January 15, 2012
January 2, 2012
January 2, 2012
Chandos is releasing on compact disc a recording of a 1981 performance by the English National Opera of Debussy’s Pelléas and Mélisande in English. Release date is today January 2, 2012, at amazon.co.uk and later in the month, January 31, 2012, at amazon.com.
“This live BBC broadcast of Claude Debussy's ground-breaking opera Pelléas and Mélisande was recorded at the Coliseum in 1981. The unique performance is now available on CD for the first time, as part of Chandos Opera in English historical series, performed by the English National Opera Orchestra and Chorus under Sir Mark Elder, with the soloists Neil Howlett, Eilene Hannon, and Robert Dean playing out the tragic love triangle.”–from CD description at amazon.co.uk
August 27, 2011
August 27, 2011
Saimir Pirgu, “Vedrommi intorno,” Idomeneo, Graz, 2008
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Debbie Reynolds, “You made me love you,” Irene
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Judy Garland, “You made me love you,” 1952
July 7, 2011
New York City Opera
Times change. Fashions change. Demographics change. Et cetera. Lots of things have changed in my lifetime, e.g. television, movies, and Broadway shows. It is quite conceivable, at least to me, that what New York City Opera did for so many years no longer works. And so maybe it is time for them to leave Lincoln Center and move on to other things.
If Lincoln Center is going to have lots of open time in what used to be called the State Theater, maybe they will eventually find ways of filling that time with operas, ballets, and other things, maybe by visiting companies, maybe by new companies, that will be interesting and worthwhile.
July 4, 2011
July 4, 2011
“The end of an opera,” by Lee Hall, spectator.co.uk
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Cincinnati Opera is pleased to announce the appearance of Nathan Gunn, internationally acclaimed baritone and star of the company’s upcoming production of Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, at a special one-night-only event at Joseph-Beth Booksellers on Wednesday, July 6 at 7:00 p.m. Admission is free and open to the public.
Following recent successes at the Metropolitan Opera and the Café Carlyle in New York, Mr. Gunn will explore his varied career in opera, cabaret, and musical theater in conversation with Evans Mirageas, The Harry T. Wilks Artistic Director of Cincinnati Opera. The two will discuss the story of Tchaikovsky’s hauntingly beautiful opera Eugene Onegin and Mr. Gunn’s preparation for his debut in the complex role of the title character.
Following the discussion, Mr. Gunn will sign copies of his recent solo album "Just Before Sunrise," a collection of romantic and intimate contemporary songs by such artists as Sting, Billy Joel, and Tom Waits.
For more information, please call (513) 768-5593.
June 14, 2011
Royal Opera Macbeth broadcast to movie theatres
I went to Newport, Rhode Island, yesterday to see the broadcast to movie theatres of the Royal Opera’s performance of Verdi’s Macbeth. I thought it was OK, but not a must-see performance. I liked Simon Keenlyside in the title role and Liudmyla Monastyrska as Lady
Macbeth, but the rest of the cast was so-so, below the level of what one would
normally hear in New York or even Montreal. Monastyrska’s sound is pleasant but with no great dramatic nuance.
The witches' costumes with red turbans were interesting. The rest of the costumes were an acceptable but boring mishmash, many of the men’s tops inspired by karate outfits. On the whole I didn’t like the sets
and props, to the extent that there were any. A water faucet, at the right of the stage, was an annoying gimmick that got tired really soon. A sort of gilded cage, a little stage with gold lattice work on three sides, was used in some scenes. It looked like something one might see in a sordid barroom that offers amateur striptease one night a week. The Macbeths have the sort of bedspreads one can buy in a department store. One can find a lot of fault with the stage direction. Imaginary children of the Macbeths, not called for by the libretto, were a distraction that added nothing.
Simon Keenlyside was wearing the arm bands that he has been wearing in recent weeks. His singing seemed to get better as the opera
progressed. I’m not sure whether his singing was improving or whether the sound
engineers were learning as they were going along. I think it may be the latter, since at first the orchestra seemed much louder than the singers, except for Monastyska who managed to sound loud even though the chorus and the other soloists often sounded muffled, more so toward the beginning than as the opera progressed. Have the sound engineers never done this sort of thing before, that they have to learn while doing?
May 25, 2011
Links to reviews of Royal Opera’s Macbeth
“Lady Loudmyla begins her reign,” Intermezzo
Barry Millington, thisislondon.co.uk, 3 stars
“This revival is worth catching . . . for Pappano’s conducting and Monastyrska’s Lady Macbeth alone, and Keenlyside brings all the qualities one expects to the title role. Musically there are some excellent things; as theatre, however, it’s hardly satisfying.”–Hugo Shirley, MusicalCriticism.com, 3.5 stars
George Hall, thestage.co.uk
David Karlin, Bachtrack
Stephen Jay-Taylor, Opera Britannia, 3.5 stars
“Despite high expectations for his debut, Simon Keenlyside, in the plum role in Verdi’s Macbeth . . . was a slight disappointment at the Royal Opera House last night. Opera-goers who disseminated their thoughts after the play said he wasn't as evoking as he should've been.”–Danny Lee, PinkPaper

