Opera Music

Photo: Alastair Muir Sara Jakubiak (Marie) and Leigh Melrose (Wozzeck) in ENO's Wozzeck It was a very good, and extremely well attended, evening at the Cliseum for English National Opera's hugely successful new production of Wo...
Photo: Alastair Muir Sara Jakubiak (Marie) and Leigh Melrose (Wozzeck) in ENO's Wozzeck It was a very good, and extremely well attended, evening at the Cliseum for English National Opera's hugely successful new production of Wozzeck.  There is little that I can add to the deserved pauditis it has received.  But I should note a particular welcome for Sara Jakubiak's Marie.  Sara was with us at COT in Jake Heggie's Three Decembers back in 2010 - and had been a particular favorite of mine when she was at Yale in Doris Cross's excellent program.  She is a tremendously valuable versatile singer and actress - so many exciting things for her in the future I feel sure. And as the Doctor we had the luxury casting of James Morris (Glyndebourne class of 1969 and for many years elsewhere since!).  Leigh Melrose was superb in the title role, Edward Gardner sumptuously lyrical and passionate in the pit, and Carrie Cracknell has created a landmark production that can do her no harm. So yes, another fine evening for the consistently high performing English National Opera.
about 7 hours ago
Looking forward!
Looking forward!
about 7 hours ago
La Scala tightens its belt as it rolls out the 2013-14 season, streamlined under Italy's unflinching economic crisis, down from...
La Scala tightens its belt as it rolls out the 2013-14 season, streamlined under Italy's unflinching economic crisis, down from...
about 8 hours ago
It was widely expected that La Scala would use the opportunity of today's 2013-14 season launch to reveal the replacement for Stéphane Lissner, who vacates the post of Superintendant in 2015. But there was no such announcement. Instead...
It was widely expected that La Scala would use the opportunity of today's 2013-14 season launch to reveal the replacement for Stéphane Lissner, who vacates the post of Superintendant in 2015. But there was no such announcement. Instead, the invited audience were treated to a tirade from music director Daniel Barenboim. He bluntly slammed the organisational inflexibility which he says is behind the failure to come to a decision. This failure, he said, has paralysed programming for the eight months since Lissner announced his departure. In what might be interpreted as support for the main non-Italian candidate, Alexander Pereira, Barenboim also had some sharp words for anyone bringing nationality into the debate. "When I see discussion about whether the new Superintendant is Italian or not, instead of whether he has culture, whether he can do programming, I find it dreadful." "What is the difference between Verdi and Beethoven? The birth certificate? I think not."
about 12 hours ago
I confess I have been following Cecilia Bartoli's foray into Bellini's Norma like a deer caught in the headlights. Even the very idea of it is fascinating.I read everything in the English and German press, the vast majority positive, ab...
I confess I have been following Cecilia Bartoli's foray into Bellini's Norma like a deer caught in the headlights. Even the very idea of it is fascinating.I read everything in the English and German press, the vast majority positive, about both the new recording and the performances in Salzburg.We know that Cecilia is self-identified with the greatest of all divas--Maria Malibran, a woman whose legend was amplified out of all human proportion by her early death.She also carries another less positive obsession with another transcendent diva--Maria Callas. In Cecilia's native Italy time seems to have stopped with Callas. The style of performance most represented by Callas is the only one the average opera-devoted Italian cares to hear. Cecilia's countrymen are to this day completely fascinated with Callas and care not at all for her. When Cecilia sings at La Scala, they boo.Both of Cecilia's obsession divas scored triumphs in the role of Norma. Callas was particularly known for her portrayal, recording it 5 times. I am personally astounded that La Bartoli would take this on, but should I be? It begins to seem inevitable.Cecilia Bartoli is an awesome individual. (If there were any way to invest in her, I would. Could she please incorporate herself.) You only imagined that she doesn't have the right voice for Norma. She bends reality to her will. I can't stop watching. And listening.
about 13 hours ago
It was bound to happen, a porno opera. Of course, it it had to be in either the Netherlands or Germany. I guess Germany figured it had featured enough soft-porn Regie productions, so the "honor" goes to the Netherlands. Operadagen Rotter...
It was bound to happen, a porno opera. Of course, it it had to be in either the Netherlands or Germany. I guess Germany figured it had featured enough soft-porn Regie productions, so the "honor" goes to the Netherlands. Operadagen Rotterdam 2013 will be presenting the world premiere of Pornographia on Friday, May 31 and Saturday, June 1. The opera, which is being described as a mix of performance art and opera is the first part of a series of three about contemporary sociocultural trends in society. The other two will be Megalomania and Nostalgia. The "score" of the opera will be the full soundtrack of a gay porn movie with fragments inspired by twentieth century music classics. The opera is about a small society of three figures whose mundane life is intervened by the entrance of a handsome young man. The need to satisfy their feelings of lust drives them crazy and eventually leads them to destruct what they crave for. The May 31st performance will be preceeded by a panel discussion about the pornofication of the contemporary artistic discourse in the Netherlands. Pornographia is being described as a new experimental operatic performance about our collective need for immediate gratification of our desires.PornographiaDirector Sjaron Minailo says he is using pornography as a metaphor for a culture in which the desires of the consumer are the only engine of production; A culture in which the desire for realism results in the opposite: the pornographic illustration of sexuality consumes the sexuality itself. Admission is € 10 and tickets are available online.
about 13 hours ago
Nmon FordWhen one thinks of the operatic version of Macbeth, one immediately thinks of Giuseppe Verdi. However, the Swiss-American composer Ernest Bloch wrote a highly dramatic version in 1906, which has only been performed once in the ...
Nmon FordWhen one thinks of the operatic version of Macbeth, one immediately thinks of Giuseppe Verdi. However, the Swiss-American composer Ernest Bloch wrote a highly dramatic version in 1906, which has only been performed once in the U.S., at the Juilliard School of Music in New York in 1973.The opera is about to double the number of U.S. performances it has received, with performances at the Long Beach Opera from June 15-23, 2013 and again at the Chicago Opera Theater from September 13-21, 2014. The Long Beach performances will feature Panamanian-American barihunk Nmon Ford in the title role and Suzan Hanson as his scheming wife Lady Macbeth. Adding to the dramatic effect will be the location of the performance, which will be in a vast industrial space at the Port of Los Angeles. The Chicago Opera Theater has not confirmed casting. The great Inge Borkh sings Bloch's Macbeth: Bloch’s opera reveals the influence of Wagner's music dramas and Claude Debussy's symbolist opera "Pelleas et Melisande." Bloch's probing and dramatic score powerfully illuminates the central couple, and deeply examines the temptation of promised power and its influence over our actions. but it did not receive its first performance until November 30, 1910 by the Opéra-Comique Paris. After the premiere production, the opera was staged in 1938 in Naples, but was then banned on orders of the Fascist government. Subsequently, the opera was produced in Rome in 1953, and in Trieste.
about 16 hours ago
May 28th-June 3rd, Opera Music Broadcast Webcasts the InsightALT Festival, Live from NYC A festival of new operas in development at American Lyric Theater Event: Insight ALT Festival Venue: JCC Manhattan Date/Time: May 28th-June 3rd, 201...
May 28th-June 3rd, Opera Music Broadcast Webcasts the InsightALT Festival, Live from NYC A festival of new operas in development at American Lyric Theater Event: Insight ALT Festival Venue: JCC Manhattan Date/Time: May 28th-June 3rd, 2013 (check each event for starting times) “OMB not only efficiently reached a much broader audience than what is possible [...]
about 17 hours ago
Admit it: You thought we were gonna say Solti or von Karajan, right? Girls, girls, tuck your brass knuckles back...
Admit it: You thought we were gonna say Solti or von Karajan, right? Girls, girls, tuck your brass knuckles back...
about 17 hours ago
Royal Festival Hall Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg: Prelude to Act One Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act One and ‘Liebestod’ Die Walküre: Act Three Isolde, Brünnhilde – Susan Bullock Sieglinde – Giselle Allen Wotan – ...
Royal Festival Hall Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg: Prelude to Act One Tristan und Isolde: Prelude to Act One and ‘Liebestod’ Die Walküre: Act Three Isolde, Brünnhilde – Susan Bullock Sieglinde – Giselle Allen Wotan – James Rutherford Helmwige – Katherine Broderick Gerhilde – Mariya Krywaniuk Siegrune – Magdalen Ashman Grimgerde – Antonia Sotgiu Ortlinde – Elaine McKrill Waltraute – Jennifer Johnston Rossweisse – Maria Jones Schwertleite – Miriam Sharrad David Edwards (director) David Holmes (lighting) Philharmonia Orchestra Sir Andrew Davis (director) London’s two principal opera companies have offered a baffling near-silence as their response to Wagner’s two-hundredth anniversary. With ENO, once home to Reginald Goodall, one may delete the ‘near’; the Royal Opera has opted for a single production, in November, of Parsifal, whose casting does not exactly lift the spirits. There is certainly nothing anywhere near the composer’s birthday itself. The BBC Proms have valiantly stepped into the gap, offering concert performances of the Ring (Barenboim), Tristan und Isolde (Bychkov), Parsifal (Elder) and Tannhäuser (Runnicles). Those concerts, however, will not take place until July and August. For 22 May, London’s offering was a Philharmonia concert conducted by Sir Andrew Davis. Doubtless there was stiff competition for Wagner conductors on the day, and Chirstian Thielemann was otherwise occupied in Bayreuth, but it was difficult not to feel that someone with greater Wagerian credentials might at least have been a possibility. Bernard Haitink, for instance? Most of us would readily have swapped the aforementioned Parsifal to hear the Royal Opera’s erstwhile music director once again in Wagner. Was I being unfair? The proof of the aural pudding would, as always, be in the hearing. Sadly, the Prelude to the first act of Die Meistersinger – not its ‘Overture’, as the programme insert had it – received an account, which, if undoubtedly preferable to the straightforward incomprehension Antonio Pappano had shown conducting the entire opera at Covent Garden, proved no more than Kapellmeister-ish. Timings as such tell one nothing, but it felt rushed, often more martial than celebratory. There was certainly no sense of midsummer blaze or indeed embers. The Philharmonia strings, though many in number, sometimes tended towards wiriness. Detail was either skated or fussed over. Though there was more fire towards the close, it was really too late by then. It doubtless had not helped that, earlier in the day, I had listened to Furtwängler conducting the same music in 1931, but even taking that into account, it was an undistinguished performance. Rather to my surprise, the Tristan excerpts worked better. I remain sceptical, to put it mildly, about the wisdom of pairing the first act Prelude and the so-called ‘Liebestod’ (Liszt’s wretched description of Isolde’s Transfiguration). Though I am well aware of the distinguished precedents – even Furtwängler and Boulez have followed the practice – to my ears it jars. That said, both conductor and orchestra were on better form. Not only was their a fuller string sound but Davis now seemed to understand, certainly to communicate, that something was at stake. He struck a good balance between forward impulse and a more analytical approach to the score. Though certainly not plumbing any Furtwänglerian metaphysical depths, it was a satisfying enough musical experience. Susan Bullock, joining for the ‘Liebestod’, held her line well enough. At some times, she shaded sensitively; at others, she proved rather squally. The Philharmonia, however, offered beautifully shimmering and pulsating support. Whoever interposed immediately with a boorish ‘Bravo!’ should be condemned to listen to Verdi for the rest of Wagner’s anniversary year. The second half was devoted to the third act of Die Walküre. It is
about 18 hours ago