Professor Kammersängerin Jeanne Piland

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Professor Kammersängerin Jeanne Piland |
Mezzo-soprano, Jeanne Piland has had great success
singing in most of the major opera houses
in the world. Since she has begun to include the
dramatic soprano roles in her repertoire,
she has distinguished
herself even more as one of the finest singers in her profession.
In 1997, already renowned for her exquisite portrayal of Octavian, she made her debut as
the Marschallin in “Der Rosenkavalier” at the Deutsche Opera am Rhein in Duisburg and
achieved an effortless adjustment upwards into the realms of the dramatic soprano.
Since then Eboli ("Don Carlos"), Santuzza ("Cavalleria Rusticana"), Giulietta ("The
Tales of Hoffmann"), Adalgisa ("Norma"), Sara ("Roberto Devereux"), Gertrude ("Hamlet")
and her latest Didon (“Les Troyens”) have followed with praise from press and public alike.
Jeanne Piland has also established herself as a Wagnerian heroine winning accolades as
Sieglinde (“Die Walküre”), Kundry (“Parsifal”), Brangäne (“Tristan und Isolde”),
and Venus (“Tannhäuser”).
Jeanne Piland received her Bacherlor and Master of Music from East Carolina University in
Greenville, NC before she made her professional debut at the Baltimore Opera after becoming
a finalist in the Baltimore Rosa Ponsell Opera Competition. She studied with
Geraldine Cate, Gladys White and Carolyn Grant and received a
Sullivan Grant, Rockefeller Grant, National
Opera Institute Grant as well as a Metropolitan Opera Grant before she began her full
time career
at the New York City Opera with roles such as Cherubino, Nicklausse, Siebel, Orsini,
Smeton and Lola.
Dr. Grischa Barfuss, former General Director of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Düsseldorf,
Germany, invited the young mezzo soprano for an audition for the role of Silla (“Palestrina”).
This marked the beginning of her international career and Ms. Piland’s European breakthrough.
The singer’s consistent vocal victories in Düsseldorf led to more successful engagements at
the Royal Opera House Covent Garden in London, at La Scala in Milan, in Hamburg, Munich,
Paris, Vienna, Cologne, Amsterdam, Berlin, Dresden, Zurich, Geneva, Nice, Monte Carlo,
Vancouver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, Washington D.C. as well as the festivals in Salzburg,
Aix en Provence, Santa Fe and Ludwigsburg.
Aside from her portrayals of Richard Strauss roles, Octavian in Der Rosenkavalier and The
Composer in Ariadne auf Naxos, for which she was becoming more and more in demand, the
Mozart roles were also a contributing factor in her blossoming career.
Dorabella, Sesto, Idamante and especially her delightful Cherubino, all were major factors
leading to her considerable prominence in her profession.
Another focal point of Ms. Piland’s career has been and is the French
repertoire: Marguerite,
Charlotte, Mélisande, Thérèse, Carmen, Didon and Sapho, have stunned audiences to wild applause
in the world’s opera houses for over two decades. In this season she celebrated 30 years in
Düsseldorf, 25 years in Hamburg and 20 years in Munich.
She also created the roles of Esmee in Theo Loevendie´s opera "Esmee" and Olivia in "Was Ihr Wollt"
von Manfred Trojahn in their world premieres. Both roles were composed for her.
As a concert singer she has performed often with many of the world’s finest conductors,
notably Berlioz’ "Les Nuits d’Eté" and Ravel’s "Schéhérazade". She also, with her accompanist
Charles Spencer, gives song recitals preferring the works of Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler.
Jeanne Piland lives in Düsseldorf and holds a professorship at the Robert-Schumann-Hochschule.
Aside from her international appearances, she is still profoundly connected to the
Deutsche Oper am Rhein, where she received the honorary title
of “Kammersängerin” in 2003.
Her recordings include
Berlioz’s "La damnation de Faust" (Marguerite), Massenet’s "Thérèse"
(title role), and Mozart’s
"La finta giardiniera" (Ramiro), the DVD of "Roberto Devereux"
(Sara) with Edita Gruberova and many live television transmissions from Aix en Provence,
Hamburg, Ludwigsburg, Amsterdam, Munich and a television production of Fra Diavolo.
Emily Rawlins-Struckmann
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| Emily Rawlins-Struckmann Personal Career Biography |
Emily Rawlins’ career began in Lancaster, Ohio, at the age of thirteen.
She presented a song recital for her mother’s local music club.
Her encore selection was the Habanera from Bizet’s Carmen. The success of
this local debut performance, particularly the overwhelming applause for
her prepubescent interpretation of one of the world’s greatest operatic
heroines encouraged
the very young soprano to set her sights on an
international career in opera.
After pursuing this goal through her studies at Indiana University and
singing leading roles such as Violetta in Verdi’s La Traviata, Poppea,
Santuzza and Lisa in Tchaikovsky’s Queen of Spades at the Indian University
Opera Theater, she won a scholarship to study at The Curtis Institute of
Music in Philadelphia and later a Fulbright-Hays grant to study in Vienna,
Austria at the Hochschule für Musik.
Since Ms. Rawlins’ first European engagement in Basel, Switzerland, she has
portrayed an amazing variety of operatic heroines internationally. Her vocal
range extends from mezzo to dramatic soprano roles, including many world
premieres of contemporary composers and leading roles in the traditional
operatic repertoire.
She has performed with many renowned conductors such as Christof von Dohnanyi,
Seiji Ozawa, Claudio Abbado and stage directors Jean Pierre Ponnelle and Otto
Schenk.
She studied acting with Dino Yanopoulis in Philadelphia and with Stella
Adler herself at the Stella Adler Conservatory in New York. She participated
in Master Classes with Tito Gobbi and Maria Callas.
At the Basel Stadttheater, her debut role as Cherubino in Mozart’s The Marriage
of Figaro was such a resounding success that the theater direction awarded her
the roles of Poppea, and Pamina in The Magic Flute. The following seasons she
sang Violetta, Rusalka, Cio Cio San, Desdemona in Verdi’s Otello and two Strauss
roles: Octavian in Der Rosenkavalier and the Composer in Ariadne auf Naxos.
By the end of the four-year Basel engagement Ms. Rawlins was beginning to make a
name for herself as a passionate singing actress. After a guest engagement at
the Cologne Opera, Dr. Griesha Barfuss of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Düsseldorf,
engaged her to sing the major roles already performed in at the Stadttheater Basel.
There she added Marie in Smetana’s The Bartered Bride and Zerlina in Fra Diavolo
(both filmed for ZDF, German Television) Manon in Henze’s Boulevard Solitude,
Nedda in Leoncavallo’s i Pagliacci, and several world premiere works with which
Ms. Rawlins became identified,
notably Cordelia in Aribert Reiman’s LEAR which
she sang later at its American premiere at the San Francisco Opera.
Although Ms. Rawlins career took place mainly in Europe she also performed major
operatic roles with the following American opera companies: The Boston Opera
(Bolschoi Schedrin Project,) The Boston Symphony (Elektra) The San Francisco
Opera
(Nedda, Violetta), Austin Lyric Opera (Tosca), San Francisco Concert
Opera
(La Finta Gardinere) The Houston Grand Opera (Giuletta in The Tales of Hoffmann)
The Boston Concert Opera (Hanna Glawari, The Merry Widow), Los Angeles Opera
(Anna Karenina) The Miami Opera (La Voix Humaine) Palm Beach Opera and The Columbus
Lyric Opera (Salome).
International musical festivals include the Salzburg Festival as Sophie in Cerha’s
BAAL, and in 1991 a concert with Claudio Abbado and the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra performing Alban Berg’s Bruckstücke from Alban Berg’s Wozzeck. At the
Festival dei due Mondi in Spoleto, Ms. Rawlins won accolades from public and
international press for her interpretation of the title role in Paul Uy’s opera
Sarah, based upon the turbulent life of Marilyn Monroe.
The opportunity to sing more dramatic repertoire came again in Basel, Switzerland when in
1990, Ms. Rawlins accepted an offer to sing Marie in Alban Berg’s Wozzeck.
This proved to be her destiny role since Emily Rawlins is now married to her leading man from that
engagement, the distinguished Wagner baritone and Kammersänger Falk Struckmann.
In 1993, Ms. Rawlins added Salome (with film director Ken Russell) in Bonn, Germany
and Floria Tosca in Jean Pierre Ponelle’s production of Puccini’s greatest dramatic
opera at the Lyric Opera in Austin, Texas. In 1994, she sang Venus in
Wagner’s Tannhäuser at Teatro Bellini in Catania.
In 1999, she began writing and directing and performing her own educational one-woman
shows, The Rather Unusual Recital© and Wagner’s Weiber©. Both premiered at Marylea
van Daalen’s Opera Lecture Series at the Hotel Adlon in Berlin. Both shows are aimed
at educating and inspiring uninformed or as yet uninterested public about the wonders
of song recitals, the art of singing and especially to encourage enthusiasm about
attending live performances.
Since 2002, Ms. Rawlins has been developing with Jeanne Piland, (Kammersängerin,
leading mezzo soprano with the Deutsche Oper am Rhein and Professor of voice at the
Robert Schumann Hochschüle
in Düsseldorf, Germany) what she considers to be a new form
of performance master class.
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is a five-day intensive finishing school
for young artists based upon her years of experience working with Professor Piland’s
students at the Robert Schumann Hochschule in Düsseldorf, Germany.
Future projects include Ms. Rawlins’ new one-woman show The Truth about Carmen© 2007.
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What Is It?
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is a workshop/seminar/ Master Class created to assist you as a young artist
who is 'not quite there yet' to find yourself as an authentic interpreter of operatic repertoire.
Further, to help you to find your ‘fach’ or vocal category orientation and support your search
for excellence and consistency. This training will automatically help you to attain not only artistic
status but the charisma needed to achieve actual employment in the world of opera.
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is a play on words. ‘WORK’ is a given. This is a singing workshop situation.
Participants will present 3-4 operatic arias for positive critique and optimal restructuring,
thus a creative WORKSHOP atmosphere will be your space to grow.
To complete the wordplay
we will be, with your permission, rebelling in the form of a ‘sciopero’ which is the Italian
word for strike. We will strike against the negative conditioning you have received about
singing in public: who you are and how important you are as an interpreter of great composer’s
music. Finally, we hope to be of help in creating a new generation of singers who will open up
a new era of young artists who accept their own artistic authority.
Where Is It?
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2008 will be presented in German and English at:
Mozarteum Salzburg
August 5 und 6
Orchester Haus, Mozarteum
Yamaha Saal
Erzbischof-Gebhard-Strasse 10
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August 7, 8 und 9
Schauspielhaus Salzburg
„der Klub im Foyer“
Erzabt-Klotz-Strasse 22
When Is It?
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Five day intensive.
August 5th through August 9th, 2008
10AM-1PM.
- Lunch Break -
2PM - 5:30PM
Next
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Intensive - to be announced.
Please contact us by email for details
What to Bring
Music and Translations
1. Your arias and/or songs should be memorized.
Two copies of each selection one copy for your accompanist and
one for your Workshopera! team.
Note: Please make sure that the copies are easily readable.
This means that all of the notes must be visible on the copies-
especially the piano accompaniment.
2. Bring a translation and a short opera synopsis for each aria.
This does not a have to be dissertation. A paragraph will do.
Stage Agent
is the most concise website for short opera plots and character analysis.
3. If you are interested in Crossover work please bring one or two
selections from the Musical Theater repertoire.
Attire for Workshopera!
1.One ‘Audition Outfit’
(something you consider to be suitable for
presenting yourself optimally in an audition.) This audition outfit can
also double as your attire for the Participant’s Concert.
2. Please bring appropriate shoes for presenting yourself in an
audition situation. These ‘proper’ shoes will also be required
in some Workshopera! sessions.
4. Casual clothing and shoes for body movement and creativity classes.
5. Women -please bring skirts and summer dresses
6. Men -please bring dark pants and one white shirt
Personal Needs
1. Please bring something to keep you warm, a sweater or jacket in case
the class rooms or weather is cool.
2. Summer raingear might be necessary
3. Anything that will make you comfortable with Germany’s unpredictable
summer weather.
Electrical
1. Remember please: anything you bring that is electrically powered
(hair drier, hot rollers, shavers etc.) must have a voltage switch you can
alter to 220 volt and you will need a converter plug for Germany’s
two pronged wall sockets.
2. Your digital camera, recording device and laptop usually have built-in
AC 220 volt adaptors but you still need a German converter-connection
wall socket plug for these devices.
Health Needs
1. If you need dietary supplements, special medication or health products
please bring these with you. “Normal” health food needs can be met readily
in German ‘Reformhaus’ stores.
Reminder: You may keep your liquid products only if packed in your checked
luggage, otherwise they will be confiscated by the security officers at your
local airport.
Accomadations/Hotels
(NOTE: For Duesseldorf Workshopera! courses only)
LOCATION: Where to look for a place to stay:
The areas that are closest to the Hochschule in Duesseldorf are:
Derendorf, Pempelfort, Zentrum, Stockum and Golzheim.
Three web addresses for Hotel Reservations
Hotel Reservation Service
Hotel Booking Service
Duesseldorf-Tourismus
(Duesseldorf-Tourismus will available for Workshopera! participants. This is hotel booking agency.
They deal mostly with international guests and trade fair travelers)
There is an SAS Radisson and Hilton near by for the people who do not mind spending a bit
more for their accommodations or are more interested in a luxury hotel.
Here are three star hotels -nice comfortable hotels without extras
close to the Hochschule:
Michelangelo
Gildors
Spichern Platz
National
These four hotels know about Workshopera and are willing to give some discount but not
for the two days of the Düsseldorf Fashion Fair.
*For those of you wishing very low cost housing there is a Youth Hostel in Düsseldorf
and also some rooms in private homes available.
For information on the low cost housing possibilities please write to
oma.hofmann@web.de
Transportation
Transportation in Düsseldorf
to The Robert Schumann Hochschule
U-Bahn - The Underground train or Metro
U-78 or U-79 You get on the train in the direction of either Messe Nord, Kaiserswerth or
Duisburg.
(The train driection varies with the length of the scheduled journey)
Your stop is Kennedy Dam
Click on Image for Details
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Peter Benecke
formally of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein.
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Pieter Alferink
International Opera Agent,
Topic: The Audition; What Agents are looking for
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Harriet Rawlins Hill
Voice Faculty of Otterbein College
Topic: Crossover Career Potential in Musical Theater
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Gretchen Stein
Gretchen Stein was born in New Hampshire. After she received her Master of Music from Yale
University in Organ, she worked as an organist, accompanist and choir director in many churches
in the area.
Her love of opera and operetta brought her to Europe where she was a coach in the International
Opera Studio in Zurich and then at the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Duesseldorf.
Since 1976 she has worked as a freelance musician where she has organized, conducted and
accompanied many operetta performances, benefit concerts and continues to coach singers.

Jori Schulze-Reimpell
Jori Schulze-Reimpell studied Lieder accompanying with Hartmut Höll in Köln and conducting
with Wolfgang Trommer in Düsseldorf.
During the last few years he has composed stage music for Theaters in Köln, Wiesbaden and Bonn.
After he received his diploma in accompanying he became a coach and accompanist for the
Conservatory in Köln in 1993 and at the Conservatory in Düsseldorf in 2004.
He continues to be active as an accompanist and musical coach.

Pieter Alferink
Pieter Alferink founded Alferink Artists Management in 1971.
The agency located in Amsterdam, represents artists in the fields of recital,
(vocal) classical music and opera both for stage directors and singers as well as conductors.
Over the years the office of Alferink Artists Management has gained a strong
international reputation for building lasting and solid relationships with its artists
as well as for discovering new talent.
Some of the notable successes are Charlotte Margiono, Nelly Miricioiu, Hans Peter
Blochwitz and Thomas Quasthoff (Netherlands).
All started their careers with Alferink Artists Management and are still with them today.
The Alferink agency represents its artists either worldwide or simply in the Netherlands.
Alferink Artists Management built up and continue to nurture lasting relationships with
promoters, orchestras, concert venues and theatres in Europe, the United States,
the Far East and Australia.
For various promoters the agency provides vocal casting services for
recitals, concerts and opera productions as well as producing entire projects,
ranging from intimate recitals in churches to complete staged opera performances and festivals.
Alferink Artists Management is always striving to establish new relationships, be it with
artists of excellence, innovative promoters or with new staff in its bright and friendly
offices on the Herengracht.

Peter Benecke
Peter Benecke began his European career in 1981. in Düsseldorf and Duisburg as a leading
tenor of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein. After four and a half years there he became a
freelance singer throughout the Germany and European countries for nearly nineteen years.
His career spans over 20 years of operatic appearances in Europe. He was engaged as
leading tenor at the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Düsseldorf, Germany where he acquired a
repertoire of more than 40 leading tenor roles. His repertoire includes music from the
Baroque to the Renaissance period to modern music, with composers ranging from Cavalli to
Mozart, Puccini, Verdi, Wagner and contemporary, living composers. He has participated in
several world premieres of new works in Germany. He has performed concert repertoire with
many leading orchestras in Germany as well.
He has worked with such illustrious conductors as Jiri Kout, Friedemann Layer, Christian
Thielemann and many others. In 2006, Mr. Beneke performed a cycle of songs written
specifically for him by Marcus Englemann,
renowned composer from southern California.
He began teaching while already engaged as a tenor at the in Düsseldorf. Peter has been
teaching singers for the past fifteen years and took up teaching as his main profession after
his move to California in the year 2000.
Many of his students have become promising young artists and many have gone on to professional
careers in opera both in Europe and the US. He continues to perform concert repertoire,
ranging from Bach to contemporary music.
Peter Benecke’s goal is to train singers toward honesty of performance, singing with the
natural voice with which they were born. The process of learning to sing is likely to be
the biggest journey of self-awareness any person ever undertakes, and the rewards are tremendous.

Harriet Rawlins Hill
Harriet Rawlins Hill holds a Bachelor of Music degree from the Indiana University School
of Music. Her Voice Teachers were Margaret Harshaw and Elizabeth Mannion.
She is currently on voice faculty of Otterbein College in Ohio, with a focus on the vocal
study of both musical theatre and classical techniques.
Harriet Rawlins Hill spent over 25 years in New York City working as an actress,
singer and occasional casting agent for off Broadway productions. Over her
30-year career, she has appeared on the national musical theatre stage in nearly
3,000 performances. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s The Sound of Music, Carousel, and the
original production and DVD of Sweeney Todd, starring Angela Lansbury are but a few of
the musical theater productions in which Ms. Rawlins Hill has performed leading
and supporting roles.
The Gilbert & Sullivan repertoire has continued to be a musical specialty, having sung
the roles of Ruth in Pirates of Penzance, Buttercup in The HMS Pinafore, Dame Hannah
in Ruddigore, and Dame Carruthers in the Yeoman of the Guard. She was a principal soloist
on a CD of the Gilbert & Sullivan repertoire with the Rochester Philharmonic,
conducted by Mark Elder.
Ms. Rawlins Hill’s Professional Affiliations include her thirty-eight year membership in
Actors Equity and her new membership in the National Association of Teachers of Singing.
Her personal summary of onstage musical theatre and operetta professional performances
totals approximately 3,000, of those, her Actor’s Equity Performances total nearly 1500.
In addition to her work as vocal teacher and performer Harriet Rawlins Hill is also the
Auditions Coordinator for the Department of Theatre & Dance at Otterbein College and
personally schedules, counsels audition candidates and their family and hears over 300
audition appointments each year.
Her main teaching focus is vocal technique, crossover potential, song selection, vocal and
dramatic coaching; monologue selection; plus staging class situations for mock auditions
focusing on audition demeanor and stage presence under pressure.
Click on Image for Details
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Nadia Belneeva
Hamburg Symphony & Hamburg State Opera
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Gretchen Stein
formerly of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein
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Jori Schulze-Reimpell
Köln and Düsseldorf Hochschule
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Who is Eligible?
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If you are a young artist (with or without a present singing engagement) who speaks
or at least understands the English language.
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If you wish to have fun learning how
to find your authority as a performer and reverse negative programming about
who you are and what you can accomplish as a singer.
Who's Leading It?
Professor, KS Jeanne Piland
Creating the beautiful voice, musicality, Text Interpretation and Career Stamina
Emily Rawlins
Stage Deportment, Audition Class, Character Definition and Artistic Authority
Musical Coaches:
Nadia Belneeva
Hamburg Symphony & Hamburg State Opera
Jori Schulze-Reimpell
Köln and Düsseldorf Hochschule
Previous guest lecturers include:
Peter Benecke
formally of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein.
Pieter Alferink
International Opera Agent,
Topic: The Audition; What Agents are looking for
Harriet Rawlins Hill
Voice Faculty of Otterbein College
Topic: Crossover Career Potential in Musical Theater
How Does It Work?
Our intention is that
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will be unlike anything you have experienced thus far in
your studies, coachings, singing and acting lessons.
What will happen? Perhaps nothing if you are not open to changing the way you look at
yourself as a singer and artist.
What we hope to do is to OPEN you to yourself to such a degree that you will never have
doubts about why you are singing again. This alone will pave a way for natural charisma,
which is nothing other than an unconditionally positive self image. We also hope to have
quite a lot of fun in the process.
How Much Does It Cost?
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Tuition: 400 Euro
Workshopera! "Graduates": 200 Euro
Auditors: 100 Euro