Tuesday, 10 October 2017

Aida

by Giuseppe Verdi (libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni)

seen at the Coliseum on 9 October 2017

Phelim McDermott directs and Keri-Lynn Wilson conducts this new production of Aida with sets designed by Tom Pye. The principal singers are Latonia Moore as Aida, Gwyn Hughes Jones as Radamès, Michelle DeYoung as Amneris and Musa Ngqungwana as Amonasro, with Robert Winslade Anderson as Ramfis and Matthew Best as the Pharaoh. 

The opera, famous for some very grand crowd scenes (in particular the triumphal march in the second act) actually hinges on several very intimate personal encounters, given that the central dilemma is that of divided loyalties - those of Aida between her love for Radamès and for her father Amonasro and her fatherland; and those of Radamès between his love for Aida, and Ethiopian princess, and his loyalty to his own country of Egypt. Complicating this is the unrequited love of the princes Amneris for Radamès. Despite the opportunities for bombast, the opera opens with an extremely quiet prelude, and concludes with the two lovers expiring in a tomb while Amneris prays quietly for forgiveness.

Monday, 9 October 2017

La Bohème

by Giacomo Puccini (libretto by Giuseppe Giacosa and Luigi Illica after Murger)

seen by live streaming (repeat) from Covent Garden on 8 October 2017

Antonio Pappano conducts and Richard Jones directs this new Covent Garden production (the first in 43 years), with sets designed by Stewart Laing. It features Michael Fabiano as Rodolfo, Nicola Car as Mimi, Mariusz Kwiecien as Marcello, Joyce el-Khoudry standing in for Simona Mihai as Musetta, Luca Tittoto as Colline and Florian Sempey as Schaunard.

The previous production had many revivals but, even when well-loved, such things cannot go on forever; new casts begin to look trapped in old ideas. Richard Jones has been responsible for some controversial productions in the past, but here he has made an emotionally charged tribute to a work that could drown in sentimentality or misplaced jollity, while at the same time celebrating its theatricality.

Sunday, 8 October 2017

The Barber of Seville

by Gioachino Rossini (libretto Cesare Sterbini after Beaumarchais)

seen at the Coliseum on 7 October 2017

Jonathan Miller's 1987 ENO production, conducted by Hilary Griffiths and designed by Tanya McCallin, is revived by Peter Relton with Eleazar Rodríguez as Count Almaviva, Sarah Tynan as Rosina, Morgan Pearse as Figaro, Alan Opie as Doctor Bartolo and Alastair Miles as Don Basilio.

The setting is naturalistic, with the first act outside Doctor Bartolo's house and the remainder in the upper floor reception room whose window conveniently looks over the street. This all works extremely well with the eighteenth century costumes and the references to commedia dell'arte figures (principally the musicians Count Almaviva employs in the opening scene, but this sets the tone). The lightness - not to say frothiness - of the music is allowed full rein with no intrusive directorial distractions, and the relative absurdity of the plot survives because it is all dressed safely in the past.

Thursday, 5 October 2017

King Arthur

by Henry Purcell

seen semi-staged at the Barbican Hall on 2 October 2017

Richard Egarr directed the Academy of Ancient Music and its choir, with Ray Fearon as the narrator and six soloists, in a performance of Purcell's music for this piece interspersed with poems reflecting ideas of nationhood, war, political dissension, and so forth, in a performance designed to be 'King Arthur in the Age of Brexit'. Dryden's text and story (which form the spoken part of the 'semi opera') are totally abandoned, though the idea of a conflict (originally between Britons and Saxons) is preserved in the two groups of the chorus who represent, broadly speaking, Leavers and Remainers in the Brexit referendum and its aftermath.

Friday, 7 July 2017

Hamlet

by Brett Dean (libretto by Matthew Jocelyn after Shakespeare)

seen by live streaming from Glyndebourne on 6 July 2017

Vladimir Jurowski conducted and Neil Armfield directed this newly commissioned opera based on Shakespeare's play, with Allan Clayton as Hamlet, Barbara Hannigan as Ophelia, Rod Gilfry as Claudius, Sarah Connolly as Gertrude, and John Tomlinson singing the Ghost, the Player King and the Gravedigger.

It is a huge challenge to condense the complex and very long text of Hamlet into a satisfactory opera, but Dean and Jocelyn have succeeded with an extremely clever and effective adaptation. Many aspects of the play are perforce omitted - but they often are in stage productions as well, since the longest version of the text would take about four hours to perform. There is no Fortinbras, and so very little of the political plot; not even a trip to England. What remains is the personal drama of Hamlet's confusion and collapse, the destruction of Ophelia's sanity, and the final catastrophe as the king's plot to rid himself of his troublesome nephew backfires leaving all the principal characters dead except for Horatio.

The opera opens with the feast - not on the battlements as one picnicking audience member observed during the interval interviews - but the decision is entirely sensible, and the unease of the situation is immediately brought into focus by Hamlet's strange and disconnected behaviour. He seems already to have adopted the 'antic disposition', or at least he seems to be 'on the spectrum', as they say, walking in careful but obsessive patterns around the room and then disconcerting everyone by striding along the dining table. The icy perfection of the court, all assembled in a room of classical eighteenth century elegance with white walls, is gradually fragmented as the walls are moved around in later scenes, often exposing the unpainted backs and supporting struts, until the banqueting hall is recreated for the final duel. (Excellent set design by Ralph Myers.) Throughout the production, all the people wear exaggeratedly pale make-up on their faces - but not on their necks - a subtly disquieting indication of alienation.

Several strands of the play can take place simultaneously with the hep of musical lines. Not only are we privy to Hamlet's inner turmoil, but Laertes's cautious but oppressive advice to his sister Ophelia co-exists with the public festivities of the new King, his Queen and the court. And, in an audacious twist, phrases from the famous soliloquies are used completely out of place, in terms of the play, but immediately appropriate in terms of the opera. In fact, Hamlet's first words sung in the piece, after an impressively low rumble from a tam-tam, are 'or not to be', the second half of the most famous phrase from the play. In other dextrous reshapings of the text, the players declaim fragments of the soliloquies instead of the bombastic Hecuba speech, and during the duel between Hamlet and Laertes, while the chorus sings instructions from a fencing manual, Hamlet sings weirdly relevant extracts from his advice to the players on how to use hand gestures in their acting styles. This is all brilliant stuff.

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern perform their thankless task of being pawns out of their depth, their ineffectuality somehow enhanced by their intertwining counter-tenor voices. As they, too, are not sent to England, they become the messengers for the final duel (replacing Osric) and are slain as hapless defenders of the king when Hamlet attacks him with the poisoned rapier.

All this must be matched by effective music and by the performances of the singers. The music is fascinating and powerful, with many interesting effects and textures. Unfortunately some of this was lost in a cinema screening, since Brett Dean has specifically placed some instrumentalists in the high spaces of the auditorium, and some of the chorus in the orchestra pit, but the specific sources of the sound were somewhat flattened out in the cinema - it must have been far more effective in the theatre itself.

As for the cast, they were extremely good. Allan Clayton's Hamlet was always a powerful presence in what must be a draining role, while Rod Gilfry presented an outwardly charming but increasingly sinister king, matched by a proudly reserved Sarah Connolly as Gertrude. Barbara Hannigan'e Ophelia was a revelation. Already an awkward young woman, she spiralled down into an electrifying and horrifying madness, throwing herself about the stage and onto other characters with a frightening abandon, a real tour de force.

Glyndebourne can be justly proud of this fascinating production.

Friday, 30 June 2017

Otello

by Giuseppe Verdi

seen by live streaming from Covent Garden on 28 June 2017

Keith Warner directs Jonas Kaufmann as Otello, Maria Agresta as Desdemona and Marco Vratogna as Iago in a new production of Otello with Antonio Pappano conducting. This is Kaufmann's debut in the taxing role of the Moorish general in the Venetian state whose initial love for his wife Desdemona is poisoned by the ambitious and vengeful Iago, to the point where he smothers her.

The three leads gave strong musical performances, the contrasting characterisations of wifely innocence in the soprano, almost demonic vitriol in the bass, and descent from heroism to jealous rage in the tenor all persuasively handled. Kaufmann in particular charts the degeneration of Otello's character with great dramatic power, whereas acting skills are less in demand for the other two, whose personalities are necessarily less subject to change and development.

Wednesday, 24 May 2017

Don Carlo

by Giuseppe Verdi

seen at Covent Garden on 22 May 2017

This revival of Nicholas Hytner's production of the 1884 'Modena' version of Don Carlo featured Brian Hymel as Don Carlo, Kristin Lewis as Elizabeth of Valois, Idar Abdrazakov as King Philip II of Spain, Simone Piazzola as Rodrigo of Posa, Ekaterina Semenchuk as Princess Eboli and Paata Burchuladze as the Grand Inquisitor. Bertrand de Billy conducted, and the designer was Bob Crowley.

The opera, based on the play Don Carlos by Schiller, is not especially historical, since it re-tells the story that Don Carlo, the eldest son of Philip II of Spain, was in love with Elizabeth of Valois, who was originally intended to be his bride, but who became his stepmother instead. While true that the two were of an age and apparently enjoyed one another's company, the idea that they were romantically involved is unlikely, given that the prince was extremely unstable. He did die at an early age (23) but the circumstances are not those of the sentimental story that grew up later.

Sunday, 30 April 2017

The Exterminating Angel

by Thomas Adès

seen at Covent Garden on 27 April 2017

Thomas Adès, conductor and co-librettist as well as composer, and Tom Cairns (librettist and director) created this opera, first seen at Salzburg last year, based on the film screenplay by Luis Buñuel and Luis Alcoriza for Buñuel's film El Ángel Exterminador. As this is a co-production with the Salzburg Festival (and The Met and the Royal Danish Opera) many of the original cast are reprising their roles. These include John Tomlinson, Iestyn Davies, Sophie Bevan, Anne Sofie von Otter, Christine Rice, Sally Matthews and Thomas Allen.

Thursday, 30 March 2017

Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg

by Richard Wagner

seen at Covent Garden on 28 March 2017

Kasper Holten directs his final production as the Artistic Director of the Royal Opera, featuring Bryn Terfel as Hans Sachs, Gwyn Hughes Jones as Walther von Stolzing, Rachel Willis-Sørensen as Eva Pogner and Johannes Martin Kränzle as Sixtus Beckmesser, with sets designed by Mia Stensgaard and costumes by Anja Vang Kragh. The performance was conducted by Antonio Pappano.

Musically this was a treat, with a rich and finely controlled orchestra, powerful choral singing in the opening chorale (cleverly treated as a concert rehearsal rather than as part of a church service) and the great affirmative welcome to Hans Sachs in the final scene, all of this supporting some great soloists - especially Bryn Terfel in marvellous voice as the genial and worldly-wise cobbler-poet and Johannes Martin Kränzle as the fussy over-ambitious and ultimately thwarted town clerk. The younger leads also sounded great though Walther did not look at all knightly. Hanna Hipp as Magdalene and Allan Clayton as David provided a welcome and amusing contrast to the centre-stage lovers as respectively Eva's maid and Sachs's apprentice.

Sunday, 5 March 2017

The Winter's Tale

by Ryan Wigglesworth, libretto after Shakespeare's play

seen at the Coliseum on 3 March 2017

This opera, commissioned by ENO, was conducted by the composer. It featured Iain Paterson as Leontes, Sophie Bevan as Hermione, Samantha Price as Perdita, Leigh Melrose as Polixenes, Anthony Gregory as Florizel and Susan Bickley as Paulina. The production was directed by Rory Kinnear and designed by Vicki Mortimer.

Shakespeare's plays are famously - or notoriously - susceptible to ranges of interpretation. Using one as the basis for an opera is bound to intensify this tendency, because so much must be abandoned or condensed in order to create a manageable libretto. In the case of The Winter's Tale, a play not hitherto transformed into an opera, the process has stripped away almost all the rustic comedy (the character of Autolycus is completely missing), and also a good deal of circumstantial detail. The result is that the opera is even more melancholy than the play, with the emphasis far more on the brooding figure of Leontes than on the revivifying figure of Perdita.

Tuesday, 14 February 2017

Il Trovatore

by Giuseppe Verdi (libretto Salvadore Cammarano)

seen at Covent Garden on 9 February 2017

Richard Farnes conducted David Bösch's production of Il Trovatore (here revived by Julia Burbach) with Lianna Haroutounian as Leonora, Anita Rachvelishvili as Azucena, Gregory Kunde as Manrico, Vitaly Bilyy as the Count di Luna and Alexander Tsymbalyuk as Ferrando. The set was designed by Partick Bannwart and lit by Olaf Winter, and the costumes designed by Meentje Nielsen.

This famous opera, often lampooned for its structural awkwardness, narrative complexity and gruesome subject matter, remains both popular and powerful. The original 15th century setting has here been modernised - there are guns, a tank and a rather dinky gypsy caravan - but the pervasive cruelty and lawlessness of war, and its insidious encouragement of vendetta and vengeance, is by no means diminished. The setting, apart from these props, is not especially detailed or realistic - no forbidding prisons or romantic balconies, but rather an open wintry expanse with denuded trees, relieved occasionally by some startling back projections which resonate more with the psychological state of the characters than with any real physical environment.

Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Written on Skin

by George Benjamin, libretto by Martin Crimp

seen at Covent Garden on 30 January 2017

This revival of Benjamin's 2012 opera is conducted by the composer and features Christopher Purves as the Protector, Barbara Hannigan as Agnès (his wife), Iestyn Davies as the first Angel and the Boy, Victoria Simmonds as the second Angel and Marie (the sister of Agnès) and Mark Padmore as the third Angel and John (the husband of Marie). It is directed by Katie Mitchell and designed by Vicki Mortimer.

The story derives from the fate of the troubadour Guillem de Cabestaing, employed by Raimon de Castel Rossillon. Guillem began an affair with Raimon's wife, and the nobleman exacted his revenge by killing the troubadour and serving his heart to his wife. She in turn refused to eat or drink another thing so that the taste of her lover's heart would remain with her for ever. She escaped from Raimon's attack by leaping to her death from a balcony.

Monday, 30 January 2017

The Beggar's Opera

by John Gay

seen at Farnham Maltings on 27 January 2017

This comic ballad opera from 1728 was presented in modern dress by the Farnham Amateur Operatic Society directed by Heather Legat. A small orchestra directed by Diana Vivian provided the musical accompaniment.

It's a curious piece, satirising the Italian operatic style so popular in early 18th century London by allotting operatic arias to criminals and whores, the arias in many cases being based on popular ballad tunes. Spoken dialogue replaces the recitatives common at the time. The result is that a sordid tale of prostitution, highway robbery and the corrupt management of both crimes and arrests is invested with often quite ravishing tunes, most of which vanish before they can be properly appreciated (the arias are very short). A ridiculous reprieve 'by popular demand' rounds off the story just when its logic leads one to suppose that Macheath, the principal highwayman and object of several women's affections, will be executed. This too is a joke at the expense of Italian opera conventions.

In this production the setting was wisely modernised, but even so it must be admitted that the ladies of FAOS are not really comfortable playing a group of prostitutes. However, the chorus singing was accomplished, and both Polly Peachum and Macheath had fine voices. Some of the dialogue fell flat - the verbosity of 18th century prose is not easy to manage on stage, and the targets of its satire are long gone so that only the general gist of the joke survives.

It was perhaps an odd choice for an amateur production, though it does provide opportunities for a wide number of soloists as many of the characters have at least one aria to sing.

Wednesday, 18 January 2017

Der Rosenkavalier

by Richard Strauss, libretto by Hugo von Hofmannsthal

seen at Covent Garden on 17 January 2017

This new production for the Royal Opera House was directed by Robert Carsen and conducted by Andris Nelsons. It featured Anna Stéphany as Octavian, Rachel Willis-Sørensen as the Marschallin, Sophie Bevan as Sophie and Matthew Rose as Baron Ochs. (The principal attraction in this season was to hear Renée Fleming as the Marschallin in her farewell performances of the role, and Alice Coote as Octavian, but they were not singing at all performances.)

The production, designed by Paul Steinberg (sets) and Brigitte Reiffenstuel (costumes), was set in 1911, the year of its premiere, rather than the 1740s as specified in the libretto. The justification for this is that the both times were periods of uncertainty and aristocratic melancholy; indeed that the librettist and composer deliberately chose to echo the ethos of their own time in the earlier period of the Empress Maria Theresa.  The choice of 1911 worked well because of a modern audience's sensitivity to the charmed but sleepwalking age immediately before the First World War, particularly as Vienna, the city in which the action takes place, was unknowingly in the last days of its Austro-Hungarian imperial splendour, before becoming the capital of a much reduced Austrian republic.