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?
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
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
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
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…
A profile of the star tenor about to make his debut with Opera Australia in August.
Inventive production polishes up a lost 20th century operatic gem.
Richard Jones’s much debated production of Strauss’s masterpiece is free to watch online. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Gounod’s Faust is the sort of opera that gives the genre a bad name. Its libretto is based on a play that takes Part 1 of Goethe’s original mystical morality tale and encrusts it with dowdy Victoriana and shifts the focus to the tortures inflicted on poor Marguerite whose eventual redemption hardly seems a fair consolation in today’s secular world; the lovely music coats a bitter pill that takes quite an effort to swallow. Des McAnuff’s production attempts to restore some of the original’s dramatic gravitas by shifting the opening scene to the Los Alamos laboratories with Faust as a tortured atomic scientist. The arresting imagery during the overture gave an initial frisson so I looked forward to further clever analogies but apart from the obvious effects during the Walpurgisnacht they failed to materialise so the concept proved to be only half-baked. There were other fine visual moments such as the giant project images of Marguerite’s face but the unit set of Faust’s laboratory didn’t seem to be used to its full potential and my attention wandered. Musically however, one couldn’t ask for more with a splendid cast of singing actors doing their best to sell the piece. Kaufmann is…
Across the whole collection we hear Te Kanawa’s sweet and creamy tone and her famed ability to bring her characters to life
Composers, philanthropists and an opera singer head arts awards in Queen’s Birthday Honours. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Name and shame website aims to lift the lid on who pays their artists what.