Main Page | Report this Page
 
   
Hobby Forum Index  »  Music - Opera  »  Something borrowed, something blue...
Page 1 of 1    
Author Message
Stephen Jay-Taylor...
Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 7:56 pm
Guest
In the former category, Met regulars might like to know a bit about two of
the new productions heading their way next season. The "La rondine" is
ours - ie. Covent Garden's - and very handsome too, with an amazing art deco
stained-glass
set, and very classy singers, though last time round we had Jonas Kaufmann
rather than Lasagna. The role of Magda suits Morticia to perfection. Pity
about
the opera......

The "Damnation de Faust" is a restaging of LePage's Opéra de Bastille
original that I saw there five years ago with Sabbatini, van Dam and
Larmore, and is easily one of the half-dozen or so greatest stagings I've
ever been lucky enough to see live, tirelessly inventive, invariably
apropos, utterly spectacular yet fundamentally simple, and with an
unobtrusively brilliant use of multiple video screens. Wait until you see
the retreating soldiers walk straight up a stage-filling vertical map of old
Nuremburg into the flies, or the whole of Luther's drunken cellar-full
appear from absolutely nowhere. And the Ride to the Abyss is unbelievably
effective as horses gallop across the screens in silhouette. And you won't
have to put up with Ozawa's conducting, or the orchestra's slapdash playing,
or the Bastille's grim acoustics....


As for the "something blue" see this, and marvel at European manners.....

http://youtube.com/watch?v=IB9z2R34a5g&feature=related

It's available commercially on Dynamic DVD. You should see the Act II
set.....

SJT, whose freeze-frame's fair worn out....
premiereopera at (no spam) aol.com...
Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 7:56 pm
Guest
On Jul 14, 8:56 pm, "Stephen Jay-Taylor" <sjaytay... at (no spam) btinternet.com>
wrote:
Quote:
In the former category, Met regulars might like to know a bit about two of
the new productions heading their way next season. The "La rondine" is
ours - ie. Covent Garden's - and very handsome too, with an amazing art deco
stained-glass
set, and very classy singers, though last time round we had Jonas Kaufmann
rather than Lasagna. The role of Magda suits Morticia to perfection. Pity
about
the opera......

The "Damnation de Faust" is a restaging of LePage's Opéra de Bastille
original that I saw there five years ago with Sabbatini, van Dam and
Larmore, and is easily one of the half-dozen or so greatest stagings I've
ever been lucky enough to see live, tirelessly inventive, invariably
apropos, utterly spectacular yet fundamentally simple, and with an
unobtrusively brilliant use of multiple video screens. Wait until you see
the retreating soldiers walk straight up a stage-filling vertical map of old
Nuremburg  into the flies, or the whole of Luther's drunken cellar-full
appear from absolutely nowhere. And the Ride to the Abyss is unbelievably
effective as horses gallop across the screens in silhouette. And you won't
have to put up with Ozawa's conducting, or the orchestra's slapdash playing,
or the Bastille's grim acoustics....

As for the "something blue" see this, and marvel at European manners.....

http://youtube.com/watch?v=IB9z2R34a5g&feature=related

It's available commercially on Dynamic DVD. You should see the Act II
set.....

SJT, whose freeze-frame's fair worn out....

I do believe your post shocked this ng into observing over a two hour
silence, which will now continue after this post!!!

Ed
Stephen Jay-Taylor...
Posted: Tue Jul 15, 2008 8:29 pm
Guest
Well, on the offchance of shocking them back out of it, herewith the Act II
set :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCe4X4iadbk

It's all looking rather, er, cut off, which may account for the
singing..........

This staging was created by the man who used to design Sutherland's stage
frocks. 'Nuff said..

SJT, who's heard of chopped noodles, but this is ridiculous.
AlisonC...
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 5:15 am
Guest
On Jul 16, 2:29 am, "Stephen Jay-Taylor" <sjaytay... at (no spam) btinternet.com>
wrote:
Quote:
Well, on the offchance of shocking them back out of it, herewith the Act II
set :

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCe4X4iadbk

It's all looking rather, er, cut off, which may account for the
singing..........

This staging was created by the man who used to design Sutherland's stage
frocks. 'Nuff said..

SJT, who's heard of chopped noodles, but this is ridiculous.

Hurrah, the Damnation of Faust. Any rumours about casting?

The casting might be critical for the Vivaldi as well. It's not every
tenor one would want to see in that outfit.
AlisonC...
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 5:17 am
Guest
Mind you I don't know why I'm getting so excited as it's at the Met -
except that it might get beamed to the local fleapit.
Stephen Jay-Taylor...
Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 7:14 pm
Guest
"it might get beamed to the local fleapit." AC ( hello, AC !! )

November 22nd at 6 p.m. My advice : go to the Barbican Cinema for it.
Fabulous sound system, seating so steeply raked you don't know there's
anyone in front of you, tremendously "live" atmosphere, and the buggers
don't even sell popcorn or anything rustly by way of distraction....

For the whole season - here in Europe minus, for no very evident reason,
Fleming's gala opener, see this :
http://www.metoperafamily.org/metopera/broadcast/hd_events_next.aspx

I believe Messrs Botha and Heppner are both contemplating the Vivaldi.....

SJT, who also looks good in a lionskin, albeit from the inside...
 
Page 1 of 1       All times are GMT - 5 Hours
The time now is Fri Aug 29, 2008 10:04 pm