Sunday, November 15, 2009

NYF WEB EXCLUSIVE: Interview with NYCO’s George Steel

Destabilizing the Opera Universe - an interview with George Steel

A.J. GOLDMANN

http://blog.dallasopera.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/steel-sean-mccormick.jpg

After years of playing second fiddle to its bigger, more imposing neighbor, the Metropolitan Opera, can New York City Opera regain its unique position in the world of classical music?

George Steel, General Manager and Artistic Director Opera of NYCO, which is set to reopen on November 5th after an extensive $107 million renovation, exudes confidence.

The renovations to the David H. Koch Theater (formerly the New York State Theater) include adjustments in the hall’s seating and acoustics, as well as a new state-of-the-art media center. The expanded orchestra pit can now accommodate up to 100 musicians.

With all these new resources at his disposal, Steel is eager to shake things up. “It’s great to destabilize a universe that people know like rosary beads,” Steel said.

Let’s not forget that NYCO was founded in 1943 as populist alternative to the more tradition-bound Metropolitan Opera. In the company’s 66-year history, it has presented 29 world premieres and 61 American premieres of works like Bartok’s Bluebeard’s Castle and Schoenberg’s Moses und Aron. Let’s not forget that the company also launched the careers of many now-famous American singers, through their commitment to showcasing young artists. The roster includes Beverly Sills, Renée Fleming, Samuel Ramey. There have even been some minor European talents, like Plácido Domingo and José Carreras.

In recent years, NYCO seemed to have lost focus. It was increasingly artistically and financially adrift. While the Met had successfully revitalized its image under its new general manager, record producer Peter Gelb, NYCO struggled to attract audiences. The company, which was presenting a regular mixture of standard repertoire, repackaged Broadway fare and the odd new Handel production, had lost direction.

Under Steel, it seems that NYCO will finally be getting back to its role as “the people’s opera,” as mayor Fiorello H. LaGuardia called it. But in this day and age, this means more than just offering affordable ticket prices. Steel wants to make opera intelligible to the guy off the street. If Peter Gelb’s has shown that opera can be financially viable in this day and age, then Steel – whose other job descriptions include pianist, conductor and impresario – has some pretty clear ideas about making opera artistically relevant.

The challenges that Steel faces suggest many of the larger concerns that contemporary opera and opera houses need to confront. How much will audiences tolerate new and possibly inaccessible works? How far should directors push the envelope in terms of onstage sex and violence, a recent question to emerge in the debate about Luc Bondy’s Tosca at the Metropolitan Opera? How to respect an opera house’s tradition and still attract new audiences?

“Traditional operatic repertoire and the audiences for them are getting smaller,” Steel noted, but with a positive spin. “But this is good news because you no longer need to chase the audiences. You can’t just presume that people are going to want to see masterpiece because they’re masterpieces. You need to entice them.”

The key for Steel is not to do “very old music with mildly radical stagings,” but rather to start with music that is “truly thrilling and radical.” “I have no fear about putting shocking things on the stage,” he says bluntly. Is that a promise or a threat? Steel declined to elaborate.

Steel can draw on his experience as Executive Director of Miller Theatre at Columbia University, which he ran for 12 years and turned into a vibrant destination for new music. “You want to sell out shows? Well, program composer portraits of Xenakis, Zorn, Ligeti, Varese, Nancarrow, and Reich. That’s six sold-out evenings right there,” he explained.

“I spend an enormous amount of my time putting these things on my radar.” Steel added that he is sifting through NYCO’s long-running program VOX: Showcasing American Opera, an annual performance forum for new composition, for what he calls “corn-fed American works” that have traditionally formed a backbone of NYCO’s programming.

The first production of the 2009-2010 season is a revival of Hugo Weisgall’s Esther, which was a 1993 world premiere here. It takes a certain amount of chutzpah to program a little-known atonal opera as the season opener. Steel says of Weisgall’s musical language, “It’s like Alban Berg, but more like Bill Evans.”

It’s a move that seems to have paid off. Ticket sales for Esther are so strong that the company decided to add an additional performance.

With Steel at the helm, will the NYCO finally emerge from the long shadow of the Met? Over the past four seasons, Gelb has succeeded in making Met a fashionable and fabulous place to be. NYCO can hopefully capitalize off the rejuvenated image of opera that the new Met has projected through its commitment to fresh new productions and by embracing technology. But we’re going to have to turn to NYCO for the unsung masterpieces of the 20th Century, as well as the daring operas of the future. NYCO still has a unique part to play in New York’s cultural landscape. And in keeping opera relevant and fresh.

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 13:58:21 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, August 2, 2009

La Cenerentola by Sir Peter Hall

From Operanews.com

BERLIN — La Cenerentola, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 5/20/09

Deutsche Oper Berlin’s final new production of the season was the German premiere of Peter Hall’s elegant take on Rossini’s La Cenerentola (or Aschenputtel, as the fairy tale is known in German), originally staged at the 2005 Glyndebourne Festival (seen May 20). Coming at the end of an especially dynamic DOB season that saw premieres of forgotten operas (Die Ägyptische Helena, Marie Victoire) and striking — if not always successful — new visions for more popular fare (Tannhäuser, Ariadne auf Naxos), this traditional production of a repertory standard proved anti-climactic.

Stylish sets and costumes lent a decorous, somewhat musty flavor to the performance: although the designs were well-suited in a good old-fashioned way to the light, energetic nature of Rossini’s early masterwork, they generally lacked the edge and verve that this reviewer looks for in contemporary productions. The most artistically compelling design element on offer was Peter Mumford’s stark, finely focused lighting, realized at DOB by Jerry Skelton.

But there was plenty of good news in the vocal department. Romanian mezzo-soprano Ruxandra Donose lent her earthy, dark-hued voice to the title role. Her singing rang out clear, rich and well-balanced and she navigated the runs with remarkable ease and assurance, a few shrill high notes aside. Her highly polished “Non piu mesta,” capped a thoroughly accomplished performance and earned her showers of applause.

Martina Welschenbach and Lucia Cirillo sang the evil stepsisters, Clorinda and Tisbe, respectively, with appropriate histrionics neatly alternating malice and goofiness. They were a pleasure to watch, even if they often seemed vocally interchangeable. Of the two, Cirillo, an Italian mezzo-soprano, had more success distinguishing herself.

Top vocal honors among the men went to Mario Zeffiri, a Greek tenor known for his interpretations of bel canto repertory. He put his buttery, agile voice to heroic use, tearing through his runs with alacrity, few perceivable breaks and ringing high notes.

DOB ensemble member Simon Pauly, a German baritone, was less supple as Dandini, but he made up for his vocal imperfections with effective comic acting: there was much heft and wit to his somewhat rough-hewn singing.

The evening’s Don Magnifico was bass-baritone Lorenzo Regazzo, who wore his despicable character’s ruin almost proudly, communicating it through a pointed, seething delivery that was occasionally overwhelmed by the orchestra. The routine drowning-out of the soloists seemed due to a last-minute substitution for the scheduled conductor, Paolo Arrivabeni. Filling in for Arrivabeni was Guillermo Garcia Calvo, a young Spanish maestro who is engaged at the Vienna State Opera. He delivered an incisive, intelligent and lively performance that was rich with drama and humor despite its balance problems.

A. J. GOLDMANN

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 02:02:52 | Permalink | No Comments »

Harms Triumphs with Berlin Tannhäuser

From Operanews.com

The image “http://culturebase.org/media/pics/5/d/2/e/a/ec_66020_5d2ea705fad5e8a13c6a057308a169f2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

BERLIN — Tannhäuser, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 5/10/09

It appears that Intendant Kirsten Harms may be making Deutsche Oper the most consistently interesting opera house in Berlin. Not that the company’s new Tannhäuser, which had its premiere in November 2008 and returned for three additional performances in May, was an unqualified triumph. But it was a staging of undeniable courage and surprising clarity of vision. Like her 2007 production of the double-headed Cassandra/Elektra, Harms’s DOB Tannhäuser was as remarkable for its savagery as for its moments of transcendence.

Performed in the Dresden version, this Tannhäuser was a dazzling, epic production with more than a few baffling touches. It featured naked nymphs, flying gargoyles, a fairy-tale medieval court for the Act II contest scene and sinful pilgrims roasting in a fiery pit of hell. If it wasn’t always clear what message Harms was trying to convey in moments such the final act, here set it in a military hospital, the occasional indeterminacy of the staging only contributed to the cumulative effect.

Magnificent singing accompanied Harms’s bizarre tableaux. The May 10 performance offered a rare and unexpected chance to hear the extraordinary Ivar Gilhuus, a longtime soloist at the Norwegian State Opera, in the title role. (The Norwegian filled in for indisposed American tenor Scott MacAllister.) From the start of Act I, Gilhuus was in excellent form, delivering well-sculpted phrases with a freshness and energy that he retained (against the odds) all evening long. Although Gilhuus’s sheer vocal force was undeniable from the beginning of the night, his heroic tenor was undermined by some rather wooden acting and, early on, a curiously unvaried declaiming style. As the performance progressed, he gained dramatic confidence equal to his singing abilities. He faltered most visibly at the end of Act II: his “Nach Rom!” lacked the appropriate oomph.

Gilhuus’s colleagues were equally riveting when they hit their targets, which was more often than not. To German soprano Nadja Michael fell the demanding task of singing both Venus and Elisabeth. Michael gave full measure to the goddess of love with her wild, deliriously agile voice; she brought a refreshing amount of earthiness and sensuality to the virginal Elisabeth. In the end, the two characters were not so clearly differentiated as they could have been — one supposes that was part of the reason for casting Michael in both roles — but the soprano was always vocally electrifying and physically alluring. Her chief problem was consistently — and maddeningly — indistinct diction.

The ever-dependable Markus Brück made a persuasive Wolfram, who in this production is Tannhäuser’s active rival for Elisabeth. His “Abendstern” aria became a love song to the dying Elisabeth, charged with equal measures of spiritual and corporeal yearning. His ardent legato was the cornerstone of a refreshingly straightforward interpretation. Kurt Rydl has been in better form that he mustered here as Hermann. His steely voice often turned raspy, and his low notes were off-target at times. Lenus Carlson, another old hand, was impassioned as Biterolf but had some trouble staying on pitch. Clemens Bieber’s Walther, while more controlled, was halting and indistinct.

Conductor Philippe Auguin led a white-hot performance, propelling the orchestra with such force and momentum that the singers at times rushed to keep up. Luckily, audibility was never a problem, partially because the frequently mobile set produced an echo that reverberated eerily through the theater.

A. J. GOLDMANN

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 01:59:34 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Marie Victoire at the DOB

From Operanews.com:

IN REVIEW
BERLIN — Marie Victoire, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 4/22/09

Ottorino Respighi’s Marie Victoire arrived at Deutsche Oper Berlin in April for five performances (seen April 22). Marie Victoire was written in 1913 but went unperformed until 2004, when the Teatro dell’Opera di Roma presented its stage premiere under the baton of Gianluigi Gelmetti. The French-language libretto of Edmond Guiraud, adapted from his play of the same name, deals with the tribulations of a countess who survives the French Revolution and its aftermath by dint of luck.

The DOB production by Johannes Schaaf was alternately striking and slapdash, a concept that proved hauntingly effective in communicating the drastic changes from the ancien régime to the rise of the bourgeoisie. The sansculottes and Jacobins of the preposterously mannered Act I had much in common with the rabble in Mel Brooks’s History of the World, Part I. More effective were Act II’s Reign of Terror, in which a debauched aristocracy put on a Baroque opera in the shadow of the guillotine, and Act III’s evocation of early-nineteenth-century middle-class city life.

Respighi’s expansive score has much to recommend it, chiefly the rich, if oversaturated, orchestration that registers as a bizarre hybrid of Strauss, Debussy and Ponchielli. The score also incorporates many militaristic and sacred motifs and effects (snare drums and church bells abound), as well as musical citations from late-eighteenth-century French opera. However, the glut of musical references and styles provides too heavy an accompaniment for the comparatively impoverished vocal writing. Extended lyrical passages frequently turn monotonous; melisma is put in service of melodrama and gives the work a mock-heroic flavor. There are some stirring arias and choruses, but all in all one has the impression of listening to a lushly colored (and über-long) tone poem supplemented by voices. One imagines Respighi tinkering to strike out a third way between Wagner and Verdi and coming up with this quasi-symphonic solution.

Marie Victoire poses difficulties to an opera house above and beyond the usual travails involved in reclaiming a lost work: the piece contains more than twenty singing roles. DOB assembled a worthy lineup that included both ensemble members and guest singers.

The young African–American soprano Takesha Meshé Kizart sang the title role with impressive lyricism and stamina, her powerful high notes and coloratura shadings supplemented by controlled dynamism and keen dramatic conviction. Occasionally, phrases that lay in the passaggio or her middle to low range turned heavy and molasses-like.

DOB stalwart Markus Brück played Marie’s husband, Maurice de Lanjallay who is presumed dead for much of the opera. Brück put his velvety baritone to excellent use. Bass-baritone Stephen Bronk, in the more substantial role of Cloteau, Marie’s onetime servant and later her warden at a revolutionary prison, struck the right tone between arrogance, humility and affection that his conflicted character required. Simon Pauly, cast as the conscientious writer Simon, deployed a stirring, robust voice but came across as stiff and overly noble. Tenor Germân Villar sang the amorous Clorivière with appropriate doses of nobility and lyricism. His effortless volume and even production held up until the remarkably tense final scene. The orchestra sounded superb, though conductor Michail Jurowski had difficulty establishing dynamic levels that were kind to his singers. In his hands, however, the score sounded more thickly lacquered, full-blooded and strange than in Gelmetti’s approach five years ago. Let’s hope that further productions or a commercial recording can make this worthy opera known to a wider audience.

A. J. GOLDMANN

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 10:20:43 | Permalink | Comments (3)

Monday, May 11, 2009

Berlin Opera - 2009 - 2010

The three opera houses here made their upcoming seasons public in late April. As much as I’d like to believe that the opera scene is impervious to the worldwide financial fiasco, the scaled-down nature of the upcoming seasons gives pretty strong evidence to the contrary. Both the Staatsoper unter den Linden and the Deutsche Oper Berlin will be presenting four new productions, down from six and seven respectively this season. Ironically - or at least unexpectedly - the Komische Oper Berlin, which receives the fewest subsidies of the three houses, has seven premieres planned for the 2009 / 2010 season…an audacious move in this economic climate. Further to that, I just discovered on the KOB’s website that they’ll be upgrading the seats in the baroque auditorium to become Berlin’s first opera house with individual subtitles. Interested parties can purchase the old opera seats for 50 Euros a piece (discount available for bulk orders). Here’s your chance to own a piece of opera history! Contact  rausdamit@komische-oper-berlin.de to place an order…today!

The Staatsoper will be undergoing a thorough renovation in 2011 that’s set to last at least three years. This fact might explain why their final full season pre-renovation is so “light.”Among the premieres, Federico Tiezzi’s production of Simon Boccanegra with Placido Domingo in the title role seems the some promising, as well as Dale Duesing’s staging of Chabrier’s L’Etoile, conducted by Sir Simon Rattle and starring Magdalena Kozena.

Many productions from the 2008/2009 season will appear in rep. None of the revivals seems overly exciting, except a dream Tristan with Waltraud Meier, Peter Sieffert and Rene Pape.

At the DOB, what seems most intriguing at this point is Intendantin Kirsten Harms’ new production of Die Frau ohne Schatten, which arrives in late September with Manuela Uhl, Doris Soffel and Robert Brubaker, Johan Reuter and Eva Johansson. News of this production is especially welcome after the Met decided to scrap their FroSch from next season’s schedule for financial reasons.

I’m also excited for the new Rienzi by Philipp Stölzl that will be presented during the Richard Wagner Festival Weeks during the winter (Nov - Feb), which will feature all of Wagner’s 10 other biggies - including yet another revival of Götz Friedrich’s weathered production of Der Ring des Nibelungen.

I guess that leaves the KOB, whose season includes a new Rigoletto by Barrie Kosky and Aribert Riemann’s Lear in a production by Hans Neuenfels.

Below is a list of all the new productions at each house (concert perfs not included):

-Deutsche Oper Berlin-

Die Frau ohne Schatten - R. Strauss

Barbiere di Siviglia - Rossini

Rienzi - Wagner

Otello - Verdi

-Deutsche Staatsoper unter den Linden-

Simon Boccanegra - Verdi

Fledermaus - J. Strauss

Agrippina - Handel

L’etoile - Chabrier

- Komische Oper Berlin -

Rigoletto - Verdi

Der Rote Zora - Naske

Lear - Riemann

Don Pasquale - Donizetti

Fidelio  - Beethoven

Orlando - Handel

La Périchole - Offenbach

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 11:37:03 | Permalink | Comments (4)

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Berlin Opera in Review: Strauss & Gounod

Here’s a quartet of reviews of from the current edition of Opera News. (www.operanews.com)

BERLIN — Ariadne auf Naxos, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 2/19/09


The image “http://www.rondomagazin.de/uploaded/Ariadne_WilfriedHoesl.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
How about taking the most meta-opera out there and making it even more self-referential? That’s the approach director Robert Carsen took when his vision of Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos unfurled in February at Deutsche Oper Berlin (seen Feb. 19). This fascinating, frustrating, genre-bending work never seems quite certain about itself: the DOB transplant of this production, originally seen last year at the Bavarian State Opera in Munich, boasted a cast that far outshone the staging.

Lithuanian soprano Violeta Urmana fit nicely into the shoes of the strutting diva of the title role. This is a role she has sung previously at the Met. At DOB, her performance was distinguished by crystalline clarity and effortless volume. Urmana’s bright-hued timbre gave way to darker shades as the evening progressed, making for a richer, more involved performance, a highlight of which was a full-throttle account of the gently ebbing “Es gibt ein Reich.”

Ruxandra Donose made an even stronger impression as the impetuous Composer, singing with undeniable ardor, an attractively thick texture and a velvety low range, as in her compelling account of “Sein wir wieder gut.” The Zerbinetta of Jane Archibald was alternately reverent and feisty, as in her quasi-love duet with the Composer. And even if the massive orchestral force occasionally drowned her out, she tore through her vocally punishing role with obvious relish and assurance, especially in the extensive coloratura writing. She nearly stole the show with her “Grossmächtige Prinzessin,” which was here elaborately choreographed with various paramours popping out of pianos that glided comically across the stage.

As in most Strauss, the men of Ariadne play a decidedly supporting role. That said, Roberto Saccà was indeed godlike as Bacchus, singing with Italianate grace (and a pinch of schmaltz) that made the opera’s close more fitting and dramatically convincing. Met veteran Lenus Carlson was in fine form as the levelheaded Music Teacher. And baritone Simon Pauly did solid work as Harlequin, particularly in the tuneful “Lieben, Hassen, Hoffen, Zagen.”

Carsen, one of Europe’s busiest directors, is probably best known to U.S. audiences for his striking Met production of Eugene Onegin. In this Ariadne, he tried so constantly to break through the fourth wall that most of his attempts at abstraction ended up seeming bland.

The house lights stayed on for the better part of the Prologue, and various characters walked through the audience to make their entrances. The production, which featured sets by Peter Pabst and costumes by Falk Bauer, switched awkwardly between elegance and absurdity, an obvious mirror of the tension in the score between opera seria and commedia dell’arte. The self-referential elements — the large mirrors that reflected the audience, the exposed lighting and the completely bare stage that the Composer walked onto at the end of the opera, to be greeted by the applause of the cast — quickly grew tiresome. One bright spot was Marco Santi’s smart and edgy choreography, which livened things immeasurably, especially in the otherwise static Act II.

The evening’s maestro, Jacques Lacombe, had difficulty giving shape to the sinewy, often manic Prologue, the backstage drama that occupies the work’s first half. The directorial shenanigans did much to reinforce an impression of general havoc onstage and in the pit. Lacombe took much firmer command of his musicians with the opera within an opera, starting with a delicate account of the tortuous G-minor overture and not letting up until the glittering apotheosis of the closing bars.

BERLIN — Salome, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 2/1/09


The image “http://www.rondomagazin.de/uploaded/Salome04_Monika-Rittershaus.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.
Richard Strauss’s Salome is an opera as emotionally unhinged as it is daringly modern. So one was interested to see what Achim Freyer, the controversial visionary behind Los Angeles Opera’s new production of the Ring cycle, would do to Strauss’s debauched heroine when Deutsche Oper Berlin revived his 2003 production in early February. The production images available on the company’s website promised that the evening would have its share of strangeness, and they probably had something to do with the poor attendance (seen Feb. 1).

I too had my reservations about what a Freyer Salome would look like, especially after seeing his recent Eugene Onegin at the Staatsoper Unter den Linden — a visually dazzling production that quickly ran out of ideas. With Salome, I was afraid that Freyer’s extreme distancing techniques would preclude genuine involvement in the relentless drama of the music. But it was precisely this quality about Salome that enabled Freyer’s spin to work. The high drama and breathless pace of a score tailored to suit a preexisting play were well served by this oddball, kooky production. With a staging concerned more with interpretation than with mere illustration, this Salome did not waste time over details of decor —the color of the heroine’s veils, the verisimilitude of the severed head — and thus spoke for itself.

Freyer’s Salome left the music exposed and pure, placing more demands than usual on the soprano who dares to take on this killer role. For this revival, the ravishing Manuela Uhl took up the challenge. Uhl — who obviously had no intention of being erased by the abstract, cartoonish sensibilities of this revival — created a Salome who was raw, energetic and passionate. She has an exciting, powerful voice and enough stamina to make it to the end of this punishing role. Her singing was fresh and convincing, if not always the picture of accuracy. Uhl ducked some high notes and decided to forgo some of the coloratura ornamentation, but her biggest problems were a weak low range — she often resorted to speaking — and exposed passaggio. She also pounced on her lines with an eagerness that, though not always in synch with the music, made for thrilling drama. Despite the shortcomings of her performance, the bulk of Strauss’s searing music sounded wondrous and convincing in her mouth, and aside from rough patches, her voice rang out with incredible volume and clarity from start to finish.

Uhl was supported by highly capable colleagues. Foremost among them was American baritone Alan Titus, the intense, booming Jochanaan. Chris Merritt, a lyric tenor with a background in Rossini operas, made an unexpectedly great Herodes, bringing out his character’s buffoonery and perversion with occasional Italianate embellishments. As his cutthroat wife Herodias, Hanna Schwarz sang like an avenging fury. Clemens Bieber — a DOB ensemble member — was a sympathetic and convincing Narraboth, declaiming his soaring, urgent lines with both finesse and an appealing ruggedness. The remaining roles were perfectly cast, from the Page of Julia Benzinger on down to the two Nazarenes.

The staging was as baffling as it was entrancing. The set appeared to have materialized out of a David Lynch dream sequence and resembled some kind of industrial carnival funhouse, with its numbered yellow factory doors and circus-like stage area. Much of the acting consisted of heightened, repeated gestures that took on a ritualistic aspect. This was complemented by the extremely clownish Expressionist makeup. The costumes were likewise irreverent and colorful, consisting of hand-drawn pinstriped suits and incorporating a childish variety of props, such as balloons for breasts, funnels and sand buckets for hats. One of the best touches was to number each of the Jews “1″ through “5.” All this added a magical, nursery-like feel to the narrative. The one misstep was an underwhelming dance of the seven veils, which was so confused and pedestrian that one wondered whether Freyer meant it as a comment on the evidently weaker quality of that music in comparison to the rest of the score.

At the helm of the massive orchestral force was Ulf Schirmer, whose account of the score mounted steadily in intensity, from the opening clarinet scale to the bone-crushing chords that describe Salome’s execution. In between, he was sensitive to the profusion of motifs and the score’s shimmering, exotic detail.

IN REVIEW
BERLIN — Der Rosenkavalier, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, 2/21/09

The image “http://data.heimat.de/culturebase/media/pics/4/b/d/6/7/ec_67268_4bd672685957f066f07c1fdc55f92d6d.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.


With an extensive Strauss celebration underway at Deutsche Oper Berlin, Staatsoper unter den Linden got in on the action in February with a sumptuously sung revival of Nicolas Brieger’s production of Der Rosenkavalier, conducted by Asher Fisch (seen Feb. 21).

The most compelling reason to see this revival was the role debut of Magdalena Kožená as Octavian. This is a character that fits the Czech mezzo like a glove: her performance was an all-around revelation. She delivered her opening lines, “Wie du warst, wie du bist!” in soft, luminous notes of heartbreaking beauty. She matched the impassioned horns effortlessly, which is no small feat. Her richly textured voice communicated a dramatic range from ardor to impetuousness to despair and devotion. Every phrase was carefully thought out, with an exciting deployment of rubato providing added force to the fluency of her singing, which was free of any breaks or gasps for air. This revival also capitalized on the androgynous aspect of Kožená’s beauty, which only added to the completeness of the incarnation.

Every bit as assured was the Marschallin of Angela Denoke, whose tragically noble performance reminded us that Princess Marie Thérèse is the most complex character in the opera. Denoke was here both more aristocratic and more nuanced than in her 2005 Rosenkavalier appearances at the Met, which marked her debut with that company. A pitch-perfect companion to Kozená, Denoke wavered between the earthy and the ethereal, placing equal value on the mellifluous and dramatic aspects of her performance. Her full yet silky voice contained both laughter and repressed sorrow.

Bass Peter Rose, another Met veteran, was vocally persuasive and perversely charming as Baron Ochs. He switched effortlessly among the duets, waltzes and arioso that this difficult character is required to pull off. All in all, he was so rudely charming that he threatened to tip the opera in his favor.

Sylvia Schwartz suffered from a problem common to most Sophies — being upstaged by the titanic forces of her costars. Her light, pretty voice was far from slight, but it was still obscured in her Act II duet with Octavian and in the transcendent Act III trio.

The supporting roles were judiciously cast, with Paul O’Neill making a memorable impression as the Italian Tenor. Curiously, O’Neill came out in a wheelchair to sing “Di rigori armato” with requisite lyricism and fervor that won him peals of spontaneous applause.

The audience was less kind to conductor Asher Fisch, who took his bow amid persistent boos. Apparently, Berlin felt cheated by a performance that consciously sacrificed much of the work’s Viennese elegance for a courser, darker interpretation. From the weighty, muscular tempo of the opening bars and the lusty strings and winds somewhat obscured by the horns, it was clear that Fisch was intent on taking things in a different direction.

Brieger’s elegant production matched the refinement and taste on display in the singing. The direct, striking design brought to mind both Ruth Berghaus and Gilbert Defloe. The versatile horseshoe-shaped set morphed ingeniously from the decaying elegance of the Marschallin’s bedroom to the bourgeois trappings of the Faninal residence to the seedy inn of the closing act. The only false note the production struck was in the jumbled chaos of the Baron’s aborted seduction.

A. J. GOLDMANN

IN REVIEW
BERLIN — Faust, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, 2/22/09


The image “http://www.klassikinfo.de/typo3temp/pics/59362e5319.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

I am forever being told by veteran opera-lovers, “They don’t sing like they used to.” Perhaps this explains why certain works in the repertoire have lost their places of prominence or have been eliminated altogether: we simply no longer have the voices required to do them justice. Gounod’s Faust is hardly an obscure work, but the rate at which it is staged today is paltry when compared to the popularity it enjoyed before World War II. So it was thrilling (and transporting) to see a Faust at the Berlin Staatsoper unter den Linden so expertly sung that one understood the seductive spell it cast over audiences in the nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries (seen Feb. 22).

For its new production, the Staatsoper enlisted the talents of superb singers whose bravura performances cut through the dimmer inspirations of director Karsten Wiegand’s uneven staging.

Before the curtain went up, an announcement was made that two cast members, Charles Castronovo, the Faust, and Roman Trekel, the Valentin, would be singing despite colds. If anything, this inauspicious news only made the ensuing three and a half hours more impressive and thrilling. Castronovo, a New York-born lyric tenor, was somewhat throaty in the opening scene, with hesitant low notes. He was a bit off in the reprise of “A moi les plaisirs” with the devil, but he warmed up quickly. Before long, he was singing with heroic and darkly lacquered tones. He gasped certain phrases out suspensefully and projected others with an otherworldly quiver.

The sublime Russian soprano Marina Poplavskaya, best known to New York audiences for her performance as Natasha in the 2007 Met revival of Prokofiev’s War and Peace, was cast in the punishing role of Marguerite: she sang with fierce determination and unrelenting brazenness. It was a sensational performance, but one also worried about the toll that singing like that might take on the young soprano’s voice. She delivered an expressive and bouncy “Il était un roi de Thule” in a clear, restrained manner, then made a fluid transition to a wildly coquettish “Je ris de me voir si belle,” with delicious coloratura technique and an abundance of expressive muscle. It was but one climax in a performance with too many to highlights to enumerate.

As Méphistophélès, Réne Pape was — forgive the sacrilegious locution — absolutely godlike. He snickered and jeered though this wonderfully wicked role and let his character’s evil seep through most effectively in the quieter moments. His voice sounded effortlessly big, smoothly seductive and appropriately serpentine.

Despite his cold, Trekel struck the right tone as Valentin, his complex, robust voice communicating his character’s brotherly concern — as in his deeply felt “Avant de quitter ces lieux” — but also encompassing the rage and venom of Act IV. Silvia de la Muela sang Siébel with appropriate ardor and conviction.

Wiegand, a young German stage director who made his debut at the Staatsoper in 2006 with Maria Stuarda, provided an infuriatingly garish and amateurish Act I, setting the action at a raucous casino/house party. The noisy thrashing around brought to mind the rave that Calixto Bieito choreographed for his atrocious 2006 production of Wozzeck in Barcelona.

The casino set was moved away for Act II, which unfolded on a bare stage surrounded by silver-leafed walls — minimal yet all-around exquisite setting for this act that made the work uncommonly fluid by eliminating the need for clunky transitions between various set pieces. During Marguerite’s ascension, the walls lifted majestically to reveal the chorus seated at a heavenly banquet attired in tuxedos and cocktail dresses.

The stomach-churning touches of Wiegand’s production — Marguerite dashed her newborn’s brains against the wall and, in the end, slashed her own throat with a brooch — provided a jolting dose of realism to the otherwise abstract staging.

The version used for this production made the traditional cuts of the ballet and the Walpurgisnacht scene but included sporadic dialogue. Alain Altinoglu’s conducting was sweeping and sensitive. He made some daring decisions, slowing down to an almost dangerous level during the more introspective arias and favoring an all-around expansive approach that added an extra twenty minutes to the show’s running time. But then again, it’s hard to have too much of a good thing.

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 14:20:37 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Long Night of Opera and Theater

In a city that seems to have little use for realistic thinking, the first ever “Long Night of Opera and Theater”(Lange Nacht der Opern und Theater) that sprawled across the capital between the hours of 7 p.m. and 1 a.m. last night typified the manic energy that drives Berlin’s brilliant cultural scene.

In all 51 institutions participated in the marathon-like event, presenting full and truncated programs that ranged from African drumming to Verdi and Mozart to cabaret to political satire to clubbing.

(Below: A map of participating venues and how to get there)

Tickets for the evening were a meager 15 Euros, which included transportation via a fleet of shuttle buses that zipped from north to south and east to west - and were consistantly packed all evening long.

I began my evening at the Staatsoper unter den Linden (see image below), where crowds a thousand strong were waiting to see a program of excerpts from the Magic Flute (Zauberflöte) that was performed on the hour. The crowds and queues I encountered at the Staatsoper were harbingers of things to come: the staggering turn-out made this particular “Long Night” a logistical nightmare.

By dint of pure luck, I managed to talk my way into the first tier of the theater, where I stood and enjoyed an obstructed view of the performance - though, in truth, I was more interested in observing the enthusiastic audience and the thunderous applause they gave to Papageno and the Queen of the Night.

Afterwards, I walked to the nearby Komische Oper, where that evening’s performance of Traviata was being projected outside for the benefit of a crowd fressing themselves with Bratwurst and pretzels in the soothing spring evening.


The mob in front of the KOB was even more impressive than at the Staatsoper. No one seemed to have much of an idea of what was in store for them. This turned out to be a selection of Verdi marches and arias performed in the foyer by a “Salon Orchestra” and KOB ensemble members.

The salon orchestra “Illusion” plays a light Verdi medley


Soprano Erika Roos sings “Merche diletta amiche”from I Vespri Siciliani

Meanwhile, in the baroque opera house itself, a baffling DJ set / lightshow was taking place. Most seemed as confused as I was by DJ Jürgen Grözinger, who was spinning opera LPs while drenched in a blue light.

After an ill-fated attempt at seeing a Bulgakov play at the Maxim-Gorki theater, I sallied forth to the Admiralspalast for a preview of the German version of Mel Brooks’ musical “The Producers,” which makes its début at that theater in mid-May.

It is forbidden by German law to display Nazi insignias anywhere outside of an educational or dramatic setting. Unfortunately, there’s no dispensation for satire, which means no swastika armbands or dancing in formation during the classic “Springtime for Hitler” number. In place of swastikas the actors wear red-black-and-white armbands with pretzels on them.

(Below: girls in the theater lobby in stereotypical German dress promote “The Producers”)

The program at the Admiralspalast kicked off with an effectively schmaltzy band that performed a “Berlin Revue” that included a suitably nostalgic and mushy performance of “Du gehst durch all meine Träume.”

1941’s “Du gehst durch all meine Träume”at the Admiralspalast

The principle cast members of “The Producers” were introduced and performed some scenes of dialogue and music from the show. Cornelius Obonya uncannily channeled Nathan Lane as Max Bialystock. Andreas Bieber made a less winning impression with his annoyingly whiny Leo Bloom. Herbert Steinböck made Franz Liebkin into a lovable (psychotic) dope and had the audience in stiches during some Chaplinesque double talk (Hear audio excerpt below). And Bettina Mönch was a delightful ditz as the Swedish bombshell Ulla.

Audio except of a scene from the Berlin production of”The Producers”

Ulla (Bettina Mönch) sings “When You’ve Got It, Flaunt It”

Max (Cornelius Obonya) and Leo (Andreas Bieber) sing “We Can Do It”

Next door to the Admiralspalast is the Kabaret Distel, which performs political satire (get those images of Joel Grey out of your head). On exiting the Producers preview, I somehow got swept into the Distel’s performance of “Jenseits von Angela” (a none-too-clever pun on the German title of Isaak Dinesen’s memoir), which - judging from the audience’s reactions - must have been wickedly funny, though I understood precious little aside from easy puns and slapstick.

(Below: The Distel Kabaret)

At the beginning of the evening, six hours had sounded to me far too short a time period to enjoy such a cultural smörgåsbord (those accent marks are courtesy of spell check, not me!). With the evening nearly at an end (it was close to one a.m.) I was starting to get exhausted. Still, I felt I should milk the evening for all it was worth and, so, found myself at 12:50 riding the last shuttle bus #5 into Tiergarten - Berlin’s central park - to the famed Tipi der Zelt. Tipi is a throwback to the good old days of Berlin nightclub culture. In a city that is very suspect of nostalgia, the roaring 20s is practically the only epoch of the 20th century that people continue to romanticize. (Is there really much else to be proud of?)

I arrived just in time to catch the final number in a colorful and campy drag show: an irreverent and batty conclusion to my very full evening.

(Below: drag show at Tipi der Zelt)

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 16:27:54 | Permalink | No Comments »

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

The End of Amato

I awoke this morning to the news that the Amato Opera, the longtime bargain basement opera company on the Bowery was closing at the end of the season. My chagrin, however, was tempered by finding out that the decision to close had come from Anthony Amato, the company’s 88-year old director, who founded the opera 61 years ago with his late wife Sally. The decision was not made as consequence of the financial fiasco, though my eyes flashed with this fear when I saw the news item posted on NYtimes.com (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/13/arts/music/13amat.html?hp).

Personally, I managed to attend exactly one performance of the Amato company. About 7 years ago, on a whim, I decided to try for student tickets to a Sunday matinée performance. I remember that the performance was sold-out as usual (there was always a years-long waitlist to become a subscriber), but I managed to get a return. The work was Giordano’s Andrea Chenier, which Tony Amato conducted from a pit the size of my closet with a pianist, violinist and trumpet-player (or was it a horn?) tightly compacted, yet still capable of following their scores. The stage was large enough to fit three or four singers at a time - the stars were amateur performers and students, and hearing grand opera in an enclosed space barely larger than a living room had its acoustic advantages and pitfalls: amplifying, as it did, all the beauties and imperfections of the cast. At intermission, the sold-out audience spilled out onto the Bowery, chatting and comparing note in excited tones. I got roped into several conversations. That’s how it was - the place just provoked familiarity and openness among the audience members. I remember in the second act, Robespierre’s Reign of Terror was depicted by severed doll’s heads skewered on top of broomsticks.

But as comical as the primitive stagecraft could be, there was also a certain honesty to it all that I’ve rarely encountered at the opera. In the mid- to late- 20th century, opera as an artform was widely believed to be either dead or moribund. During its six decades of life, the Amato’s repertoire grew to 60 operas, showed us opera being tended to and kept alive by real people, people who cared deeply about and needed opera as much as it needed them. The Amato, and what it stood for, will be sorely missed.

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 09:33:55 | Permalink | No Comments »

Monday, January 12, 2009

Gallardo-Domas and Shicoff Unite in Manon; Freyer Befuddles with Onegin

Reviews originally published at Operanews.com

 
Manon Lescaut
BERLIN — Manon Lescaut, Deutsche Oper Berlin, 10/22/08


In the two months since the Berlin opera season got underway, there has been only a modest showing of big international names: Berlin’s three opera houses seem to be relying more than usual on their ensemble members. Still, there has been some star power in evidence here: the most impressive coupling so far has been Neil Shicoff and Cristina Gallardo-Domâs, who sang in Deutsche Oper Berlin’s four-performance revival of Gilbert Deflo’s 2004 production of Puccini’s Manon Lescaut (seen October 22).

Deflo’s staging is an odd mix of historical accuracy and minimalism: much of the visual excitement comes courtesy of costume designer William Orlandi (also responsible for the sets). In particular, the eighteenth-century wardrobe of the debauched aristocracy — including the opera’s antagonist, Geronte — is straight out of Laclos or Sade: the representatives of the ancien régime are represented as a bunch of lecherous clowns with poodle wigs and painted faces. Among the highlights of this production is the beautiful and macabre procession of fallen women in Act III; equally striking is the desert that becomes both Manon and des Grieux’s tomb, here represented by a small cluster of red rocks in the middle of a white expanse.

But as is the case in any revival of a popular work, the main issue here was the singing. Gallardo-Domâs and Shicoff had dynamic onstage chemistry and provided most of the evening’s vocal fireworks. Gallardo-Domâs, the Chilean soprano known for her portrayals of Puccini’s heroines, gave a wrenching performance every bit as compelling as her star turn in Anthony Minghella’s 2006 production of Madama Butterfly at the Metropolitan Opera. Her idiosyncratic, distinctive voice takes some getting used to, but here it served her well. Aside from a few outbursts that were too big, her singing seemed effortlessly supple. At times her quivery, emotion-tinged singing had a pop quality, but she managed to curb her more diva-like tendencies: her opening aria, “Vedete, io son fedele” sounded both noble and vulnerable.

Her des Grieux did not make such a striking first impression. Now fifty-nine years old, Shicoff showed his age, even more so alongside the wonderful (and young) tenor Michael Spyres, who was singing Edmondo. Shicoff is still capable of producing a beautiful tone, but his voice has lost some of its former agility: there was a labored quality to Act I’s “Tra voi, belle,” and the orchestra sometimes swallowed him whole. Early in the performance, Shicoff’s transitions between registers were uneasy, and he landed some high notes weakly. While Gallardo-Domâs tore through passages with near-reckless abandon, Shicoff seemed keen to slow things down, taking his arias with graceful maturity.

Over the course of the evening, however, Shicoff achieved parity with his costar. By Act III he sounded every bit as impassioned in his lyric urgency as in his famed accounts of Don José and Lenski. Both artists delivered a shattering Act IV that combined remarkably brazen singing with convincing acting: Gallardo-Domâs forced high notes out almost defiantly as she sputtered to her death.

Massimo Cavalletti was a smoothly powerful Lescaut; Stephen Bronk brought a wonderfully villainous tinge to the cunning Geronte de Ravoir.

In the pit, Patrik Ringborg led a spirited — if at times oversaturated — account of Puccini’s first popular score. The famous Act III intermezzo was especially accomplished in its balanced lushness.

A. J. GOLDMANN

BERLIN — Eugene Onegin, Staatsoper unter den Linden, 9/27/08

 
Freyer’s Staatsoper Berlin Onegin, with Villazón, Rügamer and Samuil
© Monika Rittershaus 2008
 
   

December  2008 , vol 73 , no.6


Expectations ran high for the first new production of the season at Staatsoper unter den Linden — Tchaikovsky’s beloved Eugene Onegin, directed and designed by Achim Freyer and conducted by Daniel Barenboim (seen Sept. 27). Freyer, a Berlin native, is one of modern Germany’s most respected stage artists: perhaps best known in the U.S. for his Stuttgart stagings of the Philip Glass operas Satyagraha, Akhnaten and Einstein on the Beach in the 1980s, Freyer will take on the company premiere of Wagner’s Ring for Los Angeles Opera, beginning with Das Rheingold in February 2009. The Freyer Onegin was a collaborative effort by members of the Freyer Ensemble, the director’s workshop, which includes singers, dancers, acrobats, artists and directors. Freyer, who will turn seventy-five next year, was a student of Bertolt Brecht; his Onegin was in many ways a Brechtian take on commedia dell’arte — as if Jean Cocteau and Robert Wilson were to channel the spirit of Edward Gorey.

Absurd, abstract and occasionally beautiful, this production had some good ideas, but not nearly enough to sustain the entire evening. Most of the principal cast was onstage constantly, moving like zombies in clown-like makeup that matched the black-and-white color scheme. The only bursts of color came from garish neon lighting, most memorably for a macabre (and confusing) tableau that reappeared at climactic moments. Working with few props (mostly chairs), the actors pantomimed or performed intricate, ritualistic gestures, sometimes exiting and reentering in the middle of their scenes. It was oddly compelling in some places, irritating in others. After the famous Act I letter scene, someone shouted out from the balcony “Can we have a little action please? This is a drag,” which prompted a minute’s worth of chuckles, rebukes and whispers of agreement before the performance could continue.

Odd as the production was, it was also visually arresting: if it did not provide the optimal setting for Staatsoper’s impressive lineup of vocal talent, it established with integrity a striking — and not overly distracting — mise en scène. For the leads, Staatsoper opted to showcase three of its local favorites and import another star of international caliber. The evening’s Tatiana was Anna Samuil, the young Russian soprano who has been a soloist with the company since the 2004–05 season; she previously sang the role under Barenboim’s direction at the 2007 Salzburg Festival (see Video, p. 72). Samuil lent human warmth to a highly intellectual — one might say chilly — staging. Hers is a powerful, textured voice that evidently can’t really be molded into sounding delicate or youthful: her vibrato-heavy, urgent sound wreaks havoc with quiet, meditative moments. She took the letter scene slowly, her performance restrained and — in spots — even leisurely; when needed, she sounded brazen and heroic but also a little fierce. These qualities served her well in the final duet, in which Tatiana spurns the remorseful Onegin. Samuil’s Onegin was Staatsoper regular Roman Trekel, whose costume and stylized movements made him look like a marionette butler. He sang and acted a solid and occasionally sinister account of Tchaikovsky’s anti-hero, despite some muffled-sounding crooning in the lower part of his range.

Rolando Villazón provided world-class glamour and first-rate singing as the doomed Lenski. Like those of the rest of the cast, Villazón’s movements were severely constrained by the tight choreography, but the tenor acted so convincingly with his voice that it hardly mattered. In his early scenes with Olga, Villazón brimmed with youthful ardor; his fit of jealousy at Tatiana’s name-day party was white-hot and agonized. He capped his performance with an intensely delivered, unforgettable “Kuda, kuda, kuda vi udalilis.” As befitted the somewhat impenetrable logic of this production, Lenski walked around the stage long after his death: Villazón resembled not so much a ghost as a haunted puppet.

In a tall top hat and seriously exaggerated moustache, the luxuriously cast René Pape — a Staatsoper regular since 1988 — was completely unrecognizable as Prince Gremin. Only when he opened his mouth could one identify him by his unmistakably sonorous, mellow voice, here put to magnificent use in Gremin’s one brief scene.

In other roles, Maria Gortsevskaya, a Russian mezzo with a husky voice, made a feisty, sensual Olga. Margarita Nekrasova was affecting as Tatiana’s nurse, Filippyevna. Katharina Kammerloher’s sympathetic Larina rounded out the female cast nicely. The Triquet of Stephan Rügamer was light, breezy and utterly at home in this storybook world of puppets and pantomime.

Barenboim and the Staatskapelle gave a lushly Romantic account of the score, making it sound by turns majestic, tragic and pompous. Lenski and Onegin’s entrance, marked by a downward flight of notes in the cellos and double basses, was especially furious; the opening of the third scene, with its sustained horns and darting strings, was slowed to a near-amble. The sizable chorus sang from the back of the stage, while the principals posed and the Freyer Ensemble cavorted.

A. J. GOLDMANN

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 09:43:22 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

BERLIN — Don Giovanni, Staatsoper Unter den Linden, 12/15/07

This review appeared in the March issue of Opera News Magazine. You can follow the original link here:

 

Why was the Don Giovanni unveiled in mid-December at Staatsoper Unter den Linden — conducted by Daniel Barenboim with the commanding René Pape in the title role — such a bore? An insipid, dull staging by the house’s artistic director, Peter Mussbach, shared the blame with Barenboim’s slow, ponderous conducting, which made for a fussy, airless performance (seen Dec. 15).

Mussbach’s abstract production, a coproduction with La Scala, was met with boos. While Mussbach’s uninspired visuals — a one-dimensional set consisting of two black partitions that opened, closed and rotated to facilitate entrances and exits — indicated a lack of ideas, Barenboim seemed to have far too many up his sleeve: he tried his damnedest to bring out different qualities in the music, aria by aria and ensemble by ensemble, at the expense of presenting the work as any kind of organic whole.

Things got off to a promising start with an expansive overture. The trouble started when the curtain rose on Leporello (Hanno Müller-Brachmann), who garbled words and even cracked a little in his “Notte e giorno faticar,” followed by a trio with audibly out-of-sync principals. Müller-Brachmann improved greatly in time for the catalogue aria. Luckily, given the languid pace of Barenboim’s conducting, the bass-baritone was prepared to meet the challenge of the long, slow crescendo that brought the number to a close.

René Pape sang majestically. His champagne aria was brazen, robust, dramatically and vocally assured. His effortlessly expansive voice, with its great tonal and expressive range, is reminiscent at moments of Fischer-Dieskau in its soft and creamy character. Even Pape’s whispers were musical. One of the best moments came when, under the cloak of night, master and servant swapped costumes. One of the opera’s most implausible episodes was here made believable, thanks to the marvelous impersonations Pape and Müller-Brachmann did of one another.

Even with the luxurious musical pacing, the Donna Anna of Anna Samuil was too legato and too weighty: all evening long, she channeled Wagnerian pomp into an otherwise technically accomplished performance. The Elvira of Annette Dasch came zipping in on a white Vespa, with a matching umbrella. With Barenboim’s slowed-down tempo, her lyrical “Ah! chi mi dice mai” was more suited to a weepy Puccini heroine than to a vengeful opera-seria character, although “Ah, fuggi il traditor” was marked by welcome refinement and crispness. In Act II, she sang an impassioned “Mi tradì” while completely prone. Her performance was earthy, visceral and riveting, though certainly not to all tastes.

Despite his vampire-ish costume, Pavol Breslik made a fiercely magnetic Ottavio. His controlled, rapturous “Dalla sua pace” was the highlight of a long Act I. The Masetto of Arttu Kataja was a spiky-haired kid who made his entrance playing air-guitar. During “Batti, batti,” he flirted with some bridesmaids. Sylvia Schwartz was a suitably petite and coquettish Zerlina. Her voice was supple if somewhat rough around the edges. While her singing was tentative in “Là ci darem la mano,” she made up for it later by skillfully ornamenting her “Vedrai, carino.” Christof Fischesser was a booming Commendatore, but the silver body-paint he was lacquered with made him look like the Tin Man — an unintended touch of comedy in a long, humorless evening.

A.J. GOLDMANN

Posted by A.J. Goldmann at 10:54:08 | Permalink | No Comments »