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2019/2020 SEASON
BILLE BRULEY

PETER GRIMES
Peter Grimes, Santa Fe Opera Apprentice Recital
Santa Fe Opera
“When a singer gets us to relate to an opera we don’t ordinarily favor, we know that something special is happening onstage. Such was the case when tenor Bille Bruley performed excerpts from Act I of Benjamin Britten’s Peter Grimes. His truly remarkable dramatic skills complemented his fine vocalism. . . Bruley’s exceptionalism was matched by both his scene partners who astonished us with their total immersion in their characters and their connection with Grimes, as well as with the audience. “
VOCE DI MECHE
Peter Grimes, Peter Grimes
Indiana University Opera Theater
"The production, featuring two alternating casts, has two tenors switching as Peter Grimes: Bille Bruley, who sang opening night and will again next Saturday, and Richard Smagur, last Saturday’s Grimes and scheduled to sing this coming Friday. In Bruley and Smagur, this staging has two amazingly successful title holders. For a university music program to have one believable Grimes would be exceptionally fortunate. For a program to have two is almost beyond belief. But there they are, each of the pair living out the tragedy of this complicated, out-of-place being, fully able to bring tears to the eyes while captivating the ears."
BLOOMINGTON HERALD TIMES
Jonathan Dale, Silent Night
Arizona Opera
"When the German Army drafted Sprink, we were transported to Scotland for the enlistment of the Dale brothers, sung most effectively by heroic tenor Bille Bruley."
SILENT NIGHT
OPERAWIRE

Beadle Bamford, Sweeney Todd
The Glimmerglass Festival
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". . . Bille Bruley, who had ringing high notes to spare."
THE HUFFINGTON POST
Don Curzio/Don Basilio, Le Nozze di Figaro
Arizona Opera
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"Bille Bruley, an Arizona Opera Studio Artist, sang with trumpet-like tenor sounds."
OPERAWIRE

CHURCH PARABLES
The Tempter, The Prodigal Son
Central City Opera
“Tenor Bille Bruley bravely took the role of the Tempter, a role composed, like most of Britten’s high tenor roles, for the bright, edgy voice of Peter Pears—and made it his own. His strong, clear voice rang out forcefully, especially when warning of the havoc he would create.”
SHARPS AND FLATIRONS
King Nebuchadnezzar, The Burning Fiery Furnace
Central City Opera
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“Tenor Bille Bruley — an alumnus of the Young Artists Program who returns as a developing artist — shows that he is well on the way to a successful professional career in his gripping performance as Nebuchadnezzar. In Cazan's modernistic staging of the story — where the Babylonians carry cell phones and iPads and wear modern suits — it was probably predictable that the king would be presented as a Trump-like figure. Bruley's entrance was one of several bits of comedy early in the proceedings. Nonetheless, by the end of the opera, Bruley manages to imbue the king with real humanity after he witnesses the miracle. His voice is radiant, his enunciation impeccable. Every word he sings is easily understood and every note is precise in pitch.”
THE DAILY CAMERA
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