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Breadth of experience: Kristin Gornstein

Kristen Gornstein, credit Jessica Osber
For mezzo soprano Kristin Gornstein (MM ā€™08), studying voice performance at CU Boulderā€™s College of Music was a time of growth as a singer and actor.

ā€œI came to the College of Music for the opera experience,ā€ says Gornstein (left, credit Jessica Osber), praised as ā€œa fine actress with a deep, spacious soundā€ (Parterre). ā€œI got some great roles while I was there, singing as a soprano. I covered the really high part in ā€˜The Rape of Lucretia,ā€™ among several other roles [including ā€˜Vixen Sharp-Earsā€™ in LeoÅ” JanĆ”Äekā€™s ā€˜The Cunning Little Vixen,ā€™ ā€˜Mariaā€™ in Leonard Bernsteinā€™s ā€˜West Side Storyā€™ and ā€˜Kitty Hartā€™ in Jake Heggieā€™s ā€˜Dead Man Walkingā€™].

ā€œMy experience at CU Boulder was wonderful timing in terms of gaining confidence to audition, knowing that I could carry a stage.ā€

Indeed, Gornstein is now a frequent performer on the New York opera scene, having appeared as ā€œLucretiaā€ in Benjamin Brittenā€™s ā€œThe Rape of Lucretiaā€ (below right, credit David Altman) and ā€œRosinaā€ in Gioachino Rossiniā€™s ā€œIl barbiere di Sivigliaā€ with the Loft Opera, as well as taking on the roles of ā€œMrs. Slenderā€ in Antonio Salieriā€™s ā€œFalstaffā€ with the Dellā€™Arte Opera, ā€œDulcinĆ©eā€ in Jules Massenetā€™s ā€œDon Quichotteā€ with the Utopia Opera and ā€œRomeoā€ in Vincenzo Belliniā€™s ā€œI Capuleti e i Montecchiā€ with Opera Modo. Her many opera roles further include ā€œAngelinaā€ in Rossiniā€™s ā€œLa Cenerentolaā€ with the Salt Marsh Opera, and ā€œPaulā€ in the world premiere of Kurt Vonnegut and Richard Clarkā€™s ā€œHappy Birthday, Wanda Juneā€ with the Indianapolis Opera.

Kristen Gornstein and on stage, credit David Altman
Additionally, Gornstein credits her CU Boulder experience with turning her on to new music. ā€œI learned how it worksā€”meeting and working directly with composers and getting the chance to have some input,ā€ she says. ā€œThe College of Music refined my understanding of collaborating with living composers and premiering their works. Itā€™s become a big part of what I do in New York.ā€

Edgy and imaginative, Gornstein is an associate artist with Heartbeat Opera, appearing as featured soloist in at National Sawdust in Brooklyn and as part of the first fully staged opera pastiche ever performed on Manhattanā€™s High Line. Previously, she and her husbandā€”, also a College of Music alumnus, having earned a masterā€™s degree emphasizing both classical and jazz traditionsā€”spent a year in Stockholm, Sweden, where Drickey was a Fulbright scholar teaching American roots music at the Royal College of Music while learning from Swedish folk masters. Meanwhile, Gornstein attended the Opera College of Stockholm and performed at the Royal Opera, premiering as the mezzo-soprano soloist in Karl Unander-Scharinā€™s Opera ā€œMecatronicaā€ and reprising that performance in the Operadagen Rotterdam Festivalā€™s production of ā€œDistant Voices.ā€

Kristen Gornstein and husband on stage, credit Heartbeat Opera
When the couple (left, onstage performing at ā€œCollaboret," credit Heartbeat Opera)Ģżreturned to this side of the Atlantic in 2012, Gornstein credits Opera Music Director Nicholas Carthy for connecting her to a voice teacher to hone her singing and deepen her sense of self as an artist. Specifically, Gornsteinā€™s training includes improvisation study and subsequent performances with OperaWorks founder Ann Baltz, as well as extensive movement and dance training. In 2015, Gornstein was a fellow with the Tanglewood Music Center, where she was featured as soloist in Steven Mackeyā€™s ā€œMadrigal,ā€ Johann Sebastian Bachā€™s Cantata BWV 155 and as ā€œFederico GarcĆ­a Lorcaā€ in excerpts from Osvaldo Golijovā€™s ā€œAinadamar.ā€

Gornstein was further lauded for her portrayal of ā€œRamiroā€ in Mozartā€™s ā€œLa finta giardinieraā€ in a co-production by On Site Opera and Atlanta Opera, a role she reprised in 2018 at the Caramoor Center for Music and the Arts. The same year, she made her Carnegie Hall debut, winning third place in the Lyndon Woodside Oratorio Competition.

Today, Gornstein and Drickey are at home in Beacon, a suburb of New York. ā€œItā€™s a small townā€”about 10,000 peopleā€” thatā€™s hugely artistic,ā€ Gornstein reflects. ā€œIā€™ve been doing some modern stuff and a lot of earlier music, like the early-Mozart ā€˜Shepherd King.ā€™ā€

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, arias from ā€œThe Shepherd Kingā€ will be recorded for video, available this month (check for updates); she hopes the postponed production of ā€œIl Re Pastoreā€ by the little OPERA theatre of ny (LOTNY) will be successfully rescheduled this fall.

ā€œIā€™ve worked with LOTNY in the past,ā€ she adds. ā€œComing back to those relationships time and time again is incredibly rewarding.ā€

Her advice to new grads, especially in this period of uncertainty? ā€œYouā€™ve soaked up 23 years or so of learning and taking othersā€™ advice. Now, youā€™re the one in charge. More than ever, think about what you really want to doā€”and whatever your passion is, thereā€™s a path waiting for you.

Ģżā€œNo one knows whatā€™s happening right now, which can be a wonderful time to ask what you envision for yourselfā€”and then follow or create the path that leads you there.ā€