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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 3 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
Spare a few minutes, cher public, to discuss off-topic and general interest subjects.
Spare a few minutes, cher public, to discuss off-topic and general interest subjects.
7 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 about 16 hours ago
To honor my dear Maria Galvany on her June 19th birthday, I present an Attila from 1979 featuring Justino Diaz, Enrico Di Giuseppe, and Cornelius Opthof from Cincinatti, conducted by Anton Coppola. This is a thrilling performance and we ...
To honor my dear Maria Galvany on her June 19th birthday, I present an Attila from 1979 featuring Justino Diaz, Enrico Di Giuseppe, and Cornelius Opthof from Cincinatti, conducted by Anton Coppola. This is a thrilling performance and we all wish Mme.Galvany a very happy birthday!! (68 min.)
26 minutes ago
Gotham Chamber Opera presents La Hija de Rappaccini. by Paul J. Pelkonen Pretty poison: Elaine Alvarez is Beatriz in La Hija de Rappacini.Photo by Richard Termine © 2013 Gotham Chamber Opera. The opera season may be at its end, ...
Gotham Chamber Opera presents La Hija de Rappaccini. by Paul J. Pelkonen Pretty poison: Elaine Alvarez is Beatriz in La Hija de Rappacini.Photo by Richard Termine © 2013 Gotham Chamber Opera. The opera season may be at its end, but New York's opera lovers have a few more treats in store. On Monday night, Gotham Chamber Opera unveiled its al fresco production of Daniel Catán’s 1988 opera La Hija de Rappaccini (Rappacini's Daughter.) This Spanish-language opera is not new to New Yorkers, but this is a new production, presented on the Cherry Esplanade at the heart of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Based on a short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne and a subsequent dramatic adaptation by playwright Octavio de la Paz, Rappaccini is a Gothic thriller set in the sensual, often deadly world of a mad scientist’s poisonous garden. As in Wagner’s Parsifal, the central floral creation of Rappacini’s garden is a woman--the titular Beatriz. Her father has made her a sheltered innocent, who happens to be so toxic that her mere caress causes illness. Unlike Kundry, she is a victim of her father's machinations who eventually meets her death when she drinks an antidote intended to save the hero from her deadly touch. Although she has the title role, soprano Elaine Alvarez doesn’t get a lot of music to sing. However, the soprano makes she makes the most of her lush entry in the first act and her subsequent duet with her decidedly mad father. The love scene in Act II echoes Wagner again--with hints of Tristan and Parsifal accompanying a romantic, Shakespearean innocence in the text. Her flowery liebestod at the end of the second Act combines sadness, suicide and sense of resignation. Here, Catán's sensitive music evoked the end of Strauss’ Daphne, another short opera whose heroine has a similar obsession with botany. The major vocal find here was tenor Daniel Montenegro. His heroic performance as Giovanni evoked sympathy while providing florid detail and a potent, bright instrument. This young man displayed ringing clarity and power, and might have sounded even better if he weren't amplified. His aria during the Act I dream sequence was a tour-de-force, drawing an ovation form the crowd assembled on the grassy lawn. Baritone Eric Dubin was an imposing presence as the mad Rappaccini, whose mad-scientist machinations are the motivation behind this tragic story. His obsession with poisons and psychopathic amorality reminded this writer of Ian Fleming's book version of You Only Live Twice where James Bond's nemesis Ernst Stavro Blofeld has devolved into the manager of a garden of poisonous plants. Tenor Brian Downen played the good Doctor Baglioni, whose efforts to save Giovanni ultimately doom Beatriz. Mezzo Jessica Grigg sang Isabella with sweetness and lucidity. She is the maid who brings the lovers together. Catán’s music is sensuous and lush, although presented here in a reduced orchestration that made one long for a lush thicket of strings and double winds. Problems with the amplification made the harp and piano dominate the ensemble to an almost unfair degree. Neal Goren proved his expertise on the podium, drawing rich emotions form the musicians despite the Spartan reduction of the score. The setting was simple and effective. A white cast-iron bed represented Giovanni’s student lodgings, while a sloped red disk (very Wieland Wagner, that!) stood in for Rappaccini’s deadly garden. The incongruity of a gold-leafed tree in the middle of the Botanic Garden’s carefully cultivated wonders emphasized the alien nature of Rappacini’s experiments and the scientist’s corruption of the natural world for his own personal ends. The singers moved, dream-like through the cherry trees, adding to the surreal beauty of a perfect summer evening in Brooklyn. La Hija de Rappacini returns June 24 for one more performance. June 25 is the alternate date in the event of inclement weather.
about 2 hours ago
The Importance of Being Earnest , Gerald Barry’s fifth opera, was commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and the Barbican, and was first performed in concert, Thomas Adès conducting the London premiere.
The Importance of Being Earnest , Gerald Barry’s fifth opera, was commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and the Barbican, and was first performed in concert, Thomas Adès conducting the London premiere.
about 2 hours ago
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
about 5 hours ago
Handel’s first surviving musical composition is Almira, the opera he wrote in a hurry when shake-ups at the Hamburg opera house, where the 19-year-old had been playing in the violin section, left a planned production unfinished. Mixing G...
Handel’s first surviving musical composition is Almira, the opera he wrote in a hurry when shake-ups at the Hamburg opera house, where the 19-year-old had been playing in the violin section, left a planned production unfinished. Mixing German and Italian text, stuffed with French dances and pageantry, and with a comic servant character right out of Venetian opera, Almira is as up-to-date as the cosmopolitan city got in 1705.  A lavish, period-style production at the Boston Early Music Festival did a good job camouflaging Friedrich Christian Feustking’s feeble libretto, set in Castile in the year who-knows-what. Upon coming of age, Queen Almira learns that her late father’s will requires her to marry one of the counselor Consalvo’s sons. The only one hanging around is the flighty Osman and he’s game but she’s not because she loves a mysterious foreigner called Fernando, who gets entangled with the princess Edilia, recently thrown over by the previously mentioned Osman, who is loved by the court lady Bellante. After four hours of intrigue, including the appearance of a disguised king from Mauretania, the obligatory baroque prison scene, and the endless nattering of the servant Tabarco, the whole thing comes to a Gilbert and Sullivan close when Fernando is revealed as the long-lost son of the counselor Consalvo, rescued by a fisherman and identified by an engraved jewel pendant. There’s no plot that a few gorgeous sarabandes and some manly sword-dances can’t fix, though, and superb choreography by Caroline Copeland and Carlos Fittante (and their own alert characterizations) went beyond dance suites and an entire Pageant of the Continents to include inventive pantomime and other movement from dancers, choristers, and extras that enlivened every scene. There were card games, garden strolls, and court games of “Blind Man’s Bluff.” The whole period look of the show was gorgeous, from Gilbert Blin’s perspective set with its cardboard clouds, arched façades, and multiple tantalizing backdrops to Anna Watkins’s costumes: neck ruffs, women in rich pastels and bronze gowns and men got up à la Van Dyke (Anthony, not Dick) in black and gold velvet. And the swords! And the daggers! Historical accuracy is strictly enforced at BEMF (the director’s notes are full of aesthetic theory and such, wigs and makeup are fiercely researched, and faux candles light a specially-constructed communal music stand for the players), so even the use of weapons was presumably authentic. Even though certain melodic motives, instrumental textures, and lyrical bass-line shapes sound familiar, Almira is worlds away from the London operas that brought Handel fame and then ridicule. There are no castrato roles and no cross-dressing. Arias alternate German and Italian randomly and are often short. Recitatives, in German, have elaborate melodic shapes, even with flourishes and roulades, and they outline weird harmonies. There is plenty of ballet music, including two sarabandes that enjoyed afterlives as “Pena tiranna” from Amadigi di Gaula and Rinaldo’s “Lascia ch’io pianga,” by way of “Lascia la spina” from Il Trionfo del Tempo. By the way, if ballet mistress Melinda Sullivan’s troupe is correct, a danced sarabande is not a dirge. Among the cast, the men won out, both in singing and in using the stylized baroque gestures and movements to convey expression and character. The excellent German baritone Christian Immler played Consalvo as a fawning but charming court politico, with extended codpiece poking through puffy striped shorts, and his opening aria, “Almira regiere,” sounded especially smooth and majestic. As the disguised King of Mauretania, Raymondo, Tyler Duncan made the most of a turban, fake beard, expressive face, and handsome, ringing voice, which he brought down to a whisper for the cadenza to “Edilia, du bleibest mein.” Canadian tenor Colin Balzer is a BEMF favorite and he showed appealing emotional investment and earnest, warm sound as Fernando, whose ch
about 5 hours ago