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'''Martin Dillon''' (b. [[Portsmouth, OH]], [[June 17]], [[1957]]; d. [[Randolph, VT]], [[August 21]], [[2005]]) was a [[musician]], [[operatic]] [[tenor]], and [[professor]] of music at [[Rutgers University]] in [[Camden, NJ]]''.
'''Martin Dillon''' (b. [[Portsmouth, OH]], [[June 17]], [[1957]]; d. [[Randolph, VT]], [[August 21]], [[2005]]) was a [[musician]], [[operatic]] [[tenor]], and [[professor]] of music at [[Rutgers University]] in [[Camden, NJ]]''.
[[Image:MartinDillon.jpg|left|thumb|200px||<div style="text-align: left;border:none">'''Martin Dillon'''</div>]]
[[Image:MartinDillon.jpg|left|thumb|100px||<div style="text-align: left;border:none">'''Martin Dillon'''</div>]]
Mr. Dillon was born Martin Dillow in West [[Portsmouth, Ohio]]. He began singing in a Baptist church choir with his parents, who owned a local restaurant. In high school, his sister said, he traveled to Europe with the Ohio Youth Choir and came back with the urge to sing opera.
Mr. Dillon was born Martin Dillow in West [[Portsmouth, Ohio]]. He began singing in a Baptist church choir with his parents, who owned a local restaurant. In high school, his sister said, he traveled to Europe with the Ohio Youth Choir and came back with the urge to sing opera.


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Although he sang often with smaller opera companies in the United States and Europe, and in New Jersey oratorio performances, Mr. Dillon was considered a "character tenor," said conductor [[Eve Queler]].
Although he sang often with smaller opera companies in the United States and Europe, and in New Jersey oratorio performances, Mr. Dillon was considered a "character tenor," said conductor [[Eve Queler]].


[[Image:martindillon-sidebr.jpg|right|thumb|200px||<div style="text-align: right;border:none">'''Martin Dillon as Marc Antony'''</div>]]
[[Image:martindillon-sidebr.jpg|right|thumb|100px||<div style="text-align: right;border:none">'''Martin Dillon as Marc Antony'''</div>]]


Mr. Dillon sang 11 concert operas, many of them in [[Carnegie Hall]], with [[Eve Queler]]'s [[Opera Orchestra of New York]].
Mr. Dillon sang 11 concert operas, many of them in [[Carnegie Hall]], with [[Eve Queler]]'s [[Opera Orchestra of New York]].
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Queler cast Mr. Dillon in roles with major opera stars like [[Olga Borodina]] and [[Renée Fleming]].
Queler cast Mr. Dillon in roles with major opera stars like [[Olga Borodina]] and [[Renée Fleming]].


[[Image:MartinDillonFidelio.jpg|left|thumb|200px||<div style="text-align: center;border:none">'''Martin Dillon as Fidelio'''</div>]]
[[Image:MartinDillonFidelio.jpg|left|thumb|100px||<div style="text-align: center;border:none">'''Martin Dillon as Fidelio'''</div>]]


Martin Dillon, [[lyric tenor]], has performed solo concerts throughout the world. His concert repertoire includes the major French and German song cycles. Mr. Dillon has performed over 40 operatic roles and countless recitals in the US, Europe and Asia and maintains a busy recital schedule throughout the globe. His most recent concert tour of Turkey was funded by the [[United States Embassy]] and [[The Fulbright-Hayes Foundation]].
Martin Dillon, [[lyric tenor]], has performed solo concerts throughout the world. His concert repertoire includes the major French and German song cycles. Mr. Dillon has performed over 40 operatic roles and countless recitals in the US, Europe and Asia and maintains a busy recital schedule throughout the globe. His most recent concert tour of Turkey was funded by the [[United States Embassy]] and [[The Fulbright-Hayes Foundation]].
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Mr. Dillon is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney and Edna Francis Dillow, two brothers, Steven and Michael Dillow, and one sister, Shauna Travis. All five live in West [[Portsmouth, OH]].
Mr. Dillon is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney and Edna Francis Dillow, two brothers, Steven and Michael Dillow, and one sister, Shauna Travis. All five live in West [[Portsmouth, OH]].


[[Image:Martin DillonTails.jpg|right|thumb|200px||<div style="text-align: right;border:none">'''Martin Dillon'''</div>]]
[[Image:Martin DillonTails.jpg|right|thumb|100px||<div style="text-align: right;border:none">'''Martin Dillon'''</div>]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 10:03, 2 August 2006

Martin Dillon (b. Portsmouth, OH, June 17, 1957; d. Randolph, VT, August 21, 2005) was a musician, operatic tenor, and professor of music at Rutgers University in Camden, NJ.

File:MartinDillon.jpg
Martin Dillon

Mr. Dillon was born Martin Dillow in West Portsmouth, Ohio. He began singing in a Baptist church choir with his parents, who owned a local restaurant. In high school, his sister said, he traveled to Europe with the Ohio Youth Choir and came back with the urge to sing opera.

With a big, expansive lyric tenor voice, he passed stringent auditions to study at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, and he earned a master's degree at the University of Oklahoma.

Although he sang often with smaller opera companies in the United States and Europe, and in New Jersey oratorio performances, Mr. Dillon was considered a "character tenor," said conductor Eve Queler.

File:Martindillon-sidebr.jpg
Martin Dillon as Marc Antony

Mr. Dillon sang 11 concert operas, many of them in Carnegie Hall, with Eve Queler's Opera Orchestra of New York.

"Sometimes you want somebody with intense characterization in the voice, and that's what he had, and he was a wonderful musician, an excellent linguist," Queler said.

Queler cast Mr. Dillon in roles with major opera stars like Olga Borodina and Renée Fleming.

File:MartinDillonFidelio.jpg
Martin Dillon as Fidelio

Martin Dillon, lyric tenor, has performed solo concerts throughout the world. His concert repertoire includes the major French and German song cycles. Mr. Dillon has performed over 40 operatic roles and countless recitals in the US, Europe and Asia and maintains a busy recital schedule throughout the globe. His most recent concert tour of Turkey was funded by the United States Embassy and The Fulbright-Hayes Foundation.

For his recital work, Mr. Dillon has received many international reviews: “In his German debut, Mr. Dillon presented himself as a world-class performer” (Munich’s “Süddeutsche Zeitung”) and “Kahn’s lush lyrical melodies are excellently suited to Martin Dillon’s lyric and flexible voice” ("Neue Musik Zeitung" Berlin)

As an international performer and an American cultural ambassador, he has been invited by the US government and embassies of the Caribbean, European and Asian countries to perform at their American Associations. He returned to Adana, Ankara and Istanbul December 14, 2004-January 1, 2005 to perform solo concerts and spent a week conducting Opera Master Classes for vocal students from the Curkurova Conservatories in Adana/ Mersin and the Istanbul Conservatory of Music.

More recently, Mr. Dillon earned notice for his two CDs of Robert Kahn's music; a third was about to be recorded.

For the first disc, when his accompanist backed out, Mr. Dillon blithely sat down and recorded the songs while accompanying himself on piano, a tremendously difficult musical feat.

On August 15-20, 2005 he joined the Vermont Chamber Music Festival to perform vocals in the chamber work of Robert Kahn’s “Jungbrunnen” song cycle This concert was broadcast on the Public Broadcast Station. For more information see: (www.centralvtchambermusicfest.org )

For years Mr. Dillon lived with his Domestic partner Mr. Dhruv Kapoor until they separated in 2004.

Mr. Dillon is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney and Edna Francis Dillow, two brothers, Steven and Michael Dillow, and one sister, Shauna Travis. All five live in West Portsmouth, OH.

File:Martin DillonTails.jpg
Martin Dillon