I recently received this release and thought it might be of interest:
ACCENTUS Music release Liszt Piano Concertos on DVD and Blu-ray
Daniel Barenboim on the piano and Pierre Boulez perform both of Liszt’s Piano Concertos in a single concert - recorded live at the Philharmonie Essen in June 2011
“A real miracle, like catching two stars in a rare celestial conjunction… no wonder the audience went into delirium at the end. They knew they’d witnessed something utterly extraordinary”. – The Daily Telegraph
Daniel Barenboim and Pierre Boulez first met in Berlin nearly 50 years ago. In 2011 the two giants of the classical-music world joined forces to pay homage to Liszt during his 200th anniversary year in a stunning concert which was performed at venues in Austria, Germany and the UK . ACCENTUS Music filmed the musicians in Essen for a live recording of this landmark concert, which is available on DVD and Blu-ray from 27th February (UK), 20th February (Germany), 28th February (USA), 6th March (France).
Described by Richard Morrison of The Times as “the greatest Chalk and Cheese Show in the classical-music world” after meeting them both in Berlin*, Barenboim and Boulez both regard Franz Liszt as one of the most important pioneers of modern music, influencing revolutionary contemporaries such as Robert Schumann and Richard Wagner. Two examples of the latter’s magnificent orchestral work round off the concert programme – the overture to Faust and Siegfried Idyll.
This is the first time that Barenboim has tackled both of the highly virtuosic piano concertos in a single concert. Pierre Boulez, his friend and esteemed colleague of many years conducted Barenboim’s own orchestra, the Staatskapelle Berlin and both musicians were showered with praise on the European tour.
The premiere of Liszt’s First Piano Concerto took place in Weimar in 1855 with Liszt himself at the piano and Hector Berlioz conducting. The impressive partnership of Barenboim and Boulez on this ACCENTUS Music recording reflects the significance of the work’s first performers.
Liszt’s two piano concertos form the transition between the pianistic works of his youth and the symphonic compositions of his middle and later periods. Both works are notable for their increasing tendency to fuse their movements together in a single form, a practice which caused many of Liszt’s critics to react to his innovations with bewilderment and dismay.
This new release from ACCENTUS Music, the first of 2012, captures the dazzling musicianship of these two iconic performers and the Staatskapelle Berlin.
*A revised version of Richard Morrison’s interview with Daniel Barenboim and Pierre Boulez is included in the DVD and Blu-ray booklet.
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Tuesday, 28 February 2012
Thursday, 23 February 2012
Watch Now: Jonas Kaufmann Dmitri Hvorostovsky in concert (1 hr 10 min)
As always, found over on youtube - what did we do without it?
Moscow 2008 (Kaufmann's first appearance there)
Moscow 2008 (Kaufmann's first appearance there)
The greatest animated production of Siegfried never finished?
It appears that the co-production team of Dargaud Animations, Pendragon Imageforge with Troisieme Testament ran out of money and thus this is all that remains. However, the graphic novel by Alex Alice. is available. See here for more information (Panel below)
Showreel 2008
THE RING. Wagner. Animated - The Ring in 90 minutes, this month in Adelaide
This week at the Fringe, it will take 90 minutes. to stage the Ring
The world premiere of The Ring. Wagner. Animated will be at the new Adelaide Convention Centre venue, The Big Slapple, from Friday.
While Fringe audiences are used to cutdown versions of such epics as Star Wars and Lord of the Rings, this production is by an eminent Wagner conductor and features opera singers and a classically trained orchestra.
David Kram wants to make the story, settings and music of Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen accessible to a wider audience. Tickets to Adelaide's Ring Cycle in 2004 cost $1000, this one costs $30. There will be seven performances.
"If you take away the lengthy bits ... there is the most beautiful and stirring music and it's a terrific story," Dr Kram said.
His version sees key parts sung live by three performers. Instead of the usual symphony orchestra of at least 112 players, there are four saxophones, keyboard, and a sarrusophone - a rare saxophone capable of very low notes
Source
More details plus booking
The world premiere of The Ring. Wagner. Animated will be at the new Adelaide Convention Centre venue, The Big Slapple, from Friday.
While Fringe audiences are used to cutdown versions of such epics as Star Wars and Lord of the Rings, this production is by an eminent Wagner conductor and features opera singers and a classically trained orchestra.
David Kram wants to make the story, settings and music of Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen accessible to a wider audience. Tickets to Adelaide's Ring Cycle in 2004 cost $1000, this one costs $30. There will be seven performances.
"If you take away the lengthy bits ... there is the most beautiful and stirring music and it's a terrific story," Dr Kram said.
His version sees key parts sung live by three performers. Instead of the usual symphony orchestra of at least 112 players, there are four saxophones, keyboard, and a sarrusophone - a rare saxophone capable of very low notes
Source
More details plus booking
George Loomis provides an overview of the Frankfurt and Munich Ring Cycles
Frankfurt Wagner |
But it works superbly for Ms. Nemirova’s gripping staging. In the convoluted second act, just as the Gibichung king Gunther tells the distraught Brünnhilde that, in a double wedding, he will marry her and his sister Gutrune will marry her beloved Siegfried (who has been drugged), one of the circles revolves to bring the latter couple into place in time for Brünnhilde to look up and glare at them in astonishment.
Ms. Nemirova cuts through plot complexities to drive home poignantly Brünnhilde’s sense of betrayal. She also neatly engineers a scene change later in the act so that Brünnhilde, Gunther and Hagen plot Siegfried’s demise in seclusion. Ingeborg Bernerth’s costumes depict Siegfried as an outsider by clothing him in his usual rugged attire while Hagen and Gunther wear business suits.
There is room for humor too, as the Rhinemaidens are briefly portrayed as environmental protesters with a sign “Save the Rhine.” The Hall of the Gibichungs is dark and cramped but has a well-stocked bar so characters can pour themselves a drink at tense moments. The most enthralling moment comes with the final orchestral peroration, when the characters of the “Ring” all reassemble, including the aged gods and the dwarf Alberich; the latter gives the gods a parting gesture signaling scorn but also resignation. Brünnhilde’s redemptive self-sacrifice has seemingly touched all concerned.
The singing could be better, especially in the crucial roles of Brünnhilde and Hagen, but Susan Bullock, an experienced stylist, has some strong moments, while Gregory Frank ensures that his lightish bass voice serves the archvillain better than you might think. The bright-voiced tenor Lance Ryan is an uncommonly likable, tireless Siegfried, and Johannes Martin Kränzle offers a magnificent portrayal of Gunther, weak-willed as usual, but transformed by Siegfried’s death into a figure of newfound strength.
The conductor Sebastian Weigle and the orchestra are in fine form. They could bring more flair to some climactic moments but their vibrant performance is consistently knitted to the drama.
Continue Reading
Huston Opera to stage Christof Loy's Tristan und Isolde in 2013 with Heppner & Stemme
To celebrate 2013 Huston Grand Opera will be staging Christof Loy's Tristan (last seen at the ROH) in April/May 2013. Details below:
Dates | 18, 21(m), 24, 27 April, 2, 5(m) May 2013 | ||||||||||
Singers: |
| ||||||||||
Conductor: | Patrick Summers | ||||||||||
Director: | Christof Loy | ||||||||||
Set Designs: | Johannes Leiacker | ||||||||||
Costumes: | Johannes Leiacker | ||||||||||
Lighting: | Olaf Winter | ||||||||||
More: Huston Grand Opera | Co-production with The Royal Opera |
Sunday, 19 February 2012
The Moderns: A new blog from...
As regular readers may be aware, I am interested in number of different things than just Wagner. Some of these I examine elsewhere and these would no doubt be of little interest to any readers of this little part of cyberspace - and thus not worth mentioning. However, what might be of some interest is my fascination with 20/21st century art, cinema, theatre and music. Occasionally, I have found myself including that here - the odd piece of Berg or Schönberg for example. Yet, this has always seemed a little "out of place" here. Certainly, I have always felt prohibited from including art, cinema, literature or cinema from - for lack of a better set of terms - Modernism or Post-modernism.
So, with that in mind, I have started an occasional blog that will examine these very items. For anyone remotely interested, this rather eclectic space may be found by clicking the title below:
So, with that in mind, I have started an occasional blog that will examine these very items. For anyone remotely interested, this rather eclectic space may be found by clicking the title below:
Paul Heise: “Wagner doesn’t spoil you for other art. He enhances you for it.”
An interview and overview of the life so far of Paul Heise, creator of www.wagnerheim.com.
Paul Heise’s life is Richard Wagner.
The Annapolis resident has immersed himself in the 19th-century German composer’s Ring Cycle for over 35 years, dropping out of graduate school and giving up jobs to study the set of four epic operas.
Heise has a website devoted to his analysis of Der Ring des Nibelungen,www.wagnerheim.com (heim is home in German), which features more than 1,500 pages of information.
“I’ve never met anyone quite so single-minded,” said Elliott Zuckerman, a retired St. John’s College tutor who once had Heise in a class about another Wagner work, “Tristan and Isolde.” “He really has had one thing in his life.”
Zuckerman said Heise’s conclusions about the Ring are as “good as any others” and was impressed with the breadth of what Heise posted online. “The website is remarkable and incredibly complete and very apt these days with renewed interest in the Ring,” Zuckerman said.
Heise’s love affair with the music began when he was 18 and heard a sampling of the work for the first time on the radio. “It was a goose bump moment,” he said.
The Annapolis native immediately went to a store to find a recording. He took it home and listened — nonstop — to all 19 records. “I dropped the needle and I was instantly hooked,” he said. “I stayed up 24 hours. You know, when you read a piece of literature, or hear a piece of music that gets inside you? This thing got inside of me. It was as if I’d woken up in some way. That was it. It rendered me permanently unemployable.”
That’s a bit of hyperbole, but not that far from the truth. Heise has held a series of jobs over the years, including a stint as a juvenile probation officer, but he’s also taken long breaks to focus on his research. He’s currently a part-time gate attendant at Quiet Waters Park in Annapolis.
Religious experience
After his marathon listening session, Heise set out to read everything he could on the massive work. The Ring Cycle’s story is steeped in Norse mythology and ancient German literature and centers on a magic ring that can be used to rule the world.
Thomas Stanley, an assistant professor in the School of Art at George Mason University, met Heise while both were working at the Cecil County courthouse many years ago. When Heise spoke about Wagner, Stanley paid attention.
“He absolutely put people to sleep with his monologues about Wagner,” Stanley said. “I was the only person interested.”
Stanley said calling Heise passionate about Wagner is “the understatement of the century.”
“We’re talking about a single-focused individual who’s only comfortable talking about his research. That’s what makes Paul, Paul.”
But his friend’s devotion to Wagner and his meticulous research methods made Stanley rethink his own life and go back to school for a graduate degree in ethnomusicology. “Basically, Paul lit a fire in me,” Stanley said.
Heise’s fire is still unabated and he hopes to condense the contents of his website into a book soon. He has no regrets about devoting so much of his life to the Ring.
His major conclusion about the work is that it concerns the death of religious faith and assaults on religion by science. Religious feeling, Heise said, lives on in art.
“Wagner felt he was the heir to the religious seers in the sense that in his art he carries on the quest for religious meaning,” he said. “I’m the tip of a sphere built by other scholars and thinkers.”
Josè-Luis Novo, music director of the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra, has reviewed some of Heise’s writings. One of the ASO’s violists passed along 500 or so pages of the material from the website.
“I haven’t gone through enough... to give an authoritative opinion about it, but I think it is fascinating that someone like Paul is dedicating so much energy and time to the cause of Wagner!” Novo said in an email. “It is always great for us performers to be able to resort to the work of scholars such as Paul, because it provides us with more and better information about composers, their lives and their work.”
In particular, Novo said he read an excerpt from one of Wagner’s letters included in Heise’s writing in preparation for the symphony’s May concert. One of the pieces the ASO will perform with guest mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves is Wagner’s “Wesendonck Lieder.”
Heise was overjoyed to hear Novo looked at his work. He’s happy if anyone lends an ear to himself and Wagner. He realizes the composer’s stance on certain social issues, as well as his antisemitic views, have tarnished his reputation.
But Heise is much more interested in the music than the man.
“Wagner doesn’t spoil you for other art,” he said. “He enhances you for it.”
Image: Boston Wagner Society |
The Annapolis resident has immersed himself in the 19th-century German composer’s Ring Cycle for over 35 years, dropping out of graduate school and giving up jobs to study the set of four epic operas.
Heise has a website devoted to his analysis of Der Ring des Nibelungen,www.wagnerheim.com (heim is home in German), which features more than 1,500 pages of information.
“I’ve never met anyone quite so single-minded,” said Elliott Zuckerman, a retired St. John’s College tutor who once had Heise in a class about another Wagner work, “Tristan and Isolde.” “He really has had one thing in his life.”
Zuckerman said Heise’s conclusions about the Ring are as “good as any others” and was impressed with the breadth of what Heise posted online. “The website is remarkable and incredibly complete and very apt these days with renewed interest in the Ring,” Zuckerman said.
Heise’s love affair with the music began when he was 18 and heard a sampling of the work for the first time on the radio. “It was a goose bump moment,” he said.
The Annapolis native immediately went to a store to find a recording. He took it home and listened — nonstop — to all 19 records. “I dropped the needle and I was instantly hooked,” he said. “I stayed up 24 hours. You know, when you read a piece of literature, or hear a piece of music that gets inside you? This thing got inside of me. It was as if I’d woken up in some way. That was it. It rendered me permanently unemployable.”
That’s a bit of hyperbole, but not that far from the truth. Heise has held a series of jobs over the years, including a stint as a juvenile probation officer, but he’s also taken long breaks to focus on his research. He’s currently a part-time gate attendant at Quiet Waters Park in Annapolis.
Religious experience
After his marathon listening session, Heise set out to read everything he could on the massive work. The Ring Cycle’s story is steeped in Norse mythology and ancient German literature and centers on a magic ring that can be used to rule the world.
Thomas Stanley, an assistant professor in the School of Art at George Mason University, met Heise while both were working at the Cecil County courthouse many years ago. When Heise spoke about Wagner, Stanley paid attention.
“He absolutely put people to sleep with his monologues about Wagner,” Stanley said. “I was the only person interested.”
Stanley said calling Heise passionate about Wagner is “the understatement of the century.”
“We’re talking about a single-focused individual who’s only comfortable talking about his research. That’s what makes Paul, Paul.”
But his friend’s devotion to Wagner and his meticulous research methods made Stanley rethink his own life and go back to school for a graduate degree in ethnomusicology. “Basically, Paul lit a fire in me,” Stanley said.
Heise’s fire is still unabated and he hopes to condense the contents of his website into a book soon. He has no regrets about devoting so much of his life to the Ring.
His major conclusion about the work is that it concerns the death of religious faith and assaults on religion by science. Religious feeling, Heise said, lives on in art.
“Wagner felt he was the heir to the religious seers in the sense that in his art he carries on the quest for religious meaning,” he said. “I’m the tip of a sphere built by other scholars and thinkers.”
Josè-Luis Novo, music director of the Annapolis Symphony Orchestra, has reviewed some of Heise’s writings. One of the ASO’s violists passed along 500 or so pages of the material from the website.
“I haven’t gone through enough... to give an authoritative opinion about it, but I think it is fascinating that someone like Paul is dedicating so much energy and time to the cause of Wagner!” Novo said in an email. “It is always great for us performers to be able to resort to the work of scholars such as Paul, because it provides us with more and better information about composers, their lives and their work.”
In particular, Novo said he read an excerpt from one of Wagner’s letters included in Heise’s writing in preparation for the symphony’s May concert. One of the pieces the ASO will perform with guest mezzo-soprano Denyce Graves is Wagner’s “Wesendonck Lieder.”
Heise was overjoyed to hear Novo looked at his work. He’s happy if anyone lends an ear to himself and Wagner. He realizes the composer’s stance on certain social issues, as well as his antisemitic views, have tarnished his reputation.
But Heise is much more interested in the music than the man.
“Wagner doesn’t spoil you for other art,” he said. “He enhances you for it.”
Saturday, 18 February 2012
Mozart Requiem Karl Bohm
Christa Ludwig
Gundula Janowitz
Peter Schreier
Walter Berry
Vienna State Opera Chorus
Karl Böhm
Wednesday, 15 February 2012
Chandos to release Wagner orchestral works CD
Orchestral Works, Vol. 5
Symphony in C; Symphony in E
Huldigungsmarsch / Kaisermarsch
Overture to ‘Rienzi
Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Järvi
CHSA 5097
Chandos' series of works by Richard Wagner, performed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and
Neeme Järvi, continues with a disc of early symphonies, later marches, and the Overture to
‘Rienzi’.
Early on in his career, Wagner composed two symphonies, both of which are included on this
disc. The Symphony in C, which he wrote when he was just nineteen years old, is heavily
influenced by Beethoven in its character, mood, and instrumentation. Written two years later, in
1834, the Symphony in E was left unfinished, Wagner completing only the first movement and
thirty bars of the second. The completed version recorded here was prepared by the conductor
Felix Mottl more than fifty years later at the request of Wagner’s widow, Cosima.
The two marches on this disc are the composer’s most obvious contributions to the genre of pomp
and circumstance. The Huldigungsmarsch was written in 1864 for King Ludwig II of Bavaria.
The march-like rhythms and brassy colours complement sections in which the strings provide a
continuously flowing movement, all leading to a jubilant conclusion. The Kaisermarsch (1871)
was a commission from the publishing firm Peters, who requested from Wagner a heroic morale
booster at a time when the German countries were at war with France. Having initially composed
it for military band, Wagner soon rewrote it for symphony orchestra, the version recorded on this
disc.
The Overture to Rienzi, Wagner’s third completed opera (1838 – 40), incorporates the melody of
Rienzi’s prayer at the start of Act V, which became the opera’s best-known aria, and ends with a
dazzling military march.
Symphony in C; Symphony in E
Huldigungsmarsch / Kaisermarsch
Overture to ‘Rienzi
Royal Scottish National Orchestra, Neeme Järvi
CHSA 5097
Chandos' series of works by Richard Wagner, performed by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and
Neeme Järvi, continues with a disc of early symphonies, later marches, and the Overture to
‘Rienzi’.
Early on in his career, Wagner composed two symphonies, both of which are included on this
disc. The Symphony in C, which he wrote when he was just nineteen years old, is heavily
influenced by Beethoven in its character, mood, and instrumentation. Written two years later, in
1834, the Symphony in E was left unfinished, Wagner completing only the first movement and
thirty bars of the second. The completed version recorded here was prepared by the conductor
Felix Mottl more than fifty years later at the request of Wagner’s widow, Cosima.
The two marches on this disc are the composer’s most obvious contributions to the genre of pomp
and circumstance. The Huldigungsmarsch was written in 1864 for King Ludwig II of Bavaria.
The march-like rhythms and brassy colours complement sections in which the strings provide a
continuously flowing movement, all leading to a jubilant conclusion. The Kaisermarsch (1871)
was a commission from the publishing firm Peters, who requested from Wagner a heroic morale
booster at a time when the German countries were at war with France. Having initially composed
it for military band, Wagner soon rewrote it for symphony orchestra, the version recorded on this
disc.
The Overture to Rienzi, Wagner’s third completed opera (1838 – 40), incorporates the melody of
Rienzi’s prayer at the start of Act V, which became the opera’s best-known aria, and ends with a
dazzling military march.
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Hans Rott - Symphony in E major. "...a musician of genius ... who died...on the very threshold of his career." Mahler
"...a musician of genius ... who died unrecognized and in want on the very threshold of his career. ... What music has lost in him cannot be estimated. Such is the height to which his genius soars in ... [his] Symphony [in E major], which he wrote as 20-year-old youth and makes him ... the Founder of the New Symphony as I see it. To be sure, what he wanted is not quite what he achieved. … But I know where he aims. Indeed, he is so near to my inmost self that he and I seem to me like two fruits from the same tree which the same soil has produced and the same air nourished. He could have meant infinitely much to me and perhaps the two of us would have well-nigh exhausted the content of new time which was breaking out for music". Gustav Mahler
I. Alla breve [0:00]
II. Sehr langsam [10:46]
III. Scherzo: Frisch und lebhaft [24:57]
IV. Sehr langsam - Belebt [39:07]
A monumental orchestral work by Austrian composer Hans Rott (1858-1884). Rott studied piano and harmony at the Conservatory in Vienna with Josef Dachs and Franz Krenn, and he attended organ classes taught by Anton Bruckner; he briefly roomed at the Conservatory with Gustav Mahler. His music was greatly influenced by Bruckner and Wagner - indeed, in 1876, Rott attended the first Bayreuth Festival. Two years later, in the final year of his studies, Rott submitted the first movement of this symphony to a composition competition, only to be met with derision from all the judges with the exception of Bruckner, who recognized its merits. Nevertheless, after Rott persevered and completed the symphony in 1880, he showed the work to Johannes Brahms and Hans Richter, hoping to gain the praise of these prominent musicians. Once again, the results were disastrous. Brahms, who resented the progressive influence Bruckner exerted in the Conservatory, called Rott talentless and told him that he should give up music. This proved to be too harsh a blow for the young composer to withstand, and later the same year, he experienced a mental breakdown. While traveling on a train from Vienna to Mühlhausen in order to take up a post as choirmaster, he suddenly pulled out a revolver and threatened another passenger who was trying to light a cigar, shouting that Brahms had filled the train with explosives. In 1881, he was committed to a mental hospital, receiving a diagnosis of "hallucinatory insanity, persecution mania - recovery no longer expected". There, he destroyed a number of his compositions, reportedly using the score of his String Sextet as lavatory paper, saying, "That's all the works of men are worth." Rott died of tuberculosis in 1884.
Nonetheless, Rott's music did not entirely lack admirers. His close friends rescued several of his scores, including that of the Symphony in E major and sketches for a second symphony. His surviving manuscript scores are kept at the national library in Vienna. His influence is perhaps most evident in the music of Gustav Mahler, who spoke very highly of Rott: "It is completely impossible to estimate what music has lost in him: His genius soars to such heights even in this first symphony, written at the age of twenty. It makes him - without exaggeration - the founder of the new symphony as I understand it."
Sunday, 12 February 2012
Video Lecture: "Nature and Myth in Richard Wagner's Ring"
Thomas Bargatzky presents a paper with the title: "Nature and Myth in Richard Wagner's Ring - An Anthropological Perspective". He argues that in "Der Ring des Nibelungen", Wagner employs anthropological, mythological and philosophical topics, ideas and characters in a way which often contravenes their original intent. In the "Ring", Wagner takes leave of the political optimism of his younger years, as it became manifest in his vision of a communal "art-work of the future". The pessimism informing the Ring-cycle testifies to its actuality, as is shown in the recent discussions on the "Staatendämmerung" following the European soverign debt crisis.
Missed Saturdays MET broadcast of Gotterdamerung? Catch it here now
Update: seems one or two people were having difficulties with this. Have updated links to try and make things easier. Apologies, for those that had difficulties, I blame a lack of sleep.
It will be sitting in the on-demand section of RTE Lyric for the next week or so. Click the link below and RTE's pop-up player will launch. Give it a few seconds once it launches for the program to start. You will need to allow pop-ups. Alternatively go here and click on "Latest Show".
It will be sitting in the on-demand section of RTE Lyric for the next week or so. Click the link below and RTE's pop-up player will launch. Give it a few seconds once it launches for the program to start. You will need to allow pop-ups. Alternatively go here and click on "Latest Show".
"So tell me: who does your hair?" |
Bayreuth Parsifal in HD will feature interval documentaries with Katharina Wagner
As I hope you know by now, this years Parsifal from Bayreuth (Stefan Herheim's production for those catching up) will be simultaneously broadcast live in cinemas. Sponsored by Audi, it has now been confirmed that Katharina Wagner will direct - and present - special interval features which take viewers "behind the scenes".
Alas, still no news as to whether this will be available in the USA, but Germany, Switzerland and the UK are confirmed.
Should you not be able to get to Bayreuth or a cinema it will also be broadcast live on ARTE TV
Alas, still no news as to whether this will be available in the USA, but Germany, Switzerland and the UK are confirmed.
Should you not be able to get to Bayreuth or a cinema it will also be broadcast live on ARTE TV
Back stage at Stefan Herhei, Parsifal
Bryn Terfel to replace John Relyea in METs Don Giovanni
Kyle Ketelsen and Bryn Terfel will sing four performances each of the role of Leporello in the upcoming performances of Don Giovanni, replacing John Relyea who is now on vocal rest at his physician's instructions. Ketelsen will sing the role on February 21, 24, 29, and March 3; Terfel will sing the role on March 7, 10 mat, 14, and 17.
Ketelsen made his Met debut in 2006 as Angelotti in Tosca and later this season will sing the role of Mr. Flint in the revival of Billy Budd. He has sung Leporello at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Teatre Liceu in Barcelona, Los Angeles Opera, and the Aix-en-Provence Festival.
Ketelsen made his Met debut in 2006 as Angelotti in Tosca and later this season will sing the role of Mr. Flint in the revival of Billy Budd. He has sung Leporello at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Teatre Liceu in Barcelona, Los Angeles Opera, and the Aix-en-Provence Festival.
Saturday, 11 February 2012
Listen Today: MET Gotterdammerung - 17:00 London
UPDATE: If you missed it live, click here to listen to it for the next seven days.
So, you might not forget to listen at a time more friendly to those in Europe:
Click here to listen on BBC Radio 3.
For those to whom Radio 3 is unavailable might I suggest going to Opera Cast where you will find a list of Radio stations broadcasting this on air and also through the net.
Click here for Opera Cast
Presented by Margaret Juntwait with guest commentator Ira Siff
Brünnhilde..... Deborah Voigt (Soprano)
Gutrune..... Wendy Bryn Harmer (Bass)
Waltraute..... Waltraud Meier (Mezzo-soprano)
Siegfried..... Jay Hunter Morris (Tenor)
Gunther..... Iain Paterson (Baritone)
Alberich..... Eric Owens (Baritone)
Hagen..... Hans-Peter König (Bass)
First Norn..... Maria Radner (Contralto)
Second Norn..... Elizabeth Bishop (Mezzo-soprano)
Third Norn..... Heidi Melton (Soprano)
Woglinde..... Erin Morley (Soprano)
Wellgunde..... Jennifer Johnson Cano (Soprano)
Flosshilde..... Tamara Mumford (Mezzo-soprano)
New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Conductor....Fabio Luisi.
So, you might not forget to listen at a time more friendly to those in Europe:
Click here to listen on BBC Radio 3.
For those to whom Radio 3 is unavailable might I suggest going to Opera Cast where you will find a list of Radio stations broadcasting this on air and also through the net.
Click here for Opera Cast
Presented by Margaret Juntwait with guest commentator Ira Siff
Brünnhilde..... Deborah Voigt (Soprano)
Gutrune..... Wendy Bryn Harmer (Bass)
Waltraute..... Waltraud Meier (Mezzo-soprano)
Siegfried..... Jay Hunter Morris (Tenor)
Gunther..... Iain Paterson (Baritone)
Alberich..... Eric Owens (Baritone)
Hagen..... Hans-Peter König (Bass)
First Norn..... Maria Radner (Contralto)
Second Norn..... Elizabeth Bishop (Mezzo-soprano)
Third Norn..... Heidi Melton (Soprano)
Woglinde..... Erin Morley (Soprano)
Wellgunde..... Jennifer Johnson Cano (Soprano)
Flosshilde..... Tamara Mumford (Mezzo-soprano)
New York Metropolitan Opera Chorus
New York Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Conductor....Fabio Luisi.
Hans-Peter König as Hagen
(c) Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Waltraud Meier as Waltraute
(c) Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Iain Paterson as Gunther and Jay Hunter Morris as Siegfried
(c) Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Tamara Mumford as Flosshilde, Jennifer Johnson Cano as Wellgunde, and Erin Morley as Woglinde
(c) Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
PROLOGUE
On the Valkyries' rock, three Norns spin the rope of Fate, recalling Wotan's days of power and predicting the end of the Gods. When the rope breaks they descend in terror to their mother, Erda, goddess of the earth. At dawn Siegfried and his bride, Brünnhilde, emerge from their cave ("Zu neuen Taten"). Though fearful that she may lose the hero, she sends him forth to deeds of valor. As a token of his love, Siegfried gives Brünnhilde the magic Ring he took from Fafner, and she gives him her horse Grane in exchange. Passionately they bid farewell as Siegfried sets off into the world (Rhine Journey).
Scene from Act II
(c) Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Thursday, 9 February 2012
Update: Jonas Kaufmann and Rene Pape in new production of Parsifal
UPDATE: If you missed it, the MET confirmed this production, cast and times (See here) on Thursday. That was a lucky guess wasn't it? As the production will be premiering at Opera de Lyon in a few days, I will bring you pictures and video then. In the mean time click here and go to the METs promo video for this production (thanks to Classical Iconclast)
If the MET where producing a new production of Parsifal in 2013: who would direct, who would be in the cast and when might you see it?
When might you see it?
15/02/2013
18/02/2013
21/02/2013
27/02/2013
02/03/2013(m)
05/03/2013
08/03/2013
If the MET where producing a new production of Parsifal in 2013: who would direct, who would be in the cast and when might you see it?
Cast: |
| ||||||||||
Conductor: | Daniele Gatti / Asher Fisch | ||||||||||
Director: | François Girard | ||||||||||
Set Designs: | Michael Levine | ||||||||||
Costumes: | Thibault Vancraenenbroeck | ||||||||||
Lighting: | David Finn | ||||||||||
Co-production with Opéra national de Lyon, Canadian Opera Company |
When might you see it?
15/02/2013
18/02/2013
21/02/2013
27/02/2013
02/03/2013(m)
05/03/2013
08/03/2013
And what might that sound like?
Who will be the MET's Siegfried in 2013?
Would it surprise you know it will be:
By the way, should anyone have any updates on the METs casting for Parsifal in 2013, you wouldn't let us know would you?
By the way, should anyone have any updates on the METs casting for Parsifal in 2013, you wouldn't let us know would you?
The Scots are taking over the MET's Gotterdammerung?
The Scotsman interviews the MET Gotterdammerung's Paterson & Cargill:
As the New York Met’s epic production of Götterdämmerung is broadcast in cinemas, Tim Cornwell travels to the USA for a look behind the scenes – and to meet two of the opera’s Scottish stars
OPERA doesn’t get much bigger than Götterdämmerung at the Met – the four-hour climax of Richard Wagner’s Ring cycle, at New York Metropolitan Opera – “the biggest, grandest, most respected opera house in the world”, as Vanity Fair magazine put it. The company spends over $250 million (£156m) a year, rotating between about two dozen different operas at the rate of up to seven shows a week.
The Met’s new Ring cycle is directed by Robert LePage and cost a reported $16m (£10m). It has become famous for its 45-ton (40 tonne) set, consisting of 24 giant angled planks that rotate on an axle above and to the back of the stage. They are set near-flat for some scenes, vertically for others, while video projections turn them into forests, fiery mountains, forbidding banquet halls or rivers flowing with blood. In some they move and lurk menacingly, like giant abstract dogs.
This Saturday, two weeks after its premiere, Götterdämmerung will be broadcast live to over 1,600 cinemas in 54 countries, including seven in Scotland. One of the most human figures in this drama of Gods and superheroes is Gunther, a weak-willed, self-doubting king who plots the betrayal of heroic Siegfried but is still in awe of him. He’s played by bass-baritone Iain Paterson, the Royal Scottish Conservatoire graduate whose career is on a rising trajectory on the international opera stage.
When I arrive, the scene on the stage at the Met looks like a cross between a film set for On the Waterfront and another for Ben-Hur. Giant classical pedestals from the set of Anna Bolena, the Donizetti opera designed by Paterson’s fellow Glaswegian David McVicar, are being slowly lowered into place for the evening’s performance, dwarfing stage crew who swarm around like dockworkers. The understage seems as cavernous as a dry dock for the Titanic.
To the right, the huge revolving beams that made up the set of the previous night’s Götterdämmerung are stowed, awaiting their next outing.
Paterson leads the way through to the dressing rooms, down a corridor lined with double-bass cases that face out from the walls like sarcophagi. We wait for three huge silvery chandeliers to be rolled past us on trolleys. His name is on one of the doors, though velvety costumes for another singer, from the cast of Anna Bolena, are already hanging there.
Three years ago, when he came here for his debut performance at the Met, a helpful porter told Paterson: “This is the dressing room that Mr Pavarotti used to prefer.” He was monitoring his blood pressure regularly, at that time, and on that night, “the biggest thing” he’d ever done it went from normal to “through the roof”. “I don’t know if they were winding me up, but it certainly broke the tension,” he says.
The Scots are not quite taking over Manhattan. But from our country, better known in the opera scene for the emasculation of its national opera company rather than nurturing superstars, there is quite a confluence of talent. The Scottish mezzo-soprano Karen Cargill makes her own Met debut in Götterdämmerung in April, singing the Valkyrie Waltraute in one of the opera’s most moving passages (meaning she is not featured in this weekend’s broadcast). The musical coach working closely with both of them is John Fisher, another Glaswegian, a legendary opera director who ran both La Scala and Welsh National Opera. McVicar’s new production of Anna Bolena, meanwhile, is just a reminder of that director’s huge presence on the international opera scene.
At a boutique coffee shop near the Lincoln Centre, housing New York’s opera and ballet companies and its famed Juilliard School, Paterson and Cargill meet for an interview and a gossip, and agree to meet Fisher to watch the Scotland-England rugby match. “It’s Mecca, really, it is Mecca,” Cargill says. When she came for the audition, walking past the photographs of the great singers of the past, “I don’t know how I managed to walk. It’s slightly terrifying, but it’s amazing.”
Paterson graduated from what was then the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama a couple of years before Cargill. They pursued different paths to success, with Paterson heading to Opera North and rising up the ranks in English opera, while Cargill focused initially on a concert career, and firmly rooted in Scotland. New York’s been a bit of a reunion, for their two careers have rarely crossed paths until recently.
“People have been coming up to me and saying, your countrywoman has got a fair set of pipes,” says Paterson.
Both have sung big roles in big houses internationally – Paterson in Don Giovanni at English National Opera and Billy Budd at Glyndebourne; Cargill in the Berlin Philharmonic and at the Proms – but they share what seems a genuine ingenue’s astonishment at being at the Met.
Continue Reading
As the New York Met’s epic production of Götterdämmerung is broadcast in cinemas, Tim Cornwell travels to the USA for a look behind the scenes – and to meet two of the opera’s Scottish stars
OPERA doesn’t get much bigger than Götterdämmerung at the Met – the four-hour climax of Richard Wagner’s Ring cycle, at New York Metropolitan Opera – “the biggest, grandest, most respected opera house in the world”, as Vanity Fair magazine put it. The company spends over $250 million (£156m) a year, rotating between about two dozen different operas at the rate of up to seven shows a week.
The Met’s new Ring cycle is directed by Robert LePage and cost a reported $16m (£10m). It has become famous for its 45-ton (40 tonne) set, consisting of 24 giant angled planks that rotate on an axle above and to the back of the stage. They are set near-flat for some scenes, vertically for others, while video projections turn them into forests, fiery mountains, forbidding banquet halls or rivers flowing with blood. In some they move and lurk menacingly, like giant abstract dogs.
This Saturday, two weeks after its premiere, Götterdämmerung will be broadcast live to over 1,600 cinemas in 54 countries, including seven in Scotland. One of the most human figures in this drama of Gods and superheroes is Gunther, a weak-willed, self-doubting king who plots the betrayal of heroic Siegfried but is still in awe of him. He’s played by bass-baritone Iain Paterson, the Royal Scottish Conservatoire graduate whose career is on a rising trajectory on the international opera stage.
When I arrive, the scene on the stage at the Met looks like a cross between a film set for On the Waterfront and another for Ben-Hur. Giant classical pedestals from the set of Anna Bolena, the Donizetti opera designed by Paterson’s fellow Glaswegian David McVicar, are being slowly lowered into place for the evening’s performance, dwarfing stage crew who swarm around like dockworkers. The understage seems as cavernous as a dry dock for the Titanic.
To the right, the huge revolving beams that made up the set of the previous night’s Götterdämmerung are stowed, awaiting their next outing.
Paterson leads the way through to the dressing rooms, down a corridor lined with double-bass cases that face out from the walls like sarcophagi. We wait for three huge silvery chandeliers to be rolled past us on trolleys. His name is on one of the doors, though velvety costumes for another singer, from the cast of Anna Bolena, are already hanging there.
Three years ago, when he came here for his debut performance at the Met, a helpful porter told Paterson: “This is the dressing room that Mr Pavarotti used to prefer.” He was monitoring his blood pressure regularly, at that time, and on that night, “the biggest thing” he’d ever done it went from normal to “through the roof”. “I don’t know if they were winding me up, but it certainly broke the tension,” he says.
The Scots are not quite taking over Manhattan. But from our country, better known in the opera scene for the emasculation of its national opera company rather than nurturing superstars, there is quite a confluence of talent. The Scottish mezzo-soprano Karen Cargill makes her own Met debut in Götterdämmerung in April, singing the Valkyrie Waltraute in one of the opera’s most moving passages (meaning she is not featured in this weekend’s broadcast). The musical coach working closely with both of them is John Fisher, another Glaswegian, a legendary opera director who ran both La Scala and Welsh National Opera. McVicar’s new production of Anna Bolena, meanwhile, is just a reminder of that director’s huge presence on the international opera scene.
At a boutique coffee shop near the Lincoln Centre, housing New York’s opera and ballet companies and its famed Juilliard School, Paterson and Cargill meet for an interview and a gossip, and agree to meet Fisher to watch the Scotland-England rugby match. “It’s Mecca, really, it is Mecca,” Cargill says. When she came for the audition, walking past the photographs of the great singers of the past, “I don’t know how I managed to walk. It’s slightly terrifying, but it’s amazing.”
Paterson graduated from what was then the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama a couple of years before Cargill. They pursued different paths to success, with Paterson heading to Opera North and rising up the ranks in English opera, while Cargill focused initially on a concert career, and firmly rooted in Scotland. New York’s been a bit of a reunion, for their two careers have rarely crossed paths until recently.
“People have been coming up to me and saying, your countrywoman has got a fair set of pipes,” says Paterson.
Both have sung big roles in big houses internationally – Paterson in Don Giovanni at English National Opera and Billy Budd at Glyndebourne; Cargill in the Berlin Philharmonic and at the Proms – but they share what seems a genuine ingenue’s astonishment at being at the Met.
Continue Reading
Wednesday, 8 February 2012
Dallas Opera's Tristan no longer a concert version but now fully staged!
Need to be elsewhere and thus don't have much time but to say, that Dallas Operas concert version of Tristan und Isolde (details here) is now a fully staged version!
The following interesting explanation is taken from Theater Jones:
It is no secret that the Dallas Opera had cut back on the current season in an attempt to put the company on a sound financial footing. The new General Director and CEO, Keith Cerny, took measures to inject some business reality into the rarified operatic atmosphere and his efforts are already paying off.
A perfect example of his steady-handed stewardship is the convoluted journey that the upcoming production of Wagner's masterpiece, Tristan and Isolde, took as it wound its way to the Winspear Opera House. When it opens on Feb. 16, it will be the fully staged production that was originally imagined.
Jonathan Pell, Artistic Director, explained the twists and turns in a recent interview.
The following interesting explanation is taken from Theater Jones:
It is no secret that the Dallas Opera had cut back on the current season in an attempt to put the company on a sound financial footing. The new General Director and CEO, Keith Cerny, took measures to inject some business reality into the rarified operatic atmosphere and his efforts are already paying off.
A perfect example of his steady-handed stewardship is the convoluted journey that the upcoming production of Wagner's masterpiece, Tristan and Isolde, took as it wound its way to the Winspear Opera House. When it opens on Feb. 16, it will be the fully staged production that was originally imagined.
Jonathan Pell, Artistic Director, explained the twists and turns in a recent interview.
WNO Tristan 2012: Jay Hunter Morris is out Ben Heppner is in!
It's all change again on the Wagner "circuit".
One of the Tristans I am looking forward to this year is Welsh National Opera's revival of Yannis Kokkos' rather fine production (more here). Jay Hunter Morris was originally scheduled to perform Tristan but having now taken on Siegfried for the MET that is no longer possible.
Originally of course Ben Heppner was to play Siegfried at the MET before he pulled from there. However, it may be that the MET's loss proves to be WNO gain as he will now be performing Tristan for them alongside Ann Petersen's Isolde.
Full details, plus reviews of the last run, can be found by clicking here
One of the Tristans I am looking forward to this year is Welsh National Opera's revival of Yannis Kokkos' rather fine production (more here). Jay Hunter Morris was originally scheduled to perform Tristan but having now taken on Siegfried for the MET that is no longer possible.
Originally of course Ben Heppner was to play Siegfried at the MET before he pulled from there. However, it may be that the MET's loss proves to be WNO gain as he will now be performing Tristan for them alongside Ann Petersen's Isolde.
Full details, plus reviews of the last run, can be found by clicking here
Nearly Unsubstantiated rumor: Jay Hunter Morris as Siegfried 2013
A little bird tells me that Jay Hunter Morris will perform in the revival of the Florence-Valencia Ring Cycle during the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino 2013. Alas, I cannot confirm or deny. Zubin Mehta returns to the podium, but that you know already of course.
If the costumes stay the same (and the rumor is true): is Morris' Ring curse to always look like he is in a Mad Max sequel? |
The Wagnerian Caption Competition No 1
Time for a bit of fun, and with that in mind I present the first Wagnerian Caption Competition. Tell us, in an amusing a manner as possible please, what is being said in the scene from the Chéreau Walkure below and you will find yourself the winner of a brand spanking new MP3 copy of the Moralt live Walkure from 1949. Alas, I am still slightly mean and it was a copy bought "on the cheap" over at emusic and thus comes as 3 complete MP3 files - not separate tracks I am afraid and no booklet. But look, its free and the winner gets a special mention. To hear a little bit click play below.
Best caption Twittered to us - or emailed if you really don't have a twitter account - wins and collected electronically. Closing date: 15/02/12
Moralt Walkure: Details
Best caption Twittered to us - or emailed if you really don't have a twitter account - wins and collected electronically. Closing date: 15/02/12
Siegmund and Brunnhilde |
Moralt Walkure: Details
Walküre | ||
Live recording in mono | ||
1949 | ||
Conductor: Rudolf Moralt | ||
Siegmund | Günther Treptow | |
Sieglinde | Hilde Konetzni | |
Wotan | Ferdinand Frantz | |
Brünnhilde | Helena Braun | |
Hunding | Herbert Alsen | |
Fricka | Rosette Anday | |
Gerhilde | Judith Hellwig | |
Ortlinde | Ester Rethy | |
Waltraute | Rosette Anday | |
Schwertleite | Alice Ostrowsky | |
Helmwige | Ilona Steingruber | |
Siegrune | Gertrude Burgstaller-Schuster | |
Grimgerde | Dagmar Hermann | |
Roßweiße | Else Schürhoff | |
Wiener Symphoniker |
Tuesday, 7 February 2012
Monday, 6 February 2012
Nicola Luisotti named Music Director of Teatro Di San Carlo
Off topic but:
February 6, 2012 -- Nicola Luisotti has been appointed Music Director of Teatro di San Carlo in Naples, Italy, effective immediately. The news was announced over the weekend by General Director Rosanna Purchia and the Board of Directors of the Teatro di San Carlo Foundation following a meeting where the unanimous decision was taken. Maestro Luisotti succeeds former Principal Conductor Maurizio Benini and Music Director Jeffrey Tate. Born and raised in Tuscany, the 50-year old Luisotti is currently Music Director of San Francisco Opera and Principal Guest Conductor of the Tokyo Philharmonic.
The oldest theater in Europe , founded in 1737, many of opera’s most famous composers spent significant time at the theatre, including Rossini, Donizetti and Verdi. In 2010, the theater was reopened after an important period of restoration where the magnificent five-level horseshoe of boxes which are upholstered in red and decorated in gold leaf, frescoed ceiling and beautifully painted stage curtain were renewed to their original glory.
February 6, 2012 -- Nicola Luisotti has been appointed Music Director of Teatro di San Carlo in Naples, Italy, effective immediately. The news was announced over the weekend by General Director Rosanna Purchia and the Board of Directors of the Teatro di San Carlo Foundation following a meeting where the unanimous decision was taken. Maestro Luisotti succeeds former Principal Conductor Maurizio Benini and Music Director Jeffrey Tate. Born and raised in Tuscany, the 50-year old Luisotti is currently Music Director of San Francisco Opera and Principal Guest Conductor of the Tokyo Philharmonic.
The oldest theater in Europe , founded in 1737, many of opera’s most famous composers spent significant time at the theatre, including Rossini, Donizetti and Verdi. In 2010, the theater was reopened after an important period of restoration where the magnificent five-level horseshoe of boxes which are upholstered in red and decorated in gold leaf, frescoed ceiling and beautifully painted stage curtain were renewed to their original glory.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Katharina Wagner discuses: falling ticket demand, criminal investigations, loss of main sponser and a live Parsifal 2012 in a cinema near you - unless you live in the USA
In a rare interview with Welt Online Katharina Wagner discuses troubling times at Bayreuth and the announcement of a live cinema broadcast of Parsifal this year to an approximate 100 cinemas around the world - well apart from in the USA.
When asked about the relatively high - for Bayreuth - number of empty seats during the 2011 season, she pointed out that although empty they were still sold seats and thus at least of little economic impact. However, when pressed with the fact that demand for tickets had decreased significantly - from 10 people chasing each ticket to 6 people per ticket during the 2011 season, she included the possibility that this might be to due to the types of production being put on (the new Tannhäuser and negative critical and public reaction to recent productions were proposed by the interviewer). However, she suggested a number of other possible influencing factors including:
Was she worried? Yes, but oddly thought that the new electronic, online ticketing system would help towards rectifying the problem. Needing to cultivate a new, younger audience would also help, and this ticketing system, she seemed to suggest, would help with this.
When asked about Frank Castorf she stated he was a highly experienced director, well versed in his craft.
The interviewer noted that in his contract, Castrof was not allowed to "cut" the Ring. Had any further artistic "limitations" been placed on him? No, said Katharina, except those imposed by finances and logistics - intriguingly noting such as the size of the orchestra pit.
Questioned about ongoing criminal investigations into Bayreuth ticket sales, she was obviously unable to comment to any great extent. Again, two unnamed people were mentioned as being investigated, but she noted the investigation was into the distribution of free, not sold tickets. She also pointed out that Bayreuth was more rigorous in ticket distribution than perhaps any other opera house.
While discussing why Siemens pulled its sponsorship of the festival Katharina announced that this years Parsifal - already scheduled for free broadcast on the 11 August on ARTE TV - would also be broadcast live in Cinema relays across Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the UK. No mention was made of the USA, but given the size of this market its exclusion would seem unlikely - although nothing is ever certain with Bayreuth. Ticket prices would be around 25 to 29 euros.
Discussing, criticisms of recent productions she agrees that not everything worked but points to the progressive "workshop" nature of Bayreuth productions which allows significant changes and improvements to productions each year.
Finally, when asked if she will apply to renew her contract with Bayreuth in 2015 when it expires she said that she had still not decided.
This is only a limited overview of the full interview which can be found in its original German here
When asked about the relatively high - for Bayreuth - number of empty seats during the 2011 season, she pointed out that although empty they were still sold seats and thus at least of little economic impact. However, when pressed with the fact that demand for tickets had decreased significantly - from 10 people chasing each ticket to 6 people per ticket during the 2011 season, she included the possibility that this might be to due to the types of production being put on (the new Tannhäuser and negative critical and public reaction to recent productions were proposed by the interviewer). However, she suggested a number of other possible influencing factors including:
- A 25 percent increase in ticket prices.
- The poor state of the international economy
- That people maybe more likely to watch a Bayreuth production on DVD
- The number of quality Wagner productions elsewhere.
Was she worried? Yes, but oddly thought that the new electronic, online ticketing system would help towards rectifying the problem. Needing to cultivate a new, younger audience would also help, and this ticketing system, she seemed to suggest, would help with this.
When asked about Frank Castorf she stated he was a highly experienced director, well versed in his craft.
The interviewer noted that in his contract, Castrof was not allowed to "cut" the Ring. Had any further artistic "limitations" been placed on him? No, said Katharina, except those imposed by finances and logistics - intriguingly noting such as the size of the orchestra pit.
Questioned about ongoing criminal investigations into Bayreuth ticket sales, she was obviously unable to comment to any great extent. Again, two unnamed people were mentioned as being investigated, but she noted the investigation was into the distribution of free, not sold tickets. She also pointed out that Bayreuth was more rigorous in ticket distribution than perhaps any other opera house.
While discussing why Siemens pulled its sponsorship of the festival Katharina announced that this years Parsifal - already scheduled for free broadcast on the 11 August on ARTE TV - would also be broadcast live in Cinema relays across Germany, Austria, Switzerland and the UK. No mention was made of the USA, but given the size of this market its exclusion would seem unlikely - although nothing is ever certain with Bayreuth. Ticket prices would be around 25 to 29 euros.
Discussing, criticisms of recent productions she agrees that not everything worked but points to the progressive "workshop" nature of Bayreuth productions which allows significant changes and improvements to productions each year.
Finally, when asked if she will apply to renew her contract with Bayreuth in 2015 when it expires she said that she had still not decided.
This is only a limited overview of the full interview which can be found in its original German here
Friday, 3 February 2012
San Francisco Opera announce $1.8 Million deficit
It is without doubt a difficult time for the arts - as it is for many parts of society. Today's announcement from San Francisco Opera should not be considered that much of a surprise and one suspects will be mirrored by many other houses. What will be of interest now is SF opera's response to this news. They have certainly put on an interesting last season - of especial interest to us of course was Francesca Zambello's Ring Cycle. And this is despite the fact that a deficit was projected. So far, their reaction has not been to "pad out" their season with 40 performances of Traviata or Boheme - the frequent reaction of some opera houses. And this decision seems justified with ticket sales up 32% (total $24,633,817). Equally, the company managed to gain funds of $33,345,806 from only 11,350 donors. Indeed, total operating revenue for FY 11 grew substantially. It would certainly seem that they are giving audiences what they want - an audience consisting of 350,000 people when cinema broadcasts and various community projects are taken into account and with a further 1.8 million if its radio audience for last season is added.
Katharina Wagner is worried about the state of Bayreuth.
"Anyone know the name of a cheap roofer?" |
Many of you are no doubt aware of this already - the Friends Of Bayreuth discussed this last year, as have others - however, in an interview today Katherina stated that a report on the state of the building and the action needed to preserve it would be published in March. A previous report estimated that 20 million Euros would be needed to fix such issues as a leaking roof, crumbling sandstone facade and the general " dilapidated" state of the building.
In the interview, she announced that the official report will also put forward a plan to raise funds to conduct the repairs.
Off Topic: Magnus Lindberg - Clarinet concerto
I have heard rumors there are people who have not listened to Lindberg. I find this very difficult to imagine however:
Conductor: Sakari Oramo
Orchestra: Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Kari Kriikku (Clarinet)
Found on youtube. I belive this maybe from the CD: "Magnus Lindberg: Clarinet Concerto; Gran Duo; Chorale" which I own and heartily recommend. If indeed it is, and it certainly sounds so, then the performers will be:
Conductor: Sakari Oramo
Orchestra: Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Kari Kriikku (Clarinet)
Available on Ondine. Only £6.99 on mp3 from Amazon I see, probably less if you "shop around"
Wednesday, 1 February 2012
6 months free subscription to Opera Now
Opera Now are giving readers of the opera blog Opera Chic, six months free access to the electronic version of the magazine. No need to provide credit card, address details etc.
As you may know, I never endorse any product but this is an offer well worth investigating. To get your free 6 month subscription, or for more information visit