The Curse of Athena for Dramatic Mezzo Soprano and Chorus, The Hero and the Damned Opera by James Nathaniel Holland Sheet Music for Choir at Sheet Music Direct
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The Curse of Athena for Dramatic Mezzo Soprano and Chorus, The Hero and the Damned Opera Digital Sheet Music
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The Curse of Athena for Dramatic Mezzo Soprano and Chorus, The Hero and the Damned Opera
by James Nathaniel Holland Choir - Digital Sheet Music

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Product Description

With over 17,000 views of this piece on YouTube, if you're a dramatic mezzo soprano, shouldn't you have recorded this aria already? Now it is available in piano vocal score form with SSATB Chorus. Orchestral accompaniment sold separately.

Video Presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bR-EnUHxWus
Complete Opera Playlist at: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLEcbVsA36MCvAKaFfvS0td_-dkofF4KvQ

The Hero and the Damned, An Opera in 4 acts (The Greek myth of Perseus and Medusa)
Adaptation, Music and Libretto by James Nathaniel Holland
Composer website: http://lacoronadelossantos.net/jamesnathanielholland.html

(Duration: 4:13) (Range: G3 to E5)

The Hero and the Damned The Rape of Medusa, The Curse of Athena and Act I Finale
SCENE SYNOPSIS:

In the previous scenes, Medusa (soprano) is a beautiful virgin priestess of the goddess Athena, who men are breaking into the temple to claim. After her sisters, Eurayle (mezzo soprano) and Stenno (alto), fend off three youths. Medusa brags of her beauty and tells them that a soldier has invited them to a Cretian feast.

We pick up where Medusa instructs her sisters to prepare themselves well for their temporary escape, while she waits for them. Left alone, another suitor, has noticed her beauty, the god of the sea, Poseidon (dancer, 3 basses as his voice).
He washes in, first seducing the all too willing woman, but eventually raping her.

When he leaves, the statue of Athena (dramatic mezzo soprano) in the temple comes to life and is furious with Medusa for desecrating her holy place and for so long, making it into a circus. Athena then curses Medusa and her sisters to exist as living corpses. Further, she changes Medusa's once beautiful hair into a nest of snakes, so hideous that who ever looks upon her will be turned to stone.
Instead of seeking her beauty, men will seek her death.

This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.