Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Amelia_Sierra> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 83 of
83
with 100 triples per page.
- Amelia_Sierra abstract "Amelia Sierra is a soprano and mezzo-soprano opera singer from Mexico. Sierra was born in Mexico City and completed her musical studies with the Escuela Superior de Música of the INBA. She has studied under Maritza Alemán, James Demster, Mario Alberto Hernández and Ricardo Sánchez as well as Magda Olivero, Montserrat Caballé, Ramón Vargas, Francisco Araiza, Carmo Barbosa, Dalton Baldwin, Dolores Aldea, Lara Pasquinelli, Joan Dornemann, Tito Capobianco and Susan Young . While in training, she received recognition with Best Performance at the FONCA-OCJM in 1995, third place in the Carlo Morelli National Singing Contest and first place the OSUG Competition, both in 1996. She also received recognition by the National Coordination of Music and Opera in 1996. She has received various grants for performing from the Education for Art Program at the University of Guanajuato and SIVAM. She continues to study informally in various workshops in New York City.She has performed a number of classic roles as well as sung in new works which premiered in Mexico. She debuted as a soloist in 1996 with the Carlos Chávez Symphonic Orchestra. She debuted with the Bellas Artes Opera in 2002 as Santuzza in Cavalleria rusticana by Mascagni and appeared again in 2004 in Il prigioniero by Dallapiccola and as Elvira in the world premier of the work Ambrosio by Mexican composer José Antonio Guzmán. In 2007, she sang the role of Madame Lidoine in Dialogues des Carmelites by Poulenc, the first time in fifty years the play was performed in Mexico. Some of her other opera appearances include Un ballo in Maschera, Il Trovatore, Simon Boccanegra and Macbeth by Verdi; Don Giovanni, Così fan tutte and Le Nozze di Figaro by Mozart; Iphigénie en Tauride by Glück, Il barbiere di Siviglia by Rossini, I pagliacci by Leoncavallo, as well as Suor Angelica, La bohème, Tosca and Turandot by Puccini. She participated in a tour of opera for children, sponsored by CONACULTA .In addition to performing in operatic theater, she also performs Baroque music as well as traditional Mexican and Spanish music at festivals and in radio programs, especially with pianist Carlos Pecero. She has performed at a number of festivals in Mexico, such as the Festival Internacional Cervantino in Guanajuato and the Festival Ortiz Tirado in Sonora . She has also performed at the Festival AMUBIS in Cartago, Costa Rica and at the University of Toronto . She has performed with a number of national orchestras, such as Orquesta de Cámara de la Universidad Michoacana and OFUNAM .Since 1997, Sierra has two to major teaching positions. The first was at the Singing Academy of the Escuela Superior de Música of INBA. She currently teaches at the Celaya Music Conservatory. She has also promoted the establishment of an opera company OPTA (Opera for Tampico) in Tampico, Tamaulipas . Since 1998, Sierra has received four grants for study and performance from the Fondo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes. Her most recent was to train to sing as a mezzo soprano with her first appearance as such in Il Trovatore by Verdi, which was performed in Monterrey in 2011.(homepage)".
- Amelia_Sierra thumbnail Mezzosoprano_Amelia_Sierra_2014-06-11_17-09.jpg?width=300.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageID "33518343".
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageLength "6301".
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageOutDegree "60".
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageRevisionID "686224478".
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_music.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Carlo_Morelli.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Carlos_Pecero.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Carmo_Barbosa.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Cartago,_Costa_Rica.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Category:Living_people.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mexican_female_singers.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mexican_operatic_sopranos.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Category:Singers_from_Mexico_City.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Cavalleria_rusticana.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Celaya.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Così_fan_tutte.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Dalton_Baldwin.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Dialogues_of_the_Carmelites.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Dolores_Aldea.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Don_Giovanni.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Escuela_Superior_de_Música.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Festival_AMUBIS.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Festival_Internacional_Cervantino.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Festival_Ortiz_Tirado.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Francisco_Araiza.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Giuseppe_Verdi.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Guanajuato_City.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Il_prigioniero.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Il_trovatore.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Instituto_Nacional_de_Bellas_Artes_y_Literatura.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Iphigénie_en_Tauride.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink James_Demster.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Joan_Dornemann.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink La_bohème.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Lara_Pasquinelli.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Macbeth.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Magda_Olivero.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Mario_Alberto_Hernández.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Maritza_Alemán.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Mexico.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Mexico_City.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Mezzo-soprano.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Monterrey.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Montserrat_Caballé.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink OFUNAM.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Orquesta_Sinfónica_de_la_Universidad_de_Guanajuato.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Pagliacci.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Palacio_de_Bellas_Artes.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Ramón_Vargas.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Secretariat_of_Culture.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Simon_Boccanegra.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Sonora.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Soprano.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Suor_Angelica.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Susan_Young.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Tampico.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink The_Barber_of_Seville.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink The_Marriage_of_Figaro.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Tito_Capobianco.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Turandot.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Un_ballo_in_Maschera.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink Universidad_de_Guanajuato.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Toronto.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageWikiLink File:Mezzosoprano_Amelia_Sierra_2014-06-11_17-09.jpg.
- Amelia_Sierra wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Amelia_Sierra subject Category:Living_people.
- Amelia_Sierra subject Category:Mexican_female_singers.
- Amelia_Sierra subject Category:Mexican_operatic_sopranos.
- Amelia_Sierra subject Category:Singers_from_Mexico_City.
- Amelia_Sierra hypernym Soprano.
- Amelia_Sierra type Person.
- Amelia_Sierra type Singer.
- Amelia_Sierra type Singer.
- Amelia_Sierra comment "Amelia Sierra is a soprano and mezzo-soprano opera singer from Mexico. Sierra was born in Mexico City and completed her musical studies with the Escuela Superior de Música of the INBA. She has studied under Maritza Alemán, James Demster, Mario Alberto Hernández and Ricardo Sánchez as well as Magda Olivero, Montserrat Caballé, Ramón Vargas, Francisco Araiza, Carmo Barbosa, Dalton Baldwin, Dolores Aldea, Lara Pasquinelli, Joan Dornemann, Tito Capobianco and Susan Young .".
- Amelia_Sierra label "Amelia Sierra".
- Amelia_Sierra sameAs Q4742305.
- Amelia_Sierra sameAs m.0h98s6s.
- Amelia_Sierra sameAs Q4742305.
- Amelia_Sierra wasDerivedFrom Amelia_Sierra?oldid=686224478.
- Amelia_Sierra depiction Mezzosoprano_Amelia_Sierra_2014-06-11_17-09.jpg.
- Amelia_Sierra isPrimaryTopicOf Amelia_Sierra.