Amici Forever is made up of Nick Garrett, the bass/baritone, formerly of the Swingle Singers with a music degree from Trinity College; Jo Appleby, a soprano who studied at the Northern College; David Habbin, tenor who started out as a rock singer and went to the Mountainview Royal Northern College; Tsakane Valentine, also a soprano from South Africa who got her degree from the University of Pretoria; and Geoff Sewell of New Zealand, also a tenor, formerly a boy soprano who attended the Boston Conservatory of Music. Garret, Appleby and Habbin are all from the UK. All five members have performed in classical presentations like operas and oratorios, musicals like West Side Story and Les Miserables and lots of concerts.
The latest news from the hitfront says Amicis self-titled debut album now ranks number two in the classical charts of the US, while it has already gone either Gold or Platinum in other countries like the UK and Australia. The band will embark on a worldwide promo tour soon so expect the album to begin getting airplay hereabouts within the next few days. I am very sure lots of Pinoys will be very impressed with Amici. So check out this album if you want heavenly listening, which I am sure most of us do now that Election Day is over.
Amici Forever has classical pieces fitted with lyrics like Prayer in the Night from Handels Sarabande, and Nimrod: Lux Aeterna from Elgars Enigma Variations, pop tunes also fitted with new lyrics like Senza Catene which is actually Unchained Melody to us ordinary mortals; the theme from the TV series Requiem for a Soldier from Band of Brothers; an oratorio excerpt Zadok the Priest by Handel and opera tunes Nessun Dorma from Puccinis Turandot, Soave Sia il Vento from Cosi Fan Tutte by Mozart, Au Fond du Temple Saint from The Pearl Fishers by Bizet and others done to perfection by Amici Forever.
Whats next? Somehow, heres an idea I just cannot resist mentioning here. How about an opera boy band? Can you imagine five young great looking guys resembling the old Backstreet Boys but singing opera? The total effect would be like multiplying Josh Groban three or five times over. Awesome.
Maceda, 87, was a pianist, composer, musicologist, teacher and performer known for his extraordinary avant garde works and painstaking research on the countrys ethnic music heritage. If you come across music that comes from remote mountain places and isolated islands in the Philippines, there is a strong chance it was discovered and brought to us by Maceda. Some of his works for native instruments and voices are Ugma Ugma, Agungan, Kubing and Pagsamba. He died of acute respiratory failure following a lingering illness at his home in the University of the Philippines campus in Diliman, Quezon City. He is survived by his daughters, Marion, Madeleine, Kathleen and Eileen. He was married to the late pianist Madelyn Clifford.