Your chance to critique the critic!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4EpuMT2-Eyk&feature=youtu.be
Friday, June 22, 2012
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Be sure and check out the Facebook page for Operaville and the blog-inspired novel and companion CD at amazon.com
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
San Francisco Opera: John Adams’ Nixon in China
John Adams’ 1987 work, a project fostered by wunderkind
director Peter Sellars and Houston Grand Opera director (now SFO director)
David Gockley, created a watershed moment in modern American opera when, much
to everyone’s surprise, it became a popular hit. The opera has maintained a
place in the repertory ever since, and opened the way for a wave of new
American works, including more recent SFO creations like “Dead Man Walking,”
“The Bonesetter’s Daughter” and “Heart of a Soldier.”
Considering all that, I wish I could say I liked it. Following
the hyper-intellectual trends of the day (postmodernism, deconstructionism),
the creators of NiC gave their libretto to a poet, Alice Goodman, and decided
to blow up the whole concept of opera as a storytelling form. Given the most
tragic figure who has ever occupied the White House – a veritable American
Macbeth – Goodman created a narrative that devolves from historic meeting to
lively debate to an open-mic poetry reading featuring the most banal thoughts
of the world’s most powerful figures.
A further irritation is the Glass-inspired harmonic cycling
of the minimalist movement. In the short run, the device can be thrilling and
rhythmically propulsive. But minimalists always seem to let this sonic freight
train run non-stop, when it might be a good idea to try something different
once in a while.
As far as presentation goes, SFO has thrown an enormous
amount of talent and energy into the production (it’s almost worth seeing for
the voices alone). After a breathtaking animation of Air Force One (Sean
Nieuwenhuis, projection designer), the screen rises to Erhard Rom’s set design
of the airliner, a visual so stunning it drew applause. (The production is from
Vancouver Opera.)
Baritone Brian Mulligan steps to the tarmac and delivers the
opera’s most memorable piece, “News is a mystery,” centered on artful opera
buffo repetitions. The act proceeds to a lively debate with Mao, featuring
rousing heldentenor bursts from New Zealander Simon O’Neill and funny echoes
from a trio of yes-girls, then to a banquet that spins wildly out of control,
thanks in part to baritone Patrick Carfizzi’s clownish, skirt-chasing
Kissinger.
This is where the opera seems to run out of gas. An overlong
tour of the countryside with Pat Nixon (soprano Maria Kanyova) is followed by
an overlong performance of the ballet “The Red Detachment of Women” (featuring
an excellent solo by Bryan Ketron). The rest of the opera is stolen by Korean soprano
Hye Jung Lee, who plays Madame Mao as if her hair were on fire (in a good way).
Lee is a gradute of SFO’s Merola Program, and bears watching.
The highlight of the navel-gazing third act is Nixon’s
reminiscence of his wartime hamburger stand. Chou En-Lai’s musing about whether
“anything we did was good,” is supposed to redeem the act (and perhaps the
opera), but by then it’s too late.
It could be that NiC’s surprising endurance stems from the
very absurdity of its concept (its title taken from Rossinian farces like “The
Italian Girl in Algiers”). It could also derive from a continuing fascination
with Nixon (the average opera-goer being plenty old enough to remember the trauma
of Watergate). But the opera assumes so much background knowledge on the part
of its audience, its popularity seems destined to die off.
Through July 3, War Memorial Opera House, 401 Van Ness
Avenue, San Francisco. $21-$389, 415/864-3330, www.sfopera.com.
Image: Hye Jung Lee (Madame Mao Tse-tung). Photo by Cory Weaver.
Image: Hye Jung Lee (Madame Mao Tse-tung). Photo by Cory Weaver.
Michael J. Vaughn is author of the novel “Operaville,”
available at amazon.com, and “How to Sing,” a poem forthcoming in the literary
magazine Confrontation.
Monday, June 18, 2012
San Francisco Opera: Verdi’s Attila
June 15 2012
The appearance of a famed composer’s less-than-famous work
is likely to reveal two things: a number of hidden treasures in the score, and
a big, glaring reason that the opera isn’t performed more often. SFO’s lavish
co-production with Teatro alla Scala brings out both.
Just to begin with the negative, the libretto by Temistocle
Solera and Franciesco Maria Piave is a mess, a war opera with no battles and an
overgrasping, ill-focused central narrative. (Perhaps this is no surprise;
Verdi fired Piave, hired Solera, then returned to Piave for Act 3.)
It’s almost as if they started with too much raw material: a
devastating raid that leads to the founding of Venice, Pope Leo I convincing
Attila not to attack Rome, and an Italian girl, Odabella, who marries the Hun
general in hopes of killing him.
Surprisingly, much of this turns out to be close to the
truth. Odabella is a conflation of the Roman Emperor’s sister, Honoria, who
offered her hand to Attila in hopes of avoiding an arranged match with a Roman
senator, and Attila’s actual wife, Gudrun, suspected of stabbing the general to
death much after the action in the opera. Focus more tightly on this intriguing
relationship, and you’d have an effective story. (In later years, of course,
Verdi demonstrated a ready ability to handle small-world romance and big-world
politics simultaneously.)
Musically, the opera is a showcase for rousing choruses and
fight songs, plus a few jewels of longing and grief. As the opera opens, the
Huns have lain waste to the northeast Italian city of Aquilea . Alessandro
Camera’s set paints a morbid picture: a dozen bodies on pikes, the remains of
an amphitheatre and a brooding storm in the distance. Add a squadron of Huns in
black leather fighting gear, and you’ve got a scene more butch than a Texas
rodeo.
Ian Robertson’s chorus provides a magnificent presence,
especially in the opening act and in the banquet scene, where they create an
eerie effect of mass whisperings. The principal voices, meanwhile, are forces
of nature, beginning with the face-off between the Roman general Ezio (Hawaiian
baritone Quinn Kelsey) and Attila (Italian bass Ferruccio Furlanetto) in “Avrai
tu l’universo, Resti l’Italia a me” (“You may have the universe, but let Italy
remain mine.”).
The opera portrays Attila in a surprisingly sympathetic
light, as the only straight shooter in a world of deceivers. Furlanetto
exploits this aspect well, especially in “Mentre gonfiarsi l’anima parea,” in
which he relates an unsettling dream about the dangers of attacking Rome.
Playing the Aquilean warrior Foresto, Mexican tenor Diego
Torre moves a bit stiffly but deploys a powerful spinto voice, particularly in
his call to build the new city of Venice, “Cara patria già madre reina.” As
Odabella, Venezuelan soprano Lucrecia Garcia is downright awkward, but her
singing makes up for a lot, ranging from her thunderous response to Attila,
“Allor che I forti corrono,” to a tender elegy for her slain father, “Oh! Nel
fuggente nuvolo.” In the latter, Garcia floats a sustained piano that drops
into a descending phrase, gaining power as it falls. It’s a beautiful
demonstration of vocal control, and announces a young soprano that we should
keep our eyes (and ears) on. Another beautiful moment arrives at the end of Act
1, as Samuel Ramey, who sang Attila in SFO’s 1991 production, appears as Pope
Leo I. Considering his stature as a singer, it’s not much of a stretch for
Ramey to play royalty.
Camera’s sets take an intriguing journey from ruined
amphitheatre to ruined 19th century theatre to dilapidated 20th
century moviehouse (complete with a screening of the movie “Sign of the Pagan,”
with Jack Palance as Attila). The historical parallels would be more apparent
to an Italian audience, but it certainly carries weight on more general terms
as a comment on the mythologizing process. Christopher Maravich’s lighting
design is (forgive the pun) brilliant, notably the shimmering radiance
accompanying the pope and his entourage. Nicola Luisotti and orchestra deliver
a muscular, assured performance, especially in the horn passages of the first
act.
Through July 1, War Memorial Opera House, 401 Van Ness
Avenue, San Francisco. $21-$389, 415/864-3330, www.sfopera.com.
Image: Ferruccio Furlanetto (Attila). Photo by Cory Weaver.
Image: Ferruccio Furlanetto (Attila). Photo by Cory Weaver.
Michael J. Vaughn is the author of the novel “Operaville,”
available at amazon.com. His poem, “How to Sing,” is forthcoming in the
literary magazine “Confrontation.”
Friday, June 15, 2012
San Francisco Opera, The Magic Flute
June 13, 2012
By Michael J. Vaughn
The moral thread of Die Zauberflöte is such a brilliant
chaos that it can be nudged in provocative directions by merely shifting its
visual environment. For SFO’s new production, Artist Jun Kaneko has created
such a captivating re-imagining that it sometimes feels like someone held an
art exhibit and an opera broke out.
It’s almost too bad that the company offered a
pre-performance announcement of Alek Shrader’s cold, because I doubt if anyone
would have noticed. Shrader sang Tamino with the clearest of lyric tenors, and
only began to fatigue toward the end of the evening. Soprano Heidi Stober
provided the most touching musical moment, a performance of Pamina’s “Ach, ich
fühl’s” threaded with a spinning, vibrant tone. Russian coloratura soprano
Albina Shagimuratova performed the Queen’s famed showpieces with stunning
agility.
Baritone Nathan Gunn opted for a more likeable, less goofy
Papageno, opening up a deeper empathy for the birdcatcher’s moments of doubt,
but still getting the most of his many funny lines (“Brotherhood,
Schmotherhood!” he exclaimed, and I would have to agree). His outfit – always a
central concern for Zauberflöte buffs – is a Rubik’s cube bodysuit augmented by
an egg-holder backpack. Soprano Nadine Sierra, an SFO Adler Fellow, joined him
with a vivacious Papagena.
Tenor Greg Fedderly performed an energetic, sleazy
Monostasos, and it was lovely to hear the rich music for the boys’ trio sung by
actual boys: Etienne Julius Valdez, Joshua Reiner and John Walsh. The Three
Ladies were a familiar and welcome group: former Rhinemaidens Lauren McNeese
and Renee Tatum, and Melody Moore from last season’s world premiere of “Heart
of a Soldier.” The Ladies’ costumes took an interesting trip from Mouseketeer
to Motown girl-group. The men’s chorus gave a powerful reading of the temple
chorus, “O Isis and Osiris.” Bass Kristinn Sigmundsson gave Sarastro an
imposing presence but not quite enough thunder in the challenging low notes.
Conductor Rory Macdonald led the orchestra in an extraordinarily
clean, crisp performance. Stage director Harry Silverstein’s understated
approach to movement worked well with Kaneko’s wild sets (perhaps the same kind
of challenge offered to lighting designer Paul Pyant, who had to avoid conflict
with the everpresent projections). Tamino’s flute calls brought forth a
whimsical assortment of elongated woodland creatures, similar to Central
American woodcarvings; the cuteness award goes to the birdlings representing
Papageno’s future offspring.
The inherent contradictions of the opera may, in fact, be a principal
reason for its constant popularity. Like Hamlet, it offers an unsolvable
labyrinth of meaning and intention. If the Queen is so terrible, for instance,
why does she provide protective instruments to Tamino and Papageno? And
although the Queen resorts to violent measures, what gives some
pseudo-religious priest, spouting abstract ideals with no real substance, the
right to go around abducting other people’s children? When Kaneko went to stage
director Silverstein for his interpretation, he answered, “…none of the people
in Mozart’s world are either simply good or bad. Rather, their lives and needs
have driven them to do what they feel is necessary and correct.”
Jun Kaneko’s book “Magic Flute,” a chronicle of the
production’s creation, is available in the San Francisco Opera Shop.
Asides: Had to love the moment when the temple speaker
called for silence – immediately followed by someone in standing room knocking
over a loud, jangling bottle. The show
is a co-production with the operas of Washington, D.C., Omaha, Kansas City and
Carolina. I cannot recall another production where the designer received a
bigger ovation than any of the performers.
Through July 8, War Memorial Opera House, 401 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco. $21-$389, 415/864-3330, www.sfopera.com.
Michael J. Vaughn is the author of "Operaville," a novel and companion CD available at amazon.com. His poem, "How to Sing," is forthcoming in the literary magazine Confrontation.
Photos by Cory Weaver:
Albina Shagimuratova (The Queen of the Night).
Nathan Gunn (Papageno).
John Walsh, Joshua Reinier, and Etienne Julius Valdez (The Three Boys) with Heidi Stober (Pamina).
Alek Shrader (Tamino) and the animals of the woods.
Greg Fedderly (Monostatos).
Photos by Cory Weaver:
Albina Shagimuratova (The Queen of the Night).
Nathan Gunn (Papageno).
John Walsh, Joshua Reinier, and Etienne Julius Valdez (The Three Boys) with Heidi Stober (Pamina).
Alek Shrader (Tamino) and the animals of the woods.
Greg Fedderly (Monostatos).
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