Isaiah Bell performs across North America as a Classical tenor (notably Rufus Wainwright’s Hadrian at the Canadian Opera Company, The Barber of Seville’s Almaviva for Vancouver Opera, Mark Morris’s production of Curlew River at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, and regular appearances with the Toronto Symphony, Philharmonia Baroque, the National Arts Centre Orchestra, and the Oratorio Society of New York) and complements that practice with composing and writing for the theatre. Currently he combines these disciplines in his semi-autobiographical solo show The Book of My Shames, a co-creation with director Sean Guist around Isaiah’s own words and music. The piece, which tours in orchestrated and cabaret versions (Tapestry Opera/Pride Toronto, Pacific Opera Victoria/Intrepid Theatre, Opera Kelowna/Living Things Festival, Regina Symphony), has been described as “impossibly beautiful”, a “fascinating creation,” and a “comic, wrenchingly personal tour-de-force.” As a performer, Isaiah has established a particular relationship with the music of Britten, Handel, and Bach. He has appeared in many of Britten’s tenor roles (Albert Herring, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, War Requiem, Curlew River, Owen Wingrave, St. Nicolas) and has been seen across North America in Bach’s major works (including the Passions’ Evangelists) and cantatas. In addition to Handel’s Messiah, Isaiah has sung Acis and Damon in Acis and Galatea, and the tenors of Atalanta, Judas Maccabaeus, Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day, Joshua, and La resurrezione. During pandemic shutdowns, Isaiah created a diverse body of work, including translating, adapting, and performing Poulenc’s solo opera La voix humaine for a City Opera Vancouver filmed production (a “finely tuned performance, so perfectly married to his own sensitive and intelligent adaptation” — Opera Canada). He also designed hybrid concept recitals for Early Music Vancouver and Ottawa Chamberfest, which featured his own music and poetry alongside works from the Classical canon. For 200 days in 2020, Isaiah immersed himself into a large-scale daily art/music/poetry creation project inspired by the meditative practice of haiku writing. The results can be seen on Instagram @isaiahisaiahisaiahisaiahisaiah. Isaiah is also engaged with music education and creative-process training. He travels speaking and hosting master classes, and directs experimental concerts and stage productions for young artists (University of Victoria, Opera NUOVA, University of Toronto). Some of Isaiah’s upcoming projects include the world premiere of Julien Bilodeau and Michel Marc Bouchard’s La beauté du monde at Opéra de Montréal, Mendelssohn’s Elijah with the Oratorio Society of New York at Carnegie Hall, and Lysander in A Midsummer Night’s Dream in Des Moines. He will also premiere a newly orchestrated version of The Book of My Shames with the Regina Symphony’s Forward Current Festival.
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