Last night Dmitri Tcherniakov’s much anticipated production of Don Giovanni opened at the Four Seasons Centre. The production is basically a known quantity. This is its fourth run overall and it was recorded for TV and DVD in Aix-en-Provence; which is a lengthy way of saying that nobody should have been very surprised by what they saw last night. Inevitably some were. Rereading my review of the DVD I find I have nothing much to add to what I said there about the first act and the overall concept so I’m going to pretty much going to repeat it here.
Author Archives: operaramblings
Modern (Family) Opera
Opera 5’s new show at the Arts and letters Club pairs Wolf-Ferrari’s 1909 comedy Il segreto di Susanna with a new work , Storybook, by Darren Russo inspired by Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience. I can’t do a full review as I’m writing it up for Opera Canada but I think I can fairly say that the Wolf-Ferrari is hilarious and the Russo weird, rather wonderful and quite disturbing. It’s a show well worth seeing and you can catch it tonight or tomorrow at 7.30pm. Here are some production photos by Emily Ding. Continue reading
Mozart fragments
Last night, at Roy Thomson Hall, the TSO presented a two part Mozart program. The first half consisted of pieces from two abandoned opera projects; the buffa Lo sposo deluso and the Singspiel Zaide. The second half consisted of the better known, but incomplete, Mass in C Minor.
History’s worst fifty years in song
I guess it’s a good thing when one’s emotional and intellectual reactions to a program threaten to overwhelm one’s ability to listen analytically and evaluate. That’s what art is for isn’t it? Anyway that’s pretty much what happened to me today listening to a program called Songs of Love and War in the Richard Bradshaw Amphitheatre. The songs were all pieces more or less inspired by the catastrophes of the first half of the twentieth century; the wars, the rise of Nazi power, the occupation of France. These are all events that have many layers of meaning for me. I have studied them and the music and literature they generated for decades. I have known, often well, people who played roles in these events. I have deeply held views. You have been warned!
High contrast Traviata
The starting point for Peter Mussbach’s 2003 production of La Traviata for the Aix-en-Provence festival is his knowledge, as one trained as a medical doctor, of the effects of TB on a person’s appearance. He argues that the disease produces a strange kind of beauty with the skin translucent and pale. So, here Mireille Delunsch, as Violetta, wears a white dress, a platinum wig and very pale powder throughout while everyone else is dressed in black. Couple this with a high contrast and highly dramatic lighting plot and very sparse sets and you have the essence of the “look”. The blocking and Personenregie reinforces this with Violetta often appearing to be an ethereal, not quite solid, presence surrounded by a rather coarse material world.
Royal Conservatory announces 2015/16 season
The Royal Conservatory has announced it’s 2015/16 concert season. It’s the usual eclectic mixture of classical, jazz, world music and undefinable. Check out the full program.
The items that particularly caught my eye were The Tallis Scholars doing a holiday season concert at Koerner Hall. That one is on Sunday, December 13th at 3pm. Then there’s another early music event with a twist. On Sunday April 3rd 2016 at 3pm the Orlando Consort will perform a live vocal soundtrack to Carl Theodor Dryer’s iconic 1928 film La passion de Jeanne d’Arc. That pronises to be an intriguing combination of early music and early film. Last but not least we are getting a visit from the big Welshman with the head butt. You will have to wait until Sunday 24th April next year but that’s when Koerner Hall sees a recital by the one and only Bryn Terfel. I’m excited.
Moving into February
It’s getting pretty busy in Toronto. Here are a few upcoming things of interest that I haven’t already mentioned.
This year, the Faculty of Music’s annual student composer project is a co-production with Campbell House Museum, the 19th century home of Sir William Campbell, Chief Justice of Upper Canada. Footsteps in Campbell House is a series of pieces by student composers to words by Michael Albano. The audience moves around the house exploring the lives of those who livedd there. There are five performances on January 30th and 31st and February 1st. Each performance is limited to 35 people. Tickets are $20 and available here. I’m really intrigued by this but there’s no way I can go. Continue reading
Canadian Opera Company announces rather more than just the 2015/16 season
Last night was the “event” at which the COC brass and guests, with a bit of help from Brent Bambury, announced the upcoming season to a packed house of subscribers and friends. What struck me was how much news was packed in. It was far more than the usual schedule presentation with announcements of several major new projects. But first the season. Continue reading
I ask on my knees, as a blessing, for death
So sings the heroine of César Franck’s early piece Stradella, Léonor, during her abduction and imprisonment by the Duke of Pesaro. I felt pretty much the same watching the 2012 production from L’Opéra Royale de Wallonie. The company has a well deserved reputation for reviving neglected works from the French repertoire. I suppose once in a while if one does that one is pretty sure to come up with a complete turkey and, frankly, that’s how I’d classify Stradella. Franck left it in piano score and it was orchestrated recently by Marc van Hove so the 2012 Liège production is the premiere. The plot is essentially trivial. Stradella, a singer and protegé of the Duke of Pesaro is in love with Léonor, an orphan. They plan to marry secretly but the duke is also obsessed by the girl and has her kidnapped. Stuff happens and they both end up dead and the duke repents. Stradella and Léonor are united in Heaven. The music is rather dull and highly sentimental. The sentimentality is reinforced both by the injection of a bunch of morbid religiosity into the plot and the overuse of a children’s chorus. In fact I ended up wondering whether “Stradella” wasn’t the brand name for a Belgian artificial sweetener.
On reviews and reviewing
Jenna over at Schmopera recently published a piece on companies comping or refusing to comp critics with reference to recent spats at La Scala and Opera Australia. I was going to comment but on reflection I felt that I had rather more to say on the subject than was appropriate to a comment. I was also reflecting on a brief conversation I had on Sunday with a fellow blogger in which he described his relationship (briefly and in passing) with the company whose event we were attending as “parasitic”. I didn’t and don’t agree with that statement. I think there’s a symbiotic relationship between “critics” (for want of a better word) and the promoters of the product they review. Arts organisations need publicity. It’s part of what puts bums in seats. Critics need material to write about. We get comped because we do something that companies need. Not because we are special little snowflakes. Not because there’s some sort if inherent media right to free tickets. And above all not because it’s somehow to do with free speech; a term that has been abused so much in the last week that it almost makes me want to throw up. So, as far as I am concerned an opera company has an absolute right to comp or not to comp an individual or an organisation as they choose. Of course if one chooses to blacklist the Sydney Morning Herald’s main critic it’s going to have repercussions and, frankly, if I were editor of that paper, Opera Australia would be ignored. And, equally frankly, the actions of that company seem to be the sole work of a petulant GM with an oversized ego, but there you go.



