encores, splendid, full-blooded,
and warmly felt renditions of Neapolitan songs. Her spirit in these
was not too much different from her Spanish repertory, but Naples
would not be Naples without its Spanish heritage.
The program and the performance were matchless in themselves, but
the mere opportunity to hear one of the great operatic voices in such
intimate surroundings as the Tannery, which seats only 290 people,
was extraordinary. One could savor Vivica Genaux’s every nuance
and gesture, not to mention the effect on her performance of this
close contact with her audience.”
-Michael
Miller, The Berkshire Review for the Arts, September 1, 2024
-
of her concert with La Cetra in Istanbul
“The
long anticipated Istanbul debut of world-renowned Baroque and Rossini
interpreter Vivica Genaux, with the Swiss period ensemble La Cetra,
directed by Italian conductor Andrea Marcon, will go down as one of
the main events of the 2007-2008 concert season in Istanbul. T he
Alaskan born mezzo-soprano, with her powerful, straight-toned chest
voice, a lovely falsetto in the upper range, a carrying power remarkably
evenly distributed throughout her supple two-and-a half octave range-all
the while possessed of impeccable intonation and musicianship-is a
singer of our time who simply must be heard.”
“For any audience member who knows Genaux's (2005) award-winning
Virgin recording of Vivaldi's Bajazet with Europa Galante and Fabio
Biondi, the next aria was much anticipated. To hear on a recording
Genaux's performance of the spectacular Farinelli aria ‘Qual
guerriero in campo armato’ is to be astounded how any living
singer can handle its two-and-a half octave range, its ubiquitous
octave ornaments, running sixteenths, trills, extreme shifts of register,
and its bravado and sheer virtuosity. But sometimes a recording can
be one thing-and a real life, ordinary acoustic, weekday concert situation
something completely different. Here, La Cetra gave an inspired rhythmic
foundation which remained absolutely in sync with the soloist, and
Genaux did the rest, vibrant, commanding and powerful, as always perfectly
clear and on pitch throughout. There is scarcely more than a moment
of rest for the singer throughout the entire spectacular aria. While
this aria utilizes every part of its two and a half octaves, it centers
itself more in the upper half. But her forcefulness in the lowest
octave, cutting through the tutti orchestra, was again particularly
memorable. The da capo variation (Farinelli's), astoundingly agile.”
-Michael
Ellison, TheOperaCritic.com, March 18, 2024
“Early
music ensemble La Cetra, conductor Andrea Marcon and world-renowned
mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux performed the works of Vivaldi, Handel,
Mossi, Durante and Giacomelli in the concert that took place in Is Sanat
Concert Hall on March 18.”
“Alaskan born mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux, whose voice and acting
I admired when I saw her for the first time in “Solimano”
nine years ago in Berlin, came to Istanbul with La Cetra ensemble under
the direction of Italian Baroque music master Andrea Marcon, and interpreted
the arias mentioned above with great technical skill.”
“If Istanbul will be the cultural capital of Europe in 2010, and
if I were organizing it, I would ask ‘How can I benefit from she
who is a specialist in operas dealing with Ottoman and Turkish subjects
when she comes to our city?’
I would ask the question ‘Can we re-perform the Solimano production,
collaborating with the Berlin State Opera in Istanbul?’ as well.
Or, I would put my head together with Vivica to establish connections
with the ensembles and musicians mentioned above for a new production
and create new projects.”
-Filiz
Ali, Milliyet Newspaper, March 25, 2024
- of
her concert performance in BIANCA E FALLIERO
(with Washington Concert Opera)
“The
expected star of the show was Vivica Genaux, the Alaskan mezzo-soprano
who can sing coloratura like nobody's business, as Falliero…”
“Genaux's technique is unique, involving a rapid-fire fluttering
of jaw and mouth, but it produces a steady, even voice that flows
from top to bottom without a hint of strain, like a stream of golden
oil. Her big aria in Act II brought down the house.”
-Anne
Midgette, Washington Post, April 15, 2024
“…her solo excursions were dazzling.
Her vocal figures were brilliantly clear, always in tempo and daring
in the boldness of their execution. All was underscored by her rich,
burnished tone. Brava.”
-T.
L. Ponick, Washington Times, April 15, 2024
“Vivica
Genaux has one of those voices, with an inimitable timbre and a ferocious
technique…”
“…this was an incisive, marble-solid Falliero (in her red
jacket and black ponytail, she also struck a wasp-waisted figure).”
-Charles
T. Downey, ionarts.blogspot.com, April 15, 2024
"The
expected star of the show was Vivica Genaux, the Alaskan mezzo-soprano
who can sing coloratura like nobody's business, as Falliero; and despite
an announced allergy indisposition that initially muddied the center
of her voice, she fully lived up to expectations. Genaux's technique
is unique, involving a rapid-fire fluttering of jaw and mouth, but
it produces a steady, even voice that flows from top to bottom without
a hint of strain, like a stream of golden oil. Her big aria in Act
II brought down the house.
Genaux's voice is not big, but the whole evening was scaled to her.
Anna Christy, the Bianca, has an even smaller instrument, which she
also wields without any strain to produce a lovely, artless sound,
fresh as a girl's, and it melded gorgeously with Genaux's in their
Act I duet."
-
washingtonpost.com
"Mezzo-soprano
Vivica Genaux is one of the finest early-music singers around, with
an ability to pour out cascades of fast notes like a shower of gold
pieces. She makes her first D.C. appearance in eight years at Lisner
Auditorium in another rarity, Rossini's "Bianca e Falliero"
(April 13) an opera that long lay neglected until its exhumation during
the ongoing Rossini revival. Two other promising young singers, Anna
Christy and Teddy Tahu Rhodes (a much-hyped baritone from New Zealand),
round out the cast."
-Anne Midgette, Washington Post, February 13, 2024
- at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall, NY
A
Voice Takes a Singer Between Male and Female Roles
"She
is an artist whose eager, confident manner on the platform exactly
reflects the brightness, control and address in her singing.
"There is a chocolaty richness at the bottom of her voice, but otherwise
her basic tone is brilliant and forward. Her maneuvering around the
range, her management of a quick vibrato that adds radiance (and that
can readily move into a full trill) and her immediate sense of pitch
all add to the impression of a singer who is not only in total command
of her instrument but totally at ease with it as well, and delighted
to be making it work.
"What follows from this is that she does not sing songs as if they
were autobiography, but presents them rather as art. So she has the
freedom to assume roles, and to do so across the boundary of sex:
perhaps it should not be a surprise that the same thrilling luster
can speak - or rather sing - for male and female personae with equal
aptness.
"In a recent recording she has tackled some of the hugely challenging
arias written for the castrato Farinelli, and she started this recital
with two of those, by Nicola Porpora: songs of delicious amorous distress
and longing conveyed, as she showed, not by sentimental expression
but by agility, clarity, a feeling for line and a perfection of ornament.
She went on to three charming songs by Pauline Viardot and then Loewe's
"Frauenliebe," where the same poems that prompted Schumann's "Frauenliebe
und Leben" are treated in a plainer style and brought to a somber
conclusion, with the final text that Schumann omitted."
-Paul
Griffiths, NY Times Dec 20, 2024
GENAUX
DAZZLES AT WEILL RECITAL
"Vivica
Genaux's Weill Recital Hall concert Friday night was an impressive
mixture of vocal fireworks, salon charm, Romantic lied, and Mediterranean
high spirits that sent the capacity crowd out into the blustery rainy
night with warm smiles and the satisfaction of hearing one of the
day's top young mezzos in fine form.
"She opened the concert with the pair of operatic arias by the Neapolitan
Nicola Porpora that begin her acclaimed CD, Arias for Farinelli,
and sang them with the same sparkling virtuosity and miraculous breath
control that made that disc so compelling. Here, as in the rest of
the recital, pianist Craig Rutenberg was an outstanding partner; with
his rounded tone and forceful playing, Porpora's orchestration was
never missed. Genaux's interpretations encompassed both the dramatic
aspects of the arias and their showpiece qualities - it's a rare artist
who'd dare open a recital with its most taxing numbers, in this case
heavily ornamented music with machine-gunned rapid high notes and
long, sustained phrases that would make ordinary mortals turn blue.
She brought it off brilliantly, as if to say: 'That was really me,
not studio trickery, on that disc. Now let's relax and have some fun.'
"The fun in question was a set of charming salon melodies by Pauline
Viardot, the great 19th century mezzo, which Genaux sang with obvious
fondness. In the last stanza of "In My Father's Garden," Genaux sang
and acted out the lyrics, coy, but not cloying. The other songs were
"Cossack Lullaby," a lovely tune with an Eastern flavor, and "Madrid,"
an affectionate dance for the voice.
"The first half of the program ended with Loewe's setting of von Chamisso's
poems, Frauenliebe. Yes, it's the same poetry to which Schumann
set his equally non-P.C. song cycle. These tributes to submissive
19th century bourgeois wives may have lost their sentimental punch,
but Loewe's rich melodies and expressive settings make for a pleasurable
journey when sung with the sincerity and warmth Genaux brought to
them. She has a very distinctive, brilliantly colored voice, yet she
altered it beautifully to bring a sense of awe in the last stanza
of "Sweet Friend, Thou Gazest," and drained it of color for the words
"Now the world is void" in the penultimate song.
"After intermission, Genaux returned transformed, changing from her
chic spangled blue pants suit to an off-the-shoulder burgundy and
mauve gown with a ribboned bottom and a long mauve scarf, her hair
gelled straight back. The audience loved it, anticipating a second
half heavily laden with Spanish spirit.
"First though, came Haydn's Arianna a Naxos, the dramatic
cantata that enabled Genaux to demonstrate plaintive pleading and
angry coloratura outbursts as she sees her lover, Theseus, sailing
away. She then took us to the other side of the Mediterranean, with
a trio of Spanish songs by Rossini, full of fire and dash. In "Canzonetta
spagnuola," the scarf came off her shoulders and she vamped her way
into a convincing gypsy flamenco ambience, spinning out luscious pianissimos
and splashes of loud coloratura pyrotechnics on the repeated "ayees."
"Genaux closed with a trio of zarzuela arias, drenched with Spanish
folk influences and brought off with high spirits, ending with Gimenez's
"Zapatadeo," with its mile-a-minute patter song central section that
elicited delighted laughter.
"Powerful singing, astounding agility, a colorful voice with an impressive
range, a stunning mix of styles, languages, and periods. Who says
song recitals can't be fun?"
-
Dan Davis, classicstoday.com 12/13/02
- in
Anchorage, Alaska
“Fairbanks
native and rising opera star Vivica Genaux left no doubt in anyone’s
mind why she has quickly become such a hot commodity on the international
circuit. She displayed her technical prowess; her trills were flawless
and effortless, with more notes per beat than could be counted. [In]
the Haydn cantata ‘Arianna a Naxos’ her passionate delivery
in the long work's many contrasts proved an evening highlight. The
showstopper was a set of three Spanish songs by Rossini. In ‘Canzonetta
Spagnuola,’ Genaux's abilities were at their peak. With everything
from speedy vocal runs to incredible dynamic control, it was here
that she proved why she's become one of opera's darlings.”
-
S.L. Guthrie, Anchorage Daily News, October 21, 2024
-in
Oderzo, ITALY
“Vivica
Genaux’s beautiful concert was the crowning achievement of the
Oderzo Festival this summer. Though already internationally acclaimed
for some years, Genaux is relatively new to Italian audiences. She
is a lyric mezzo whose range extends from soprano-like peaks down
to a rich low register. Her timbre is reminiscent of Teresa Berganza’s,
especially in the zarzuelas she performed here. Rossini arias are
perfect for her elegant singing and reveal all the smoothness and
richness of Miss Genaux’s sound. In the final scene from Cenerentola,
she exhibits her expertise for the coloratura roulades of ‘Non
più mesta’ and hearing ‘Cruda sorte’ made
us wish to experience her brilliant Isabella on stage soon.”
-
Giorgio Gualerzi, L’Opera, October 2002
in
Pittsburgh, with the Chatham Baroque
“As
big a career as mezzo-soprano Vivica Genaux has already had just barely
into her 30s, a recital last night at Synod Hall in Oakland made it
obvious that the best is yet to come.”
“It [her program] says volumes about the intelligent approach
that Genaux has applied to her career. She is picky with her repertoire,
but sings what she sings better than most in the world. She has few
peers in the three Rossini mezzo-soprano roles of Rosina, Angelina
and Isabella, and is now showing the world some beautiful, all but
forgotten works. By avoiding roles that aren’t perfect for her,
she keeps the integrity of her work at the highest level, though last
night’s concert impressed those even expecting that level.”
“From the first phrase until the end of the concert, Genaux
displayed a disciplined technique and a keen stylistic understanding
of the music. Her timbre is unique, with a gorgeous darkness that
is beyond direct and easy description. Nary a note went without the
proper support and her phrasing was graceful.” “She also
had a complete sense of the greater purpose, that is the drama beyond
each aria and recitative. Through voice and visage, these pieces opened
up like a translation of an ancient tale, but flowering in an individual
and fresh way.”
-
Andrew Druckenbrod, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, September 23, 2024
“Genaux’s vice is exceptionally rich in timbre, but with
no heaviness whatsoever. Her agile technique must be heard to be believed.
A former voice coach in attendance commented, ‘Vivica is the
fastest voice on the planet’. But she has much more to offer
than record-setting coloratura. Her emotional identification was riveting
and she is an undeniably glamorous figure.”
-
Mark Kanny, (Greensburg, PA) Tribune-Review, September 25, 2024
-
VIDDA Foundation Award / Opera Orchestra of New York Recital at the
Weill Recital Hall (Carnegie Hall, NY), with the Chatham Baroque
"Ms.
Genaux selected her works wisely and sang them with a stylish fluidity
and a complete command both of the ornamental flourishes of Baroque
music. Those qualities were immediately apparent in Vivaldi's "Alla
caccia dell'alme e de' cori," which opened the program. Here, and
in a stunningly nuanced account of a cantata attributed to Domenico
Scarlatti, "Bella madre de' fiori," her embellishments were appropriately
florid and thoughtfully applied, and she varied them interestingly
in the repeated sections. In the Spanish works -- and particularly
in the García encore, with its flamenco-like bent pitches -- she sang
with an ear for both the musical and emotional accent of the language.
For a listener who heard Ms. Genaux give an affecting and skillfully
ornamented performance in the title role of Rossini's "Cenerentola"
at Caramoor in 1996, the musicality and communicativeness of her performance
were not surprising. What was striking, though, was the degree to
which she is in control of her resources. In an opera performance,
she projects a full-bodied, rich sound; on Monday she produced a light,
transparent timbre that suited the intimacy of the setting."
-
Allan Kozinn NY Times 03/17/00
"Ms.
Genaux is a singer of great technical security and virtuosity, with
a strikingly appealing stage presence and a lovely, unique vocal timbre.
She has proved her mettle on the opera stage, where she strongly projects
brightly comic personalities like Rosina in ‘Barber' and forceful
trouser-role characters in bel canto works. She delivered the recital's
Spanish works by Literes, Esteve, and Arańes with lilt and spirit
and an instinctive feel for their rhythmic character."
-Heidi
Waleson, The Wall Street Journal, 04/10/00
-
at the Italian Consulate in WASHINGTON, D.C
"Genaux
stood before a luxuriant image of the theater in Verdi's beloved town
of Busseto. Listen to the voice (a very fine one) and imagine hearing
it in a small jewel-box theater encrusted with gesso molding.... Genaux
is a mezzo-soprano from Alaska in full, spring bloom of a growing
operatic career.
"She is naturally suited to the baroque and bel canto styles, with
a voice that has in it both the duskiness of twilight and the freshness
of morning.
"Genaux's best performances came in three Rossini songs she has recently
recorded and in an encore, "Cruda sorte!" from the same composer's
opera "L'Italiana in Algeri." The songs--(the "Ariette Espagnole")--require
a voice as sultry as Marilyn Horne's bottom range and a sense of style
as easy and feline as soprano Victoria de los Angeles'. Genaux bit
into the meatiest, most seductive part of her voice, a sound that
flirts with and insinuates itself into the ear. The aria demonstrated
the fluency of her technique and an ability to traverse fast passages
with ease."
>-Philip
Kennicott, Washington Post, January 12, 2025
-at
the Pittsburgh/Carnegie Music Hall - Ezio Pinza Council for
American Singers
“Yesterday’s
program was devoted to Gioacchino Rossini, whose music has become
a Genaux specialty over the years. It was obviously a labor of love,
in which the singer made it evident not only how much she loves this
composer’s music but also how much she loves to sing. Those
lucky enough to have attended were all the richer for it.” “Genaux,
at 28, has a fabulous vocal technique, extraordinary musicianship
and interpretive skills that go directly to the heart. She’s
also drop-dead gorgeous and movie-star glamorous. Her attire itself
could have been material for a Vogue cover picture, not to mention
her regal bearing. She’s got it all.” “Genaux has
a vibrant vocal color with metal in her lower register, power in the
middle and a high extension that kicks in as an unexpected surprise.
The voice is colorful and interesting of itself, but she makes it
more interesting with her keen musical intelligence.”
- Robert Croan, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 29, 2024
-
at the Caramoor Festival
"...an
exciting performer who commands attention as she skilfully negotiates
the musical minefields of this challenging repertoire. Her wonderfully
refined acting skills and considerable vocal accomplishment made literal
translations of the texts unnecessary."
-
Francis Brancaleone, The Reporter Dispatch June 30, 2024
in
San Diego, California
“Genaux
is unquestionably a favorite at San Diego Opera, a sweetheart of the
stage with whom audiences easily fall in love. She often excelled
at the showy displays that are so much a part of the coloratura mezzo-soprano
repertoire. With the attentive support of her pianist, she ignited
the fioritura fireworks, sending out shimmering cascades of sound.
Genaux made notes soar, dart, zigzag and practically somersault above
the treble clef.”
-
Valerie Scher, The San Diego Union-Tribune, October 27, 2024
“The
strikingly beautiful young singer, with her sparkling stage manner,
her lively relationship with the audience, and her efforts to dramatize
each of the pieces on her program as though she were acting it on
the operatic stage, makes a wonderfully engaging impression, quite
apart from her singing. But it is the singing that will ensure Genaux
a major career. She is a coloratura mezzo of impeccable technical
command and with a distinctive and memorable voice. Genaux’s
voice has a deep, rich quality, with a metallic glitter. She is most
impressive in passages of fioritura, where her superb agility, fabulous
breath control, and authoritatively varied articulation produce just
the reaction of dazzled amazement and pleasure this 19th Century style
was meant to evoke.”
-
Jonathan Saville, The Reader (San Diego), November 6, 2024
-
concert with the New York Chamber Symphony
A
Little Miracle (David Stock) - WORLD PREMIERE
“The
performance was strong, especially Ms. Genaux’s, in speech,
song and everything in between.”
-James R. Oestreich, The New York Times, March 17, 2024