Grange Park Opera opened its 2019 season with a revival of Jo Davies fine production of Verdi’s Don Carlo, one of the last (and finest) productions in the company’s old home in Hampshire.
Category: Reviews
Ernst von Siemens Music Prize, 2019
The first woman composer to receive the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize could not have been a worthier candidate.
Josquin des Prez and His Legacy: Cinquecento at Wigmore Hall
The renown and repute of Josquin des Prez (c.1450-1521) both during his lifetime and in the years following his death was so extensive and profound that many works by his contemporaries, working in Northern France and the Low Countries, were mis-attributed to him. One such was the six-part Requiem by Jean Richafort (c.1480-c.1550) which formed the heart of this poised concert by the vocal ensemble Cinquecento at Wigmore Hall, in which they gave pride of place to Josquin’s peers and successors and, in the final item, an esteemed forbear.
Symphonie fantastique and LÈlio United – F X Roth and Les SiËcles, Paris
Symphonie fantastique and LÈlio together, as they should be, with FranÁois-Xavier Roth and Les SiËcles livestreamed from the Philharmonie de Paris (link below). Though Symphonie fantastique is heard everywhere, all the time, it makes a difference when paired with LÈlio because this restores Berlioz’s original context.
Ivo van Hove’s The Diary of One Who Disappeared at the Linbury Theatre
In 1917 Leoö Jan·?ek travelled to Luha?ovice, a spa town in the ZlÌn Region of Moravia, and it was here that he met for the first time Kamila Stˆsslov·, the young married woman, almost 40 years his junior, who was to be his muse for the remaining years of his life.
Manon Lescaut opens Investec Opera Holland Park’s 2019 season
At this end of this performance of Puccini’s Manon Lescaut at Investec Opera Holland Park, the first question I wanted to ask director Karolina Sofulak was, why the 1960s?
Karlheinz Stockhausen: Cosmic traveling through his Klavierst¸cke, Kontakte and Stimmung
Stockhausen. Cosmic Prophet. Two sequential concerts. Music written for piano, percussion, sound diffusion and the voice. We are in the mysterious labyrinth of one of the defining composers of the last century. That at least ninety-minutes of one of these concerts proved to be an event of such magnitude is as much down to the astonishing music Stockhausen composed as it is to the peerless brilliance of the pianist who took us on the journey through the
Don Giovanni at Garsington Opera
A violent splash of black paint triggers the D minor chord which initiates the Overture. The subsequent A major dominant is a startling slash of red. There follows much artistic swishing and swirling by Don Giovanni-cum-Jackson Pollock. The down-at-heel artist’s assistant, Leporello, assists his Master, gleefully spraying carmine oil paint from a paint-gun. A ‘lady in red’ joins in, graffiti-ing ‘WOMAN’ across the canvas. The Master and the Woman slip through a crimson-black aperture; the frame wobbles.
A brilliant The Bartered Bride to open Garsington’s 2019 30th anniversary season
Is it love or money that brings one happiness? The village mayor and marriage broker, Kecal, has passionate faith in the banknotes, while the young beloveds, Ma?enka and JenÌk, put their own money on true love.
A reverent Gluck double bill by Classical Opera
In staging this Gluck double bill for Classical Opera, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, director John Wilkie took a reverent approach to classical allegory.