A Christofascist Tosca

Puccini’s Tosca is a work that seems to turn the boldest directors conservative.  Up until now the only one I had seen that wasn’t set in Rome in 1800 was Philip Himmelmann’s production in Baden-Baden.  That starred Kristine Opolais and so does Martin Kušej’s 2022 production at the Theater an der Wien.  And like the Baden-Baden work this sets the piece in some sort of Christofascist dystopia but a very different one from Himmelmann.

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Le astuzie femminili

Domenico Cimarosa’s 1794 Commedia per musica; Le astuzie femminili, is extremely silly.  It’s like an early Rossini farsa but a full two acts running almost three hours.  There’s a girl called Bellina, who bears a more than passing resemblance to Rossini’s Rosina.  She has been left a fortune by her father contingent on her marrying a dude from Naples called Don Giampaolo Lasagna.  But she is in love with the penniless Filandro.  Worse, her guardian, the notary Don Romualdo also wants to marry her despite having promised to marry his housekeeper Leonora.  There’s also Ersilla, a friend of Bellina, who doesn’t seem to be in love with anybody.

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Lakmé

I’m probably not the only person who knows Delibes Lakmé only by the famous duet “Viens, Malika”, nor did I realise it actually comes about ten minutes into the first act.  So, I was curious to explore the recent (2022) recording from the Opéra Comique where the work premiered in 1882.

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Der Schatzgräber

Franz Schreker’s Der Schatzgräber premiered in Frankfurt in 1920.  It was his last and most successful opera but it disappeared from the repertory under the Nazis and performances have been rare since WW2.  Christof Loy directed it for Deutsche Oper Berlin in a new production in 2022, marking the 100th anniversary of the first performance in Berlin.  It was also a continuation of Loy’s project of bringing less well known opera with “strong female characters” to DOB, following his production of Korngold’s Das Wunder der Heliane and Zandonai’s Francesca di Rimini.

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Roméo et Juliette at the Liceu

I’m actually not sure where to start with Stephen Lawless’ production of Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette recorded at the Liceu in 2018.  The production is a bit weird but then so is the libretto.  It follows the basic plot of Shakespeare’s play but weakens it dramatically in all the wrong places which appears to be why Lawless made some of his, to my mind, less felicitous decisions.

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Bryn in Don Pasquale

I don’t really associate Bryn Terfel with bel canto comedies but why not?  He’s a good actor and he’s certainly funny in recitals so why not in opera?  So, what’s he like in the title role of the production of Donizetti’s Don Pasquale recorded at Covent Garden in 2019?  Short answer, excellent, and pretty much everything about the show is highly satisfactory.

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McVicar’s Figaro revived

Back in 2015 I reviewed a 2006 recording from the Royal Opera House of Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro directed by David McVicar.  It’s very good and has a super starry cast; Finley, Persson, Röschmann, Schrott, Shaham.  There’s even a cameo by Philip Langridge as Basilio.  So, when I saw that a new recording of the same production, made in 2022 with a young and less obviously starry cast, had been released I was in two minds whether to bother.  I’m glad I did.

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Ernani

Ernani is an early Verdi opera (1844) and it’s not performed that often (16th most performed Verdi opera according to Operabase).  It was given at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino in 2022, in a production by Leo Muscato, which was recorded for video release.  How you react to it may partly depend on how you feel about bel canto operas on (more or less) serious themes.  This is an opera about unrequited love and revenge (lots of revenge) but, in typical bel canto style, the music doesn’t always fit the mood.  So here we open on a prelude where Ernani’s bandit gang are sorting out the corpses from their latest skirmish while the orchestra plays a rather jolly tune, then they break into a drinking song and then Ernani enters and sings a rather lovely cavatina.  There are places where the music is darker and some of it is really rather good.  In particular there are some strong duets for Ernani and his (everyone’s) love interest Elvira.  Overall, I rather liked it musically.

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The other Humperdinck opera

Humperdinck’s second “fairy tale” opera; Königskinder, is unusual in that, although it includes traditional fairy tale elements, it isn’t based on a traditional fairy tale but rather on a play by Else Bernstein-Porges.  It’s, of course, also performed much less frequently than Hänsel und Gretel.  It was given at Dutch National Opera, in a production by Christof Loy, in 2022 and recorded for video release.

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Kát’a Kabanová as alienation

Opera is full of patriarchy.  It’s a bit odd then that Leoš Janáček wrote two operas about dominating matriarchs and the consequences of their actions.  The better known of the two is probably Jenůfa but the later Kát’a Kabanová deals with similar themes.  Both are bleak and have watery endings.

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