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About operaramblings

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

DION rocks

I really wasn’t sure what to expect from DION; A Rock Opera, currently premiering at Coal Mine Theatre.  It’s billed as a “rock opera” which worried me as very loud music in. a very small space is so not my thing.  On the other hand it’s based on Euripides The Bacchae and I’m a sucker for a really good reworking of classical Greek drama.  So I went.  It was absolutely the right decision.  This show rocks in an entirely good way.

6.tiresias

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On the Other Side of the Sea

Aluna Theatre’s production of Jorgelina Cerritos’ On the Other Side of the Sea (translated from Spanish by Dr. Margaret Stanton and Anna Donko) opened at The Theatre Centre last night.  Cerritos is from El Salvador and the play is set on a beach somewhere in that part of the world.  There are two characters (three if you count the sea).  Dorothea is a no longer young civil servant sent from the capital to a remote fishing village to issue birth certificates, ID cards and the like.  Every day she sets up her desk on the beach but she has no clients until the Fisherman arrives.  He has come from the Other Side of the Sea in his rowing boat.  He needs a birth certificate; “something that shows who he is”,  but has none of the information needed for Dorothea to issue one.  She gets angry at his bugging her day after day; especially as he is her only client and she can’t do anything for him. They quibble about the possibility of names (he wants his ID to read “Fisherman OftheSea”) and argue the finer points of grammar concerning what may, or may not be, possible.  This is often very funny but it doesn’t seem to be going anywhere.

Bea Pizano and Carlos Gonzalez-Vio in The Other Side of The Sea_photo by Jeremy Mimnaugh_4808

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De Profundis

De Profundis: Oscar Wilde in Jail is an adaptation by Gregory Prest of the famous letter that Wilde wrote, page by page, to Lord Alfred Douglas while he was in prison.  It opened; a world premiere, last night in a Soulpepper production directed by Prest at the Young Centre.

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Music to Accompany a Departure

Heinrich Schütz’s 1636 work Musikalische Exequien is sometimes described as the “first German requiem”..  It was performed last night at Koerner Hall by the excellent LA Master Chorale and their conductor Grant Gershon in a staged version directed by Peter Sellars; following up on their 2020 performance of the Lagrime di San Pietro.

Los Angeles Master Chorale: Music To Accompany A Departure Rehearsal

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Invocazioni Mariane

V5474-DIGIPACk-8mm.inddInvocazioni Mariane is a new CD from counter-tenor Andreas Scholl and his long time collaborators the Accademia Bizantina and their conductor Alessandro Tampieri.  It consists of 18th century music from Naples; all of which is in some way connected with the Virgin Mary and is mostly drawn from oratorios or similar pieces designed to be performed during Holy Week.  Back in the day, with women not permitted on the stage in Naples (or the Papal States) the high parts would have been sung by castrati.  That, of course, is where Scholl comes in.

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Too beautiful for words

The Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir with their conductor Tõnu Kaljuste appeared at the rather spectacular (and very large) St. Paul’s Basilica last night as part of Sounstream’s 2023/24 season.  The programme was largely made up of works to liturgical or scriptural texts by Palestrina and Pårt.  It was gorgeous polyphony, beautifully sung but in which any sense of the text was largely lost.  It also all inhabited a very similar sound world.  Even towards the end of the concert when a little variety crept in it was surprisingly little.  One might expect a 21st century work setting H.P. Lovecraft to sound more dramatic or abrasive than a 16th century setting of “Ave Maria” but Omar Daniels new piece Antarktos Monodies, despite having a few interesting touches, was much of a piece with the music that surrounded it.

estonian-philharmonic-chamber-choir

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Does anybody do dance like Opéra de Paris?

The title of this review of a 2022 recording of Rameau’s Platée is prompted by the fact that I’ve rarely seen this much high quality dance included in an opera production.  It’s really spectacular.  But back to basics.  Platée is a comic opera of 1745.  The production filmed in 2022 is by Laurent Pelly and was making its fifth run at the Palais Garnier.  There’s an earlier video release of the 2002 run.

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