4.8 • 2.6K Ratings
🗓️ 24 March 2021
⏱️ 41 minutes
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They say you can’t go home again, and Giuseppe Verdi’s Aida knows it all too well. Captured from her homeland of Ethiopia and enslaved in Egypt, she falls in love with an Egyptian warrior. Aida is torn between her love for this man and her love for her home and, because it’s opera, she ultimately chooses the tenor.
In “O Patria Mia,” Aida stands on the banks of the Nile and says goodbye to Ethiopia. In this episode, host Rhiannon Giddens and her guests explore what home means, and what it means to leave it behind.
The Guests
Soprano Latonia Moore has sung the role of Aida more than a hundred times. She made her Met debut in the role with a day and a half’s notice, and it launched her international career. As a Black soprano, she feels like she has joined the club of great singers who have taken on the role.
Naomi André is a professor of Afro-American and African Studies and Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Michigan. She wrote her dissertation on Verdi’s operas and was blown away the first time she saw Aida at the Met. She thinks it’s amazing that a story about ancient Egypt still resonates today, and she still finds something new in the work every time she sees it.
Poet and visual artist Mahtem Shiferraw is from Ethiopia and Eritrea, but now lives in Los Angeles. Coming to the U.S. as an adult, she had to completely rebuild her sense of identity and belonging, and her understanding of home. Growing up in Ethiopia, she went to an Italian school and acted in a non-opera production of Aida.
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0:00.0 | She doesn't know what's going to happen. |
0:07.0 | She doesn't know if she's ever going to have her love again. |
0:12.0 | And most importantly, she doesn't know if she's ever going to see her home again. |
0:18.0 | From WQXR in the Metropolitan Opera, this is Aria Code. |
0:23.0 | I'm Rianne Giddens. |
0:24.0 | We all know what it's like to feel like the outsider, to feel a little like we don't |
0:29.0 | fully fit in. |
0:30.0 | Every episode, we break down a single Aria so we get to know it from the inside out. |
0:35.0 | Today, it's an Aria all about the meaning of home. |
0:38.0 | Oh, Patria Mia from Verde's Aida. |
0:41.0 | We were basically treated as nobody. |
0:44.0 | We were no one here. |
0:46.0 | Our sense of home was completely shattered. |
1:05.0 | Home. |
1:06.0 | It's something that's always been a part of my work because where we come from, |
1:10.0 | shapes who we are, but that idea, where we come from, can be really complicated. |
1:15.0 | There are native homes where you were born and there's adoptive homes where you might move |
1:20.0 | too and sexual homes where your family has been for centuries and spiritual homes where you |
1:26.0 | feel like you belong. |
1:27.0 | And then in addition to these, there's the kind of home that only exists in your memory. |
1:33.0 | A place that's played a big part in shaping who you are, but where you'll never live again. |
1:38.0 | That's the kind of home Giuseppe Verde conjures in the Aria, Opatria Mia from one of his most |
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