User talk:Hylomorphism

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              Ioanna Karvelas is a Greek-American dramatic soprano, who studied Voice in New York under Conrad Osborne and at the National Conservatory of Athens in Greece under Antony Kalaitzakis, a tenor and student of the famous tenor Nino Piccaluga.(A contemporary of Martinelli, he was often chosen by Toscanini to open the season of La Scala.)

Urged by Krino Kalomiris, director of the Athens Conservatory and daughter of the National Composer of Greece Manolis Kalomiris, to record her interpretation of the role of the mother in Manolis Kalomiris's opera THE MOTHERS RING, she appears in this role in the first Greek Opera ever recorded with the Sofia Philharmonic and the Obretenov Chorus. She has since become an ambassador of Greek Classical Music always performing along with her theater engagements a wealth of compositions beginning with the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, Lincoln Center in New York as well as in Germany, Austria, Poland, Bulgaria and the Ukraine. She specializes in the dramatic roles of Verdi, such as Lady Macbeth, Abigaille, Elisabetta, Leonora in Trovatore and Forza, Puccini's Turandot and Tosca, and the Wagnerian heroines Sieglinde and Ortrund. ShShe has appeared at the Athens Lyric Theatre, The Athens Festival, The Heraklion Crete Festival, and the Samos Festival. She has recorded the role of Lady Macbeth in Verd's Macbeth with the Polish National Radio Orchestra.

   Recently she has expanded her repertoire to include the role of Elektra in R. Strauss's Elektra, which she has studied with Maestro David Aronson of the Vienna Staatsoper.
     Ms.Karvelas is director of Opera Lesvos and artist-in-residence of the University of Indianapolis/ Athens Campus.

Wikipedia:Suspected copyright violations/2010-04-17

Any particular reason you're blanking this page? VernoWhitney (talk) 21:16, 13 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I'm sorry you get the impression that the presence of a link on that page implies that the current article is a copyright violation. It took me a while to even figure out what article you were referring to since there's no direct link between the now-deleted old article and your current one. I would like to assure you that the presence of an article on that page does not mean that there's a copyright violation (looking at that particular one, I see quite a few marked as false positives or public domain text (which means that there was never a copyright issue), or "Article cleaned" (which means it was a copyright concern at one point but the text has been rewritten or removed so there is no further concern). Now all that having been said, I would appreciate it if you would please stop blanking the page. VernoWhitney (talk) 21:36, 13 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]