OMRT: Tell us about your Carnegie Hall debut.
LA: My Carnegie Hall debut. It's the little hall, of course, but no matter. I do hope you can come. Right now, there are 124 people coming. Come on, only 129 to go to sell out the house!
Oh, yes, and I am playing some Liszt, for his 200th birthday. He don't look a day over 193. Also music by Ervin Nyiregyhazi (try saying that five times fast) and Harrison Gross, a very talented young composer.
OMRT: Hometown.
LA: San Franciso
OMRT: How did you first become interested in playing piano?
LA: All four of my siblings played when I was very small.
OMRT: Where/with whom did you study?
LA: First with a work friend of my mom's, then with a former child prodigy who was a great teacher but a drunk.
OMRT: What is your favorite opera and why?
LA: ELEKTRA-- so thrilling, and so very twisted, and yet noble in a bizarre way.
OMRT: What is your dream gig?
LA: Playing and conducting the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra in music of Brahms and Reger.
OMRT: If you could have dinner with any composer, who would you choose and why?
LA: I would eat with Stravinsky. What a HOOT that would be.
OMRT: Do you have any pre-performance rituals or superstitions?
LA: NOPE
OMRT: What has been your most unusual performance to date and why?
LA: Playing a gig with a cabaret singer from Albania where the act before us was a deaf guy singing "This is the Moment" from Jeckyll and Hyde.
OMRT: If you were tone-deaf, what would your dream job be?
LA: CHARACTER ACTOR
OMRT: What is playing on your iPod (or record player) right now?
LA: Mack and Mabel by Jerry Herman. Lovely show.
OMRT: NYC is the cultural center of the music industry, where is your favorite musical or non-musical place to be?
LA: BERLIN
OMRT: How do you measure your success?
LA: Joy in making music the way I'd live my life if I could do it without making money. To me, that is a life well-lived.
OMRT: If returning to OMRT, what was your favorite previous experience?
LA: La Boheme. What a privilege to work with such singers!
OMRT: How did you become a part of OMRT?
LA: Sheer luck. I got a call to play for audtions.
OMRT: What did you do on your summer "vacation"?
LA: Conducted Dido and Aeneas in San Francisco.
OMRT: When and how did you decide to move to NYC?
LA: 1994, to start a Masters Degree in Piano at Julliard
OMRT: What do you like about living in NYC?
LA: The crazed people and the pace.
OMRT: What is the last theatrical performance you attended?
LA: Paul at Tarsus, at Gospel Town Theater in Post, TX. What an experience.
OMRT: What's you best backstage story or the craziest thing that has happened to you while performing?
LA: Playing a production of Jesus Christ Superstar with the Jesus missing DURING the overture. Then the singer popped onstage the second he got called to the stage.
OMRT: How do you approach preparing to perform? And how is it different to prepare a new work vs. a more traditional piece?
LA: All I do is plug away and uncover secrets as fast as I can after a quick first look at the score....or, procrastination!
OMRT: How do you convince friends and family who have never seen a classical performance to give it a try?
LA: See me play or ELSE!
OMRT: Do you sing in the shower?
LA: No bloody way.
OMRT: How many jobs do you have? Or how many hours do you work in a week?
LA: Schoolteacher and conductor.
OMRT: How many hours are you in rehearsal on top of that?
LA: Uncountable!
OMRT: How much do you rehearse each day?
LA: Depends.
OMRT: What is something you can do that others can't?
LA: Flip my eyelids for a full minute to scare my niece!
OMRT: What is the first opera you ever saw?
LA: Madama Butterfly on TV; Faust in San Francisco
OMRT: What is your pop culture guilty pleasure?
LA: South Park
OMRT: Words of wisdom for aspiring artists?
LA: Gird your loins!
OMRT: What is your super power?
LA: Ahem.
OMRT: Why do you love music?
LA: The way it can let you inside a person's mind without speech -- through music. That is why I LOVE IT SO MUCH!!! Like Nietszche-- for me life without music would be a mistake.
Lloyd's concert in honor of Franz Liszt's 200th birthday is tomorrow, Sunday November 20th at 7:30pm.
Weill Recital Hall
at Carnegie Hall
57th Street east of 7th Avenue
New York, NY
Tickets available here.
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