Opera Reviews
The Path to Heaven, RNCM, Manchester review - tragedy, truth, passionFriday, 22 June 2018![]()
Adam Gorb’s The Path to Heaven, with libretto by Ben Kaye, is his longest work to date (almost two hours’ running time without interval) and on a story that could hardly be more tragic – the Holocaust. Read more... |
Kiss Me, Kate, Opera North, London Coliseum review - Cole Porter delivered in true company styleThursday, 21 June 2018![]()
First palpable hit of the evening: a full orchestra in the pit under hyper-alert Opera North stalwart James Holmes, saxophones deliciously rampant. Second hit: they've got the miking of the voices right (very rare in West End shows). Third: the first ensemble number, "Another opening, another show", sends spirits soaring. Read more... |
Falstaff, Garsington Opera review - Sir John under pressureMonday, 18 June 2018![]()
All those pranks, set-ups, fake letters and disguises, they just keep coming thick and fast in Verdi’s Falstaff. The score has irresistible energy and momentum. Read more... |
Berlin to Broadway with Kurt Weill, Opera North, City Varieties Music Hall review - life as a cabaretMonday, 18 June 2018![]()
Peer at the small print and it’s clear that Berlin to Broadway with Kurt Weill is actually a spruced-up repackaging of a show originally devised by Gene Lerner and arranger Newton Wayland, about whom Opera North’s programme tells us nothing. Read more... |
Mamzer Bastard, Royal Opera, Hackney Empire review - inert Hasidic music-dramaFriday, 15 June 2018![]()
Striking it lucky with a successful new opera is a rare occurrence, though every company has a duty to keep on trying. Read more... |
Acis and Galatea, English National Opera, Lilian Baylis House review - Handel for the hashtag generationTuesday, 12 June 2018![]()
If you go to ENO’s Acis and Galatea expecting a grassy knoll draped decoratively with a Watteau shepherdess or two then you may be disappointed. Read more... |
Roscoe, BBC Philharmonic, Mena, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - a scenic send-offTuesday, 12 June 2018![]()
Juanjo Mena, chief conductor of Manchester's BBC Philharmonic for the past seven years, took his official leave of them with a programme reflecting his great love, the music of his Spanish homeland. Read more... |
Giulio Cesare, Glyndebourne review - no weak linkMonday, 11 June 2018![]()
What a great show, on every level. David McVicar’s Glyndebourne production of Handel’s Giulio Cesare, originally staged in 2005, and in its third revival this year, has a cast without a weak link, and never fails to draw in the audience to the work’s cycles of power, suffering, death and intermittent triumph... Read more... |
Un ballo in maschera, Grange Park Opera review – singing out against the American grainMonday, 11 June 2018![]()
Stumble across Grange Park Opera’s new brick-clad “Theatre in the Woods”, nestled amid a labyrinth of gardens and orchards next to the rambling Tudor pile of West Horsley Place in Surrey, and on a mild June evening you may feel as if you have fallen into some Home Counties version of a magic-realist novel. Read more... |
Lohengrin, Royal Opera review - swan mystery musically illuminatedFriday, 08 June 2018![]()
It's awfully long for a fairytale in which a mystery prince helps a damsel in distress, and she asks him the question she shouldn't. Myth tends to go deeper, as Wagner did in The Ring of the Nibelung after Lohengrin. Here he captures the magic of transformation and transcendence, but in between there's too much hard-to-stage pomp. Read more... |
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