Opera Music

Scots are fuming over their haggis at John Fulljames's portrayal of Highlanders in La donna del lago reports the Herald.  The director shows them as kilted thugs with matted hair and filthy clothes, going round raping and disembowelling ...
Scots are fuming over their haggis at John Fulljames's portrayal of Highlanders in La donna del lago reports the Herald.  The director shows them as kilted thugs with matted hair and filthy clothes, going round raping and disembowelling everything in their path in between 21/2 octave coloratura runs. "Turning Highlanders into savages is the clear choice of an author; that's what Rossini and Scott are saying," he claims. "If you look at those films [like Highlander and Braveheart], the Highlanders are hairy. You do imagine they'd be smelly." But Professor David Purdie, the chairman of the Sir Walter Scott Club, dismisses that interpretation as "bollocks". "Scott was a great admirer of the courage and characteristics of the Highlanders and lamented the fact they had been separated for so long from southern Scotland by geography, language, politics and religion. Scott more than anybody else helped to unite the Highlands and Lowlands. His great aim in life was the promotion of Scotland as a unity within the United Kingdom."
about 1 hour ago
UNITEL CLASSICA broadcasts the WAGNER GALA from the Semperoper Dresden to celebrate the 200th birthday of the great composer. Music director Christian Thielemann conducts the ouvertures and great tenor scenes from Richard Wagner’s operas...
UNITEL CLASSICA broadcasts the WAGNER GALA from the Semperoper Dresden to celebrate the 200th birthday of the great composer. Music director Christian Thielemann conducts the ouvertures and great tenor scenes from Richard Wagner’s operas which were premiered in Dresden. Jonas Kaufmann, one of the most popular Wagnerian tenors of the age, will be a special guest. The concert will be broadcast
about 2 hours ago
Utterly mad but absolutely right - Richard Strauss's Ariadne auf Naxos started the Glyndebourne 2013 season with an explosion. Strauss could hardly have made his intentions more clear. Ariadne auf Naxos is not "about" Greek myth so much ...
Utterly mad but absolutely right - Richard Strauss's Ariadne auf Naxos started the Glyndebourne 2013 season with an explosion. Strauss could hardly have made his intentions more clear. Ariadne auf Naxos is not "about" Greek myth so much as a satire on art and the way art is made.
about 12 hours ago
The finale of the closing of the old Met. "Auld Lang Syne" gets to me every time. Remember, I lived my youth on the old standee line, and the joys of friendship with so many other opera lovers, the fun we had, the great performances we ...
The finale of the closing of the old Met. "Auld Lang Syne" gets to me every time. Remember, I lived my youth on the old standee line, and the joys of friendship with so many other opera lovers, the fun we had, the great performances we saw (after freezing outside the Met for so many hours.) will remain in my heart forever. Aida Triumphal Scene: Verna,Madeira, Baum, Sereni,Macurdy, Scott. Cosi Fan Tutte: Trio with Stratas, Miller, Guarrera Magic Flute: Quintet with Pracht, Grillo, Kriese, Shirley, Uppmann Vanessa: Quintet with Steber, Thebom, Dunn, Alexander, Harvuot Rosenkavalier Final Trio with Caballe, Raskin, Elias Andrea Chenier: Final Duet with Milanov, Tucker (Zinka's very last Met appearance.) Faust (the opera that opened the Met in 1883) Trio with Tucci, Gedda, Hines Auld Lang Syne (and many,many tears) (56 min.)
about 15 hours ago
Here is part two of the Met closing of April 16, 1966: Osie Hawkins first announces some cancellations, and then the following are sung: Forza final trio: Rigal,Peerce,Tozzi Gioconda Act 2 duet: Crespin, Cvejic Trovatore: D'amor sul'a...
Here is part two of the Met closing of April 16, 1966: Osie Hawkins first announces some cancellations, and then the following are sung: Forza final trio: Rigal,Peerce,Tozzi Gioconda Act 2 duet: Crespin, Cvejic Trovatore: D'amor sul'alli rosee: Price Manon Lescaut Act 2 Love Duet: Tebaldi, Corelli Die Meistersinger Prize Song: Sandor Konya. Gotterdamerung Immolation Scene; Nilsson (48 min.)
about 16 hours ago
I am in Portland, Oregon, for reasons unrelated to opera and was asked out of the blue if I would like to go to see Falstaff at the Portland Opera. This is the Verdi year, so everyone has chosen to do Falstaff, including the San Francis...
I am in Portland, Oregon, for reasons unrelated to opera and was asked out of the blue if I would like to go to see Falstaff at the Portland Opera. This is the Verdi year, so everyone has chosen to do Falstaff, including the San Francisco Opera and the Metropolitan Opera live in HD next fall.The only familiar name in the cast was Susannah Biller as Nanetta. She spent the entire opera smooching with Nicholas Phan as Fenton, pausing briefly to sing a very nice aria toward the end. She is progressing nicely in her career.There were some pleasant features to the production. Falstaff, sung by Eduardo Chama, was played with more dignity than is usually the case. When women smile at him in the street, he imagines them to desire him passionately. The joke is that he is hugely fat. At one spot he kneels on the floor before Alice and cannot get back up. My favorite part of the production was the two story window in the Ford's house. The servants carry Falstaff in the laundry hamper up to the second floor. Then when they toss him out the window, you can see him descend into the Thames.I have known people who love only Falstaff of all Verdi's operas, but I am not one of them. I prefer more arias, even in comedy. Nevertheless, the performance was enjoyable.
about 17 hours ago
Southover Grange, Lewes 3pm May 19 2013 I took a little trip down to Lewes today to see my younger son and three of his children - all much occupied as families are with assorted activities at the weeekend.  Included in this was a...
Southover Grange, Lewes 3pm May 19 2013 I took a little trip down to Lewes today to see my younger son and three of his children - all much occupied as families are with assorted activities at the weeekend.  Included in this was a birthday party for three year olds (my only grand daughter is three but the party was for her long blond haired boyfriend who is her junior by three months!) This was held in the beautiful garden of Southover Grange.  This is a lovely place on a largely sunny day such as this.  It has little compartments one of which was taken by the host family for a pirate themed party. I lived near Lewes for more than 25 years during most of the time that I worked at Glyndebourne.  So all of this area is extremely familiar to me, home really..... So that was about it for the day.  I am now back in London - a beautiful evening here.  I am still adjusting after my China trip.  It seems to be taking longer than usual.  Very annoying.
about 17 hours ago
Anniversaries are strange creatures; more often than not, they now seem to make us moan. (Did anyone not become sick and tired of the dual Mahler anniversary years 2010-11? Most notably, anyone who actually had a real interest in Mahl...
Anniversaries are strange creatures; more often than not, they now seem to make us moan. (Did anyone not become sick and tired of the dual Mahler anniversary years 2010-11? Most notably, anyone who actually had a real interest in Mahler?) Until relatively recently, my unconsidered response to this year’s Wagner bicentenary was – well, not much of a response at all. Indifference, not total, but relative, reigned. Yes, it has had me thinking about certain things, often more about 1813 than 2013, and it certainly has had me working on certain things, from a visit to the splendid Wagner World Wide conference in South Carolina onwards. Yet to a certain extent every year is a Wagner year, and not just for me. London does not do especially well for Wagner performances, though at the same time they are far from non-existent. (The responses or lack thereof, by the two main opera companies here have, however, been baffling: a single production, yet to come, from the Royal Opera, and nothing whatsoever from ENO.) More to the point, however, not only the arts but so many of the ways in which we might and perhaps should consider our lives remain very much in Wagner’s shadow. Yes, there have been anti-Wagnerians – Stravinsky is perhaps the most obvious example, though one should always take his alleged æsthetics with a large grain of salt – but their often militant anti-Wagnerism pays at least as much testimony to Wagner’s influence as more evident discipleship. The seriousness of Wagner’s vision for music, for the theatre, for art, for humanity remains as inspiring as ever – and as artistically productive. Stockhausen’s Licht, still to be staged as a cycle, is only the most gargantuan of modernist engagements, which of course began long before Wagner’s death, Liszt as so often standing as a pioneer (as well, of course, as a powerful influence upon Wagner). When opera, following the Second World War, seemed to have reached something of an impasse, much of the avant-garde for no particular reason having decided it was no longer ‘viable’, it was Wagner’s example that pointed the way forward. Boulez, initially suspicious of Wagner’s mythologising, came through his work with Wieland Wagner to be one of the composer’s foremost modern advocates and freely admitted that his own compositions from the 1970s onwards would have been quite different were it not for his immersion in conducting Wagner’s dramas. (A great sadness is that he never conducted Die Meistersinger, one of the three operas he most wished to conduct but never had the opportunity to do so, the others being Don Giovanni and Boris Godunov. And Tristan never really had the attention it deserved from him, being confined to a collaboration with Wieland in Japan.) Nono, a composer who from a relatively early year did write for the stage – and all of his works are in one sense or another highly dramatic – was asked, in a 1961 interview, ‘Who were the musicians that most influenced you during your earliest years?’ He named but one, Wagner. Operas such as Intolleranza 1960 and Al gran sole carico d’amore may certainly, in their political concerns and in their determination to explore the boundaries of theatre and of musical drama, the composer’s relationship with the audience included, may and should be considered very much, though certainly not exclusively, in a Wagnerian tradition. Just as with Wagner, Nono always believed in the necessity of a ‘provocation’ for an artwork, ‘The genesis of any of my works,’ he wrote, ‘is always to be found in a human “provocation”: an event, an experience, a test in our lives, which provokes my instinct and my consciousness, as man and musician, to bear witness.’ Moreover, that witness was best served in a fashion both verging upon the traditional, its roots in the Schiller-Marx-Wagner idea of art as the paradigm of labour, but also technological, an interest in new technical possibil
about 18 hours ago
Sir Simon Rattle conducts the Philadelphia Orchestra. by Paul J. Pelkonen Soprano Barbara Hannigan as the Police Chief from Ligeti's Le Grand Macabre. Image from BarbaraHannigan.com. Some composers still need an advocate. Today...
Sir Simon Rattle conducts the Philadelphia Orchestra. by Paul J. Pelkonen Soprano Barbara Hannigan as the Police Chief from Ligeti's Le Grand Macabre. Image from BarbaraHannigan.com. Some composers still need an advocate. Today's audiences are filled with skeptics, put off by the idea of atonal music and names like Berg, Webern and Ligeti. On Friday night at Carnegie Hall, the Philadelphia Orchestra returned to Carnegie Hall under the baton of Sir Simon Rattle, the current music director of the Berlin Philharmonic. This program cemented Sir Simon's reputation as a fearless advocate for these new sounds, interpreted through the rich, velvety texture of this top-flight ensemble. The concert opened with Webern's Passacaglia. This is the composer's first published work, published in 1908 but written well before he came under Schoenberg's tutelage. Plucked strings establish an eight-note bass theme, which is then put through twenty-three permutations supported by a very large orchestra. Sir Simon brought hushed delicacy to the early passages, and power and urgency to the huge chords of brass and strings that form the work's climactic moments. The orchestra was joined by soprano Barbara Hannigan for Three Fragments from Alban Berg's seminal 1925 opera Wozzeck. These arrangements were made by the composer as a kind of "road show" to build awareness for his first opera, the sad story of a soldier who murders his unfaithful lover and then drowns while trying to recover the murder weapon. Ms. Hannigan played the central role of Marie in these excerpts, which include Marie's two important solo scenes and the opera's finale. Berg demands flexibility from this huge orchestra, requiring the sounds of a military band, a chamber orchestra, often in the same scene. Sinuous themes hinted at the murder to come, with slithering, jarring chords. Ms. Hannigan melted into the part of the doomed Marie, torn between her lust for the pompous Drum Major and her infant child. The Prayer Scene (Act II Scene 1) followed, with Ms. Hannigan mixing song with sprechstimme ("song-speech") creating a picture of desparation. The third excerpt presented Wozzeck's death, a moving elegy for the common man defeated by forces beyond his control. This was played with power and heart-felt emotion. The repeated statements of a single note in the orchestra led to a chorale-like reiteration of the protagonist's despairing main theme. In the last scene of the opera, Ms. Hannigan played the parts of a gang of children and the protagonists' young, orphaned son. She turned and sang "Hop-hopp!" the final words of the lad, riding his hobby-horse. The second half of the evening opened with a black-wigged Ms. Hannigan bursting onto the stage. Decked out in vinyl boots and a black latex trench-coat, she reprised the (insane) Chief of Police in Mysteries of the Macabre, a ten-minute excerpt from György Ligeti's opera Le Grand Macabre. This is a coloratura tour-de-force and a concert specialty of this artist. Written for a small, unconventional orchestra, it sounds like Mozart's Queen of the Night gone further round the bend and singing in carefully notated gibberish. Ms. Hannigan's brilliant, over-the-top performance made the Hall rock with laughter, especially when she knocked Mr. Rattle off his podium and started flailing at the orchestra. The concert concluded with a note-perfect performance of Beethoven's Pastorale Symphony. This was an energetic walk through the composer's imaginary country-side, rambling through fields and forests with stops by the brook to hear birds twitter and chirp in the woodwinds. The cellos took the lead with these familiar, expansive themes, in an idyllic portrait that somehow clarified the details of the score. Conductor and orchestra took glee as they impersonated the merry town band of the third movement, scattering them with the thunderstorm that followed. The final Shepherd's Song was played with deep, serene feeling,
about 19 hours ago
Part one of the closing of the Old Met.Contents as follows: Nat.Anthem;Lauder Greenway greeting; Tannhauser Entrance of Guests (Stokowski) and introduction of honored guests;Rudolf Bing Greeting. Lucia Sextet: Moffo, Sergi,Walker, Diaz, ...
Part one of the closing of the Old Met.Contents as follows: Nat.Anthem;Lauder Greenway greeting; Tannhauser Entrance of Guests (Stokowski) and introduction of honored guests;Rudolf Bing Greeting. Lucia Sextet: Moffo, Sergi,Walker, Diaz, Ordassy,Anthony Ballo: Eri tu: Merrill Otello duet: McCracken,Colzani Don Carlo aria: Siepi Louise Depuis le jour: Kirsten Carmen Quintet: Resnik, Votipka, Baldwin, Franke, Cehanovsky Butterfly Un Bel di:Albanese (and she kissed the stage) Walkure: Wintersturme: Vickers Barber of Bagdad: Heil,diesem Hause Corena Barbiere: Una voce poco fa Peters
about 19 hours ago