Press

Reviews

La Boheme, Santa Fe Opera

“Making his company debut, the young Mexican singer showed that he is the real thing — a lyric tenor with a rich, vibrant voice, ample squillo and that idiomatic ping on top. Lomeli’s golden-voiced, lovingly phrased Che gelida manina nearly stopped the show and his singing throughout was both balm to the ears and dramatically involved. A superb actor, Lomeli brought a natural quality to the comedy as well as the tragedy, with a jarring, heart-breaking intensity to the final scene.”

Lawrence A. Johnson, The Classical Review

“…the vocal discovery of the season.  As heard last night, under a menacing, dark-clouded, and lightning-streaked sky, the cast was, with a few exceptions, excellent. David Lomelí’s Rodolfo made the biggest splash, in his Santa Fe debut: a winner of the 2006 Operalia Competition, the Mexican tenor sang with heroic poise, with seemingly boundless energy and control, and is definitely a singer to watch.”
Charles Downey, The Washington Post 

“Fast-rising Mexican tenor David Lomeli made his Santa Fe debut with this Bohème and showed why major houses in the world want him on their stages.  Lomeli’s powerful voice is graced with brilliant squillo without any burdensome heft to restrict him as he navigates his upper range. He sang “Che gelida manina” with expert legato and precise diction, and drowned out even the ringing voice of Ana María Martínez during “O soave fanciulla.”  He’s not a bad actor, either.  The chemistry between him and Martínez during Act I lit up the house.  From both vocal and dramatic perspectives, you would have a difficult time today finding a tenor more suited to Rodolfo than David Lomeli.”
Paul Wooly, Concerto.net

 


On Macbeth, Opera de Lille

“David Lomelí (Macduff) sings with a noble and bright presence.”
Alexandra Diaconu, ResMusica

“David Lomelí embodies Macduff with sensitivity.”
Sébastien Foucart, Concerto.Net

 “With only one aria, but one of the most beautiful of Verdi’s repertoire (“Ah, la paterna mano”), David Lomelí achieves great success. His voice has both brilliance and power.”

Christophe Rizoud, Forum Opéra 

“Beautiful discovery of the charming David Lomelí’s Macduff, played with a beautiful musical momentum.”
Mehdi Mahdavi, Altamusica

“David Lomelí (Macduff) amazes the audience from the beginning to the end of the opera.”
Patrice DeMailly, Nord Eclair

 


On The Elixir of Love (Nemorino), New York City Opera

 “It was hard to tell if David Lomelí was laughing or crying at the warm, extended ovation that followed his big aria on Tuesday evening at the New York City Opera, but he certainly deserved all the applause and bravos. As the lovesick small-town bumpkin Nemorino in Donizetti’s classic, deliriously entertaining comedy, “The Elixir of Love,” this 29-year-old tenor sang with sincerity and style and acted with energy in his New York stage debut.

He doesn’t always make the loudest noise, but his sound is sweet and penetrating, with plenty of squillo, that “ping” in a tenor’s tone that makes his voice seem to pop out several sizes larger than it is. Alternately dancing and pining, drunk and mournful, Mr. Lomelí captured the opera’s potent combination of hilarity and pathos. He was, in a word, delightful…Mr. Lomelí’s golden-toned, sensitively sung ‘Una furtiva lagrima,’ [was] the showstopping aria that earned him those cheers. It was then that you could finally relax and enjoy that sweetest of opera going experiences: a terrific debut.”

Zachary Woolfe, The New York Times

“The breakout star of the company’s revival of The Elixir of Love is the tenor David Lomelí, who swept Placido Domingo’s Operalia competition five years ago and here delivers an endearing performance as a shy, clumsy Nemorino with a honeyed sound and a penchant for diminuendos.”
The New Yorker

“One of the debutants, David Lomelí, sang the lovesick Nemorino with an appealing lyric tenor well suited to the early 19th-century Italian repertoire, though one notes he also sings Verdi and Puccini. He won the audience’s affection at once with his gracefully phrased cavatina ‘Quanto è bella’ and offered a polished account of ‘Una furtiva lagrima.’”
George Loomis, The Classical Review

 “David Lomeli’s sikly lyric-tenor voice effortlessly conveyed Nemorino’s feeling that ‘he himself could die of love’ in the melancholy romanza ‘Una furtiva lagrima.’ His introductory cavatina, ‘Quanto è bella,’ in which Nemorino muses on Adina’s beauty, was touchingly sung, and Lomeli pulled off superbly the tender minor-major sequence in the concertato, ‘Adina, credimi,’ in which Nemoniro begs Adina to wait one more day (to let the elixir take effect) before marrying Belcore. Lomeli, making his City Opera debut, is definitely an up-and-coming performer.”

Victor Wheeler, ClassicalSource.com 

“If you weren’t at City Opera tonight for Elisir, you missed a real event and shouldn’t miss the follow up. That’s all I will say for the moment, but here is David Lomeli, Operalia winner, singing all over with major conductors, and with major engagements on the calendar for this year, including Glyndebourne and elsewhere in Una Furtiva, which he sang tonight.”
Classissima, My Classical Music

“David Lomelí as Nemorino got applause after a strong, bright interpolated high note at the end of the recitative midway through his duet with baritone José Adán Perez…[Lomelí] brings the requisite sensitivity and pathos to ‘Quanto è bella, quanto è cara,’ ‘Adina, cremidi,’ and ‘Una furtiva lagrima.’”
Bruce-Michael Gelbert, QonStage.com

 “[T]he real reason to catch this revival is David Lomeli, a young Mexican tenor making the first of what I hope will be many New York appearances…he has a lovely halo of peach fuzz around his tone, a tender, natural way with a phrase, and a seductive high pianissimo.”

Justin Davidson, New York Magazine

“Across the Plaza the New York City Opera is also doing a bel canto gem, Donizetti’s ‘Elixir of Love.’ Normally I do not approve of productions transposed to some other place and time, especially those of Jonathan Miller. But in this case setting the opera in some Midwestern plains town in the ’50s where the heroine Adina runs a combination filling station and diner clarifies the setting. These people are rustics and not necessarily picturesque, as they would be in a traditional 19th century setting. Miller’s conceit clarifies the action.

The City Opera has been fortunate in finding as gifted a tenor as David Lomeli to sing the key role, Nemorino, a shy young man attracted to the brash Adina. He has one of opera’s greatest hits, the aria “Una Furtive Lagrima,” which he sings with great finesse. Stefania Dovhan is masterful as Adina, Meredith Lustig sings with great force as her rival, Jose Adan Perez has the proper vocal swagger as Nemorino’s rival, and Marco Nistico is excellent as the snake oil salesman who dispenses “the elixir of love.” Brad Cohen conducts the endearing score with abundant brio.”
Howard Kissel, The Huffington Post

“David Lomelí, a young Mexican tenor, is especially outstanding as the awkward, dopey, but finally triumphant Nemorino. He starts out fidgety and pathetic, a guy who will clearly never get the girl he loves, the beautiful Aldina (here played by the charming Stefania Dovhan as a Marilyn-Monroe-lookalike who owns the local diner). But by middle of the second act he has gained new confidence through drinking a love potion supplied to him by a passing quack (the brilliant Marco Nisticò) — and in fact by this time Adina has indeed fallen in love with him, largely as a result of his new-found self-confidence. Just after accurately perceiving her change of heart, Nemorino gets a moment alone onstage to express his delight that she finally loves him, and it is this solo that stops the show.”
Wendy Lesser, National Arts Journalism Program Blog

“Mr. Lomeli’s way with physical comedy and his sweet, effortlessly lyrical yet penetrating tenor make him a mesmerizing presence.”
Heidi Waleson, The Wall Street Journal

“Mexican tenor David Lomeli’s second-act aria “Una furtiva lagrima” is that perfect moment—the lighting, the orchestra, the staging, the singing, especially the singing. Since it’s the signature aria in the show, expectations are precipitously high for that number, yet New York City Opera and Lomeli delivered.

There’s much to recommend the production as a complete work, too. In addition to Lomeli’s breakout performance as the lovestruck Nemorino, the set design, the costuming, the performers in the supporting roles, and the overall energy of the production are to be highly commended.”

Gale Martin, BachTrack.com


On Lucia di Lammermoor (Edgardo), Pittsburgh Opera

“Mr. Lomelí showcased a tenor voice with lovely heft to it.”
Andrew Druckenbrod, Pittsburgh Post Gazette

“Young Mexican tenor David Lomelí made his debut singing Lucia’s lover, Edgardo, and what a wonderful voice it was to encounter. Lomeli had ample power, but it is the warmth of his timbre and evenness from top to bottom that suggests he could have an important career.”

Mark Kanny, Pittsburgh Tribune

On La Traviata (Alfredo Germont), San Francisco Opera

 “It’s difficult to believe that young Lomelí was making his War Memorial debut on Monday. His was a self-assured, impressive performance, his brilliant lyrical tenor soaring freely in the big house. He is sure to join the famous alumni of the S.F. Opera Center, including – just in this production – Netrebko, Pérez, and Castronovo.”

Janos Gereben, SF Classical Voice 


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