My review of Nicole Lizée and Nicolas Billon’s RUR A Torrent of Light is now up on Opera Canada.

Scott Belluz as [Alex] – Photo by Elena Emer
My review of Nicole Lizée and Nicolas Billon’s RUR A Torrent of Light is now up on Opera Canada.

Scott Belluz as [Alex] – Photo by Elena Emer
My review of Sunday’s performance of Samuel Barber’s Vanessa is now up at Opera Canada.
My review of the Glenn Gould School’s production of Handel’s Rinaldo is now up at Opera Canada.

Photo: Lisa Sakulensky
My review of the Glenn Gould School’s production of Ana Sokolović’s Svadba is now up on Opera Canada.

On Stage, Left to Right: Camila Montefusco, Maria Milenic, Elena Howard-Scott,
Chelsea Pringle-Duchemin, Mélissa Danis, Katelyn Bird. In Front: Peter Tiefenbach. Photo: Kjel Erickson
I was beginning to think that I was not reviewing as many video recordings as in the past. It’s actually true but unsurprising since I rarely dip into the back catalogue anymore focussing almost entirely on new issues, which any case have slowed since there has been much less to record. So, yes, I’m down from about 60 per year to 43 in the last twelve months but there’s a twist. Increasingly my video reviews have been appearing in the print edition of Opera Canada. So 8 of the last year’s 43 didn’t appear here. I thought I’d just publish a list, by edition of the magazine, with a one sentence review of each disk in case anybody felt it was worth digging them out. So…
My review of Opera in Concert’s streamed version of Cilea’s Adriana Lecouvreur is now up at Opera Canada.

My review of UoT Opera’s Opera in Miniature; A Festival of One Act Operas is up on the Opera Canada website.

My “Final Word” article which appeared in the last print edition of Opera Canada has now been published on-line. It looks at how audience experience of on-line content during the pandemic may impact the marketing and production strategies of both larger and smaller opera companies.
There’s an interesting new project on Youtube from Natalya Gennadi and Catherine Carew. It’s called HBD! Project and the idea is to produce a short themed video each month featuring composers whose birthdays fall in that month. The February pilot is online and it’s a bit different from other “shows” in similar vein that I’ve come across. This one features a song by Alban Berg sung by Natalya with a fluffy puppy, music for cello and piano by Jean Coulthard played by Alice Kim and Hye Won Cecilia Lee and Rodney Sharman’s Tobacco Road sung by Catherine. So what’s new you ask (apart from the puppy)? It’s the graphics with Mozart in a party hat, animated Emily Carr paintings and a look for the Sharman that could double as the witches’ scene in Macbeth. Yes it’s a bit weird but oddly compelling.

My review of Tapestry’s show from the weekend; Lovesongs – A Saxophony is now up on the Opera Canada website.

Photo: Dahlia Katz