Staff and Hosts
Thanks for tuning in, and we would like to introduce you to our vigilant volunteers and hosts. Take your shoes off, pull up a beanbag chair, and give opera a listen. A big thank you to everyone who volunteers their time to make this station great! If you like what we do, please say thank you.
Executive Director/Music Director:
Kelly Rinne
Executive Director & Music Director, host and self-proclaimed geekette, on Classical Music Broadcast.com (founded 2005) and on OMB, founded in 2009
You may also find me as a fill-in host on local FM radio in and around the Metro Detroit area. I host all types of classical, but LOVE opera – its better than any reality TV show.If you really want to know…I have 2 degrees a BA in Fine Art/Art History the second an MFA in Opera from CCM. (I refer to the latter as “doing time”) I was an opera designer for 16 years then I went into web development. (oh there’s a LONG story there)
Wanting to not completely give up opera I started Classical Music Broadcast.com in 2005 after working locally in FM radio for 7 years.
We broadcast intermittently until 5 years ago when the station went 24/7. Thanks to all the listeners who have stuck with us through our growing pains! OMB went 24/7 Thanksgiving of 2009.I am a voice actor, and am that voice you hear on the phone often asking you to “please hold – we want your call to be our next call”.
* Personal stuff: I speak 4 languages badly and that might include English.
* I love KOL, Diablo, the Witcher and online gaming.
* Linux, PHP, Coffee, Chocolate and red wine are my friends.
* I have two full-time office cats – The Classical Music Cat and the Coloratura and one part-timer – the little thug.
* I work 7 days a week
* do volunteer work locally
Reviewers:
G Paul Padillo
Also known as Sharky
Portland, Maine, United States
Crazy, free spirit, originally from New York with side trips through DC, Chicagoland, Tennessee and Florida. Maine is home. Love anything to do with sports, music, food, movies, theatre. Least favorite things: fashion, pretentious people, today’s hot new country. GPP is a highly profiled reviewer for Amazon.com and is having his first review for Opera News published soon in the January 2012 issue.
Albert Innaurato is an award-winning American playwright, theatre director, writer and fan of opera and classical music. Official bio coming soon.
Max D Winter (reprinted with permission)
Janos Gereben (reprinted with permission)
Leslie Beczala (reprinted with permission)
Program Hosts:
Kelly Rinne: Music Mix, New Notes, What’s Opera Doc
See above.
Michael Mayes: Texapolitan Opera Radio Hour
Texas and wherever opera roles command
With a commanding voice and sense of drama, baritone Michael Mayes is known for his consummate portrayals of iconic characters in the operatic repertoire. Originally from Conroe, Texas, Michael has performed with opera companies across the United States including Madison Opera, Cincinnati Opera, Palm Beach Opera, Kentucky Opera, Des Moines Metro Opera, Arizona Opera, Central City Opera, Michigan Opera Theater, and Fort Worth Opera.
Engagements for 2010-2011 include Valentin in Faust with Opera Birmingham, Marcello in La bohème with Eugene Opera and Des Moines Metro Opera, Silvio in Pagliacci with Kentucky Opera, the title role in Don Giovanni with Shreveport Opera, and Papageno in Die Zauberflöte with Michigan Opera Theater. Next 2011-2012 seaon will find Mr. Mayes returning to Ketucky Opera as Escamillo in Carmen, Shreveport Opera as Danilo in Merry Widow, Fort Worth Opera as Kinesias in Lysistrata, and making debuts with Nashville Opera as Silvio in Pagliacci and Tulsa Opera with the role debut of Joseph De Rocher in Dead Man Walking.
Michael Rice, Oliver Camacho: Opera Now! The weekly opera newsmagazine
Michael Rice

Creator, Producer, and Benevolent Host of OperaNow! Michael Rice has not let let the semi-success of the show go to his (evidenced by the picture above) huge head. He was born in Chicago, the son of two families that stayed despite much of the “white flight” that was occuring throughout the city. At the age of 10 he moved to Connecticut where his family began to “move on up.” His first success on the stage was at the age of 13 protraying Tevye at a Catholic grade school (you figure that one out.) He has worked as a singer for several years now, taking him all over the country and even EUROPE! (can you believe it?…that’s where opera started for the love of God!)
His love of broadcasting and more importantly, spreading misinformation, led him to start OperaNow! as a bully pulpit from which to spread FUD and annoyingly laugh at his own lame jokes. Along the way, he realized people seemed to enjoy what he and his wacky friends had to say and could not be more delighted at the result.
The son of immigrants and a product of Chicago Public Schools, Oliver was never supposed to find opera. Oliver’s passion for opera is evidence of a latent gene most people possess, regardless of class, race or environment. As with other proclivities, the more they are exercised, the more perverse they become. The quest for moments of sublime beauty, or small deaths, has made Oliver an obsessive collector of Compact Discs (ancient documents of singing.)
As a singer, Oliver has been rejected by some of the most prestigious institutions. He did not realize that being short, brown, and having a small voice would ever be an obstacle in opera.
In 2006 he created The Opera Company whose mission is to employ only the smartest and most versatile types of singers: those who are enthusiastic about developing other performance disciplines like mask, clown, dance and commedia dell’arte; those who love song and music and have the intelligence to choose repertoire that feels authentic to them; those who want a different path than ABC YAP and who know that opera is theater and theater requires collaboration, rehearsal, sweat and sometimes tears.
Or those who are just really hot guys.
Doug Dodson

Doug Dodson, originally from Spearfish, South Dakota, began his journey to mid-level Internet stardom at the University of South Dakota, where he earned a BA in anthropology with minors in music and classical humanities. Against all odds, he was able to find a field of study that actually drew upon all three of his undergraduate research emphases: baroque opera. Mr. Dodson went on to complete an MM in vocal performance at the University of Missouri – Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance.
Comfortable in a variety of musical styles, Mr. Dodson has been featured as a soloist in concert and chamber works by Adès, Bernstein, Britten, McClure, Mozart and Saint-Saëns, as well as many of the baroque composers you might expect. Operatic credits include roles in the stage works of Conradi (Die schöne und getreue Ariadne), Handel (Giulio Cesare and Semele), Purcell (Dido and Aeneas), and Monteverdi (Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria), plus an enjoyable foray into the world of Gilbert and Sullivan (though not as a countertenor, much to the relief of Gilbert’s undoubtedly uptight ghost, I’m sure. However, methinks Sullivan might have been amused by the Major-General in falsetto. The world may never know.)

Tenor Matthew Garrett grew up on the streets of East Paterson, New Jersey, and quickly discovered his childlike aptitude for opera singing. Known by his friends at a young age as “that white motherfucker”, the turning point of his youth occurred after a high school performance of Showboat, when Eastside High principal Joe Clark (portrayed by Morgan Freeman in the film Lean On Me) remarked “You sang the shit out of that shit.” Inspired by these words, Garrett quit his job as a bouncer at a neighborhood strip club and enrolled in Juilliard’s Take Back the Night at the Opera night courses.
Since completing his training in 1975, Matthew Garrett has built a solid reputation as the guy you call when “your tenor cancels two days before the concert and you know you can’t find anyone who can possibly learn this lousy shit at the last second.” He thanks Jesus for his superb musicianship skills, as his small voice is rivaled only by his forgettable penis.
Matthew Garrett has performed with orchestras and opera companies from Granville to Duluth, usually pro bono.
Ethan Watermeier

The spawn of a diminutive Brooklyn Jew and a Irish-German-Southern-Catholic-Jesuit gentleman, American baritone Ethan Watermeier grew up in a small, one-room wooden cabin in the wilderness of the Adirondack mountains. He spent the majority of his childhood playing irish fiddle, reading the great works of Laura Ingalls Wilder and Dr. Seuss, and learning various ways to cook moose. In the 1980′s, after graduating from the US Space Camp – Level II, Ethan’s dreams of becoming an astronaut were crushed following a tragic lawn-dart accident. Immediately turning his ambitions towards theatre and music, Ethan quickly became the premiere teenage Shakespearean actor of his time, starring in over 159 productions with the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, and the Wagon Wheel Dinner Theatre in Warsaw, Indiana. Since then, Ethan has become somewhat of a jack of all trades, pursuing a panoply of passions and professions including: doctor, Justice of the Peace, certified minister of the Bahaii faith, Vice-president of the the American Association of Jugglers, an 11th degree blackbelt in Krav Magaa, and registered midwife. He is currently enjoying a happy, productive, honest, fun, healthy, and creative life, and looking forward to a successful future of the same. Ethan’s favorite foods are apples and ice-cream.
Roberta Senatore
Roberta Senatore was born and raised a poor black child wandering the streets of Pittsburgh until she was scooped up one day by Tito Capobianco to sing in his operas for – and I quote – “all the donuts I could eat”. The rest is history and she now makes a living working various, part-time jobs, none of which take out taxes, and all of which lack direction. She hopes to retire one day to Hawaii and devote her final years to being a cat-lady. Her favorite foods are cheesecake and cookie dough.
Jennifer Rivera (known as Jenny to everyone except third grade teachers, Europeans, and program biographies) became an opera singer because she was not quite smart enough to learn to play an instrument or even read music, really. She wasted her youth performing for Kiwanis club dinners as a member of the illustrious musical group “The Whiz Kids” (that part is unfortunately not a joke), followed by years of being tortured by opera conductors who refuse to take fast enough tempos and opera directors who force her to lie on her stomach while she sings high notes. Not until she met and fell in love with the infamous Michael Rice did she find her true calling of being his third or fourth choice panelist on his podcast, whenever his ex-wife is unavailable.
Contributors:
Bob Dilley: Artists Events
Bob Dilley contributes the infamous Artists Events, a staple of the opera-l newsgroup for over many years. A daily Who’s Who’s of operatic and vocal birthdays, premieres, dates of death, and a Quote of the Day. We love Bob and all he stands for.
I have been into classical music and opera since I was three years old.
During all these years of listening to the radio, I have built up a
repertoire of artists, and operatic and ballet music that has been
become a matter of being imprinted in my mind. Consequently, because of
this imprinted repertoire I was able to know who, what and whom to
research when I wwnt to the library. Building my database was an
exceeding slow and time consuming process. During this process I
decided – why not also build a calendar containing all the information I
had acquired. This idea turned out to be a most worth while project.
It also involved much detailed work; however, the effort was really
worth it. I have been creating a yearly calendar of artists’ dates of
birth and death along with the dates of many premiers. The calendar I
have created for 2012 has an array of the following goodies in it:
there are 320 composers, 181 conductors, 634opera singes, and 112
virtuosi in it. In addition there are also 720 operas, 93 operettas, 65
ballets, and a few choice oratorios, orchestral works,and requiems for a
total of 901 premiers.
David M Wagner: Twitterati Extraordinaire
Virginia
Professor Wagner teaches at Regent University School of Law, his vast amount of knowledge on just about everything and his humorous pithy excerpts of the Opera Music Broadcast playlist make for fantastic reading.



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