Alumnus van Schoonhoven a winner in George London Foundation competition; alumna receives Encouragement Award
2019 George London Award Winners (left to right) Carolyn Sproule, mezzo; Samantha Gossard, mezzo; Charles Sy, tenor; Rebecca Pedersen, soprano, and Fredonia alumnus and tenor Kyle van Schoonhoven, with GLF President Nora London (photo by Jennifer Taylor).
March 4, 2019
Lisa Eikenburg
Kyle van Schoonhoven, a tenor and 2011 graduate of the Fredonia School of Music, was one of five winners of the prestigious George London Foundation for Singers annual competition, held Feb. 22 at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York City.
He received a $10,000 award, singing 鈥淢ein Lieber Schwan鈥 from Wagner鈥檚 鈥淟ohengrin.鈥
Amanda Lynn Bottoms performing during the competition (photo by Jennifer Taylor).
Mr. Schoonhoven, who was a Music Education major at Fredonia, was also a Winner in the 2017 Metropolitan Opera National Council (MONC) Grand Finals Concert and was a former George London competition award recipient. He will perform in 鈥淐armen鈥 in Concert in early June with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.
In addition, Fredonia 2014 alumna and mezzo-soprano Amanda Lynn Bottoms, who was also a finalist in the competition, received a $1,000 George London Encouragement Award. She sang 鈥淐harlotte鈥檚 Letter Scene鈥 from Massenet鈥檚 鈥淲erter.鈥
The New York Classical Review website noted, 鈥淭he evening ended appropriately, with the most stunning performance of all: Kyle van Schoonhoven showed the makings of a star heldentenor with 鈥淢ein lieber Schwan鈥 from Lohengrin. He has that coveted combination of full tone, brightness, power and flexibility perfectly suited to Wagner鈥檚 demanding tenor roles. Moreover, he matched that remarkable power with keen emotional sense, channeling grief through his ringing farewells.鈥
Earlier in the review, the website noted, 鈥淚t was surprising that mezzo-soprano Amanda Lynn Bottoms did not earn a top prize for her moving account of the Letter Scene from Werther. Her weighty, colorful voice and deep velvet texture were an ideal fit for the aria and she found real emotional depth in the text, singing with power and focus all the while.鈥
Judges for the competition included soprano Harolyn Blackwell, George London Foundation Executive Director John Hauser, George London Foundation President Nora London and tenor and voice professor George Shirley.
The George London Foundation for Singers is a non-profit organization that gives awards to outstanding young professional opera singers during their early careers through the annual George London Competition. It also presents a recital series in collaboration with the Morgan Library & Museum as well as supporting students in the pre-college vocal programs at the Manhattan School of Music and the Juilliard School.