Maddalena Del Gobbo to present new album "Maddalena in Wonderland"
10 min read
Jun 18, 2025
On June 23, acclaimed cellist Maddalena Del Gobbo will present her latest album, Maddalena in Wonderland, at the Italian Embassy in Vienna. Released by Supreme Classics, the album reimagines the relationship between historical performance and contemporary storytelling, inviting listeners into a richly textured sonic landscape. The evening will include remarks from the artist, live excerpts from the album, and a reception in the embassy’s historic salons. Presented in partnership with Supreme Classics, the event is expected to draw a distinguished audience from the worlds of diplomacy, the arts, and cultural leadership.
About the Album
Del Gobbo’s creative work consistently pushes against conventional boundaries of genre and presentation. Maddalena in Wonderland continues that trajectory, offering a program that merges baroque repertoire with personal narrative, cinematic pacing, and a sense of theatrical wonder. The album reflects her commitment to historically informed performance—but filtered through a modern lens that values experimentation and emotional immediacy.
A Cultural Context
The Italian Embassy in Vienna, long a site for fostering international dialogue through the arts, provides a fitting backdrop for this launch. In recent years, the embassy has supported artists working at the intersection of heritage and innovation—a context in which Del Gobbo’s work resonates strongly. As cultural diplomacy increasingly involves interdisciplinary and experiential formats, events like this serve not only as artistic showcases but as platforms for conversation between sectors—artistic, diplomatic, and institutional.
Bridging Disciplines, Expanding Horizons
Maddalena Del Gobbo’s latest project reflects a vision that aligns closely with our work at CM Culture: honoring tradition while challenging its boundaries. Maddalena in Wonderland brings baroque performance into dialogue with narrative, imagination, and visual aesthetics—demonstrating how classical music can be experienced not only as repertoire, but as environment and story.
As with all the projects we support, this launch is more than a singular event. It marks the start of a broader conversation about how classical artists today can shape the future of the art form—on their own terms, and in spaces that invite cross-cultural and cross-sector engagement. We look forward to seeing how this work evolves in the months ahead.
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On June 23, acclaimed cellist Maddalena Del Gobbo will present her latest album, Maddalena in Wonderland, at the Italian Embassy in Vienna. Released by Supreme Classics, the album reimagines the relationship between historical performance and contemporary storytelling, inviting listeners into a richly textured sonic landscape. The evening will include remarks from the artist, live excerpts from the album, and a reception in the embassy’s historic salons. Presented in partnership with Supreme Classics, the event is expected to draw a distinguished audience from the worlds of diplomacy, the arts, and cultural leadership.
About the Album
Del Gobbo’s creative work consistently pushes against conventional boundaries of genre and presentation. Maddalena in Wonderland continues that trajectory, offering a program that merges baroque repertoire with personal narrative, cinematic pacing, and a sense of theatrical wonder. The album reflects her commitment to historically informed performance—but filtered through a modern lens that values experimentation and emotional immediacy.
A Cultural Context
The Italian Embassy in Vienna, long a site for fostering international dialogue through the arts, provides a fitting backdrop for this launch. In recent years, the embassy has supported artists working at the intersection of heritage and innovation—a context in which Del Gobbo’s work resonates strongly. As cultural diplomacy increasingly involves interdisciplinary and experiential formats, events like this serve not only as artistic showcases but as platforms for conversation between sectors—artistic, diplomatic, and institutional.
Bridging Disciplines, Expanding Horizons
Maddalena Del Gobbo’s latest project reflects a vision that aligns closely with our work at CM Culture: honoring tradition while challenging its boundaries. Maddalena in Wonderland brings baroque performance into dialogue with narrative, imagination, and visual aesthetics—demonstrating how classical music can be experienced not only as repertoire, but as environment and story.
As with all the projects we support, this launch is more than a singular event. It marks the start of a broader conversation about how classical artists today can shape the future of the art form—on their own terms, and in spaces that invite cross-cultural and cross-sector engagement. We look forward to seeing how this work evolves in the months ahead.
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A new milestone: Living Opera is distributed by Universal Music Group.
CM Culture Management is proud to mark this milestone for our client Living Opera. With this development, Living Opera continues to grow as a creative studio that brings classical performance into conversation with contemporary sound and creative storytelling.
Living Opera’s Creative Direction
Living Opera develops original recordings, multimedia projects, and live performances that blend classical technique with modern artistic approaches. The studio focuses on work that connects music, narrative, and culture for audiences across generations.
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The first single arrives on November 28 and comes from Living Opera’s upcoming project Radio Days. This release introduces a new series of recordings that explore the musical landscape of the early American broadcasting era ahead of the US250 celebrations in 2026.
About CM Culture Management
CM Culture Management represents artists and creative ventures that bridge classical performance and contemporary media. Through strategic development, production support, and brand building, CM Culture helps artists expand their reach while maintaining their full artistic vision. We are thrilled for Living Opera and can't wait to see what this new chapter holds!
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Living Opera Launches a New Chapter: A Digital Home for a Global Vision
Living Opera Launches a New Chapter: A Digital Home for a Global Vision

Sep 18, 2025
10 min read
Living Opera Launches a New Chapter: A Digital Home for a Global Vision
Living Opera unveils its new website and Foundation, marking a new phase in its mission to make the impossible possible. The platform now unites its work across music, education, research, and philanthropy in one place, celebrating five years of growth and looking ahead to the next chapter of artist-led innovation. Founded by soprano Soula Parassidis and tenor Norman Reinhardt in 2019, Living Opera began as a conversation about how to create a new internal culture for classical musc. That conversation has become a movement spanning stages, studios, and classrooms worldwide.
A Foundation for the Future
The newly formed Living Opera Foundation transforms a vision into structure. It provides a home for initiatives that unite creativity and purpose, including the Kristin Okerlund Masterclass Series, which mentors young artists and honors one of Living Opera’s most cherished collaborators, the Eric Wilson Prize, recognizing artistic integrity and leadership, and the Circles network, a model for sustainable, community-driven performance. Each initiative is guided by the same principles that have defined Living Opera from the beginning: service, purpose, story, and excellence.
Music, Media, and Meaning
Living Opera Media expands the organization’s storytelling through recordings, podcasts, and film. Upcoming projects include Radio Days: The Golden Age of American Song, celebrating the music that once brought families together across the airwaves, Muse of the Golden Throne, a revival of rare art songs inspired by the poetry of Sappho, and Behind the Curtain, a podcast revealing the real lives of artists who make today’s culture possible. Each project shares one goal: to make art accessible without losing its depth and to show that classical music continues to speak with power and relevance.
Building the Culture They Want to Live In
As Living Opera enters its next chapter, the message remains constant: beauty endures when it is built with purpose. The new website invites audiences, partners, and patrons to explore how the organization blends tradition with innovation, art with data, and performance with community. What began as two artists seeking meaning in their craft has become a global network proving that excellence, generosity, and sustainability can coexist.
Visit www.livingopera.org to learn more.
10 min read
Jun 28, 2025
Norman Reinhardt featured on Medici TV
Norman Reinhardt featured on Medici TV in Strauss’s Capriccio from Teatro Real Madrid in a landmark staging by Christof Loy.

Jun 28, 2025
10 min read
Norman Reinhardt Featured on Medici TV in Strauss’s Capriccio from Teatro Real Madrid
A Sophisticated Turn in a Philosophical Comedy of Love and Art
Tonight, American tenor Norman Reinhardt appears in one of Richard Strauss’s most elegant and conceptually rich operas—Capriccio—streaming on Medici TV in a landmark production from Teatro Real Madrid. Directed by Christof Loy and conducted by Asher Fisch, this staging brings renewed clarity to Strauss’s final opera, a work that trades spectacle for subtlety and stakes for satire.
A Role Rooted in Artistry, Not Display
Reinhardt sings the role of Flamand, a composer locked in a genteel battle of wits and aesthetics with poet Olivier (Andrè Schuen), both vying for the affection of the Countess Madeleine. Though Capriccio may lack the overt drama of Strauss’s earlier works like Salome or Elektra, it demands considerable finesse from its performers—both vocally and dramatically. As Flamand, Reinhardt delivers Strauss’s conversational lyricism with clarity and conviction, shaping musical phrases that are at once tender and intellectually alive.
The role places him in the center of an opera that is less a story than a dialogue—between characters, and between art forms. Flamand’s music, particularly his setting of Olivier’s sonnet, becomes a vehicle for exploring whether music or poetry more fully captures the essence of human feeling.
Capriccio: Music, Words, and the Artist’s Dilemma
Premiered in 1942, Capriccio is a metatheatrical opera that stages an 18th-century debate about artistic primacy: should opera privilege words or music? But beneath the polished surface of this “conversation piece,” as Strauss and librettist Clemens Krauss described it, lies a meditation on artistic responsibility, the nature of creation, and the impossibility of separating beauty from subjectivity.
Set in a château outside Paris during the Enlightenment, the opera’s refined setting mirrors its refined concerns. Under Loy’s direction, the production emphasizes the stylized, almost mannerist qualities of the piece, while allowing moments of genuine feeling to emerge—particularly in the complex emotional landscape surrounding the Countess’s choice (or refusal to choose) between her two suitors.
A Career Defined by Range and Intelligence
For Reinhardt, this role continues a pattern of high-caliber engagements that emphasize his versatility. Known for his performances in Mozart, Strauss, and 20th-century repertoire, Reinhardt brings an unusually clear diction and thoughtful phrasing to roles that often require more than vocal power. As Flamand, he strikes the balance between artistic passion and courtly restraint—a challenge not only of singing but of characterization.
A Global Stage for a Chamber Opera
With Teatro Real’s production reaching audiences worldwide via Medici TV, this Capriccio offers viewers a rare opportunity to encounter Strauss’s most intimate opera in a richly realized staging. It also places Reinhardt before an international audience in a role that demands—and rewards—artistic nuance.