Philip Glasss Akhnaten: I Am Your Sunshine, Your Only Sunshine

Published: Nov. 27, 2019, 5 p.m.

b'You may not have heard of the Egyptian king Akhnaten, but the young pharaoh helped shape modern religion as we know it. His revolutionary efforts to shift Egypt away from worshiping many gods to worshiping just one paved the way for monotheism and the major Judeo-Christian faiths. His desire to remake the world is the subject of Philip Glass\'s entrancing opera.\\nIn this episode, host Rhiannon Giddens and her guests reflect on Akhnaten\\u2019s "Hymn to the Sun," an aria drawn from an ancient text of devotion. Akhnaten expresses his adoration of the sun and asserts himself as a prophet \\u2013 a vision of his own power that eventually led to his downfall. At the end of the show, you\'ll hear countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo sing the complete \\u201cHymn to the Sun\\u201d from the Metropolitan Opera stage.\\nThe Guests\\nCountertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo first sang the role of Akhnaten with the LA Opera in 2016 and now stars as the titular pharaoh at the Metropolitan Opera. Even though he has lived with the character for nearly four years, he still hasn\'t decided whether he sees Akhnaten as a visionary or cult leader. But that doesn\'t stop him from wearing an Eye of Horus necklace.\\xa0\\xa0\\nKara Cooney is a professor of Egyptian Art and Architecture at UCLA who spent years as an archaeologist in Egypt. At dig sites and in her research, Cooney has been able to uncover some moments of Akhnaten\\u2019s life, which still largely remains a mystery. Even she doesn\\u2019t quite understand her journey into Egyptology, she has always understood the world best through the lens of antiquity.\\xa0 \\nKaren Kamensek is conducting Akhnaten at the Metropolitan Opera. A self-proclaimed Glass groupie, she is our first guest who\'s been mentored by a show\'s original composer. The world-renowned conductor pays it forward by leading a number of youth orchestras.\\xa0\\nJohn Schaefer is the host of the WNYC radio program New Sounds. For more than 30 years, he has promoted the work of contemporary composers and performers. In 1984, he jumped at the chance to premiere Akhnaten on the radio.\\xa0\\nSpecial appearance by Rev. Paula Stone Williams, a pastor and LGBTQ advocate. As a transgender woman, Williams uses her experiences to foster more compassion in the world.'