What She Saw

RR8099_What-She-Saw-1200x1200What She Saw is a new album of vocal music by New York composer Douglas Anderson.  There are two works on the record.  There’s a cycle of eleven Cassandra Songs for mezzo-soprano and piano and a monodrama for mezzo-soprano, piano and percussion called Through/In.

The Cassandra Songs each set an episode in Cassandra’s life dwelling, inevitably, on the “always right but never believed” motif and the ill treatment that gets her.  The texts, by Andrew Joffe, are really rather good and they get a somewhat atonal setting; especially in the piano line.  The vocal style varies from conversational to declamatory.  The settings are actually quite varied though very much in the same sound world.  It’s well performed by mezzo-soprano Rachel Arky and pianist Elizabeth Rodgers.  The recording. was made in 2023 at Martin Patrych Memorial Studios in the Bronx an it’s clean and well balanced.

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Dark Rusalka from Glyndebourne

Melly Still’s production of Dvorák’s Rusalka, recorded at Glyndebourne in 2019 got rave reviews and, judging by the audience reaction on the recording. was enthusiastically received in the house.  Unfortunately I don’t think it works all that well on video despite some rather stunning stage pictures and generally strong performances.

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Colourful Vixen from Glyndebourne

Melly Still’s 2012 Glyndebourne production of Janáček’s Cunning Little Vixen is straightforward and rather beautiful.  Certainly the staging matches the magic of this extraordinary score.  There are really two ideas underpinning the designs.  The animals are very human rather than the furries sometimes seen.  Their specific nature is hinted at rather than made terribly explicit.  They are differentiated from the humans by being very boldly coloured.  In contrast, the human world is a sort of monochrome 1920’s Moravia; all greys and browns.  Within this framework there are some neat touches.  The foxes carry their tales and use them to great demonstrative effect.  The chickens are portrayed as sex workers with the cockerel as, sort of, their pimp.  It’s not overdone and it’s very effective.  The sets are centred round a stylized tree with other structures as needed being erected on the fly with flats so the action never really stops.

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