Opera
La Calisto, Hampstead Garden OperaMonday, 28 April 2014![]() Baroque operas are like buses. You wait years for some Cavalli to come along, and then three of his operas arrive almost at once. It all started with English Touring Opera’s Jason last October – a witty and endlessly shape-shifting work – followed... Read more... |
Gallery: Stars of the Glyndebourne ChorusSaturday, 26 April 2014![]() Its constituent parts come in all sizes, tall and small, compact or full-bodied, and span the ages. But put them all together and an operatic chorus is a vast but single organism that sings – and moves – as one. The current Glyndebourne Chorus... Read more... |
Khovanshchina, Birmingham Opera CompanyWednesday, 23 April 2014![]() Has anyone ever sat through Musorgsky’s last, not quite finished, opera about the struggle for power in Moscow at the time of Peter the Great’s accession in the 1690s, and come away with the slightest idea of what it’s all about? If Khovanshchina... Read more... |
La Traviata, Royal OperaSunday, 20 April 2014![]() The German soprano Diana Damrau has had the role of Violetta Valéry in La Traviata in her sights for a very long time. As she has explained in interviews, seeing the Zeffirelli film of the opera, with Teresa Stratas in the title role, as a 12-year... Read more... |
theartsdesk Q&A: Soprano Nicole CabellMonday, 07 April 2014![]() Last year a DVD appeared featuring the 15 winning performances from the start of the BBC Cardiff Singer of the World Competition up to 2011. I watched them all, skimming if any seemed a notch below par but staying with most. You could see the star... Read more... |
Powder Her Face, English National Opera, Ambika P3Thursday, 03 April 2014![]() The opening gyrations of Thomas Adès’s bluesy, schmoozy overture to Powder Her Face beckon you into a world of cheap sensation and excess. Accordion, saxophones and sizzle cymbal add their indecent, after-hours suggestions, and you have a microcosm... Read more... |
Prince Igor, Novaya Opera, London ColiseumWednesday, 02 April 2014![]() Had this Moscow production any serious ideas in its head until its suddenly effective epilogue, much might have been pertinently said about an opera in which an imperialistic campaign ends in disaster, and where the Polovtsian “enemy” shows far more... Read more... |
L’Ormindo, Royal Opera, Sam Wanamaker PlayhouseWednesday, 26 March 2014![]() The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, the new indoor Jacobean theatre at The Globe, is an absolute jewel of painstaking historical research and craftsmanship. It is small, seating around 350, and with its thrust stage lit by around 100 candles (with electric... Read more... |
theartsdesk in Sydney: Beyond the CringeSunday, 23 March 2014![]() I hadn’t heard the term “cultural cringe” until I went to live in Australia. Holiday encounters had been so full of sunshine, art, water and music that it hadn’t occurred to me to doubt the cultural confidence and energy of the nation that gave us... Read more... |
Die Frau ohne Schatten, Royal OperaSaturday, 15 March 2014![]() The big message of The Woman Without a Shadow, brushing aside the narrower, moral majority preaching that you’re incomplete without children, seems clear: fulfillment can’t be bought at the cost of another’s suffering. Yet the path towards that... Read more... |
Le docteur Miracle, Pop-up Opera, The Running HorseTuesday, 11 March 2014An orchestral musician recently told me that only one per cent of graduates from UK music colleges go on to take up a post in an established opera company or orchestra. You’d think, given such an alarming statistic, that there would be a lot of very... Read more... |
A silver rose for Glyndebourne's 80thMonday, 10 March 2014![]() Der Rosenkavalier, Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal’s 1911 “comedy for music” about love, money and masquerading in a putative 18th-century Vienna, is a repertoire staple around the world. Continental houses throw it together without a... Read more... |
