Alessandro Scarlatti wrote at least sixty operas but only one of the extant ones is a comedy; Il Trionfo dell’Onore which premiered in Naples in 1718. Cunningly Scarlatti insisted on an Italian, rather than Neapolitan, libretto so it soon got productions further north. It’s a piece of its time. It had only just become allowable to produce operas that weren’t based on classical myth or history. Even Cavalli’s most tongue in cheek works like Il Giasone had roots in the classics! But here we have an opera whose characters are quite ordinary though clearly based on the typical types of the commedia dell’arte.
Looking forward to December
‘Tis the season of family holiday shows and Messiahs. Not that I’m planning to do much of either but here are some shows that you might be interested in…
- On December 7th, the earliest of the Messiahs. Toronto Choral Society have a matinée performance at Koerner Hall. Soloists include Quinn Kelsey and Teresa Tucci .
- The Ensemble Studio have a noon hour concert on December 9th in the RBA
- Rogers vs Rogers opens at Crow’s Theatre on December 10th. This is another adaptation by Michael Heaney of a book about Toronto shenanigans. He was also responsible for The Masterplan. Previews are the 2nd to the 9th with the run extending to January 3rd.
What one calls a happy marriage
Richard Strauss’ Intermezzo is a very strange semi-autobiographical piece apparently dealing with the married life of Richard and Pauline Strauss thinly disguised as Court Composer Robert Storch and his wife Christine. What is really a bit weird is how these two characters are presented. Herr Storch is a bit stuffy and self absorbed but Frau Storch is just awful. She is rude to everyone, especially her long suffering maid and other servants, and she overreacts bizarrely to just about everything. She’s spoiled, self-centred, vain and generally a giant PitA.
Mass for the Endangered
Soundstreams’ opening concert of the season at Trinity St. Paul’s on Saturday evening featured Sarah Kirkland Snider’s Mass for the Endangered and an intriguing selection of 20th and 21st century music on related ecological themes.
In Search of Youkali
In Search of Youkali is a sort of journey through the theatre music of Kurt Weill performed by soprano Mary Bray supported by Murray Grainger (accordion), Marianne Schofield (double-bass) and William Vann (piano). For me, it’s a bit of a mixed bag. The German songs; “Barbarasong” and “Berlin im Licht” are quite nicely done but with (mainly) a bright, operatic kind of sound where I would prefer something more cabaret style. The accompaniments work well though.
Unfulfillment
Abe Koogler’s The Fulfillment Centre opened last night in a production directed by Ted Dykstra. It’s the story of four people in a small town dependent on some sort of giant fulfillment centre; an all too common fate for small town America. In a post-industrial USA it’s that or a prison.
Jaroussky – Gelosia
Counter-tenor Philippe Jaroussky and Artaserse present a recording of Italian baroque cantatas on the theme of “Jealousy”. My review of the CD is available at La Scena Musicale.
Catalogue information: Erato 5419799976
Calamus
Calamus is a work for soprano and cello by Andrew Staniland based on poems from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. My review of the recent CD release is now available at La Scena Musicale.
Catalogue information: Leaf Music VR2025
Invented Folksongs
Invented Folksongs is a set of four pieces by Anna Pidgorna inspired, rather than based on, traditional Ukrainian folk songs collected by her in the field and recorded by her with the Ludivico Ensemble. My review is now available at La Scena Musicale.
Catalogue information: Redshift Records TK557
Who’d have thought that snow falls
A few months ago I reviewed a recording of Morton Feldman’s Three Voices which I had never heard “live”. On Sunday evening I got the chance to hear Lindsay McIntyre perform it at Arrayspace. It’s a roughly one hour long piece in which the soprano performs with two tracks that she has recorded in advance. It was really interesting to hear the nuances of two recorded voices versus live which, of course, doesn’t really come across the same way on a recording, however good. It’s the subtlest of textural difference but it’s definitely there.





