WNO
La Bohème, Welsh National OperaSaturday, 02 June 2012Of all Romantic operas, La Bohème is perhaps the one that responds best to what one might, for want of a better phrase, call straight theatrical treatment. It’s pure genre: no hidden meanings, no contemporary significance. “Scenes from the life”, as... Read more... |
Tristan und Isolde, Welsh National OperaSunday, 20 May 2012Welsh National Opera has a good track record with Wagner. Its Meistersinger of two summers ago is already the stuff of legend (and alas not likely to return to reality); farther back one recalls a more than respectable Parsifal, a notable Ring cycle... Read more... |
Beatrice and Benedict, Welsh National OperaSaturday, 18 February 2012Such a pity about Beatrice and Benedict! As a musical visualiser, a creator of musical tableaux, a radio composer avant la lettre, Berlioz had few equals. The Damnation of Faust is surely the greatest radio opera ever written. But for some reason he... Read more... |
La Traviata, Welsh National OperaSunday, 12 February 2012Famously, at its Venice premiere in 1853, La traviata had trouble with the censor, not only over the salty innuendos of the plot, but over the simple fact that it was set in the present day and in contemporary costume. A rule like that would finish... Read more... |
Regional Opera, 2012 SeasonThursday, 12 January 2012Popular operatic love stories by Puccini, Wagner and Mozart dominate the regional scene in 2012, but key talents like producer Tim Albery in Leeds, Lothar Koenigs in Cardiff and David McVicar in Glasgow all promise significant stage experiences.... Read more... |
2011: Welsh Warblers and Wagner Gone WestThursday, 29 December 2011Living and working 150 miles from London, one either clutches at local straws or gets on a train. I’ve done both in 2011, as usual, but in a way the local is more stimulating, not because it’s better (ha!) but because there’s so much less of it.... Read more... |
WNO Orchestra, Koenigs, St David's Hall, CardiffSaturday, 29 October 2011“Blessed are the dead”, sings Brahms in the final movement of his German Requiem. And as far as the rest of this concert was concerned it was perhaps just as well. In Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder, the children are all dead; and in Schoenberg’s... Read more... |
Katya Kabanova, Welsh National OperaSaturday, 08 October 2011Katie Mitchell’s production of what many regard as Janáček’s greatest opera began life 10 years ago on the stage of Cardiff’s New Theatre; and there are times in this revival when you feel its director Robin Tebbutt’s yearning to be back in that... Read more... |
Madam Butterfly, Mid Wales OperaSaturday, 24 September 2011There are several types of garden opera, and there are also, happily, several types of cinema opera. You can rustle your Werthers through a relay from the Met and endure the touchy-feely interviews with panting mega-sopranos just out of Verdi’s “... Read more... |
Don Giovanni, Welsh National OperaSaturday, 17 September 2011After a summer of operas set in what might tactfully be called fancy locations, it comes as a mild shock to return to Wales and a Don Giovanni that actually takes the composer’s instructions as its starting-point. John Caird, whose first ever... Read more... |
The Sleeper, Welsh National Youth Opera, CardiffFriday, 15 July 2011“These premises have 24-hour security surveillance,” reads one of the notices on the wall as we audience traipsed round the outside of Cardiff’s Coal Exchange between stages of this mobile production of Stephen Deazley’s new opera about people who... Read more... |
Turandot, Welsh National Opera, CardiffSunday, 29 May 2011No point in going to WNO’s Turandot expecting to see images of old Beijing, for all the charming lady in a Chinese floral hat on the programme cover. The curtain goes up on the inside of an enormous galvanised dustbin festooned with photos of what... Read more... |