news

Artist
Living Opera Music
10 min read
Nov 30, 2025
Living Opera Music Releases Debut Single from New Album Radio Days
Living Opera Music Releases Debut Single from New Album Radio Days ahead of the US250 celebrations.
CM Culture is thrilled to announce the release of “O Holy Night,” the first single from Living Opera’s new album Radio Days: The Golden Age of American Song. Featuring soprano Soula Parassidis and tenor Norman Reinhardt, the project marks a new phase in their recording and touring strategy under CM Culture’s management. Distributed through Universal Music Group, the single opens a campaign designed to position operatic voices within a broader contemporary entertainment market.
Creative Team and Artistic Direction
Produced by Grammy nominated songwriter Jeff Trott and arranged by Oscar winning pianist and orchestrator Patrick Warren, Radio Days brings Parassidis and Reinhardt’s international stage experience into a setting shaped by American song and early broadcast traditions. The album blends classical technique with the storytelling and orchestral language of the radio era, creating a sound that appeals to both classical and non classical listeners.
Why O Holy Night Leads the Release
“O Holy Night” was chosen as the debut single because of its historic significance in American media. On Christmas Eve 1906, inventor Reginald Fessenden broadcast what is widely recognized as the first radio program from Brant Rock, Massachusetts. During that transmission he performed “O Holy Night,” surprising ship operators who expected only Morse code. The moment revealed radio’s capacity to carry music and human expression across distance, setting the stage for how audiences would experience sound in the decades that followed.
Connecting to American Musical Heritage
By opening the album with “O Holy Night,” Living Opera draws a direct line from that first broadcast to the evolution of American listening habits. The release connects a familiar work with a landmark moment in the nation’s cultural and technological history, framing Radio Days as both a musical project and a tribute to the early forces that shaped American entertainment.
Looking Ahead
Timed in advance of the United States two hundred fiftieth anniversary, Radio Days will continue with additional singles and a national performance series suited for orchestras, festivals, broadcast partners, and civic events. Presenters, producers, and industry partners interested in booking, licensing, or collaboration opportunities may contact CM Culture for materials, availability, and project information.

Artist
Living Opera Music
10 min read
Nov 20, 2025
Living Opera Music is distributed by Universal Music Group
CM Culture Management is proud to mark this milestone for our client Living Opera.
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.
New Music on the Horizon
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!

Organisation
Living Opera Music
10 min read
Sep 18, 2025
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
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.

Living Opera Music
10 min read
Jan 2, 2025
Thinking Outside the Box – Defining the Market for Art and Culture
The size of the classical music sector might appear modest at first glance. Statista estimates the global classical music market, including ticket sales, recordings, and digital platforms, to be valued at approximately $281 million in 2018 in the United States and Europe combined.
The size of the classical music sector might appear modest at first glance. Statista estimates the global classical music market, including ticket sales, recordings, and digital platforms, to be valued at approximately $281 million in 2018 in the United States and Europe combined.
But to limit our understanding of the market for art and culture to traditional definitions like these is to overlook a vast and evolving landscape of what is possible.
Art and culture extend far beyond the concert halls and opera theaters. In fact, much of the classical community grew out of house concerts in the United States and Europe! By redefining our potential misconceptions of what classical music looks like, we uncover a much larger and more dynamic ecosystem—one that positions artists as central players not only in entertainment, but also in education, community building, and even corporate innovation.
The global art and entertainment industry is much bigger. PwC forecasted that the Media and Entertainment industry is expected to grow to $3.4 trillion by 2028, encompassing everything from film and streaming to live events and experiential platforms. Visual arts, theater, and immersive experiences are increasingly blurring the lines between traditional and new media. By considering classical music as part of this larger creative economy, we begin to see its potential to resonate with wider audiences and contribute to diverse industries.
For example, collaborations between classical musicians and digital platforms have led to exciting innovations, such as live-streamed concerts, virtual reality (VR) performances, and algorithm-curated playlists on Spotify and Apple Music. These formats not only expand access to classical music, but also integrate it into broader consumer habits. (For a future post: streaming platforms provide very little remuneration for artists, so they are not sustainable.)
Through our work with Living Opera, we have explained how artists can step beyond traditional venues to redefine their roles. In education, musicians are becoming advocates for interdisciplinary learning, bringing creativity into STEM fields to foster problem-solving and innovation. Community engagement programs leverage the power of music and art to address social issues, from mental health initiatives to urban revitalization projects.
Consider how orchestras now partner with corporations to provide immersive experiences for employees or how art installations appear in unexpected places like airports and hospitals.
This expanded view of the market for art and culture also repositions the artist. No longer confined to roles as performers, creators, or curators, today’s artists are entrepreneurs, digital innovators, and thought leaders. Agencies like ours aim to empower this evolution, connecting artists with nontraditional opportunities that align with their talents and aspirations. (And my research has also shown that artists who acquire some entrepreneurial training are able to command higher wages in the labor market.)
In a world where creativity is increasingly valued across all sectors, the market for art and culture is defined not just by traditional ticket sales or box office revenues but by its capacity to inspire, educate, and innovate. By thinking outside the box, we can redefine what it means to be an artist and explore the boundless opportunities within this ever-expanding market.
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