Desperately seeking Salieri
History rapidly forgot him and 'Amadeus' sought to paint him black but who was this much-maligned composer?
History rapidly forgot him and 'Amadeus' sought to paint him black but who was this much-maligned composer?
Tognetti and co offer a bold and confident delivery of an ambitious program.
Opera house orchestra releases report asserting General Manager’s “lavish spending on unpopular productions”. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
American actor to portray operatic legend in film of Terrence McNally’s Master Class. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
The sounds of the Bard; Karajan 25 years on; Indigenous uprising goes choral; Mussorgsky’s musical gallery. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Peter Gelb backs down on global showing of John Adams’ The Death of Klinghoffer. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
The ACO perform two iconic symphonies for the first time, welcome an American soprano and debut a new instrument. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Warmth, suppleness and even playfulness abound as Ax and Robertson continues their exemplary cycle. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Queen looks likely to choose first ever woman in a role that has been filled by men for 400 years. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
A completely digital orchestra at the Hartford Wagner Festival has triggered a fierce debate. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Two short films chronicling Gould's life and music free to watch online.
Handel’s Tamerlano, written for the Royal Academy in 1724, is something of a secret pleasure for fans of 18th-century Italian opera. Lacking the magical stage machinery of the likes of Rinaldo, and with a low quotient of showcase arias to tickle the sensation seeker’s ear, it nevertheless has a claim to greatness. Why? It has one of the composer’s most grimly determined plots and a set of characters upon which Handel lavishes his utmost psychological insight. In 1402, the Mongol herdsman Timur defeated his enemy, the Turkish sultan Bayezid, who history relates he had carted around in a cage for months afterwards. In the opera, the wicked (i.e. Eastern) tyrant Tamerlano has designs on Bajazet’s daughter, Asteria, and sends his ally, the Greek (hence noble) Andronico to convey his desires to the maiden and her vengeful father. Unbeknownst to Tamerlano, Andronico is himself in love with Asteria and from these complications a tense, potentially bloody political opera ensues. Handel wrote the work at speed, as was his wont, but revised it at his leisure on more than one occasion in order to create as tight a musical drama as he was capable of. It culminates in a thrilling scene of…
How good it is to have such excellent accounts of two major works for voice and orchestra by Holst. The first, dating from 1904 (and revised eight years later) is The Mystic Trumpeter, a setting of Walt Whitman featuring a soprano solo, and the second is the First Choral Symphony, a four-movement work with texts by Keats for soprano, chorus and orchestra. This recording might have come to light some years ago were it not for the untimely death of Richard Hickox in 2008, who passed away just as the project was beginning. Andrew Davis has more than ably assumed Hickox’s mantle and with Susan Gritton (who had begun work with the late conductor) he invests these works with all the colour and drama they demand. In The Mystic Trumpeter the overtly musical references of Whitman’s text help give shape and coherence to Holst’s musical language, allowing the composer to distance himself further from the Wagnerian idioms of which he was overly fond and edge closer to a unique personal style. The varied and often delicate nature of the orchestration allows a clear and effective presentation of Whitman’s paean to love, freedom and joy. Lasting just under 20 minutes, the…