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About operaramblings

Toronto based lover of opera, art song, related music and all forms of theatre.

Talis est ordo deorum

The latest Opera Vision Youtube recording to catch my attention is a recording from L’opéra nationale de Paris of Spontini’s La Vestale.  Productions of La Vestale are rare and most Opera Vision streams come from considerably less prestigious houses so this is particularly welcome.  I reviewed a Palazetto Bru-Zane audio recording of this work in 2023 and I’m not going to repeat what I wrote about the performance history and the plot.  Here I shall concentrate on the Paris performance.

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Silly can be fun!

Back in 2013 I reviewed a 2009 DVD from La Scala of Donizetti’s Le convenienze ed inconvenienze teatrali and I was not impressed.  However, having read several rave reviews for last year’s production at the Wexford Opera Festival currently being streamed on the Opera Vision channel on Youtube I decided toi check it out.  I was pleasantly surprised.  It’s still very silly but Orpha Phelan’s production with an excellent cast is actually amusing enough to carry two hours of video and was probably even more fun in the theatre.

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A tribute to George Sand

V8616-K- Sonya Yoncheva - George copyGeorge is a new CD from soprano Sonya Yoncheva and friends made up of music George Sand would have listened to and some readings fro her works.  There’s a particular emphasis on Pauline Viardot; close friend of Sand and sister of Maria Malibran.

The music includes Chopin piano pieces played by Olga Zado, who also accompanies the songs.  His Casta diva, based on the Bellini aria, is particularly interesting.  There are songs by Leoncavallo, Delibes, Offenbach, Tosti and Liszt as well as piano music and songs by Viardot.  On two of the songs Yoncheva is accompanied by mezzo Marina Viotti and Zado is joined by violinist Adam Taubitz for a Viardot Romance.

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Countess Maritza

This year’s New Year offering from Toronto Operetta Theatre is Imre Kálmán’s 1924 work Countess Maritza presented in Nigel Douglas’ English language version.  It’s a pretty typical TOT offering.  The work itself is a rather silly love story full of just about every cliché about central Europe bar vampires but it’s tuneful and the ten piece orchestra conducted by Derek Bate provides colour and volume enough for the Jane Mallett Theatre.147

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An operatic triptych

Resphigi’s 1931 work Maria Egiziaca was originally conceived as a concert work but very early on it became more common to perform it fully staged.  That’s how it’s presented in a production earlier this year from Venice’s Teatro La Fenice though it actually took place in the smaller Teatro Maliban.  It’s quite a short work; a little over an hour, and as the composer’s description of it as a “symphonic triptych” suggests it takes place in three scenes.

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Metallic Mitridate

Mozart’s Mitridate, re di Ponto is definitely one of his less often performed works even though it’s astonishingly accomplished for a fourteen year old composer.  One can see why.  It adheres very faithfully to the opera seria model.  Far more so than, say, La clemenza di Tito.  The libretto is based on a play by Racine which, frankly, lacks dramatic interest and has a contrived ending.  The opera wraps all the loose ends up in about three minutes.  Structurally da capo aria follows recitative follows da capo aria with little variation and the arias all adhere pretty rigidly to the formal range of baroque emotions.  That said there is some spectacular vocal writing; both lyrical and dramatic, which allows the singers to fully display their skills.

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January 2025

jan2025So what’s in store for Toronto early in the New Year?

  • December 29th 2024 and January 3rd and 4th 2025, Toronto Operetta Theatre are presenting Kalman’s Countess Maritza at the Jane Mallett Theatre.
  • Bad New Days are presenting Adam Paolozza’s Last Landscape; a meditation on environmental collapse, at Buddies in Bad Times.  Preview is on the 12th with opening on the 14th and running until the 26th.
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Best of 2024

So here we go with a round up of the best things I saw and listened to in 2024.

Opera

23-24-06-MC-D-1111The Toronto opera scene is still a bit flat and lacking the vibrancy of pre-pandemic with Against the Grain pretty much invisible and Tapestry wrapped up in building out their new digs.  Still, there were some good shows.  The best of the CCC’s offerings, IMO, were Cherubini’s Medea in the spring and Gounod’s Faust in the fall.  Beyond the COC, William Christie and co’s presentation of Purcell’s The Fairy Queen at TSM was refreshingly different, Opera 5 bounced back with a rather good production of Britten’s The Turn of the Screw and let’s throw Art of Time Ensemble’s reimagining of Stravinsky’s The Soldier’s Tale into this category too.  There were a couple of excellent student shows.  The GGS produced a very good Dialogues of the Carmelites early in the year and UoT Opera chipped in with their Three Islands show featuring three one act operas directed by Tim Albery. Continue reading