Opera Reviews
Tristan und Isolde, Glyndebourne, BBC Proms review - endless love, perfect paceWednesday, 01 September 2021![]()
“Now I’ve conducted Tristan for the first time,” the 27-year-old Richard Strauss wrote from Weimar to Wagner’s widow Cosima in 1892, “and it was the most wonderful day of my life”. Read more... |
Ariadne auf Naxos, Edinburgh International Festival review – apt setting for Strauss hybridMonday, 30 August 2021![]()
This lively interpretation of Richard Strauss’s opera within an opera provides a feast for the senses as a musical highlight of the Edinburgh international Festival. Read more... |
theartsdesk at the Birgit Nilsson Days - the rich legacy of a farm girl turned divaThursday, 26 August 2021![]()
Feet firmly planted on fertile native soil, but always open to the world, lyric-dramatic soprano Birgit Nilsson soared into realms no-one from the rolling hills and coastline of Sweden’s Bjäre peninsula, where she grew up, could possibly have imagined. Read more... |
A Night at the Opera, BBC Philharmonic, Glassberg, BBC Proms review - six of the bestTuesday, 17 August 2021![]()
This delectable Prom hid behind the title "To Soothe the Aching Heart" the failsafe concept of a programme of the world’s favourite opera extracts, plus some. Take six British opera stars – three sopranos, two tenors and a mezzo – and assign them the business of comforting us all. Read more... |
Hansel and Gretel, British Youth Opera review - chaotic rewrite of a classic opera misses the markWednesday, 11 August 2021![]()
It’s hard to know where to start with this chaotic Hansel and Gretel, and not just because Humperdinck’s opera has been cut, spliced and re-stitched with a brand-new libretto, new characters and multi-track, multi-option audio. The restless, competing ideas, the gaudy design, the ill-judged tone, the fussy technology all conspire against the performers, who produce some fine singing despite everything. Read more... |
RhineGold, Birmingham Opera Company, Symphony Hall review - music-drama at the highest levelTuesday, 03 August 2021![]()
The love of power corrupts, the power of love falters or fails. Read more... |
Luisa Miller, Glyndebourne review – small-scale tragedy, big emotionsMonday, 02 August 2021![]()
“Time-travelling” is how Enrique Mazzola, the superb first conductor of Glyndebourne’s last new production of the main season, described the slow-burn trajectory of Verdi’s semi-masterpiece Luisa Miller in his First Person here on theartsdesk. Read more... |
The Cunning Little Vixen, Longborough Festival Opera review - life, death and the menopause in the forestSunday, 01 August 2021![]()
There are advantages and disadvantages about opera-in-the-round, and it’s a format that suits some operas better than others. Longborough’s Cunning Little Vixen, staged by Olivia Fuchs in their new big-top tent, makes the very most of the advantages and pushes the disadvantages into the shade, without entirely obliterating them. It’s a lively show, very well sung, cleverly, energetically acted and directed; but the problems, of which more below, refuse quite to go away. Read more... |
Opera in Song, Opera Holland Park review – world-class singers in a brilliant recital triptychWednesday, 28 July 2021![]()
Now that the summer opera-house companies have pulled off staged triumphs under the most difficult of circumstances, it’s time to celebrate semi-al-fresco concerts. Not so many have cropped up as I’d hoped after the success of the Battersea Park Bandstand Chamber Music series last year. Read more... |
Le Comte Ory, Garsington Opera review - high musical style and broad dramatic comedyFriday, 23 July 2021![]()
Play it straight and you’ll get more laughs: that’s the standard advice on great operatic comedies like the masterpieces of the Gilbert & Sullivan canon, Britten’s Albert Herring, Verdi’s Falstaff, Puccini’s Gianni Schicchi. Read more... |
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