PAUL SPENCER ADKINS (TENOR)
A winner in the First Luciano Pavarotti International Voice Competition as well as the Philadelphia and Princeton Metropolitan Opera auditions, tenor, Paul Spencer Adkins enjoys a career in the United States and abroad. He has performed leading tenor roles with opera companies which include the Greater Miami Opera, the Opera Company of Philadelphia, Pittsburgh Opera, Chicago Opera Theater, Tulsa Opera, Des Moines Metro Opera, Opera Delaware, Orlando Opera, Boston Lyric Opera, Virginia Opera, Cleveland Opera, Lake George Opera and Opera Columbus among others. Mr. Adkins’ European operatic debut was with the Netherlands Opera Forum as Nadir in The Pearl Fishers. Symphonic engagements include the Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, the Milwaukee Symphony, the Toronto Philharmonic Orchestra; the Richmond Symphony, Mexico's National Symphony and the Philadelphia Orchestra. Mr. Adkins has performed with the Flanders Opera Orchestra, Belgium, RAI Orchestra in Milano, Italy; the Swedish Radio Orchestra along with the Bournemouth and Portsmouth Symphony Orchestras of Great Britain.
Adkins' television credits include the co‐producer and featured solo artist
in the international PBS broadcast of “The Musical Legacy of Roland Hayes.” His appearance in the children's opera, A Star For Kitty, for “Mr. Rodgers’ Neighborhood” is rebroadcast annually. Paul Spencer Adkins is an Adjunct Associate Professor for the University of the Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was also the first vocal director for Peter Nero and The Philly Pops® Voices of the Pops, a resident ensemble. Mr. Adkins is a principal artist of Creative Leaps International and its parent company, Associated Solo Artists, Inc. Two solo CD’s “How Can I Keep from Singing” and "PART of a PAINTING" are available from www.cdbaby.com.
LISA DALTIRUS (SOPRANO)
Lisa Daltirus is an international vocalist with a radiant voice of beauty, power, nuance and a demanding stage presence. She is an active soloist in opera, symphonic concerts and recitals. Lisa has received acclaim on opera stages of the world in the title roles of Tosca
and Aida, Leonora in Il Trovatore, Bess and Serena in Porgy and Bess
to name a few. She has performed with the Metropolitan Opera, the Seattle Opera, Portland Opera, Connecticut Opera, Lyric Opera of Kansas City, and Arizona Opera, the Washington National Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, on tour in London, Edinburgh and Cardiff with the Cape Town Opera and in concert with the Orlando Philharmonic and the Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles. Additional regional companies include, Palm Beach Opera, Minnesota Opera, Michigan Opera Theatre, Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Theatre of St. Louis, and the Opera Company of Philadelphia. European engagements include Amsterdam, Thessaloniki, Greece, the Opera Nationale de Nancy, France and Copenhagen, Denmark. An active soloist with orchestra, Lisa has performed at Carnegie Hall with New York Grand Opera Orchestra, Avery Fisher Hall with the Richard Tucker Foundation and members of the Met and NY Philharmonic Orchestras, the Philadelphia Orchestra in the Kimmel and Mann Music Centers, Shanghai City Orchestra Shanghai, China, the Radio Philharmonic at the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam and many others.
Celebrated works performed include the Beethoven 9th, Mahler’s 4th and 8th Symphony, Verdi’s and Mozart’s Requiem and Knoxville Summer of 1915. Ms. Daltirus has received awards and recognition from the NJ State Opera Vocal Competition, the Joy of Singing competition, The Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions, The Liederkranz International Vocal Competition and the New York Vocal Artists Competition. She is also a grantee of the Singer's Development Fund in NYC and the William Matthews Sullivan Foundation.
The New York Times
said, “Imperious, her eyes ablaze, the very image of Tosca...she exuded an intangible electricity, that charge that comes across to the audience when something is really happening onstage.”
Opera News
reported, “plainly a star in the making...Leontyne Price is a clear (and welcome) model vocally... Her full, liquid sound illuminated line after line with musical polish and detail and soared impressively on high B-flats and Cs.”
JOHN CIMINO (BARITONE)
John Cimino is an award-winning operatic and concert artist who has performed throughout the United States, Europe and around the globe on six continents. Among his performance credits are a gala opening night with the Opera Company of Philadelphia as "Marcello" in La Boheme
opposite tenor Luciano Pavarotti; "Miller" in Verdi's Louisa Miller
with Carlo Bergonzi at the International Verdi Festival in Busseto, Italy; “Sharpless” with the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra opposite Anna Moffo; “Cascart" in Leoncavallo's Zaza at the Wexford Opera Festival in Ireland; "Alfio" in Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana
with New York City Opera; "Wulf" in Puccini's Le Villi, "Silvio" in I Pagliacci
and “Cascart” in Leoncavallo’s Zaza
with New Jersey State Opera; “Tonio” in Pagliacci
with New Orleans Opera; "Figaro" in Rossini's Barber of Seville
with Piedmont Opera Theater and the San Antonio Opera; the title role in Verdi's Rigoletto
with San Francisco's Western Opera; and the title roles in Man of La Mancha
and The Most Happy Fella
with various American theater companies. Cimino has more than 20 international prizes to his credit including the First Pavarotti International Voice Competition and the International Verdi Competition.
Cimino's musical training was accomplished at the Manhattan and Juilliard Schools of Music where he studied voice with lifelong friend and teacher, Maestro Daniel Ferro, and in Italy where he studied Verdi with the famous Maestro Ettore Campogalliani who afterwards presented him in debut performance at the revered Amici del la Lirica in Mantova where he had previously introduced both Luciano Pavarotti and Carlo Bergonzi.
Cimino is also an avid composer-lyricist of opera, musical theater and art songs, including works based on the paintings of American artist, Thomas Cole, and the poetry of William Blake, Walt Whitman, Stephen Crane, Loren Eiseley, Daniel Berrigan and his own original texts as well. Cimino is co-founder and president of Associated Solo Artists, The Learning Arts, and Creative Leaps International and, most recently, founded the Renaissance Center for Knowledge Integration, Interdisciplinary Thinking and Advanced Applications of Imagination with funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Of Cimino’s singing reviewers have said: "For sheer beauty of lyric singing, Cimino walked away with the prize." (NEWARK STAR LEDGER); "...a virile, smoothly produced baritone ...the most beautiful singing of the
evening." (NEW YORK TIMES)
JON KLIBONOFF (PIANIST)
A versatile recitalist, orchestra soloist and chamber musician, Jon Klibonoff has performed extensively throughout the U.S. and abroad. His various honors include first prizes in the Kosciuszko Chopin Competition and the silver medal in the 1984 Gina Bachauer International Piano Competition. Klibonoff has appeared as soloist with the Utah, Baltimore, Richmond, Denver, New Orleans, Oakland, Syracuse, and North Carolina symphonies, as well as the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Denver Chamber Orchestra. Mr. Klibonoff is a past recipient of a NEA solo recitalist's grant and has been sponsored by the Pro Musicis Foundation in recital throughout the world.
A founding member of the acclaimed ensemble, Trio Solisti, he has performed in major venues such as Lincoln Center, the Kennedy Center, and at numerous colleges and universities throughout the United States. Mr. Klibonoff is also a principal member of Associated Solo Artists, an organization that performs concerts, educational programs and corporate events. He holds degrees from the Manhattan School of Music and from The Juilliard School and is on the faculties of the Manhattan School of Music and Concordia Conservatory of Music.