Opera Music

add news feed

post a story

Arena di Verona inaugurated its 100th anniversary season last night to a packed house of 15k spectators, set to a...
Arena di Verona inaugurated its 100th anniversary season last night to a packed house of 15k spectators, set to a...
13 4 days ago
Hall One, Kings Place Cantata: ‘Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten,’ BWV 202 Concerto for oboe and violin, BWV 1060R Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041 Cantata: ‘O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit,’ BWV 210 ...
Hall One, Kings Place Cantata: ‘Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten,’ BWV 202 Concerto for oboe and violin, BWV 1060R Violin Concerto in A minor, BWV 1041 Cantata: ‘O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit,’ BWV 210 Carolyn Sampson (soprano) Christopher Cowie (oboe) Academy of St Martin in the Fields Tomo Keller (violin/director) A string section of the size 4.4.3.2.1 is small by reasonable standards, though doubtless counts as positively – or rather negatively – Furtwänglerian by the mullahs of ‘authenticity’. Nevertheless, there was no sense that the Academy of St Martin in the Fields was undernourished, and in any case its ‘orchestral’ contribution was intermittent. Carolyn Sampson and obbligato oboist Christopher Cowie took the first movement of the wedding cantata, Weichet nur, betrubte Schatten, as equal ‘soloists’ in something that fell midway between an instrumental concerto and a vocal duet. That aria emerged clear and clean, but not without warmth. Sampson’s tone remains somewhat ‘English’ in quality; provided one does not mind that, there is much to enjoy, even though a touch more vibrato would not have gone amiss. Breath control and phrasing were exemplary from both ‘soloists’. The arioso-like quality of some of the recitative writing was well handled by Sampson. There was a nimble rendition of the cello part to the second aria, though intonation was not always beyond reproach. In the third aria, ‘Wenn die Frühlingslüfte streichen,’ Sampson was fluently complemented by violinist, Tomo Keller. This cantata may not represent Bach at his most profound, but there is considerable pleasure nevertheless to be had in his effortless mastery of melody, harmony, and counterpoint. Instrumentalists such as the cellist in the final recitative took their opportunities for word-painting. Despite the small forces, there was a welcome courtly sturdiness to the closing gavotte-aria, in which the full orchestra returns. The concerto for oboe and violin opened well, its first movement harmonically grounded, and with a well-chosen tempo that permitted the music to speak. There was splendid give and take between the soloists, Cowie and Keller. Above all, Bach’s score was played as music; the issue of the score’s reconstruction melted away, or rather simply did not arise. The slow movement was on the swift side for an Adagio, though it generally worked. There were, however, occasions on which one wished the performance would prove more yielding, more in the case of the violin than the oboe. There was exemplary pizzicato support from the ASMF. The finale would have benefited from a slightly more moderate tempo, Keller’s performance veering uncomfortably close to the world of Vivaldi. Bach does not need to sound aggressive. It was a relief, then, after the interval, to have the A minor violin concerto performed in less harried fashion. Again, the tempo for the first movement was well chosen; it certainly was not slow, but nor was it relentless. Phrases were nicely turned. Dynamic contrasts and gradations made musical sense throughout. The slow movement was arguably a little brisk, somewhat no-nonsense in the orchestral approach. There were, however, moments when it yielded. Moreover, there was none of the non vibrato nonsense one fears in present-day Bach performance; the violin was permitted to sing throughout. Playing was clean, strong, and sweet-toned in the finale, which benefited from a well-judged tempo. It excited through musical means rather than through exhibitionism, which has no place whatsoever in Bach. The relative neglect of the wedding cantata, O holder Tag, erwünschte Zeit, is puzzling; to my eyes and ears, it is a superior work to Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten, though I should not wish to be without either. Cowie returned to the orchestra, this time on oboe d’amore, and was joined by ano
25 3 days ago
UPDATES WILL BE POSTED DAILY Photos will be posted when available Here is a recording from BBC Wales with some chat about the competition & some excerpts from Song Prize recital 1 Download: radio-wales.m4a This competition can be overloo...
UPDATES WILL BE POSTED DAILY Photos will be posted when available Here is a recording from BBC Wales with some chat about the competition & some excerpts from Song Prize recital 1 Download: radio-wales.m4a This competition can be overlooked and neglected by the BBC programmers who concentrate more on the main prize event. You will find less information and far less media coverage but here is a helping hand to those who are interested – particularly those who are geo-blocked from the TV coverage. The song prize recitals run from Sunday 16th to Tuesday 18th when the finalists are announced. Sunday 16 June - Song Prize recital one - 2.30pm, Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, Cardiff Katherine Broderick - England  Marco Mimica - Croatia Jamie Barton - USA  Susana Gaspar - Portugal Official accompanists: Simon Lepper, Ll?r Williams Highlights of this recital on BBC radio3 at 13.00 BST on Tuesday 18 June link ~~ Song Prize recital two - 7.30pm, Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama Alexey Bogdanchikov - Russia  Gala El Hadidi - Egypt Luthando Qave - South Africa  Mária Celeng - Hungary Loriana Castellano - Italy Official accompanists: Simon Lepper, Ll?r Williams Highlights of this recital on BBC radio 3 on Wednesday 19 June at 13.00 BST link ~~ Monday 17 June - Song Prize recital three - 2.30pm Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama Olena Tokar - Ukraine  Gary Griffiths - Wales Yuri Gorodetski - Belarus  Egl? Šidlauskait? - Lithuania Official accompanists: Simon Lepper, Ll?r Williams Highlights of this recital on BBC radio 3 on Thursday 20 June at 13.00 BST link ~~ Tuesday 18 June - Song Prize recital four (followed by announcement of Song Prize finalists) 2.30pm, Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama Jeongcheol Cha - South Korea  Ben Johnson - England Daniela Mack - Argentina  Micha? Partyka - Poland Official accompanists: Simon Lepper, Ll?r Williams Highlights of this recital on BBC radio 3 on Friday 21 June at 13.00 link ~~ Friday 21 June   Song Prize Final ~~ SATURDAY 22 JUNE at 19.30 on BBC 4 television THE SONG PRIZE FINAL  link Petroc Trelawny presents the first of BBC Cardiff Singer’s two finals, the Song Prize, a demanding discipline where singers perform art song and lieder accompanied only by the piano. Joining Petroc is the acclaimed young opera singer Danielle de Niese, while on hand to analyse the performances are two experts at the genre – leading Irish soprano Ailish Tynan, who won the title in 2003, and internationally-renowned mezzo-soprano Bernarda Fink. ~~ Filed under: BBC, Cardiff
13 1 day ago
La Cieca supposes she shouldn’t complain: the more time Lorin Maazel spends on Facebook, the less time he has to wreck Don Carlo.
La Cieca supposes she shouldn’t complain: the more time Lorin Maazel spends on Facebook, the less time he has to wreck Don Carlo.
7 1 day ago
Congratulations to Jamie Barton who won the first round of the #CardiffSinger Competition! @jbartonmezzo #HGOPride
Congratulations to Jamie Barton who won the first round of the #CardiffSinger Competition! @jbartonmezzo #HGOPride
USA
4 about 12 hours ago
Jamie Barton from the United States wins the first day of the Cardiff Singer of the World Competition.
Jamie Barton from the United States wins the first day of the Cardiff Singer of the World Competition.
4 about 7 hours ago
Nathaniel Hawthorne, the repentant Puritan—that is, he repented that his family had once been Puritans—describes the voice of Rappaccini’s Daughter, Beatrice, as “rich as a tropical sunset, … which made Giovanni, though he knew not why, ...
Nathaniel Hawthorne, the repentant Puritan—that is, he repented that his family had once been Puritans—describes the voice of Rappaccini’s Daughter, Beatrice, as “rich as a tropical sunset, … which made Giovanni, though he knew not why, think of deep hues of purple or crimson and of perfumes heavily delectable.” That may have been enough to lure Mexican composer Daniel Catán to turn this overwritten anecdote in Frankenstein gothic into a chamber opera, La Hija de Rappaccini.   If Catán’s astringent, percussive score does not live up to such coloristic hints, the staging by Gotham Chamber Opera in the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens on Monday evening certainly did, at least in the glamorous pink and purple above the stage area, a sunset lingering precisely as long as the not-quite-two-hour score and not a second longer. Kudos to whoever arranged the clouds just so above Prospect Park. The opera will be repeated next Monday at the same site, right behind the Brooklyn Museum. Weather is predicted. Hawthorne’s theme of science run amok, questioning (even violating) the Laws of God, was a popular one during an era when intellectual progress rashly challenged much received (and revealed) wisdom. Dr. Rappaccini sacrifices his life, his soul, his daughter, everything to the new idol, experimental science. His garden in Padua mimics Eden, except that all his exotic and selectively bred plants are poisonous. (Today, Hawthorne might call his tale “Monsanto’s Daughter.”) The doctor’s child, evidently also self-generated, has likewise been nurtured on the poisonous garden. She has a touch that burns, a kiss that kills; the character cries out for punk diva treatment. But she has one thing she can call her own, her God-given soul, all cloying sweetness and light. The student, Giovanni, who carelessly falls in love with her, is gradually transformed by her breath and the garden’s atmosphere into her poisonous male counterpart. He gives her a “universal antidote,” but the substance that will cure any poison, kills pure, poisonous Beatrice. Juan Tovar’s libretto delves slightly further into the psyche of these people, their base and basic impulses: Hawthorne describes Giovanni’s dreams, and in the opera we see them sing, and the characters within them tell Giovanni just what he’d like to hear. The opera cleverly “personifies” three of the garden’s purple plants (costumes by Anita Yavich, choreography by Mark Dendy) who, like the Hesperides, weave their way about their walled orchard, surrounding the lovers with purple limbs and crimson voices. The elderly housekeeper becomes more clearly a procuress. The rival scientists fight their battles in the open. But somehow, while young Giovanni is clearly presented, in his naiveté and in his sensuous self, Beatrice, too heavily, symbolically explained in Hawthorne, is a sketchy enigma here. We don’t quite get what she wants, what she knows, any clear sense of her lonely predicament. That’s the libretto; Catán’s score which, in the hands of a master would fill in the blanks or replace them with something attractive in its very vagueness, is atmospheric but insubstantial. The music is scored for percussion: harp, piano, triangle, drums. This is metallic rather than sensuous, full of suggestion but little melody. It is not that Catán is unaware of melody or its uses in storytelling: At moments of heightened drama, such as Giovanni’s first sight of Beatrice or the trio of temptation when the doctor bids his “creations” join together in a ghastly parody of Adam and Eve and their death-bringing tree, melody seems to find itself and hearers are pleased and grateful. We receive these emotional pinnacles … well, emotionally. But Catán either cannot or does not care to sustain melody. Most of the tale is stated in the bald arioso of so much dreary modern opera. The singers go up too high for comfort when they are upset by something, or descend when they are speaking portentously. It makes one restless to hear what t
about 7 hours ago
The ultimate in site-specific productions, Tim Albery's new Peter Grimes opened on Monday night - on Aldeburgh beach, close to Britten's home. All the action takes place on a specially-constructed decrepit boardwalk, lodged between the ...
The ultimate in site-specific productions, Tim Albery's new Peter Grimes opened on Monday night - on Aldeburgh beach, close to Britten's home. All the action takes place on a specially-constructed decrepit boardwalk, lodged between the audience and the sea. Those who sat through the windy evening described the experience as 'unforgettable' and 'remarkable'. More pictures on the BBC News website.
about 10 hours ago
am in suuuuperb spirit now, project which has taken near TWO years to set up is now finally running, yeeeeeesssssss. the pix were actually 1 day old but capturing perfectly the mood. So it’s sort of rainy and very loooooovingly hum...
am in suuuuperb spirit now, project which has taken near TWO years to set up is now finally running, yeeeeeesssssss. the pix were actually 1 day old but capturing perfectly the mood. So it’s sort of rainy and very loooooovingly humid here, and i was chucking away on the computer when… this appeared on the window… which quickly evolved to this and before long this took over the dirty window… at which point it was time to go hunting… for an (window) un-filtered view as well as the… other end of rainbow in Harvard Sq 20min later :-). and now that the run is submitted again, i might have some time tomorrow after meeting to write up the 2nd Almira experience.
about 11 hours ago
Barbican Hall Strauss – Festmusik der Stadt Wien Berlioz – Overture: Le corsaire, op.21 Mozart – Violin Concerto no.3 in G major, KV 216 Beethoven – Symphony no.8 in F major, op.93 Brahms – Nänie, op.82 Students f...
Barbican Hall Strauss – Festmusik der Stadt Wien Berlioz – Overture: Le corsaire, op.21 Mozart – Violin Concerto no.3 in G major, KV 216 Beethoven – Symphony no.8 in F major, op.93 Brahms – Nänie, op.82 Students from the Royal Academy of Music and Guildhall School London Symphony Chorus London Symphony Orchestra Patrick Harrild, Joseph Wolfe (conductors) Nikolaj Znaider (violin/director/conductor) Gordan Nikolitch (director) And so, the London Symphony Orchestra gathered tribute to the late Sir Colin Davis. Arguably it was with this orchestra, still more so than with the Royal Opera, that Sir Colin was most at home; certainly the greater number of his appearances in recent years were here at the Barbican. But until the very end, he remained committed to music-making with the young, so it was meet and right that the concert should open with student musicians from the Royal Academy (where, as recently as 2011, I heard him conduct Béatrice et Bénédict) and the Guildhall. As Jonathan Freeman-Attwood, Principal of the RAM put it in one of a host of programme tributes, ‘Of the many distinguished conductors in British music over the last century, I cannot believe there has been anyone more committed to nurturing young musicians than Sir Colin. (I hope that these wonderful tributes will be made available online for all to read, if indeed they are not already.) Strauss’s 1943 Festmusik der Stadt Wien might then have seemed on paper an odd choice with which to open, but it allowed a goodly number of young musicians to assemble, and to offer a decidedly superior, eminently musical, fanfare to what was a celebration as much as a memorial. Joseph Wolfe, Sir Colin’s son, then conducted Le Corsaire. It is doubtless unnecessary to remind anyone that Sir Colin did more than anyone for Berlioz either during or after the composer’s life. To ‘review’ these performance as if this were a ‘normal’ concert would be not so much to do something wrong as completely to miss the point. Wolfe may have taken the opening more hurriedly, and the following section more leisurely, than his father might have been expected to do – though, who knows, for this was not a musician to rest on his laurels? – but the last thing Sir Colin was was a megalomaniac, insisting that there was one ‘correct’ way to perform anything. (His courtesy and humanity proved far more lethal weapons against the monstrous regiments of ‘authenticity’ than any number of angry Adornian attacks from the likes of me.) Berlioz was honoured, as he was in Sir Colin’s final performance with the LSO and the London Symphony Chorus, a truly unforgettable performance of the Requiem. Palpable throughout was the electricity of commitment from an orchestra that had clearly loved a father-figure and above all a fellow musician. Nikolaj Znaider, author of another moving programme tribute, joined the orchestra for Mozart’s Third Violin Concerto. He and Sir Colin had various concerts planned together; indeed, this evening was due to have offered a performance of the Mendelssohn Concerto and Schubert’s ‘Great’ C major Symphony. Amongst those plans had been exploration of Mozart. There were a few occasions when one might have sighed longingly, knowing that a tricky corner would have been deftly negotiated by the greatest Mozartian since at least Karl Böhm. But again, the point here was to rejoice in fresh musicianship. Znaider drew from the LSO a crisp and often affectionate response to Mozart’s vernal score, especially during an adorably sweet account of the slow movement, and his sensitivity as soloist was beyond reproach. The performance, however, was not without melancholy, at least in terms of response, for if we shall miss Sir Colin in Berlioz, we shall miss him even more in Mozart. Who, after all, now is left, fit to perform that most difficult and yet most crucial of musical tasks? N
about 11 hours ago