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OPERA REVIEW- BOSTON LYRIC OPERA-"DON CARLOS"
CONCERT REVIEW- "SIGUR ROS"
(at the BERKLEE PERFORMANCE CENTER) OPERA REVIEW- (New York City Opera)-"I CAPULETTI ED I
MONTECCHI" "ROBERTO DEVEREAUX" at the NEW YORK CITY OPERA (LINCOLN CENTER) Unfortunately, most productions of this treacherously difficult opera will be compared to the classic NYCO production with Beverly Sills many years ago. However, this new production at the City Opera is as good as it gets today. The beautiful stylized sets, costumes, and direction, place the Elizabethan drama in a theatrical setting, complete with neon lights, a theater marquee, identical costumes for all of the courtiers, and larger-than-life portraits of Elizabeth I everywhere. Against this backdrop, is played the love triangle of Queen Elizabeth, Essex, and the Duchess of Nottingham. Lauren Flanigan was as good an Elizabeth as is available today, but her struggling in the last half hour was evident. As I said, the role is treacherous. It's amazing how Sills sang it all so effortlessly 30 years ago, and acted up a storm as well. Oh, well!
(4-Stars) Nick CONCERT" REVIEW- New England Conservatory's 22nd Annual Gospel Jubilee If you missed last night's "Gospel Jubilee," you missed one of the rarest, most unusual, and exciting nights, in any concert hall, anytime...anywhere! Part '60s "love-in," part cathartic religious experience, part rockin' rock concert, part fantastic musical show, what happened in that theater last night was less a performance than it was an experience. Brilliant instrumentalists, preachers who said, meant and spoke directly to you, and that incredible 200-voice New England Conservatory Millennium Choir, tore the roof off of prestigious Jordan Hall. It was only minutes into the concert, when the performers got the audience to its feet (and kept it there for three hours,) shouting, singing, "praising the Lord," and just having a great time making "a joyful noise." It didn't matter whether you were a Baptist, an agnostic, a Catholic, a Jew, a Buddhist, or a Golden Retriever, you were on your feet because the music was overwhelming. This audience, the most diverse that I've ever seen in a concert hall of this caliber, was an important part of the experience, and the line between stage and auditorium disappeared...to everyone's advantage. The musicians (many with classical backgrounds) were inspired; the well-dressed audience was transported and anyone who was lucky enough to be there, will never forget it. I know I won't! (5-Stars) Nick "La Clemenza di Tito" by Mozart A beautifully sung, and intelligently mounted production of a rarely performed Mozart opera. Even with three other excellent singing actresses on stage with her, Lorraine Hunt stole the show. (4- Stars) "Platee" by Rameau The only reason to drag this oddity out of its' 18th-century closet, is to give people like me, something to talk about. We can talk about the outrageous costumes by fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi, or we can talk about the humorously vulgar and sometimes beautiful choreography by director/choreographer Mark Morris. But what is it? Is it a ballet with music, or is it an opera with dance? Actually, what it really is, is a freak, like its' main character Platee...a water "sprite" sung by a man, in the most hideous costume ever worn on an opera stage! See it if you must, but be warned, it's not "La Boheme!" (1- Star)
OPERA REVIEW- "THE MERRY WIDOW" (at the Metropolitan Opera House) First, to set the matter straight, "The Merry Widow" is an operetta (not an opera,) with much of the "plot" being told through spoken dialogue, like a Broadway musical. The fact that it has never been done at the Met before, is a tribute to the wisdom of past managements, who have restricted the operettas in the repertory to Strauss" "Die Fledermaus," and Offenbach's "La Perichole,"(both superior works.) The fact that it's being done NOW, is a tribute to the power of its' stars, Placido Domingo and Fredericka VonStade. The charm of this new production (and it IS charming,) comes from the beautiful music (which has never been sung better,) and an excellent translation of the very cheesy libretto. On the negative side is the hideous production, with sets that look like they were thrown together from the left-overs of Christmas spectaculars at Radio City! Over her long and wonderful career, Fredericka VonStade has always maintained the image of the "girl-next-door," never the diva. The role of Hanna Glawari requires a diva with a capital "D." The last time that I saw "The Merry Widow," was over at the New York City Opera where the Hanna was Beverly Sills (who was sitting a few boxes over from mine last night!) Now, THAT'S a diva! Therefore, with no larger-than-life Hanna, and with a charming but aging Danilo (Domingo,) there was little or no chemistry between the two mega-stars. That's fatal in "The Merry Widow." My opinion notwithstanding, the audience LOVED it!! (3-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "Tristan und Isolde" Every 40 or 50 years, two Wagnerian singers come along, with the God-given talent and endurance to perform the most demanding roles in all of opera. Jane Eaglen and Ben Heppner have been singing these roles around the world in preparation for doing them at the Met...and now they're here. They are magnificent! Wagner wrote inspired music for two human characters as opposed to his usual helmeted gods and goddesses. Tristan and Isolde are real people with real passions. Their love story is universal, and their music soars. Eaglen and Heppner sing above the huge Wagnerian orchestra, and their voices fill the house. Amazing! The production, although stylized, is startlingly beautiful, but doesn't detract from the people in it. The opera is 5 hours long and when it's over, you feel that you've lived through a rare experience. Many people will SAY that they were in the opera house tonight; I'm glad that I WAS!(5-Stars) New York City Opera: "Il Viaggio a Reims" This rarity by Rossini is almost never performed, possibly because it has ten principal singing roles requiring ten top singers. To New York City Opera's credit, they found ten new young, handsome/beautiful singers who fit the bill perfectly. The performances were magnificent; the acting was as good as the singing! The music, treacherously difficult for the singers, was a joy to hear. This one's a winner( 5-stars)New York City Opera: "Ariodante" I hate Handel! In spite of the fact that I was bored to death for most of this 3-hour opera, due to the repetitive nature of Handel's style of music, I can appreciate that the singers were in top form singing the baroque music as well as it could possibly be sung, anywhere in the world. The costumes and sets were lavish; they kept me from nodding off.(3-stars)Opening Night of the Metropolitan Opera: Although it may not be the exclusive affair that it used to be, the opening night of the Met is still an occasion for pulling out the tuxedos, the gowns, and the family jewels. Our group of seven (Vera, Lillian, Pat, Connie, Marty, Chris...and me, of course) looked splendid enough to cause heads to turn as we paraded through the plaza and up the grand staircase of the opera house to a sumptuous dinner at the Grand Tier restaurant. Surrounded by other formally-clad diners, under massive arrangements of flowers, with trumpeters on the staircases heralding the arrival of the ticket holders, this is a memorable event for even the most jaded of opera-goers. With everyone looking like a celebrity, it was hard to spot the real celebrities(Mayor Giuliani, Bruce Willis, Barbara Walters, Calvin Klein, Jeremy Irons, John Glover, etc.) The operas being performed were the famous twins, "Cavalleria Rusticana" and "Pagliacci" or "Cav" and "Pag" as they're known in opera circles. "Cavalleria Rusticana" Why the new hot tenor, Jose Cura, chose to make his Met debut in an opera where the soprano always steals the show is unfathomable. His mentor, Placido Domingo, certainly knows better. What could he have been thinking? So, how was he? His voice, although not as big as that of Domingo or Pavarotti, certainly fills the house. He acts up a storm (very believable and athletic,) and he looks great!! Dolora Zajick, the Santuzza, blew the roof off.(5-stars)"Pagliacci" Placido Domingo was a perfect Canio...believable as a tormented, jealous husband driven to the shocking double murder of the finale. His singing, in this role made famous by Enrico Caruso, was always wonderful. Speaking of Caruso, with this performance, Domingo broke Caruso's record for singing in the opening nights at the Met. Dwayne Croft sang the supporting role of Silvio beautifully, as though Silvio was the star of the opera. Veronica Villaroel was OK...nothing more. It's about time to retire this Zeffirelli production; it's starting to look a little shopworn!(4-stars)After the performance, people seemed reluctant to let go of this magical evening, wandering aimlessly in the plaza, photographing each other in front of the fountain, or the soaring arches and massive Chagalls at the Met. We did the same!! Nick METROPOLITAN OPERA REVIEW- Mefistofele I love this opera, with its' flow of melody from beginning to end. With all of its' money, you would think that the Met could have come up with a new production of Mefistofele, rather than borrowing the tired Swiss one from Geneva that's been kicking around San Francisco and Chicago for the past 15 years. No matter; it still looks beautiful, and the voices were great. This is Samuel Ramey's opera, and he is the best devil around! Richard Leech matches him note for note as Faust. Surely the Met could have come up with a better Marguerite than Veronica Villaroel. I just don't like her voice...or her roly-poly looks! Let's hope that we don't have to wait another 25 years to have a new production of Mefistofele at the Met. (4-Stars) OPERA REVIEWS (2000-2001 Season) METROPOLITAN OPERA REVIEW- "FIDELIO" What a pity that Beethoven wrote only one opera, because it's such a powerful and overpowering work. But instead of complaining, it's better to be thankful that we HAVE "Fidelio. "(One of my favorite composers, Gustav Mahler never even wrote ONE opera!) The Met has mounted "Fidelio" in a no-expenses-spared new production, set in a modern-day prison that could serve as a set for the TV show "Oz." The singers of the two main roles are as good as it gets...Karita Mattila and Ben Heppner. The conductor is James Levine. How wonderful it is to see it all come together in such a perfect way. This tale of freedom lost and freedom regained is a universal one, and Beethoven set it to magnificent music. This ranks up there with the Met's most memorable productions; truly exceptional(5-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- Cecilia Bartoli and Bryn Terfel at the MET Two of the most powerful voices in opera today, belong to two of the most charismatic personalities. On stage, the chemistry between them is magical, as it was in the unforgetable Met production of "The Marriage of Figaro" two seasons ago. Unfortunately, they haven't appeared together in an opera since then. So, this joint recital was a welcome event. And then Bartoli did what she's been doing a lot of lately...she cancelled! Olga Borodina a great mezzo and colleague at the Met, was substituted. And then Borodina cancelled...it must be catching! Some good Met singers were rounded up at the last minute and substituted for the ailing divas, and ultimately, we did have a fine concert, but it wasn't the super-concert that we opera-lovers paid all of that money to hear. All in all, a big disappointment, but an enjoyable evening nonetheless. (3-Stars) Nick METROPOLITAN OPERA-"TURANDOT" In this 13-year-old Franco Zeffirelli production of "Turandot," there is a scene that is the most spectacular scene on any stage in the world today. It's the "mother-of-pearl" Imperial Palace of China, with its blue on-stage ponds, crossed by white marble bridges, on which move hundreds of singers and dancers dressed in ivory and gold opulent costumes. The fact that this is opera at its grandest, is irrelevant to many of the tourists who flock to what has become one of New York's most popular tourist attractions! Luckily for opera lovers, the three main roles are being sung by three of operas greatest voices, Jane Eaglen, Angela Gheorgiou, and Richard Margison. I dare you to hear Margison sing "Nessun Dorma" without thinking of either the Three Tenors, or the World Cup! (5-Stars) NEW YORK CITY OPERA-"THE LOVE FOR THREE ORANGES" How do you mount a production of one of the most rarely performed operas in the repertory? Well, in this case, you take the music of Prokofiev, you dress it up in glorious sets and costumes by children's book illustrator Maurice Sendak (Where The Wild Things Are,) and coax the director, Frank Corsaro, to milk it for every laugh that you can get! The result is a Sendak blockbuster show, that could easily become a holiday classic, like "The Nutcracker," "The Wizard of Oz," or "The Sound of Music," even though it has nothing to do with any specific holiday. It's a feast for the ears and the eyes. Take the kids; they'll love it! (5-Stars) METROPOLITAN OPERA REVIEW- "IL TROVATORE" By stripping away the trappings of 16th Century Spain, director Graham Vick takes the complicated and sometimes absurd plot of "Il Trovatore," and makes it its strongest feature. The story of twin brothers separated at birth and raised, on the one hand by gypsies and on the other by nobles, and who come together as adults to fight for the love of the same noblewoman, is now dramatic and often moving. But, Il Trovatore is all about the glorious music of Verdi and this was the strength of this new production. The magnificent singing of Delora Zajick as the gypsy mother of one of the brothers, was not a surprise. She's always outstanding. But to hear two singers who are not my favorites (Neil Shikoff and Roberto Frontali) as the brothers, do such a remarkable job, was really a surprise. Add to this the excellent singing of Marina Mechariakova, and you have an opera performance worthy of what Verdi wrote. The audience loved it, especially the people in the box next to mine...Mayor Rudi Giuliani and his guests, including the son of Placido Domingo. They were on their feet cheering! (The conductor, Carlo Rizzi was erratic, and some of the sets were bad, therefore not 5-Stars.) (4 1/2-Stars) Nick
NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY OPERA THEATER- "RITA" and "VIVA LA MAMMA" Why the prestigious New England Conservatory Opera Theater chose to perform their Donizetti double-bill at Northeastern University's Blackman Auditorium is a mystery, but after viewing these two obscure one-act "operas," it's an even greater mystery why they chose to perform them at all. Although the always fine Conservatory orchestra performs the charming and often beautiful Donizetti music wonderfully, the singers on stage are dreadful. Hasn't anyone told these aspiring young performers that even opera singers are required to act nowadays? What they were doing on stage is at the level of children dressing up in their mother's clothing, and performing in the backyard for their friends! (1-Star) Nick
"Nabucco" at the Met This early work by a very young Giuseppe Verdi, is famous for 3 things: (1) the well-known overture filled with recognizable melodies,(2)the even MORE well-known Hebrews Chorus, "Va Pensiero," which became the rallying cry for Italians during the revolution that established Italy's reunification as a country, and (3) the treacherously difficult music that Verdi wrote for the lead soprano...music that has destroyed the voices of several famous singers in the past. Why anyone would chose to sing the role of Abigaille is beyond me, but soprano Andrea Gruber tackled it and sang it beautifully. Let's hope that it hasn't destroyed HER voice. Along with the three historically famous things about this opera, can now be added a fourth with this new production...(4) one of the largest, tallest, revolving sets ever built for the enormous Met stage. It depicts the Temple of Jerusalem (in flames!) as well as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon! Stage designer John Napier (who designed "Les Miserables" for Broadway) did himself proud. This opera tells the story of the biblical Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar (Nabucco) and his conquest of Jerusalem. It requires some incredible singers and this new production had them. In addition to Andrea Gruber, there's the always dependable Samuel Ramey and Juan Pons, and two fine newcomers, Marianna Tarasov and Francisco Casanova (albeit a VERY fat Casanova!) They all handled the beautiful Verdi music perfectly. James Levine (looking very sick) conducted expertly. (5-Stars) "La Boheme" at the New York City Opera It's been ages since I saw this opera acted and sung by people who actually looked like 25-year-old starving Parisians! This cast was near perfect and I predict great things for two of the singers (both are Mexican.) Tenor Rolando Villazon (Rudolfo) and baritone Alfredo Daza (Marcello) are young, handsome, with powerful voices, and charming personalities. Remember their names. The director chose to move the action of the story up to WWI, and so we get a Cafe Momus with soldiers in uniforms and Act III set in and around a troop train with empty coffins banked on the station. It was very effective. A memorable production, beautifully sung AND acted. (5-Stars) "The Gambler" at the Met This was the Metropolitan Premiere of Prokofiev's rarely performed opera (outside of Russia.) I was hesitant about seeing it, but then I told myself that Prokofiev could be beautifully melodic ("Romeo and Juliet" ballet; "The Love for Three Oranges, and "Peter and the Wolf.") I should have listened to my instincts. "The Gambler" bored me to tears. There isn't one piece of melodic music in the entire 2 1/2 hour opera. There's some drama in the Dostoevsky story, and the set design was striking, but all in all, not an enjoyable evening at the opera! (1-Star) Nick OPERA REVIEW: "RIGOLETTO" (at the New York City Opera) I knew that something was wrong when I realized that the chattering tourists from Montana (who were seated in my row,) were louder than the combined voices of the tenor (the Duke) and the baritone (Rigoletto) coming from the stage. The tenor, although tall, dark, and handsome, was an operetta tenor venturing into the world of grand opera. In the animal world, that would be the equivalent of a poodle trying to have sex with an elephant! The soprano (Gilda) had a decent enough voice, the minimalist sets and costumes were attractive, and the orchestra and chorus were very good. But all in all, this was not a strong production for the City Opera. Oh well, even a Rigoletto-lite is better than no Rigoletto at all! (2 1/2-Stars) Nick OPERA REVIEW- "Luisa
Miller" (at the MET) CONCERT REVIEW- "THE BUENA
VISTA SOCIAL CLUB"(Orquesta Ibrahim Ferrer) METROPOLITAN OPERA REVIEW- "DIE FRAU OHNE SCHATTEN" When the Met decided to replace its 35-year-old spectacular production of Strauss' "Die Frau Ohne Schatten," I was wary, because I love Strauss, and this was an historic and unforgettable production. Not to worry. The new production is even better than the original one. The sets, costumes and lighting (by Herbert Wernicke,) are magnificent, utilizing the full resources of the Met's stage machinery. But, the emphasis here, (as in the original,) is on the music, and the music of Strauss is served beautifully, by a perfect cast, and a super-conductor. The conductor is Christian Thielemann, the darling of the concert and opera world right now. He conducts brilliantly, and he looks like a movie star! The quintet of singers (Deborah Voigt, Wolfgang Brendel, Gabriele Schnaut, Reinhild Runkel, and Thomas Moser) couldn't be better. Not only do they sing up a storm, riding over the huge Strauss orchestra, but they know how to act as well. Watch their expressions as they sing and interact with one another...they know what they're singing about. The story, about an Empress who casts no shadow, is really an allegory about fertility and childbirth. But the story is just the framework on which to hang the difficult music, and those huge, imaginative sets. When the Met does it right, it's a glorious evening in the opera house. (5-Stars) Nick NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY CONCERT REVIEW- HONORS ORCHESTRA We're so lucky to have a world-class musical facility like the NEC right around the corner. An acoustically perfect gem, with musicians to match these incredible acoustics. Last night's concert was a perfect example of an excellent program...and a typical one. The Honors Orchestra made up of the graduating seniors, was conducted by noted composer and conductor Stanislaw Skrowaczewski. They all performed brilliantly. The program opened with the mercifully short Media's Meditation and Dance of Vengence of Samuel Barber. Then, what followed was Schumann's melodic and powerful Piano Concerto in A minor. The soloist was Dizhou Zhao, a 3rd-year student from China, who won this year's piano competition. It was obvious why. He played the difficult music with no music in front of him, as though it were chop-sticks. Incredible! After the intermission, the orchestra performed the beautiful Symphony No.4 in E Minor by Brahms. It was like a tonic, if you had just had a stressful afternoon. All of this wonderful music, and I was in bed by 10:30pm! (4-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY'S 23rd ANNUAL GOSPEL JUBILEE Last year, I attended my first Gospel Jubilee at the Conservatory and was overwhelmed (see my review of THAT concert.) Last night, I took two Israeli friends back to THIS year's Jubilee, and once again I was thrilled with this magnificent annual present to Boston audiences. Primarily a tribute to African-American church music, this concert becomes, for audiences of ALL races and religious persuasions, a hymn to life. As I said in last year's review, it is a combination of Christian church service, rousing choral recital, rock/jazz concert, preachers speaking directly to the needs of ALL people, and virtuoso piano recital. The audience is very much a part of the performance with its responses to the singers, hand-waving, and singing along with the performers. It was wonderful to see two Israeli Jewish men...my friends...on their feet applauding and shouting with the rest of the "participants" last night. One of the many things that amazes me about this event each year is the expert, brilliant piano playing of the accompanists. Each could be a concert soloist, and probably has been. As always, the 200-voice New England Millennium Choir tore the roof off of Jordan Hall...our acoustically-perfect little jewel of a concert hall. If you're anywhere near Boston next year at this time, don't miss the 24th Annual Gospel Jubilee concert. It's a night to remember. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "DON GIOVANNI" (at the New York City Opera) How do you make a new production of the Mozart masterpiece "Don Giovanni" appear fresh to a new audience? For one thing, you can hire a new director and tell him/her to thrill us with a fresh new way of looking at this classic. (Similar to what Peter Sellars did years ago when he set the opera in present-day Harlem; it worked beautifully.) Also, you can create exciting new sets and costumes. (The Met did this with its Franco Zeffirelli production; that also worked.) But, even with an exciting new director, and fresh sets and costumes, the voices must soar in this treacherously difficult opera. And soar they do at the City Opera, in this first new production of "Don Giovanni" there, in over a decade. Several artists were making their debuts in this production, most notably Peter Coleman-Wright as the Don, Alexandrina Pendatchanska as Donna Anna, and Nathan Berg as Leporello. Add the always-incredible Amy Burton (as Donna Elvira) to this group, and you have an ensemble cast made in heaven. I hope that somebody at the City Opera planned to capture this on video, because it's a production for everyone...even those people who hate opera. What could be more exciting than murder, seduction, and the flames of hell for the rapist Don Giovanni...all set to the glorious music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart? Inspired! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "DON PASQUALE" (BOSTON LYRIC OPERA) Great cities are often judged by their sports teams and their opera companies. Boston is a first-rate sports city, but a second-rate opera town. Stephen Lord's Boston Lyric Opera Company has not yet achieved the international acclaim achieved by Sarah Caldwell's late-great Opera Company of Boston, the birthplace of Beverly Sills' career. The latest BLO production is "Don Pasquale." This is the same production seen at Glimmerglass and the New York City Opera several years ago, the one in which the setting was moved to a commedia del arte company in the time of Moliere. BLO uses relative unknowns in its leading roles, some of whom have gone on to greater fame in other houses (Deborah Voigt, etc.) No one from THIS production will go on to achieve fame in the world's great houses, however, it is a very competent production. The story of "Don Pasquale" involves a foolish old man, who is embarrassed into doing the right thing for, and by, the young people around him. The Norina of Sari Gruber lacks the charm and vocal pyrotechnics necessary for this role, but she gets the job done. The males are better, especially the Ernesto of tenor Charles Castronovo. Pasquale and Malatesta are fine in the difficult patter duets written by Donizetti, in this, his most charming and comedic opera. No mad scenes here! Conductor Stephen Lord kept it all moving along, although at an uneven pace. I love this score, and it's always good to hear it live, even if it's not under the best of circumstances. (3-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- "MOSTLY SONDHEIM: BARBARA COOK" The theater season that's about to come to an end in two months, has been a unique and unusual one for one big reason. Two of the best musicals have been one-woman shows: "Elaine Stritch: At Liberty," and "Mostly Sondheim: Barbara Cook." Last night, Barbara Cook brought her hit show to Boston for just one night, and she packed Symphony Hall to the rafters. For those of you who are not familiar with this 76-year-old song stylist, here's a quick refresher. She started out as a pretty and talented ingenue as the star of such Broadway classics as "Candide," "The Music Man," and "She Loves Me." When she ended her career on Broadway, she started a new career in the world of cabaret, and there she became its queen. As with other great song stylists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme and Barbra Streisand, Barbara Cook takes each song, and turns it into a 3-act play. Composers adore her because she sings their songs the way they meant them to be sung...every word is important to tell a story in song. Her current show consists mostly of songs written by Stephen Sondheim, and of songs by other composers, that he has said that he would have liked to have written! The adoring audience stopped the show several times with standing ovations. Try to see this show on Broadway if you haven't already seen it...it's a winner! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "AGRIPPINA" (at the New York City Opera) Handel is one of my least favorite composers, and his operas sound, to my ear at least, like the sung version of those hateful, repetitious Czerny exercises that I was forced to play as a young piano student. "Agrippina" is yet another one of his boring repetitious operas. To date, I've suffered through four of them, and I still haven't changed my opinion...I hate Handel! If you're still interested, this one has to do with Agrippina, the mother of Nero, and her obsessive plotting to put him on the throne, now occupied by her husband Claudius. With a mezzo soprano singing Nero, and two high-voiced counter-tenors in the cast, it sounded like the stage was filled with eunuchs! My apologies to any eunuchs who might be reading this review. (2-Stars) BOSTON LYRIC OPERA- "LA BOHEME" (Dress Rehearsal) Over the years, I've seen this Puccini classic staged in so many different ways, from the spectacular over-populated "all-of-Paris-onstage-at -the-Met" production by Franco Zeffirelli, to Baz Luhrmann's beautiful Australian Opera production where the action was moved from 19th Century Paris to Paris in the 1950's, to the New York City Opera's new staging, which is set in Paris in World War I, to the Broadway version of "Boheme," renamed Rent." How refreshing then, to see it performed traditionally, the way it was written! The Boston Lyric Opera has done a very respectable job making this tale of four young starving artists (the Bohemians of the title,) and their lovers, come to life in a meaningful way. But no matter how you juggle the plot or the setting, it's still the singing that matters, and here the Lyric has risen to the occasion, giving us 6 fine young singers, who also are fairly decent actors. They all look like their characters, and they sing and act the roles beautifully. If I had to find fault with anything in the production, it would be in the sets for Acts 2 and 3. They were much too stylized, and in Act 3, made no sense of where the action was transpiring. My friend, Pete, a first-timer to opera, said that he enjoyed the opera very much and would like to see another one. That's a great compliment to this production, and opera has a new recruit! (4-Stars) METROPOLITAN OPERA REVIEW- "SLY" Even though they're past their prime, the "three tenors" can still make opera companies do what they want them to do. Like mount an obscure opera, just because it's easier for them to sing at this stage in their careers. Jose Carreras did that with Wolf-Ferrari's rarely-performed opera "Sly," at The Washington Opera, and Placido Domingo brought it to the Met, as his own starring vehicle . Well, is the opera any good? Yes, and no. Although the music is melodic, it's completely forgettable. While it would appear that the singers are singing their hearts out, nothing in the score is very difficult or challenging. As proof of this, Domingo was scheduled to conduct a full opera following this matinee performance. Something he could never do after singing something of substance. The story is somewhat interesting. A group of bored nobles kidnap a drunkard from a tavern, put him up in their palace, and convince him that he's the master of the house. The ending is tragic! Would I ever see "Sly" again. No! (2-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- BOSTON POPS - "AN AMERICAN SALUTE" I love to hear ANY music at Symphony Hall because of its overwhelming beauty and perfect acoustics. However, the springtime Pops concerts at Symphony are to concert music, what fast food is to fine dining...fat-filled and loaded with calories, with very little quality in the contents. Tonight's concert was devoted to patriotic music...obscure and rarely performed Americana, by such composers as Morton Gould, Aaron Copland, Howard Hanson and Meredith Wilson. After listening to two embroidered versions of "The Star Spangled Banner,"and pieces entitled "Song of Democracy," "Amber Waves," "America, the Dream Goes On," and "The Promise of Living, from The Tender Land," it's easy to understand why they're rarely performed. There was even a new piece entitled "The Pledge of Allegiance," written and sung by an 8-year-old! Now, please don't get me wrong, no one loves America as much as I do, but having to listen to an entire evening of this trite and mediocre elevator music, is enough to make even a jingoistic patriot defect. (2 1/2-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW- ENRIQUE IGLESIAS (at The Tweeter Center, formerly Great Woods) I guess that one of the signs of aging is that you start to go to concerts of the children of people that you saw in concert decades ago. That happened to me last night. Years ago, I saw Julio Iglesias in concert. He was never a favorite of mine, but it was a birthday gift for my sister. What made the concert worthwhile was the surprise guest appearance of Willie Nelson, who at the time, had a hit single with Iglesias, called "For All the Girls I've Loved Before." Unfortunately, there were no surprise guests last night, (unless you count the wonderful opening act, "Soluna,") and we had to sit, on a night when the show started an hour late, through an entire evening of Iglesias and his saccarine-sweet Hispanic "everything-sounds-the-same" Pop crap! His appeal is mainly to pre-pubescent chicas who love everything about him, from his pretty face to his breathless voice. For them, he slinks and shimmies all over the stage like a gay matador. He's not as blatantly in-your-face commercial as the charismatic but now out-of-the-loop Ricky Martin, nor is he anywhere near as talented as the other Hispanic pop idol, Marc Anthony. Which makes him sort of a modern-day Julio Iglesias (where is he today?) Yikes, I've come full circle! (2-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "DEAD MAN WALKING" (at the New York City Opera) "Overwhelming," riveting," "chilling," "devastating," and "emotionally draining," are words that are almost never used to describe a new American opera. But, in the case of composer Jake Heggie's opera "Dead Man Walking," they, and others describe perfectly the raw force of this new work. Based on the book by Sister Helen Prejean, and the Sean Penn/Susan Sarandon film, it tells the story of the unusual relationship between a young convicted killer on death row, and his spiritual advisor, a naive nun, Sister Helen Prejean. From the opening scene, in which two naked teenagers are brutally murdered, to the shocking finale, depicting the execution (by lethal injection,) of Joseph Rocher, the opera is mesmerizing, as no other that I've ever seen. The music is perfectly suited to the material. Nothing sweet and hummable, but there are some beautiful melodic arias, duets, quartets, and even a sextette. Some enterprising producer should get the composer to take this to Broadway after it concludes its run of ten performances at the City Opera. It could run there for years! See it, if you can. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW' "IL TRITTICO" (at the New York City Opera) Two tragedies and a comedy make up this triple-bill of one act operas that Puccini wrote as his penultimate work. The New York City Opera mounted three beautiful productions of this rarely performed work. Two of the three operas, "Il Tabarro" ("The Cloak,") and "Gianni Schicchi," were being done so that their star baritone, Mark Delevan, could sing the starring roles in each. In the first, he was the Parisian bargeman who murders his wife's lover, and in the other, he is the hilarious Florentine conman, Gianni Schicchi. If he could, I'm sure that he would have loved to have sung the part of the tragic nun in the third opera, "Suor Angelica!" The first two operas are very dark, and, unlike typical Puccini operas, they are not very melodic. "Gianni Schicchi" on the other hand, is full of glorious melody and hilarious shtick, acted and sung to perfection by an ideal cast of singing actors. If you can sit through two hours of dark and brooding music, "Schicchi" is certainly worth the wait. (3-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA" (Boston Lyric Opera) Fire the director and ship him back to Italy. That would be a start in correcting what's wrong with this dreadfully embarrassing production of the usually indestructible "Barber of Seville!" Director Stefano Vizioli saw this as an adolescent, foolish slapstick comedy with BACKGROUND MUSIC by Rossini. The Rosina, the only singer on stage with a decent voice, looked more like Rosie O'Grady than Rosina of Seville. But the worst embarrassment was the tenor, Lawrence Brownlee. Now I don't demand that the tenor look like Brad Pitt, but he shouldn't look like Al Roker, the Today Show's weathermen, or even worse, Oprah Winfrey in drag! His tiny voice didn't compensate for his ridiculous appearance and his absurd acting. The bass who "sang" Basilio had a voice that couldn't carry beyond the third row. Maybe that was the fault of the orchestra, which played loudly and badly throughout, and even managed to botch up the usually foolproof overture. The character part of Berta, the old servant, was sung by a young woman who was directed to act like a slut from "Canterbury Tales." The Figaro, was sung by a baritone who was so lacking in presence and voice, that there were times that you forgot that he was onstage...and the opera is named for him! If you're forced to go, leave at intermission. The second act is so full of shtick that, at times, I couldn't even tell that there was music being played. I could go on, but why bother. (1-Star) OPERA REVIEW- "SALOME" (New York City Opera) It's easy to understand how this shocking opera caused a riot, and brought police into the opera house, when it was first performed in Germany, in 1905. Even today, the shock value is still there. Taken from the play by Oscar Wilde, it's the story of the biblical "whore princess" Salome, and her relationship with her incestuous parents (Herod and Herodias,) as well as her sexual desire for the imprisoned John the Baptist. The music, by Richard Strauss, is overwhelming, and a trial for the singers, whose voices have to carry over the massive 100-piece orchestra required by Strauss. And carry they did! Especially the amazing Mark Delavan, as John the Baptist. Eilana Lappalainen as Salome, does not have a huge voice, but it's a fine one, and it's so nice to see a beautiful singer actually dance the erotic Dance of the Seven Veils, and make it believable and sexy. This production is set in a huge glass atrium filled with silver palm trees and dominated by an enormous staircase that curves up to the full height of the stage. The director moved the actors quickly and dramatically around this massive set, and the single act opera (1 hour and 50 minutes with no intermission,) ended all too soon, with Salome being murdered, as she cradled the severed head of the Baptist in her groin! Don't bring the children. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "IL PIRATA" (Metropolitan Opera House) The question is, "why is this rarely-performed Bellini opera being given an expensive new production at the Met this season?" The answer is, because reigning opera diva Renee Fleming wanted to stretch her vocal wings in the area of bel canto...not her area of expertise to date. So how did she do? Although she sang beautifully, I was always thinking of the other sopranos who have sung this ornamented style so much better. Singers like Callas, Caballe, Sutherland, and Sills. Marcello Giordani who sang the tenor role, hit all the high notes (and God knows, there were lots of them!) but, at times, it was obvious that he was straining to do this. The opera itself, "a Sicilian melodrama," (isn't that redundant?) is very melodic and filled with beautiful visual stage pictures. However, the action is static, and the translation is old-fashioned and corny...maybe deliberately so. If you're a fan of Renee Fleming (and who isn't?) this performance is a must I suppose, and besides you'll see her in 5 elaborate and beautiful costumes...if that's your thing! Be warned, however, there's only one intermission in 3 hours. (4-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE" (Metropolitan Opera) With some rare exceptions, like George Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess," Leonard Bernstein's "Candide," Stravinsky's "The Rake's Progress," and Frank Loesser's "The Most Happy Fella," I don't like any operas written after the last great opera composers, Puccini and Strauss, wrote their last works.; in other words, after about 1920. To my ears, anything written after that is just not melodic. Try humming an aria from "Wozzeck." William Bolcom has written this new opera, based on the Arthur Miller play, and it should never have been written! It adds absolutely nothing to what is already a classic...the play is already operatic. It's still the story of a family of Sicilian-Americans who live, and labor, on the docks of Red Hook in Brooklyn in the 1950's. The father, Eddie Carbone, is either too dumb or too emotionally involved, to realize that he's in love with the niece that he raised like a daughter. The rest is Greek tragedy. Bolcom has written only one memorable aria, "New York Lights," which could easily become a cross-over popular hit. The rest is just background music! (1-Star) OPERA REVIEW- "LES TROYENS" (Metropolitan Opera) There are not too many opera companies in the world that can afford to mount a production of Berlioz' five-hour monumental spectacle, dealing with the falls of both Troy and Carthage, and which requires at least six major singing stars...plus the Trojan Horse! The Met has not only done it, but has created its biggest hit in decades. This is what opera is all about. The three stars portraying Aeneas, Cassandra, and Dido are required to sing some of the most difficult music ever written, sing it full out for long stretches of time, and act these parts with believability. The Met has these stars. A trimmed-down Ben Heppner (who lost 90 pounds) looks buffed, and sounds incredible in the demanding role of Aeneas. Deborah Voigt and Lorraine Hunt Lieberson as the women in his life, match, and often surpass him in power and emotional intensity. In this production, even the lesser roles are cast with stars (Dwayne Croft, Elena Zaremba, Gregory Turay, etc.) Director Francesca Zambello and designer Maria Bjornson (who died just before this, her Met debut,) have recreated the fall of Troy in all its terrifying splendor amidst stylized but dramatic and enormous sets. The burning of Troy, the suicide of the Trojan women, the entrance of the Trojan Horse, the Royal Hunt and Storm, the glory of the utopia that was Carthage, etc., are all there on stage. With James Levine and the finest opera orchestra in the world in the pit, the five hours passed much too quickly, and you're left at the overpowering finale, wanting more. For five hours, I forgot about Iraq, burning night-clubs, transplanted organs, and terrorists under the bed! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC" (New York City Opera) The New York City Opera opened its Spring Opera Season last night, with Stephen Sondheim's "A Little Night Music." Although it's neither Spring, nor is the Sondheim classic an opera, the night was a phenomenal success. The production was star-filled (Jeremy Irons, Claire Bloom, Juliet Stevenson, and Michele Pawk,) as was the audience ( Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Elaine Stritch, Barbara Cook, Polly Bergen, Marge Champion, James Naughton, and Sondheim himself.) This intelligent and thought-provoking musical, holds up beautifully after all of these years. In fact, the music and lyrics sound even more brilliant and creative than they did in the several times that I've seen it around the world, in the past. The credit must go to Irons, Stevenson and Bloom, who are magnificent. The story, based on Ingmar Bergman's film "Smiles of a Summer Night," concerns seven articulate Swedish aristocrats (and one maid,) in 19th Century Sweden, who become romantically and comically intertwined over a single weekend, and all to one of Sondheim's best, and most accessible scores. Theatergoers will be talking about this production for years to come. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "FAUST" (Metropolitan Opera) Angela Georghiou and Roberto Alagna, the husband and wife operatic duo, whose conceit and arrogance far exceed their good looks and talent, have once again screwed the paying public. Those of us who paid an exorbitant price to see this worn-out production of "Faust," simply for the "privilege" of seeing what the Alagnas could do with these roles, were shocked when they pulled out of the last two performances of the opera, "because of the war," and ran back to their home in France. They're now on my "you-know-what"- list of no-shows (along with Cecilia Bartoli,) whose performances I will boycott in the future. But now for the somewhat good news. Two good-looking young Texans, Emily Pulley and Marcus Haddock, sang in place of the missing Alagnas, and they did just fine. James Morris was the Mephistopheles, a role that he can sing in his sleep. Although his voice has lost a lot of what it once had, he can still take on the devil! The production is a surrealistic mess, with rotating sets made to look like Gothic rock formations, with the church scene looking like it took place in the belly of a whale. It's no wonder that poor Marguerite was scared nearly to death! It's time for the Met to scrap this production and create a new one, possibly set in the 19th Century, where Gounod's music tells us that it belongs. (2 1/2-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- CINCINNATI SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Symphony Hall, Boston) Last night, the young Estonian conductor, Paavo Jarvi, brought the big sound of his Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra to our acoustically-perfect Symphony Hall, where it filled the majestic hall with sound...some if it magnificent, some perfectly awful! The first piece, a Boston premiere, was predictably dreadful, having been written in 1999. Nothing but noise for 20 minutes! The second piece, however, was magnificent. Sibelius' Violin Concerto in D minor was performed by Russian violinist Vadim Repin, and it was 40 minutes of perfect music performed brilliantly. This Siberian violinist is one of the greats. After the intermission, the orchestra performed the Shostakovich Symphony No. 10 in E minor. It was too long (one hour,) and only intermittently big and exciting. My mind wandered most of the time! (3-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- PETER CINCOTTI & HIS PIANO (Sculler's at the Doubletree in Boston) The hottest new singing sensation on the New York club-scene right now is Peter Cincotti, who "flying in under the radar," so to speak, made his Boston debut last night, virtually unnoticed by our local media, at a one-night stand at Sculler's Jazz Club at the Doubletree Hotel. That his performance was sold-out is not surprising considering the fact that he's just come off of a 30-day completely sold-out engagement at New York's Oak Room, where celebrities were fighting to get in to hear him! Who is this guy who critics rave has inherited the mantle passed down from Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett and Mel Torme, to Harry Connick, Jr. and Michael Feinstein? Not surprisingly, his repertoire consists of the immortal standards of Cole Porter, George Gershwin, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Harold Arlen, etc. What IS surprising is that this native of Concord, Mass., is only 19 years old. He must be channeling someone! In his 1-1/2 hour set tonight, he played (piano) and sang his way through many of the classics, giving them a distinctive sound, but his solo piano playing of "After You've Gone," was alone worth the price of admission. He's a true song-stylist but an even greater jazz pianist. Even the Muppet's " Rainbow Connection" sounded fresh and sexy! If he comes to your town, beg, borrow, or steal a ticket to see Cincotti; he's an incredible artist...AND he's an undergraduate at Columbia! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "FLAVIO" (New York City Opera) I approach each new production of a Handel opera with dread, because, to put it mildly, I'm not a big fan of Handel. I keep going to them with the hope that, one day, I will like one of them. In my opinion, the music in Handel's operas is dull, repetitious, and endlessly long. Here's what I hate about Handel: (1) the ridiculous plots; (2) the countertenors (men who have trained their voices to sound like women, like the Italian castrati of the 18th Century, who gained their high voices at an awful price!) (3) the ridiculous repetitiveness of the music, where singers will sing one sentence, and then repeat it four or five times in slightly different variations. If the repetitions were eliminated, a three-hour Handel opera would be only 20 minutes. This, I might be able to sit through! Otherwise, it's torture. (1-Star) CONCERT REVIEW- THE BOSTON POPS (Conductor Keith Lockhart) with RICKY SKAGGS and PETER CINCOTTI Peter Cincotti made his debut with the Boston Pops last night, (as did Ricky Skaggs,) in a concert that was more like three separate concerts, and which never really came together as a cohesive whole. The first "act" of the concert consisted of Ricky Skaggs and his band in a half-hour set of Tennessee Blue Grass. It was foot-stomping and thrilling. The second "act" consisted of the usual Pops fare of light classical (the theme from "Silverado,") and classical (the Overture to "La Forza del Destino") pieces. This was also well done, although the brass tended to overwhelm the strings in the classical numbers. The third "act," and the reason that I came to this particular concert, consisted of Peter Cincotti (and his three-piece band.) Unfortunately, in the half-hour allotted to him, he only got to sing four numbers, all of which I had heard him perform when I saw him at Sculler's Jazz Club in his Boston debut last month. In this new venue, it was apparent that Cincotti is one of the most exciting talents to come onto the scene in years. It was also apparent that, being backed by a full orchestra ("This is the first time that I've played with an orchestra,") added nothing to a Cincotti performance. In fact, he's heard to better advantage in a cabaret-like venue, with just his extremely talented three-piece band, his piano, and his overwhelming talent. He was obviously impressed by being in Symphony Hall, and playing with the Boston Pops under Keith Lockhart. But the Pops drowned out his magnificent piano-playing at times, and even his distinctive soft-spoken singing voice sometimes got lost on the overcrowded stage. This will undoubtedly happen to him again next month when he makes his Carnegie Hall debut. My advice to Mr. Cincotti? "Stick to Cabaret where nothing gets between you and your audience." (4-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- "THE BOSTON POPS FOURTH OF JULY CONCERT AT THE ESPLANADE ON THE CHARLES RIVER" New technology has done a lot to improve the experience of attending the premiere 4th of July concert...the Boston Pops at the Hatch Shell on the Charles, in the dozen years since I last experienced this event. Twenty five "towers of sound" banked with speakers, now line the Charles River on both the Boston and the Cambridge side of the Charles River. Jumbotron screens are placed at strategic points in the crowd, bringing the sights and sounds of the concert to everyone there, and not just to the lucky 10,000 who arrived at dawn to get into the oval area directly in front of the Hatch Shell. However, at least one aspect of technology altered the concert and took something away from it. This year, for the first time, the concert was telecast to a national audience...and certain concessions had to be made. The concert had to stop for commercials for one! But, more importantly, the fireworks spectacular was pushed back to 10:30pm (from 10:00,) and all of the fireworks were unloaded at once, making for a grand show for the viewers, but leaving the "1812 Overture" without any fireworks at all. Certainly a first for Boston. But, I'm nit-picking. All in all, the concert experience was magnificent. People come to this famous event for different reasons. Some come for the incredible fireworks spectacular (and it was amazing, with fireworks that I've never seen before.) Others come to hang out with their friends (and it seems as though everyone in Boston was here in this crowd of half a million people.) But some, like me, actually come to hear the music as well, and on this score, the concert didn't disappoint. Some of the highlights of the concert were: rising young opera star Indra Thomas' powerful and inspiring rendition of the Star Spangled Banner (with the entire crowd coming to its feet as young people slowly removed their baseball caps,) followed by what I thought was the most beautiful music of the evening, her singing of the "Ebben, ne andro lontana" aria, from Catalani's opera "La Wally." After this, conductor Keith Lockhart introduced the star attraction of the concert, and out marched the 400 voice Mormon Tabernacle Choir, and their voices filled the heavens with "God Bless America," "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," and, joined by country singer LeAnn Rimes, "America the Beautiful." A great day to be with friends...and to be an American! (5-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW-"BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND AT FENWAY PARK" Because it was an historic event...the very first concert at Fenway Park...I would have gone, regardless of the performer. However, because the performer was Bruce Springsteen (and the E Street Band) rather than Brittany Spears, P Diddy, or some other "trash-for-cash" here-today, gone-tomorrow non-entity, the show was memorable, AND enjoyable. The huge stage was out in the outfield, opposite home-plate, and I had a great seat (a right-infield box,) in the direct line of vision with "the Boss." The aisle seat was raised above all of the on-field seats (which were on a special metal flooring to protect the outfield grass,) and there was no one seated in front of me, so I could actually sit throughout the 3-hour concert. The concert started promptly at 8pm (more or less,) when Springsteen and the Band marched onto the stage, where he sang about 800 of his best songs for about 3 hours! Where does this man get his energy from??? He was all over the stage, non-stop, for the entire concert. The audience was filled with Boston celebrities, with people like Cam Neely and the Jordan's Furniture men sitting in and around me! They loved him. Has anyone noticed that Bruce and Steven Van Zandt are starting to look alike? Yikes! Clarence Clemons was as much of a presence as usual, and in general, I would have to say that everyone on stage seemed to be energized by the Fenway setting, the incredibly receptive audience, and the warm summer evening. In spite of all the beer, I didn't see one fist-fight! All in all, one of Springsteen's best concerts, and one of Boston's more memorable events. (5-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- "RANDY NEWMAN" (at the Berklee Performance Center) Lately, the word "legend" has been carelessly tossed around. It used to mean someone who had accomplished a lifetime of outstanding, high-quality work. Now, the term has been applied to people with names like Brittney, Christina, and Justin...people who have just recently achieved puberty. Randy Newman IS a true legend. Ever since the 60's, this rock/pop icon has been writing outstanding songs, and performing them to audiences of his select fans. These fans have included people like The Beetles, The Rolling Stones, Elton John, James Taylor, Bruce Springsteen, etc. Just a few weeks ago, I was talking to my cousins John and Kim, and we were wondering if Randy Newman would ever be performing again. Well, I'm happy to say that the answer is "yes" and I was lucky enough to hear him in concert tonight, at the Berklee Performance Center, a venue that's almost literally across the street from where I live! He looks older, with his full head of graying hair. But he still sounds the same...his voice is as throaty as ever. Once he starts to sing, you realize that people just don't write songs like this any more. The melodies are always deceptively beautiful. The words, however, are sarcastic, biting, brilliantly topical, hilarious, and often, heartbreakingly poignant. This man is cynical beyond the pain level of most people. He sang all of my favorites ("Short People," "The Great Nations of Europe," "Lonely at the Top," "Political Science,") and dozens more, for more than two wonderful hours. A truly memorable concert for all of us who were lucky enough to be there. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "LUCIA di LAMMERMOOR" (New York City Opera) I've seen fat "Lucias," glamourously thin "Lucias," and, in that ridiculous Met production, a "Lucia" who was directed to climb down a 100-foot-high wall of coffins, while singing the treacherously difficult music of the Mad Scene. But, I've never seen a visibly-pregnant one...until last night! When soprano Jennifer Welch-Babidge found herself to be pregnant six months before her debut as "Lucia," the production-director was faced with a decision...replace her in the role, or incorporate her pregnancy into the part. He chose the latter, and judging from the results, it was the right decision. Now, Sir Walter Scott's fragile heroine Lucy of Lammermoor is even more fragile, and she has much more to lose when she thinks that she's been jilted at the altar by her lover, Edgar of Ravenswood! When her brother marries her off to someone else against her will, you can almost understand why she chopped her bridegroom to pieces on their wedding night! Almost! Miss Welch-Babidge sings like an angel, as do the other two leads, Cuban tenor Jorge Antonio Pita, and American Stephen Powell. This Lucia is beautifully sung and beautifully acted. In fact, Lucia's Mad Scene is the best one that I've ever seen. If there's a problem with this production, and there is, it has to do with the horrible sets and bizarre costumes. The set designs of Christine Jones seem to set this Scottish melodrama on a glacier in Antarctica, and the costumes of Constance Hoffman would be more appropriate in a Mad Max film or an "S & M" version of Macbeth. Both of these women are protegees of Julie Taymor. They've picked up her craziness, but not her genius. Now if we could just put those three lead singers into a Zeffirelli-designed Lucia, complete with tartans and kilts, that would be a production for the operatic history books! (4-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "ALCINA" (New York City Opera) One Handel too many: we left at the intermission after Act I. (0-Stars) CONCERT REVIEW- MARILYN HORNE & BARBARA COOK at SYMPHONY HALL ("Just Between Friends") A "diva" is an admired, mature, and distinguished prima donna ("first lady",) of the musical world, who, over a lengthy and successful career, has paid her dues to her profession and to her fans, who think of her as a goddess (the Italian word for goddess is "diva.") Brittney Spears, Mariah Carey, Beyonce Knowles and Christina Aquillera are not divas; they're sexy girls who can sing. Marilyn Horne and Barbara Cook ARE divas; Horne who retired from the world of opera after a lengthy international career, and Cook who retired from the world of the Broadway Musical Theater, and then re-established herself as a star of the world of Cabaret. They were united for this sold-out concert at Symphony Hall for the very first time, and it was a triumph. The tuxedoed and gowned audience (including people like Nathan Lane,) loved every minute of it. The program consisted of the musical standards of Rodgers and Hart, Cole Porter, Harold Arlen, Duke Ellington, Rodgers and Hammerstein, Stephen Sondheim etc. These are songs that are nearly 50 years old, and they're still being sung all over the world. When they were sung by Horne and Cook, separately and together, they sounded as fresh as though they had been written yesterday. Both women sang beautifully and told interesting and amusing anecdotes between songs. But this audience came to hear these women sing, and sing they did. One can only hope that someone was capturing this historic event on video or at least CD. If not, then only a couple of thousand people were the lucky ones tonight! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "BENVENUTO CELLINI" (Metropolitan Opera) Carnival in Rome; the casting of a major Renaissance bronze sculpture; the conflict between its artist, Benvenuto Cellini, and his powerful patron, Pope Clement VII. Those are the elements of the plot of this rarely performed masterpiece by Hector Berlioz. In fact, the last time that I saw the opera, was at its American Premiere, 30 years ago, when it was done by the then world-famous Opera Company of Boston, led by Sarah Caldwell, and starring Jon Vickers. The Met has pulled out all the stops for this current production...the first time that its ever been done there. Set designer George Tsypin, and his costume designer Georgi Alexi-Miskhishvili, have brilliantly created a huge, abstract, sculpture-like setting, that brings in major elements of Renaissance design...the dome, the arch, and the grand staircases that climb to the sky, and peopled that setting with creatively-costumed (and a few naked) carnival revelers. The cast is perfect, with Marcello Giordani hitting all those treacherous high notes as Cellini, and Isabel Bayrekdarien, as his Teresa. If you love the music of Berlioz, as I do, then the 3 1/2 hours will slip quickly by, and you'll come out humming the music of the beautiful Roman Carnival Overture. If you're not a Berlioz fan, then go to see the wild Cirque du Soleil-like production, directed by Andrei Serban in his Met debut. The brilliant coup de theatre at the finale (the casting and revealing of the giant full-size statue of "Perseus Holding the Head of Medusa,") is alone worth the price of admission...even at the Met's insanely high ticket prices! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "LA JUIVE" (Metropolitan Opera) To the best of my knowledge, I've never heard one note of music from this sadly neglected opera. What a pity. It's a magnificent work. The present new production at the Met (borrowed from the Vienna State Opera,) is a musically and dramatically exciting 4 hours in the theater. The theme of the opera is anti-semitism, and the story is a romantic tale of forbidden love between the Jewess Rachel and the Christian prince Leopold, during a period of fanatical hatred of the Jews...15th Century Austria. The current production is set in the present, for no discernible reason! Tenor Neil Shicoff (the son of a cantor,) was born to play the role of Eleazar, Rachel's vengeful father. His devotion to the role and the opera, was instrumental in getting the Vienna production (in which he starred,) brought to the Met. Now, that's clout! One of the reasons that "La Juive" hasn't been done at the Met since the days when Caruso sang it 80 years ago, is that it's difficult to cast, requiring five star-quality singing actors, and they're not so easy to round up in one production. The Met has done it. All five singers are magnificent. This kind of singing doesn't happen very often on one stage, even at the Met. The five stars are Neil Shicoff, Soile Isokoski, Elizabeth Futral, Ferruccio Furlanetto and Eric Cutler. Some people will find the sets and costumes jarring. I thought that they were perfect, with a steeply angled stage, separating the world of the Christians (all white, above,) from the world of the Jews (all black, below.) It's dramatic, effective, and it makes the director's point, starkly and visually. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "SALOME" (Metropolitan Opera) When "Salome" was first performed 100 years ago, it caused near-riots, and the Metropolitan's first production of the opera was shut down by the police, the day after its premiere! Today, 100 years later, it's still causing controversy. The story of the Judaen princess, Salome, who dances for her lecherous father, Herod, in order to obtain the severed head of John the Baptist, has a magnificent score by Richard Strauss, but what to do with that Dance of the Seven Veils. Sopranos who can handle the treacherous music, don't usually feel comfortable dancing the dance, AND singing. Let's face it. It's a strip tease. None of this presented a problem to the beautiful and talented Karita Mattila, who not only sings and acts the role perfectly, but also dances the hottest Dance of the Seven Veils that I'VE ever seen...ending up with her completely naked. She looks damn good for a 43-year-old! (Last night's performance was being filmed to be shown on TV. How will they handle the full frontal nudity?) Just once, I'd like to see a production of "Salome" set in its true biblical period, instead of in some modern-day no-man's land. The production at the New York City Opera looks like it's set in the lobby of Caesar's Palace in Vegas. At least the Met's production has huge stylized sane dunes! All of the rest of the singers were wonderful, but Mattila stole the show...in every way. The staid Met audience ROARED its approval! (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "DON GIOVANNI" (Metropolitan Opera) To many people, this is the perfect opera...it has everything. Well, if that's the case, then this new production must be the perfect showcase for this opera. It has a true ensemble cast, made up of the Met's finest Mozarteans. Although the sets are stark, consisting of huge sliding brick walls and staircases, they move quickly, making for effective and fast scene changes (in what is already a very long night at the opera.) They certainly work better than the Zeffirelli mess that they replaced. But, this production is all about the singers and they are: Thomas Hampson (as an older, but crueler Don Juan,) Anja Harteros, Christine Goerke, and Hei-Kyung Hong (as his "donnas,") Rene Pape (a wonderful Leporello,) and Gregory Turay (as Don Ottavio.) It may be a cliche, but this is a true ensemble working together to tell the story of the slime-ball Don Juan, his conquests, and his downfall. The voices are superb, and the orchestra under Maestro James Levine, supports them beautifully. A perfect, although long, performance in every way. (5-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "TOSCA" (Boston Lyric Opera) Because I took a young friend to see this opera, and it was his first opera, I tried to look at it through his eyes, and see and hear what HE was seeing and hearing. What I saw was a fairly pedestrian, provincial version of a "can't-fail" opera. The three main singers had weak voices that couldn't rise above the orchestra, especially in the key dramatic moments. The soprano...a large black woman...was unbelievable in the role of a glamorous, Italian opera singer. She was hammy, inelegant, and her butt was bigger than her voice. The tenor, whose biography says that he's a "decorated officer for the Miami-Dade Police Department," shouldn't quit his day job! The baritone was OK, but in the key "Te Deum" scene, he couldn't be heard above the big chorus on stage. So that leaves the sets and the orchestra. The first act set, with its ornate marble floor and scaffolding, could pass easily for the Church of Sant' Andrea della Valle. But the same set, with some additions and subtractions served as Scarpia's apartments in the Farnese Palace, and that damn same decorated marble floor was completely inappropriate on the stone roof of the Castel Sant' Angelo! What to say about the orchestra, which was being conducted by our Boston Pops conductor, Keith Lockhart, who was conducting his first staged opera in Boston. Let's just say that I've heard worse conducting from the Lyric Opera's own Stephen Lord. Although he moved the proceedings along, like a good traffic cop, at times he slowed down so much, to make it easier for the tenor and soprano to sing two of their showcase arias, that I thought that some members of the orchestra could have gone out into the alley for a smoke! So what did my friend think? He said that he enjoyed the performance very much, although he would have liked to have seen a more attractive Floria Tosca. So would I! (2 1/2-Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "ERMIONE"
(at the New York City Opera)
This rarely performed opera by Rossini (one of my favorite
composers,) has a ridiculous story (based on Euripides' "Andromache,") bad
acting, and beautiful and exciting music. It almost sounded like Handel,
but much more melodic and memorable. (As you may know, I HATE Handel ! )
The opera calls for three tenors, a soprano, a mezzo, and a bass,
all of whom are required to sing some of the most treacherously
difficult music that I've ever heard on an opera stage. The fact that they
pulled it off is a tribute to the City Opera. Where do they find all of
these talented and good-looking young people? (They've been doing it for
years, since they were the ones who discovered Placido Domingo and Beverly
Sills among countless others.) See this one if you can. It'll be hard to
find again.
(4-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW- "MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA" (at the New York City Opera) This Marvin David Levy opera, based on the play by Eugene O'Neill
(which is in turn based on Aeschylus' "Oresteia,) has a great story, great
acting, great singing, and dreadful music. We left after the second act!
(2-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW- "MADONNA- THE RE-INVENTION TOUR"
(at the Worcester Centrum)
CONCERT REVIEW- NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY
PHILHARMONIA (at Jordan Hall in Boston) OPERA REVIEW- "THE MAGIC
FLUTE" (at the Metropolitan Opera) OPERA REVIEW- "DIALOGUES OF THE CARMELITES" (at
the New York City Opera) CONCERT REVIEW- "CAROL CHANNING- THE FIRST 80 YEARS ARE THE HARDEST!" (at the Berklee Performance Center, of the Berklee School of Music, in Boston....just down the block from where I live!) Some performers are so tied into the history of Broadway, that their names are virtually synonymous with the excitement, lights, and music of the American Musical Theater; names like Ethel Merman, Mary Martin, Julie Andrews, Bernadette Peters, Eartha Kitt, and of course, Carol Channing. At 83 years of age, this crazy blonde is still kicking up those incredible legs, singing the songs that made her famous, and telling unforgettable anecdotes about her life in the theater. On last year's Tony Awards Show, she surprised everyone by leading LL Cool J in a rap version of the title song from her most famous musical, "Hello Dolly," thereby becoming one of the few performers who appeals to both the hip-hop and the hip-replacement generations! In her current one-woman show at the Berklee Performance Center, she captivated her audience, by once again becoming Lorelei Lee in "Gentleman Prefer Blondes," (the role that Marilyn Monroe played in the film version,) and her greatest creation, Dolly Levi in "Hello Dolly," (the role that Barbra Streisand played in the film version.) Those foolish Hollywood producers couldn't trust her to play on screen, the roles that she created on Broadway. She's still tireless, funny, and can sing her songs with a remnant of that husky voice that made her famous. But what she really does for 1 1/2 hours, is tell hilarious stories about herself, her famous friends, and her life on stage. Although at times, she forgets what she's saying, she's still a VERY funny woman with impeccable timing. I hope that I have the energy that she has, when I'M 83!!! (3 1/2- Stars) OPERA REVIEW- "SAMSON ET
DALILA" (Metropolitan Opera House in New York)
CONCERT REVIEW- "LEBANESE
SINGERS" (FADEL SHAKER & NAWAL EL ZOUGHBI)
CONCERT REVIEW- "HARVEY KORMAN
& TIM CONWAY:TOGETHER AGAIN" OPERA REVIEW- "LES PECHEURS DES PERLES"("THE PEARL
FISHERS")at the New York City Opera. OPERA REVIEW- "LA
FANCIULLA DEL WEST" ("THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST") at the New York
City Opera. CONCERT REVIEW- "PINK MARTINI" with the BOSTON
POPS (in their 120th Year!) OPERA REVIEW- "CYRANO DE BERGERAC" (at the
Met) OPERA REVIEW- "FAUST"(2005) (at the Met) OPERA REVIEW: "CAPRICCIO"
(at the New York City Opera) OPERA REVIEW: "ARIANE ET
BARBE-BLEU" (at the New York City Opera) OPERA REVIEW: "THE MINES OF
SULPHUR" (at the New York City Opera) OPERA REVIEW: "ROMEO ET JULIETTE" (at the Metropolitan
Opera)
The Met has chosen to put together a spectacular new production of
what is basically a dull opera. "Romet et Juliette" has only one showpiece
soprano aria, and none of the beautiful duets, trios, quartets and
choruses of Gounod's more popular other opera, "Faust." The best things
about it are the incredible sets and costumes, (which look as though they
were reproduced from the pages of The Notebooks of Leonardo de
Vinci) and the French singing sensation, Natalie Dessay...the most
beautiful and believable 14-year-old-looking Juliette that I've ever seen
on an operatic stage. She's amazing! Next to her, tenor Ramon Vargas (who
is pretty good himself,) looks like her father (fleeting thoughts of
pedophilia came to mind as I watched them together!!!)
(4-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "THE
LITTLE PRINCE": (New York City Opera)
CONCERT REVIEW: "B.B. KING'S 80TH
BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION" ay Symphony Hall in Boston With the possible exception of "Eugene Onegin," I really don't like
Russian opera. For me, all the beautiful Russian music is in its ballets,
but there, the "arias, duets, trios,etc." are all danced rather than sung,
and I really don't enjoy dance. In Russian opera, where everything is
sung, there's never anything worthwhile being sung! The music is big,
broad, even spectacular, but easily forgotten. Such is the case with
Tchaikovsky's "Mazeppa." The only interesting piece of music is the
Prelude to Act III, which is filled with references to the composers own
"1812 Overture." All of the stars of this production are stars of the
Kirov Opera, back in St. Petersburg, and its conductor, Valery Gergiev, is
the director of that company. The story, well known to any schoolchild in
Russia or Ukraine, concerns the real-life historic general, Mazeppa, who
fell in love with a girl young enough to be his grand-daughter, with
tragic consequences. The singers were all excellent, and the
production was designed by George Tsypin. Although stylized, it was
spectacular, with incredible lighting effects. This is definitely not
something that I would want to see again, although I'm glad that I saw it
once.
(3-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "DON PASQUALE" (at the MET) The last time that I saw this wonderful Donizetti masterpiece, was
when it was mounted as a new production for Beverly Sills as she was about
to retire from singing. It was a glorious valentine to one of
the greatest singers who ever lived. This new production was created
to highlight the exceptional voices, the great acting
ability, and the model-like looks of opera's two hottest young stars,
Anna Netrebko (Norina) and Juan Diego Florez (Ernesto.) It was a
different take on the opera, than the more sophisticated, elegant Sills
production. This one was youthful, exuberant, funny, and the crazy comings
and goings made more sense, when they were being done by "kids." The
singing was magnificent. Both of the stars have light voices, but what
they can do with them is amazing. Much of the time, they were singing this
difficult music while running and climbing all over the sets...which,
incidentally, were quite beautiful. The other two stars of the evening
were Mariusz Kwiecien (Dr. Malatesta) and Simone Alaimo (Don
Pasquale.) The conductor was Maurizio Benini, standing in for an
indisposed James Levine. All in all a glorious, fun night in the opera
house. At the prices the Met charges, all I can say is thank God the two
stars were not sick!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "LA TRAVIATA" (Boston Lyric Opera) It's not that this production was bad; it's just that it wasn't very
good. On the plus side, the soprano and the baritone sang well, and
the conductor kept everything together. In addition, the sets, although
extremely minimalist, were colorful and somewhat interesting (although
I've never seen the Act II country-house scene set in the dead of Winter!)
On the minus side, the acting, in general was amateurish, and the tenor
was hopeless...too fat for his costumes, with a
not-quite-ready-for-prime-time voice. His timing was so bad in the
"Brindisi," that it was a horserace between him and the conductor. I'm not
sure who lost; I think that we, the audience, did. The director (if
there was one,) must have instructed the singers to face the audience
when they had to sing, (in a style that went out of fashion decades
ago,) and never mind who they were singing to, or with. In
addition, whenever they felt any kind of emotion...they just sat down.
I've never seen singers sit so much since the days when Pavarotti was
immobile on stage, at the end of his career! I left before the
beginning of the last act. I didn't need to see the soprano die; it would
have been redundant!
(3-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "TOSCA" (at the Met) I've seen the magnificent Franco Zeffirelli production of "Tosca" at
the Met several times...the one in which he recreates, almost
literally, on the huge stage, the Roman settings for the story's
three acts: the spectacular cathedral in Act 1, the ornate apartments of
the Farnese Palace in Act 2, and the rooftop of the Castel Sant' Angelo in
Act 3. So why see it again? In two words...Deborah Voigt. The once
hefty blonde with the overwhelming voice, is now the
"almost-two-hundred-pounds-lighter" slim blonde with the still
overwhelming voice! Casting Voigt as the glamorous Roman singer Floria
Tosca was a match made in heaven...who could resist? Not me. She was
magnificent. She became Tosca, and when she was on stage (which was most
of the time,) not even the overpowering sets could distract you away from
her. Her voice soars over the orchestra, the chorus, the sets, the
audience, and it would soar right out the back doors onto Broadway ,
if those doors weren't closed! The woman is glorious, and I'm happy
to say that she was discovered up here in Boston, singing at our own
Boston Lyric Opera. Run to see this one, if you can still get
tickets.
(5-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW: "PINK MARTINI" at the Berklee Performance Center, Boston
All too infrequently, my favorite band of performers comes to town.
Last night was one of those nights. During the afternoon, I tried to
explain to some young friends who had never heard of "Pink Martini,"
what their sound was about. I must have failed, because one of them
said that "it sounds like elevator music." That couldn't be further
from the truth. At the concert, the cousin of the lead singer said,
"call them a big band, that plays multi-cultural jazz." Well, that's
closer. What they are is a group of a dozen accomplished musicians
(some of whom are from Oregon, who met at Harvard,) led by a
charismatic young woman, China Forbes. They start their concert with a
rousing rendition of Ravel's "Bolero," in a dance-band arrangement,
and then proceed to perform almost 3 hours worth of beautiful
music...all with a beat that keeps you from sitting still. You want to
get up and dance, or at least jump around and wave and clap your
hands. I often feel like Don Quixote searching through the world of
today's music, for something with MELODY. Here's melody with a capital
"M." China Forbes sings bouncy, melodic, songs, in French, Italian,
Spanish, Greek, Japanese, and Arabic. Some of them come from old films
("Anna," "Never on Sunday," "The Man who Knew Too Much,") and some of
them are just old top-10 songs from decades ago ("Que Sera, Sera.) In
many of them, the band sounds like a house-band at a Cuban nightclub
in the 1950's. In any case, they're unique and magnificent. Buy one of
their two CDs and you'll see what I mean.
(5-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW: "RANDY NEWMAN" at Berklee
Randy Newman is one of my favorite
entertainers. He's 63, fat, gray-haired, wears glasses, and can
hold an audience in the palm of his hand like few other performers I
know. A singer-songwriter (he's composed the scores for
films ranging from "Ragtime," and "The Natural," to the animated
films "Toy Story," "A Bug's Life," and "Monsters, Inc.") he is a
social satirist with one of the sharpest biting wits in music today.
This true legend, could include among his fans, people like Elton
John, The Beatles, Paul Simon, and Bruce Springsteen. If you're not
familiar with his froggy voice and his melodic piano-playing, pick
up one of his CDs like "Sail Away," and I guarantee, you'll be
hooked. At last nights concert, he sang some of my old favorites
like "Let's Drop the Big One," "The Great Nations of Europe,"
"You've Got a Friend in Me," and "Short People." He's won Oscars and
Grammys and countless other awards and honors, but he's at his best
just sitting at a piano on a bare stage, being sarcastic and
beautifully hummable. I could listen to the man for hours.
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "COSI
FAN TUTTE" (at the New York City Opera)
Even if you're not a big fan of Mozart, or of opera in general,
you would probably enjoy this glorious new production because of
its melodic score, the beautiful sets and costumes, and the young,
talented performers who so realistically sing, and act, the parts
of these unfaithful lovers....or are they unfaithful? The story is
about two Neapolitan sisters and their lovers, who decide to test
the love of the women, by disguising themselves as foreign
soldiers, and trying to see if the women will be unfaithful. It's
a believable story, but even if it weren't, the music is so
wonderful, that it wouldn't matter if the singers were reading
from the telephone book. The singers were all new to me, but I
look forward to hearing all of them again in other roles. The
conductor was the 80-year-old Julius Rudel. My God, he's been
around forever. A perfect new production for the City Opera, and a
wonderful way for us to start off the new opera season at Lincoln
Center.
(5-stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "L'ELISIR D'AMORE" (at the New York City Opera)
Director Sir Jonathan Miller has hit a bulls-eye with this
charming new production. He has chosen to change the time and
place of this Donizetti comic masterpiece, from the 19th Century
Italian countryside, to an American diner in the Texas of the
1950's, and the whole thing works beautifully. The stage picture
looks like an Edward Hopper painting, and it comes complete
with a Ford Fairlane convertible! Of course the music is
magical, and it's sung by a cast of brilliant young
singer/actors, who actually make you believe the crazy
story. This is one to take the whole family to, even the one who
can't spell opera.
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" (at the MET)
When the new General Manager of the MET, Peter Gelb, came on
board, one of the things that he promised to do was to bring
in more directors from Hollywood and Broadway, in order to
breathe new life into the new productions each year. He's also
been innovative in making young people aware of opera, and the
MET, by having the opening night opera telecast live, on huge
screens in Lincoln Center Plaza and in Times Square. Both were
well attended by young people. The first of the new
productions under his management, was this production of
Puccini's glorious "Madama Butterfly." The director is
Hollywood's Anthony Minghella ("The Talented Mr. Ripley," "The
English Patient," etc.) The production being replaced by this
new one, had realistic sets and costumes, with a full-size
Japanese house and cherry trees, overlooking the harbor at
Nagasaki. This one is presented as a Japanese play, completely
stylized...no house, no gardens...but it is incredibly
beautiful nevertheless. As far as the costumes go, it's a
Japanese fashion show; simply breathtaking. But opera is about
music and singing, not about sets and costumes. Here the
production fell a bit short. The Cio-Cio-San (Madame
Butterfly) was Cristina Gallardo-Domas, who certainly looked
the part of a teenage Japanese girl, but I could think of lots
of sopranos who could have sung it better. The tenor (Marcello
Giordani,) playing her cruel American husband, and the
baritone (Dwayne Croft) as the American Consul were perfect.
The conductor was James Levine. In the long run, it really
doesn't matter whether or not the critics like this
"Butterfly" or not, it's become the hottest ticket in town.
Just TRY to get in to see it! IT'S EASILY THE BEST SHOW
THAT I'VE SEEN IN A THEATER THIS SEASON. IF I COULD HAVE GIVEN
IT 6 STARS, I WOULD HAVE!!!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "IL BARBIERE DI SIVIGLIA" (at the MET)
If you saw the Letterman show last Wednesday, you saw the
Met stars, the Met chorus, and the Met orchestra, perform
the last scene of Act I of this "Barber of Seville" in its
entirety. On the Letterman Show!!! This is another perfect
example of how the new General Manager is trying to attract
young people to the Met. (That, and lowering the lowest
price tickets to $15.) This new production of "The Barber of
Seville" hits its mark with every arrow. It's absolutely
perfect! Visually, it's stunning, with stylized sets evoking
the sun (and orange trees) of Seville. Vocally, it couldn't
be better. With the finest Rossini tenor in the world, Juan
Diego Florez (who looks like a handsome movie star,) Diana
Damrau (a perfect Rosina...and hot,) the wonderful Peter
Mattei (as Figaro,) and Samuel Ramey (a bit over-the-hill,
but still good as Don Basilio,) you've got a cast that
directors can only dream about. Speaking of directors,
Broadway's Bartlett Sher ("The Light in the Piazza") has
been brought in to direct this new production. If you're
lucky enough to get a ticket, and this is your first
opera, you'll be hooked. It's THAT good.
(5-Stars)
OPERA (MOVIE?) REVIEW: "I PURITANI" (Live telecast from the Met)
I'm not sure how to review this live telecast from the
Metropolitan Opera House. Do I review the telecast,
which was shown on one of our local movie screens in
High Definition, or do I review the actual opera
performance, starring the glorious Anna Netrebko? I'll
see if I can do both. As part of the Met's new General
Manager Peter Gelb's campaign to make opera more
accessible to "the masses," 6 of this
season's performances are being telecast LIVE to
hundreds of High Definition movie screens, in theaters
in America, Canada and Japan. We attended the
performance yesterday of Bellini's "I Puritani,"
starring the beautiful Russian soprano, Anna Netrebko
("Audrey Hepburn with a voice,") and tenor Eric Cutler,
(who looked and sounded like a young Placido Domingo.)
The telecast was excellent. Clear HD picture on a big
screen. You could come and go at will, although no one
left during the performance, only during the
intermissions. The theater audience applauded along with
the opera house audience. We brought popcorn and iced
coffee into the theater, and dressed in sweats!!! The
intermissions were the best part of the afternoon.
Before the opera, Beverly Sills chatted with
opera-broadcast moderator Margaret Junthwait; "Bev" was
hilarious. These two could become a new comedy act.
During the first intermission, soprano Renee Fleming
interviewed Anna Netrebko in her dressing room; two
charming, beautiful, and talented sopranos just
chatting. She also interviewed her again AFTER the Mad
Scene. During the second intermission, Sills introduced
scenes of some of opera's historic mad scenes. Lots of
camera views live backstage, of stars leaving the huge
stage, after they sang the act (Netrebko clowned it up a
lot...very funny,) stage crews taking down and putting
up sets. All very "inside." The whole performance
started with a 5 minute introduction by Peter Gelb. You
really felt part of something special. The opera itself
was GLORIOUSLY sung, especially by Netrebko and Cutler,
who looked and sounded magnificent. The production was a
30-year-old production, with sets, costumes, and
direction that looked a bit worn and tired. We're going
again next week to see the World Premiere of Tan Dun's
"The First Emperor," with Placido Domingo. Why not check
to see if these live telecasts are being shown in one of
YOUR neighborhood theaters?
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "THE FIRST EMPEROR" (Live Telecast from the Met)
Our second live telecast performance from the Met, was
the opera house's sold out hit this season, "The First
Emperor." This multi-million-dollar production brings
the best of China's movie industry into the opera
world, to give life to Chinese composer Tan Dun's most
ambitious work. The opera is directed by the movie
world's Zhang Yimou ("House of Flying Daggers," "Hero,"etc.)
with sets and costumes by Fan Yue and Emi Wada (
"Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.") I generally stay
away from contemporary music, because of its lack of
melody, but this was too big an event to miss. After
all, aside from the major "Chinese connection, "
Placido Domingo was playing the lead role of Emperor
Qin, China's first emperor...the one who built the
Great Wall and created that army of terra cotta
soldiers to guard his tomb. Surprisingly, for this
tenor who has sung dozens of roles, old and new, this
was the first role written for him for a World
Premiere at the Met. So, how was it? Well, it looks
big and colorful. But, how does it sound? To my
Western ear, the music was ugly, dissonant and
offensive. Not a note worth listening to a second
time. Taking away the music, what's left? A pageant, a
spectacle, like the Radio City Christmas Show without
the Rockettes! In fact, the Met already has quite a
few spectacular productions like "Turandot," "La
Boheme," and "Aida," that are every bit as spectacular
as "The First Emperor," and THEY have glorious music
from beginning to end. Today's opera was all style and
no substance. I'm certainly glad that I didn't spend
$350 to see it at the Met. Now that would have been a
tragedy of operatic proportions!
(2-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "DIE AGYPTISCHE HELENA" (at the Met)
Richard Strauss is one of my favorite composers, and
I've seen and love, just about all of his operas,
especially "Der Rosenkavalier, "Salome," and "Die
Frau Ohne Schatten." This opera about Helen of Troy
hasn't been done at the Met in 80 years, and it was
only dragged out of mothballs, because Deborah Voigt
wanted to sing the role, and nowadays, what Miss
Voigt wants, she gets. Well, it's lucky for us, the
opera-going audience, because this opera is
magnificent, especially in this new magical
production mounted by the Met. This is a David
Fielding production (he directed it and created the
unbelievable sets and costumes,) and based on this
production alone, I would call the man a genius. The
visual images were stunning, matched beautifully by
the incredible singing of the two female leads,
Deborah Voigt and Diana Damrau. These women blew the
walls out of this building, and that's not easy to
do , when you're singing over a 100-piece Straussian
orchestra in the pit! Forget about the story, it's
unimportant. The reason to see this production is to
hear Voigt and Damrau singing over the waves of
beautiful music coming out of the pit, and to see
the Met stage come alive with imagery not seen in a
long time, if ever. I can't recommend this
production highly enough.
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "MET'S 40th ANNIVERSARY GALA
There are very few events that are more elegant
and lavish, than a "Gala" at the Metropolitan
Opera House. This one was to celebrate the Met's
40th year at Lincoln Center. For this evening, the
management chose to give us three fully-staged
acts of three separate operas, starring the two
"rock stars" of the current opera world...the
beautiful, sexy Anna Netrebko, and the handsome,
charismatic Rolando Villazon. The three acts were:
Act I of "La Boheme," the Sant Sulpice act of "Manon,"
and the second act of "L'Elisir D'Amore." They
were perfect choices, showing off the voices of
these hot young singers at their best, in three of
the Met's most colorful productions. Joining them
in smaller roles were Mariusz Kwiecien, Samuel
Ramey, and Paul Plishka. What a magnificent night
it was at the Met...glorious singing on stage, and
beautiful people in gowns and tuxedoes in the
audience. Bravo!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "LA DONNA DEL LAGO" (New York City Opera)
This performance of this rarely seen Rossini
opera was disappointing on so many counts. Where
do I begin? The opera is rarely performed,
because it requires 7 stars with excellent
voices to sing the difficult music. In this
performance, only 3 of the 7 were singing
beautifully. The rest were phoning it in,
especially the soprano (who I had heard before,
doing a fine job in another Rossini opera.) She
was awful, and could barely be heard past the
10th row of the orchestra. Then there were the
sets and costumes, some of the ugliest that I've
ever seen on this stage. In this story about
nature, instead of the highlands of Scotland,
the sets looked like dirty piled-up Lego blocks!
The costumes (mostly kilts,) were dark,
and updated to a vague 19th Century (for no
reason whatsoever.) The story, based on Sir
Walter Scott's narrative poem, "The Lady of the
Lake" (where the hell was the lake in this
production?) was so absurd, that it might have
been more successful had it been played for
comedy. In fact, the audience laughed at times,
when the story was meant to be tragic! Much of
this was the fault of the incompetent director,
Chas Rader-Shieber (is that a real name?) The
other night, I walked out of a college
production of "Guys and Dolls" which was better
directed than this mess. If you want to hear
Rossini this season, walk across the Plaza to
the Met to see their incomparable production of
his "Barber of Seville." That's a smash hit.
This one's a loser!
(2-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "THE PIRATES OF PENZANCE" (New York City Opera)
When this glorious production of the Gilbert
and Sullivan operetta finishes its run at
Lincoln Center, it should pack up its wildly
colorful sets and costumes, its perfect cast,
and head down Broadway a few blocks, to the
Theater District, where it could run forever.
It would be a smash hit there, as it was here.
It's a perfect family show for everyone.
Recruiting two Tony-award winning leading men
from Broadway, Marc Kudisch ("A Little Night
Music," "The Apple Tree," "Chitty,Chitty,Bang,Bang,"
etc.) and Mark Jacoby ("The Phantom of the
Opera," "Ragtime," etc.) to play The Pirate
King and The Major General, respectively, was
a brilliant idea. They're hilarious, they look
great, they can act, and they sing well enough
(on this opera stage, where everyone is
amplified for this production only.) The
comedy begins even before the story starts.
Lillian Groag, a genius of a director from
Argentina, has created a slapstick little skit
to be played out on stage, while the overture
is playing. It has the audience rolling in the
aisles, and it sets the comic tone for this
over-the-top production. In this version,
everything is satirized, from sex to opera,
and the singing-actors are brilliant at poking
fun of everything, while singing and
dancing as well as anyone in any Broadway show
down the street. Of course, the familiar
Gilbert and Sullivan score is melodic, clever,
funny , and has withstood the test of time
beautifully. This is musical comedy gold, and
it shouldn't be squandered. Come on producers,
put this show on Broadway!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "IL TRITTICO" at the MET
It's the largest production ever to be
mounted on the Met's vast stage. Yes, even
larger than Zeffirelli's spectacular
productions of "La Boheme," "Turandot,"
and "Tosca"...those operas by Puccini,
that have been bringing tourists to the
Met just to SEE them. "Il Trittico"("The
Triptych") is Puccini's collection of
three short operas, given here all on the
same evening, as they were thirty years
ago when I last saw them at the Met, with
Teresa Stratas playing all three of the
operas heroines. It's difficult to round
up a starry cast for ONE opera, let alone
THREE, but the Met has done it here in
this festival casting, conducted by James
Levine. In "Il Tabarro" ("The Cloak,") the
dark and brooding love triangle that ends
in murder on the banks of the Seine, Maria
Guleghina and Salvatore Licitra sing the
ill-fated leads. The set for this
opera...a large barge docked under a
bridge on an embankment of the Seine...has
got to be seen to be believed! In the
tragically sad "Suor Angelica" ("Sister
Angelica,") a nun kills herself because of
the death of her illegitimate child.
Barbara Frittoli is brilliant as the nun,
and Stephanie Blythe is equally brilliant
as her cruel, aristocratic aunt. Their big
scene together is a tour-de-force for both
stars. Even if you never heard of the
third opera, "Gianni Schicchi," you will
know the famous aria "O Mio Babbino Cara."
Find it and listen to it. I'll bet you
know it! This opera features an ensemble
cast of some of the Met's best singing
actors, including Stephanie Blythe once
again. It's the age-old story of greedy
relatives fighting over the will of a dead
relative. It's hilarious! The set for this
one is the bedroom of a Florentine villa,
which opens up to a view of all of
Florence. Magnificent. With these voices,
and these sets, it looks as though the Met
has another smash hit on its hands. This
one should be bringing those tourists in
for decades to come. Let's hope that they
enjoy the music as much as they enjoy the
sets!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "ORFEO ED EURIDICE"
I never really cared for this 18th
Century opera by Gluck, for a few
reasons. I don't like music of the
Baroque period, and in my opinion, this
is a one-aria opera...the aria being "Che
Faro." This new production, directed by
choreographer Mark Morris, goes out of
its way to eliminate the ancient
trappings, and uses a modern-day look,
and a countertenor, David Daniels, in
the role of Orfeo, taking over the
role planned for Lorraine Hunt Lieberson,
who died just before rehearsals began.
(In Gluck's time, this role and many
others like it, were written for, and
sung by castrati, those Italian men who
gave up "a great deal" for their art. If
you don't know what I mean, look up the
word "castrati." When the castrati died
out, these roles were then sung by
women, who had virtually the same
voice.) If you're familiar with the
legend of Orpheus in the Underworld, you
know that it's the story of a man who
goes to hell to bring back his wife.
Unfortunately, he makes a big mistake on
the way back! Even though I just can't
wrap my head around the countertenor
voice (it sounds too fake to my ear,)
all three leads...David Daniels, Heidi
Grant Murphy, and Maija Kovalevska...were
wonderful. The sets...stylized
ceiling-high walls and descending
staircases...owe a great deal to the
spectacular lighting effects. The
conductor was James Levine. This
exciting new production has changed my
mind. It's much more than a one-aria
opera, and in this production, it's
absolutely spellbinding. But I still
can't get used to the countertenor
voice!!!
(4-Stars)
OPERA
REVIEW:
"LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR" (at the
Metropolitan Opera in New York) OPERA
REVIEW:
"ROMEO ET JULIETTE" (at the
Metropolitan Opera in New York)
OPERA REVIEW:
"CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA & I PAGLIACCI"
(New York City Opera)
CONCERT REVIEW:
"JOAN RIVERS at the BERKLEE PERFORMANCE
CENTER"
OPERA REVIEW:
"CENDRILLON"
(New York City Opera)
OPERA REVIEW:
"VANESSA" (at the
New York City Opera)
During this holiday season, when
everything is so arrogantly and
stupidly "politically correct," and
people are afraid to even say the word
"Christmas," it's so refreshing to
attend a concert devoted entirely to
the songs, stories, poems, and even
segments of an opera, about Christmas.
The prestigious Boston Pops Orchestra,
under the direction of Keith Lockhart,
along with the Tanglewood Festival
Chorus, filled Symphony Hall with the
music of Christmas, beginning with
"Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," and
ending with "White Christmas." In
between, there was a reading from one
of the Gospels about the birth of
Jesus, excerpts from Gian Carlo
Menotti's Christmas opera "Amahl and
the Night Visitors," a reading of "Twas
the Night Before Christmas" ("A Visit
From St. Nicholas,") and a Christmas
sing-along. The highlight of the night
was a special arrangement of "The
Twelve Days of Christmas," sung by the
Tanglewood Chorus, using music from
everything from "Swan Lake" to
"Oklahoma!" It was great fun. Thank
God for conservative Boston. Christmas
still survives here!!!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW:
"HANSEL AND GRETEL" (Live in High
Definition from The Met)
I don't know why people were taken by surprise by the incredible success of these High Definition broadcasts of operas live from the Met, into theaters all around the world. Who wouldn't want to pay a mere $20 to see a live opera from the Met, beamed directly to their neighborhood movie theater? The one that we saw today was Engelbert Humperdinck's Wagnerian-like "Hansel and Gretel," the most successful fairy-tale opera ever created. I'm a purist when it comes to my fairy tales, but in this production, which takes the idea of food as its dramatic focus, each act is set in a different kind of kitchen. Surprisingly, it works. It works largely because of the fantastic singing and acting abilities of the three leads...Christine Schafer as Gretel, Alice Coote as a very believable Hansel, and Philip Langridge, in a huge fat suit, as The Witch. I agree with the critic who said that "the fat suit made him look like a combination of Julia Child and Mrs. Lovett (from Sweeney Todd.") Although I missed the huge gingerbread house of the Met's old production, this one has a different kind of impact...one that I'm sure that all of the modern-day, weird children watching, will love! However, it's such a ghoulish and frightening production, that I'm sure that those very-same children will have nightmares for a month! I can't end this review without mentioning the reason for going to any opera...the music. Humperdinck wrote a huge, lavish score that was obviously influenced by Wagner. It may not be what you expect when you go to an opera based on a fairy tale, but it's spectacularly beautiful and unforgettable. We loved it. (5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW:
"PETER GRIMES" (Live in High
Definition from the Met) (5-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW: TELECAST OF THE
PLACIDO DOMINGO 40TH ANNIVERSARY
GALA CONCERT IN LOS ANGELES
This telecast from the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion in Los Angeles, celebrated Placido Domingo's 40 years of singing opera, in what was once a no-man's land for opera! Forty years ago, a young tenor from Spain, made his debut in Los Angeles, with the touring New York City Opera, and the rest, as they say, is history. Now, he's not only still singing in Los Angeles (along with everywhere else in the world,) but he's also the General Director of the Los Angeles Opera Company...which started out as a joke, but is now quite respectable. This concert celebrates his tenure with the opera company. Singing with him was the soprano Patricia Racette, and the Los Angeles Opera Orchestra was conducted by James Conlon. Similar to the Live in High Definition telecasts from The Met, this telecast was shown in movie theaters around the country today. Luckily, one of the theaters was in Cambridge. Whoever chose the selections chose wisely. Both Domingo and Racette, individually and together, sang arias and duets that were not from the usual run-of-the-mill operas. We got to hear unfamiliar arias from "Le Cid," "L' Arlesiana," and "Maravilla," as well as the "standards" from "La Boheme," "Carmen," "Tosca," etc. All were sung beautifully. They even sang some Broadway songs from "Follies," and "West Side Story." We got to hear not one, but two overtures from the L.A. Opera Orchestra...the overtures from "Die Meistersinger," and "La Forza del Destino. I can't say that there was a dull moment in the entire 2 hour concert. (5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW:
"MACBETH" at THE MET
CONCERT
REVIEW:
THE BOSTON POPS: "A LITTLE
NIGHT MUSIC" in Concert
CONCERT
REVIEW:
"NEIL DIAMOND in concert at FENWAY
PARK"
CONCERT
REVIEW:
"A CONCERT IN THE VINEYARD"
CONCERT
REVIEW:
"THE VERDI REQUIEM" performed by
The Landmarks Orchestra
OPERA REVIEW:
HDTV LIVE TELECAST OF
"THE MET'S OPENING NIGHT GALA" CONCERT
REVIEW:
RUSSELL SHERMAN at The New England
Conservatory OPERA REVIEW:
"AIDA" FROM LA
SCALA IN MILAN (High Definition
Broadcast) OPERA REVIEW:
"LA TRAVIATA" FROM LA SCALA IN MILAN (
High Definition Broadcast ) OPERA
REVIEW:
"DOCTOR ATOMIC" (Live in High
Definition from THE MET.) OPERA REVIEW:
"THE
TALES OF HOFFMANN" (Boston Lyric
Opera)
OPERA REVIEW:
"LA
DAMNATION DE FAUST" (at THE MET)
When I saw Robert Lepage's spectacular production, "KA" at the MGM Grand in Vegas several years ago, I was astonished to see how the latest technological advancements in video and stagecraft, could transform a huge stage, into another world. Then, when I heard that Peter Gelb, the new General Director at the Met, had hired the same Robert Lepage to create Wagner's "Ring" next season, and Berlioz' "La Damnation de Faust" this season, I knew that we had the right man running the Met. "La Damnation de Faust" is really an oratorio, and it's rarely fully staged because it's simply too difficult to create the many spectacular scenes required. Robert Lepage and his amazing staff have done it! Horses race across the stage; Faust sinks into the deep sea, twisting and turning as he falls out of his boat; trees wither and die before our eyes, etc. In this magical production, the voices don't always match the incredible special effects. Marcello Giordani is somewhat weak as Faust, who sells his soul to the devil to save his lover. Susan Graham is moving and excellent as the doomed lover, Marguerite. John Relyea is the devil, and he's not up to his usual elegant singing and acting. I'm just nit-picking; this is a big hit for The Met. See it if you can. Now, let me say something negative about these incredible interactive video special effects. Although they work beautifully in this relatively static opera, I wouldn't want to see them used for every production. For one thing, they're very restrictive, pushing all of the action onto vertical scaffolding on the very front of the Met's huge stage. The Met's cavernous main stage, two side stages, and lower stage are not utilized at all. Let's hope that Robert Lepage rectifies this when he designs The Ring. (4-Stars) OPERA REVIEW: "YEOMEN OF THE GUARD" (A Bostonians Production at The New England Conservatory)
A New England Thanksgiving
tradition is the annual
Bostonians production of a
Gilbert and Sullivan operetta.
This year's show was the "Yeomen
of the Guard," the most
opera-like of all of Gilbert &
Sullivan's works. It was
presented in a semi-staged
production, with a full
orchestra in Jordan Hall. The
singers, none of whom were
familiar to me, were all
excellent, as was the playing of
the score by the Bostonians
orchestra. I won't even begin to
attempt to summarize the
convoluted plot, except to say
that it all takes place in and
around the Tower of London, and
involves switched and mistaken
identities. In other words, a
typical Gilbert and Sullivan
plot. It was lots of fun, and a
grand way to spend a rainy
Sunday afternoon.
(4-Stars)
OPERA
REVIEW:
"THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO"
(New England Conservatory Opera
Company) OPERA REVIEW: "THAIS" (at THE MET)
The last time that I saw
"Thais," was 30 years ago at The
Met, when it was put on as a
favor to Beverly Sills, the
reigning diva of the time. When
divas of this caliber want an
opera mounted for them, it's
done. Hence, the present
production of "Thais" (borrowed
in these economically
troublesome times, from the
Chicago Opera,) which was put on
for, and stars, Renee Fleming.
It fits her like a glove, and
she sings beautifully, and looks
great in it (in costumes
designed for her by French
couturier Christian Lacroix!)
The plot of the opera is about a
famous monk, and an equally
famous prostitute in 4th-Century
Egypt. The monk, Athaneal, knew
her when they were younger, and
sets out to reform her now.
Tragically, as he becomes more
sinful, lusting after her, she
becomes more saintly, and
eventually enters a convent and
actually does become a saint
after her death...the French St.
Thais. But, we don't go to the
opera for the plot, do we? The
music, by Jules Massenet, is
lush, exotic, and romantic. The
highlight of the score, is the
haunting instrumental piece
"Meditation," played by a solo
violin between two scenes of Act
II. It's unforgettable (I'm
still humming it,) and the
violinist who played it...first
violinist David Chan...received
a standing ovation during the
final curtain calls. The two
other stars of the evening,
Renee Fleming and Thomas Hampson,
sang their hearts out, and
looked like two handsome movie
stars. It's a beautiful, albeit
long (3 1/2 hours) evening of
opera. Unfortunately, it's a
wonderful treat that only comes
around once every 30 years!
OPERA
REVIEW:
"LA RONDINE"at THE MET (and GALA
DINNER afterward on The Grand
Tier)
CONCERT
REVIEW:
"ALL-MENDELSSOHN PROGRAM"
(Boston Symphony Orchestra at
Symphony Hall)
I'm very lucky to be living
right across the street from
the magnificent Symphony Hall
here in Boston, because on a
cold wintry night as it was
last night, it's so easy to
run across the street and
listen to two hours of
beautiful music, played by one
of the world's greatest
orchestras, and conducted by
one of the world's greatest
conductors. The program last
night was a program of music
by Felix Mendelssohn, and it
consisted of the Hebrides
Overture, The "Scottish"
Symphony, and The "Italian"
Symphony. The conductor was
Kurt Masur. Of course,
everything was played to
perfection and it was a joy to
just sit back, close your
eyes, and let that lush music
just wash over you. It always
amazes me how perfect the
acoustics are in Symphony
Hall, where every sound on
stage is carried to every seat
in the house, as though you
were listening to the
music with your own private
earphones...but so much
better! It was also enjoyable
to see so many young people
attending the concert. I can
only hope that they enjoyed it
as much as we did.
(5-Stars)
Last season, when I saw the
new production of this opera
at The Met, I thought that
it was absolutely perfect.
The singing (especially that
of Natalie Dessay as Lucia,)
the direction (by Broadway's
Mary Zimmerman,) the sets
and costumes, and the
acting, all couldn't have
been better. When it was
announced that the opera
world's glamorous "rock
stars," Anna Netrebko and
Rolando Villazon, would be
singing the lead roles this
season, I immediately bought
tickets to the HDTV
live telecast from my
neighborhood theater. When
we walked into the theater
we were confronted with the
first disappointment.
Rolando Villazon was sick
and would be replaced by new
Polish tenor Piotr Beczala.
I never heard of him! The
second disappointment
happened when Anna Netrebko
made her first entrance. She
was chubby! If you've never
seen Anna Netrebko before,
let me tell you that she's
glamorous, model-thin,
beautiful, and sexy hot. She
had a baby in September and
I guess that she came back
to work too soon. More
importantly than her excess
body fat, is the fact that
she lost a few of her high
notes. Get it together Anna,
FAST! Get rid of the pudge
and get those notes back.
The good news is that the
new tenor is phenomenal...a
real find. He's tall,
good-looking, and with a
voice that could drown out
everyone else on stage...and
he can act. Hang on to this
one! The other roles were
sung by the always excellent
Mariusz Kwiecien, a
hold-over from last year's
cast, and Ildar Abdrazakov,
a fine bass, and new to me.
The intermission features,
always fun, were handled by
Natalie Dessay, last year's
Lucia. Stick to the singing
Natalie! The production is
still a great one. I
recommend it, even to those
people who are new to opera.
It's so dramatic, it'll blow
you away.
(4-Stars)
CONCERT REVIEW:
TOM JONES at the HOUSE OF
BLUES in BOSTON
OPERA REVIEW:
"IL
TROVATORE" at THE MET
OPERA REVIEW: "LA SONNAMBULA"
at THE MET OPERA REVIEW: "ATTILA"
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW: "HAMLET"
The only other time that I saw this opera, was decades ago, across Lincoln
Center Plaza from The Met, at The New York City Opera, where it was mounted
for the young baritone Sherrill Milnes (now old and retired, like me!) I
don't remember it having such beautiful music, or being so damn long! This
time, the reason to see it is Simon Keenlyside, who is the perfect
singing actor. He could play the role without the music...he looks so good,
and acts so well. Throw in a great baritone voice, and you've got the
complete package. Coloratura Natalie Dessay, who was scheduled to play
Ophelia, had to pull out of this production, due to illness. She was
replaced by Marlis Petersen (unknown to me,) who was go good, that Dessay
wasn't missed. That's saying a lot. James Morris and Jennifer Larmore were
Claudius and Gertrude, "the incestuous lovers." Once again, the sets were a
mess, but this time, the costumes were appropriate. Come on guys, get your
act together. Swallow your pride and hire Franco Zeffirelli to design all of
your new productions, before he dies. He's not getting any younger!
(5-Stars)
OPERA REVIEW:
"ARMIDA" (at The Met) OPERA REVIEW:
"TOSCA" (at The Met)
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