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| Tobias Picker: Lili Elbe – Lucia Lucas – Theater St. Gallen 2023 |
Ever since John Adams and Alice Goodman focused on Richard Nixon’s 1972 visit to China, contemporary opera (and contemporary American opera in particular) has mined recent events and politics for themes. Two recordings scheduled for release during July and August highlight this. In July, Bright Shiny Things releases the premiere recording of Tobias Picker’s Lili Elbe, first grand opera created for and about a historical figure of trans identity, and then in August Blue Griffin Records issue Ricky Ian Gordon’s The Tibetan Book of the Dead: An Opera, a work from 1995 intimately bound up in the AIDS crisis.
Tobias Picker’s Lili Elbe centres on the life of Danish painter Lili Elbe, one of the first known recipients of multiple experimental gender confirmation surgeries, which tragically ended her life. The work was premiered at the Theater St. Gallen in Switzerland in 2023 [see my article] and recorded live at the dress rehearsal. This recording is being issued in August to coincide with the American premiere of the work at the Santa Fe Opera Festival, where Picker’s first opera Emmeline premiered 30 years ago.
The work has a libretto by Aryeh Lev Stollman, Picker’s partner of over 45 years, novelist, and neuroradiologist at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York City. Much of the material derives from historical sources. Picker who is drawn to writing operas about strong female protagonists, described Lili’s longing to fully inhabit womanhood as profoundly operatic — a psychological and emotional conflict he sees as no less intense than that of typical operatic tragic heroines.
The title role was written for transgender baritone Lucia Lucas who sings on the recording and at Santa Fe and as does soprano Sylvia D’Eramo in the role of Gerda Wegener. The recording features Modestas Pitrėnas conducting the Sinfonieorchester St. Gallen.
Tobias Picker’s Lili Elbe is released on Bright Shiny Things on 31 July 2026, and opens at Santa Fe Opera on 1 August.
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| Ricky Ian Gordon: The Tibetan Book of the Dead: An Opera Eric Owens, Jonita Lattimore, Frank Hernandez – 1996 (Photo: Jim Caldwell) |
Blue Griffin Records’ recording of Ricky Ian Gordon‘s 1995 opera, The Tibetan Book of the Dead: An Opera is based on restored archival recordings made at The American Music Theater Festival in June 1996. The opera was co-commissioned by Houston Grand Opera and The American Music Theatre Festival and is inspired by ancient Tibetan Buddhist teachings, depicting epic journey of a dying soul through a series of spiritual and emotional planes along the road of rebirth.
The background to the opera is the AIDS crisis and the libretto dramatises, in seventeen scenes, the death of an individual, the journey through the “bardo,” (in between) and the rebirth. The work’s origins are intertwined with Ricky Ian Gordon’s relationship at the time, with Jeffrey Grossi, who was already living with HIV when they first met. It was Grossi who encouraged the composer to learn Buddhist teachings and immerse himself in Sogyal Rinpoche’s 1992 book The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying. [Sogyal Rinpoche was a Tibetan Buddhist teacher who would eventually become a not uncontroversial figure – see the BBC article on his death in 2019]
The opera came together relatively quickly. David Gockley, who had asked Gordon for a commission for Houston Grand Opera, suggested the book as a source for an opera and a libretto was created within two days. Despite his illness and largely being confined to bed, Jeffrey Grossi was able to see one of the Philadelphia performances of the opera, where archival tapes were made.
It was these tapes that became the basis for the new release. Whilst working on his memoir Seeing Through: A Chronicle of Sex, Drugs, and Opera, Gordon wondered whether the archive tapes could be made viable. The final product is the result of painstaking work on the originals. The recording features artists from The Houston Grand Opera studio: baritone Frank Hernandez, bass Eric Owens, sopranos Nicole Heaston and Jonita Lattimore, mezzo-sopranos Beth Clayton and Jill Grove, tenors John McVeigh and Gabriel Gonzalez, and Orchestra 2001 conducted by Charles Prince.
Ricky Ian Gordon’s The Tibetan Book of the Dead: An Opera is released on Blue Griffin Records on 14 August 2026.





