Composer and pianist and Nicolas Reveles earned his Master of Arts in
choral conducting from the University of Redlands, as well as a Doctor
of Musical Arts degree in piano performance from the Manhattan School of
Music. He has produced theater scores for the Old Globe Theatre, North
Coast Repertory Theatre, and others.
Since 1998, Reveles has served as the Geisel director of education
and outreach for the San Diego Opera. As of 2010, he’s also the host of
UCSD-TV’s OperaTalk with Nick Reveles.
He wrote the music and libretto for Sextet, launched in summer 2010 by San Diego’s Diversionary Theatre. “Sextet is
a queer opera in six scenes,” says Reveles. “It is nearly completely
sung throughout in a style that I would call ‘American eclectic.’ My
influences are many: Aaron Copland, Ned Rorem, Benjamin Britten, church
music, jazz...but I spend a lot of time trying to chase all of the
composers out of the room while I’m working. They nag.
“Sextet came to me in a dream. After deciding that I wanted
to write a chamber opera for a small space, I was awakened at three in
the morning with the scenarios of four of the six works pretty much
complete. The dialogue came easily. The music, however, took three or
four years of percolating, writing in fits and starts, waiting for the
right forms and structures to match these six unrelated episodes,
unrelated in the narrative sense.
“Thematically, they are explorations of gay male desire...they all
reflect things that have been special or unique in my own life; a search
for the real Jesus and spirituality; a love for fairy tales, for the
horror genre and grand guignol; a deep respect for Walt Whitman, who I
believe was not only our greatest poet but our greatest gay poet; and
for those little domestic tragedies and tender moments that brush by us
every day.”