Hironori Jo Tenor Recital

城宏憲 テノール・リサイタル
Opera concert

Hironori Jo Tenor Recital is Opera concert event held in Japan.

As the music hall, Hakuju Hall set up reclining seats in the audience for the first time in the world. Since its opening, "Reclining Concert" has been continued and received favorable reviews. It is a series that enjoys the highest acoustics with the whole body while concentrating comfortably at the same time a feeling of tense air in the classical concert hall as well as a feeling of relaxation in the live house. By tasting the raw music relaxingly with the reclining seats in all seats, you can enjoy the sounds that you could not hear and listen to the charm of music. Please spend a relaxing time at Hakuju Hall with beautiful sound.

Hironori Jo has a high calling of "tenor who will bear the next generation" with shining beautiful voice and masterpiece performance. This time, as a solo recital, we have the most hot attention now with the program which has opera · aria from handel baroque opera "Julius · Caesar of Egypt", Gnor "Romeo and Juliet", Donizetti "Roberto · deglieu" etc.
Please enjoy the charm of music!

People

Hironori Jo

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He won Sienna Grand Prize at the 42nd Italian Vocal Concords and the 1st place and the Iwatani prize at the 84th Japan Music Competition. He graduated from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and won Acanthus music award, completed the New National Theater Opera Training Center. Hironori Jo is a male tenor singer in Japan.

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Handel

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George Frideric Handel was a German, later British, Baroque composer who spent the bulk of his career in London, becoming well-known for his operas, oratorios, anthems, and organ concertos. Handel received important training in Halle-upon-Saale and worked as a composer in Hamburg and Italy before settling in London in 1712; he became a naturalised British subject in 1727. He was strongly influenced both by the great composers of the Italian Baroque and by the middle-German polyphonic choral tradition.

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Giacomo Puccini

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Giacomo Puccini was an Italian opera composer who has been called "the greatest composer of Italian opera after Verdi". Puccini's early work was rooted in traditional late-19th-century romantic Italian opera. Later, he successfully developed his work in the realistic verismo style, of which he became one of the leading exponents.

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Tomoko Nakajima

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Tomoko Nakajima is a Japanese actress best known for playing Hotaru Kuroita in the long-running television drama Kita no Kuni kara ("From a Northern Country"). She won the award for best supporting actress at the 12th Yokohama Film Festival for Tugumi.

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Things you may know to enjoy

Tosca

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Tosca is an opera in three acts by Giacomo Puccini to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa. It premiered at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome on 14 January 1900. The work, based on Victorien Sardou's 1887 French-language dramatic play, La Tosca, is a melodramatic piece set in Rome in June 1800, with the Kingdom of Naples's control of Rome threatened by Napoleon's invasion of Italy. It contains depictions of torture, murder and suicide, as well as some of Puccini's best-known lyrical arias.

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William Shakespeare

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William Shakespeare (bapt. 26 April 1564 – 23 April 1616) was an English poet, playwright and actor, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's greatest dramatist. Shakespeare produced most of his known works between 1589 and 1613.

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Such theories are often criticised for failing to adequately note that few records survive of most commoners of the period. Sometime between 1585 and 1592, he began a successful career in London as an actor, writer, and part-owner of a playing company called the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later known as the King's Men.

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Musical ensemble

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A musical ensemble, also known as a music group or musical group, is a group of people who perform instrumental or vocal music, with the ensemble typically known by a distinct name. Music ensembles typically have a leader. In rock and pop ensembles, usually called rock bands or pop bands, there are usually guitars and keyboards (piano, electric piano, Hammond organ, synthesizer, etc.

In jazz ensembles or combos, the instruments typically include wind instruments (one or more saxophones, trumpets, etc. Conductors are also used in jazz big bands and in some very large rock or pop ensembles (e.g., a rock concert that includes a string section, a horn section and a choir which are accompanying a rock band's performance). Some music ensembles consist solely of singers, such as choirs and doo wop groups.

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In classical music, trios or quartets either blend the sounds of musical instrument families (such as piano, strings, and wind instruments) or group together instruments from the same instrument family, such as string ensembles (e.g., string quartet) or wind ensembles (e.g., wind quintet).

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About this area

Tokyo

Tokyo (Japanese: [toːkjoː] , English /ˈ t oʊ k i . oʊ / ), officially Tokyo Metropolis, is the capital of Japan and one of its 47 prefectures. The Greater Tokyo Area is the most populous metropolitan area in the world. It is the seat of the Emperor of Japan and the Japanese government. Tokyo is in the Kantō region on the southeastern side of the main island Honshu and includes the Izu Islands and Ogasawara Islands. Formerly known as Edo, it has been the de facto seat of government since 1603 when Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu made the city his headquarters. It officially became the capital after Emperor Meiji moved his seat to the city from the old capital of Kyoto in 1868; at that time Edo was renamed Tokyo. Tokyo Metropolis was formed in 1943 from the merger of the former Tokyo Prefecture (東京府 , Tōkyō-fu) and the city of Tokyo (東京市 , Tōkyō-shi) .

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