Unusual double bill from the Glenn Gould School

The Glenn Gould’s Spring Opera, which opened on Wednesday night, is an intriguing double bill.  It pairs Rossini’s first, and rarely performed, opera; La cambiale di matrimonio with Puccini’s much better known Gianni Schicchi.

La cambiale di matrimonio (The Wedding Contract) is a one act screwball comedy (technically a farsa).  It has all the plot elements that see will see over and over in later Rossini comedies; cunning servants, an old man trying to make money out of a marriage, young lovers facing obstacles etc.  The plot elements are mirrored by the music; patter songs, breakneck ensembles and an impossibly florid soprano aria, inter alia.  In this case they are used in the service of a plot that features a cash strapped English merchant who is trying to marry his daughter off to a rich Canadian who is seeking a suitable bride but she’s in love with a far less wealthy young man.  Everyone seems to want to kill the Canadian but he’s fundamentally a nice chap (of course) and he engineers a happy ending

Continue reading

GGS double bill

This year’s fall opera offering from the Glenn Gould School was a double bill of short chamber operas.  It played at Mazzoleni Hall on Friday and Saturday evenings with Liza Balkan directing and Jennifer Tung conducting.

Continue reading

Brews, Beauties and Brawlers

So on Saturday night at St.Olave’s CE I finally managed to catch a concert in the Apocryphonia series.  It was titled Brews, Beauties and Brawlers and was billed as “classical” meets “punk”.  It was a collection of pieces for piano, solo voice and/or choir and organiser Alexander Capellazzo had recruited four voices of each type with soloists coming from the group.  Narmina Afaniyeva was at the piano.  Everybody (and some of the audience) had dressed for the occasion!

Continue reading