Sept. 15, 2012
Having completed her four-year residency at Opera San Jose, mezzo Betany Coffland is pursuing life as a freelance singer, including this charming recital at Salle Pianos in San Francisco. Christine McLeavey Payne accompanied her on two of the store's antique instruments, opening on harpsichord for "As With Rosy Steps" from Handel's Theodora then proceeding to fortepiano.
The musical highlights included a gorgeous reading of "Verborgenheit" from Hugo Wolf's Morike Lieder, Payne's sumptuous reading of Wagner's "Isoldens Liebestod" (as transcribed by his father-in-law, Franz Liszt) and "A Chloris," from a trio of love songs by Reynaldo Hahn.
Beyond the treat of hearing Coffland's beautiful instrument in such a small space, the store also provided some funky accoutrement from the Market Street setting. One piece was accompanied by the sound of bottles being thrown out by the restaurant next door, an occasional trolley would make its broad swoosh part of the background, and several passers-by stopped to spy at the windows. John Cage would have loved it.
The Salle store, which specializes in the sale and restoration of European art-case and period pianos, hopes to have more recitals in future. More info at http://sallepianos.com/
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Friday, September 14, 2012
San Francisco Opera: Verdi's Rigoletto
Sept. 11, 2012
Having a production design back for a fourth go-around is no
problem when it’s Michael Yeargan’s 1997 chiaroscuro set, an urban nightscape
of stark angles and colors drawn from the work of Giorgio de Chirico, but also
evocative (to American eyes) of Edward Hopper. The effect is a world bent on darkness
and chaos, which certainly fits Rigoletto. Constance Hoffman, meanwhile,
contributes supremely ornate medieval Italian fashions that represent the Mantua
court’s excesses of power.
Repeated exposure to the opera reveals a creation
ridiculously rich in melody – with a cast, in this case, fully equipped to take
advantage. Italian tenor Francesco Demuro issued a plea for understanding in
consideration of his head cold, and then proceeded to deliver a perfect Duke.
His tone casts an even balance between lirico and spinto, capturing both sides
of the macho but over-romantic rake. Demuro excelled – as a lady-killer should
– in his duets, notably the artfully accomplished double cadenza at the end of
the Duke’s song to Gilda, “È il sol dell’anima,” and the turns at the ends of
his phrases in his playful seduction of Maddalena, “Un dì se ben rammentomi,”
at the beginning of the famed third-act quartet.
Serbian baritone Zeljko Lucic plays Rigoletto with admirable
attention to line, pulling his phrases here and there to match the moment’s
emotions. This was most evident in his recollection of Gilda’s late mother,
“Deh non parlare al misero,” and in his later plea to the courtiers,
“Cortigiani, vil razza dannata.” Polish soprano Aleksandra Kurzak began the
evening sounding a bit brittle, but went on to reveal extraordinary skills,
including an otherwordly trill at the closing of “Caro nome” and the ghostly
pianissimo high notes at the end of the death scene. Her second-act confession
to her father was simply, emotionally, ravishing. Kurzak’s girlish features
lent to the image of an innocent who must be guarded, and her small stature
matched Demuro’s, making for an unusually believable body-bag.
Italian bass Andrea Silvestrelli presents a Sparafucile of
intimidating size, both physically and vocally. The final note of his
introduction set off seismographs in Berkeley.
Director Harry Silverstein took an approach that was mostly
conservative, using the courtiers as static tableux for the principals, but did
choose his spots for comedy – such as a long-needed poke at the overdone addios
between Gilda and Gualtier Malde in Act 1. The maid, Giovanna (mezzo Renée
Rapier), made several attempts to wrestle the disguised Duke out the back door,
finally yanking off his jacket. Another opportunity – a blinded Rigoletto
holding the ladder for his own daughter’s abduction – went sadly unexploited.
Yeargan’s set has some amusing funhouse qualities.
Rigoletto’s apartment slides onstage even as Rigoletto enters, and
Sparafucile’s inn sports a wall of striking red blinds. Nicola Luisotti’s
conducting was brisk and incredibly sharp. Luisotti is an animated figure, and
a pleasure to watch. At one point, working the dynamics of the men’s chorus, he
held up a hand as if he were holding a wineglass, then made the glass smaller
and smaller as the chorus got quieter.
Through Sept. 30, War Memorial Opera House, 301 Van Ness
Avenue. Alternating casts. $22-$340. 415/864-3330, www.sfopera.com.
Images: Aleksandra Kurzak (Gilda). Željko Lučić (Rigoletto). Photos by Cory Weaver.
The opera will present a free simulcast of the production on the high-def scoreboard at AT&T Park, 8 p.m., Sept. 15. www.sfopera.com for details.
Images: Aleksandra Kurzak (Gilda). Željko Lučić (Rigoletto). Photos by Cory Weaver.
The opera will present a free simulcast of the production on the high-def scoreboard at AT&T Park, 8 p.m., Sept. 15. www.sfopera.com for details.
Michael J. Vaughn is a 25-year opera critic and the author
of 13 novels, including Operaville, available at amazon.com. His poem, “How to
Sing” will appear in the fall 2012 issue of the literary magazine Confrontation
(Long Island University, Brookville NY).
Thursday, September 13, 2012
San Francisco Opera: Verdi’s Rigoletto
Sept. 11, 2012
Having a production design back for a fourth go-around is no
problem when it’s Michael Yeargan’s 1997 chiaroscuro set, an urban nightscape
of stark angles and colors drawn from the work of Giorgio de Chirico, but also
evocative (to American eyes) of Edward Hopper. The effect is a world bent on darkness
and chaos, which certainly fits Rigoletto. Constance Hoffman, meanwhile,
contributes supremely ornate medieval Italian fashions that represent the Mantua
court’s excesses of power.
Repeated exposure to the opera reveals a creation
ridiculously rich in melody – with a cast, in this case, fully equipped to take
advantage. Italian tenor Francesco Demuro issued a plea for understanding in
consideration of his head cold, and then proceeded to deliver a perfect Duke.
His tone casts an even balance between lirico and spinto, capturing both sides
of the macho but over-romantic rake. Demuro excelled – as a lady-killer should
– in his duets, notably the artfully accomplished double cadenza at the end of
the Duke’s song to Gilda, “È il sol dell’anima,” and the turns at the ends of
his phrases in his playful seduction of Maddalena, “Un dì se ben rammentomi,”
at the beginning of the famed third-act quartet.
Serbian baritone Zeljko Lucic plays Rigoletto with admirable
attention to line, pulling his phrases here and there to match the moment’s
emotions. This was most evident in his recollection of Gilda’s late mother,
“Deh non parlare al misero,” and in his later plea to the courtiers,
“Cortigiani, vil razza dannata.” Polish soprano Aleksandra Kurzak began the
evening sounding a bit brittle, but went on to reveal extraordinary skills,
including an otherwordly trill at the closing of “Caro nome” and the ghostly
pianissimo high notes at the end of the death scene. Her second-act confession
to her father was simply, emotionally, ravishing. Kurzak’s girlish features
lent to the image of an innocent who must be guarded, and her small stature
matched Demuro’s, making for an unusually believable body-bag.
Italian bass Andrea Silvestrelli presents a Sparafucile of
intimidating size, both physically and vocally. The final note of his
introduction set off seismographs in Berkeley.
Director Harry Silverstein took an approach that was mostly
conservative, using the courtiers as static tableux for the principals, but did
choose his spots for comedy – such as a long-needed poke at the overdone addios
between Gilda and Gualtier Malde in Act 1. The maid, Giovanna (mezzo Renée
Rapier), made several attempts to wrestle the disguised Duke out the back door,
finally yanking off his jacket. Another opportunity – a blinded Rigoletto
holding the ladder for his own daughter’s abduction – went sadly unexploited.
Yeargan’s set has some amusing funhouse qualities.
Rigoletto’s apartment slides onstage even as Rigoletto enters, and
Sparafucile’s inn sports a wall of striking red blinds. Nicola Luisotti’s
conducting was brisk and incredibly sharp. Luisotti is an animated figure, and
a pleasure to watch. At one point, working the dynamics of the men’s chorus, he
held up a hand as if he were holding a wineglass, then made the glass smaller
and smaller as the chorus got quieter.
Through Sept. 30, War Memorial Opera House, 301 Van Ness
Avenue. Alternating casts. $22-$340. 415/864-3330, www.sfopera.com.
Images: Aleksandra Kurzak (Gilda). Željko Lučić (Rigoletto). Photos by Cory Weaver.
The opera will present a free simulcast of the production on the high-def scoreboard at AT&T Park, 8 p.m., Sept. 15. www.sfopera.com for details.
Images: Aleksandra Kurzak (Gilda). Željko Lučić (Rigoletto). Photos by Cory Weaver.
The opera will present a free simulcast of the production on the high-def scoreboard at AT&T Park, 8 p.m., Sept. 15. www.sfopera.com for details.
Michael J. Vaughn is a 25-year opera critic and the author
of 13 novels, including Operaville, available at amazon.com. His poem, “How to
Sing” will appear in the fall 2012 issue of the literary magazine Confrontation
(Long Island University, Brookville NY).
Monday, September 10, 2012
Opera San Jose: Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers
Sept. 8, 2012
Given the four-year residencies granted its principal
singers, Opera San Jose’s debut performances carry an added weight. For
dedicated patrons (and critics) these aren’t just introductions, they’re the
beginnings of relationships. Call it a first date.
The focus of OSJ’s 2012-13 opening was soprano Cecilia
Violetta López in the role of Léïla, and it was fascinating to track the way
that a new voice works its way through one’s neural networks. Her opening
lines, as Léïla is welcomed as the guardian virgin of Ceylon’s pearl dives,
bring an immediate recognition of vocal quality: a lyric instrument, laced
with energy. Her first set piece, an incantation to the goddess Siva, reveals
expressivity and dynamic range, as well as the basic pleasure of listening to
her sure, unforced tone.
Having checked off the basics of vocal quality, the critic
then waits to hear if the singer’s brain is connected to her throat. The
question was fully answered by a cadenza in the second-act cavatina, “Comme
autrefois dans la nuit sombré.” Taking a moment to drift in a bath of sudden
silence (always a magical substance at the operahouse), López launched a
passage of virtuosic phrasing, both in her tonal colorings and in her lovingly
crafted crescendos.
The bonus came in López’s acting. In the third act, pleading
for the life of her lover, Nadir, she delivered an emotional authenticity
reminiscent of a recent OSJ graduate, mezzo Betany Coffland. Denied her lover’s
pardon, she sparked into anger, in the form of a laser-like top note and and an
evil eye you would not want to be on the receiving end of.
The OSJ community is accustomed to welcoming new singers who
have talent but a certain rawness, so it’s exciting to consider where a singer
with such a head start might end up. A fine example was available just across
the stage: tenor Alexander Boyer, who arrived in town three years ago with a
beautiful lyric tone but a certain awkwardness in the area of dramatics. Thanks
to lead role after lead role, Boyer reached something of a peak with last
year’s “Pagliacci,” and now performs with divine assurance. His half of the
immortal tenor-baritone duet, “Au fond du temple saint,” was absolutely golden,
and he followed by applying a lighter, more subdued tone to a
touching interpretation of Nadir’s romantic confession, “Je crois entendre
encore.”
The famed duet also pointed out some vocal trouble with
baritone Evan Brummel, who wasn’t quite matching Boyer’s volume, and was projecting
anxiety all through the first act. The problem seemed to wane in the second
act, and Brummel’s skills came to full fruition in Zurga’s self-tormenting
third-act monologue, “O Nadir, tendre ami de mon jeune agé.” Bass Silas Elash
seemed under-utilized as the high priest Nourabad (perhaps, in general, the
price of being a bass), but played the role with an effective bad-cop
intensity.
The libretto is a notorious mess (almost a blueprint for the
Perils of Pauline film melodramas), but stage director Richard Harrell did a
good job of driving his villagers into a suitable frenzy; at the end of Act 2,
they nearly pushed the sinful couple off the stage. Andrew Whitfield’s chorus
is solid start to finish, with a special nod to the tricky backstage chorus at the
Act 2 opening, which had to match up in the orchestra pit with Mary Hargrove’s
piccolo and Mark Veregge’s percussion. Another invigorating presence was the
dance troupe under Lise La Cour, who created a choreography of not-too-specific
primitivism (matching the setting, which drifted from Mexico to Ceylon during the
opera’s creation). Charlie Smith’s set design spans the same bridge, centering
on the head of an idol that could be Mayan or Polynesian, and some intriguing
metallic ornaments along the left side of the stage. The featured piece of
Elizabeth Poindexter’s 2003 costume design is Léïla’s brilliant gold-and-blue
dress, which links, subtly enough, with the blues and greens of Nadir’s peasant
garb.
I’ve been a fan of Anthony Quartuccio for years, and for
good reason. He conducted with a smooth touch and elastic feel, giving needed
space to both his singers and Bizet’s lustrous score, whose rhythms often
emulate the waves and tides of his setting. Under Quartuccio's direction, the orchestra
sounded majestic.
The ending of the opera has been in flux ever since Bizet
set it to paper. This one – using music added by Bizet’s contemporary, Benjamin
Godard – has poor Zurga stabbed by a villager, struggling backward up the
temple steps, then stumbling through the fire and over the cliff in a
Tosca-like leap. Brummel’s dive was convincing, and overall this ending worked
well.
Through Sept. 23, California Theatre, 345 S. First St., San
Jose. Alternating casts. $51-$111. 408/437-4450, www.operasj.org.
Images: Tenor Alexander Boyer and the chorus; soprano Cecila Violetta López. Photos by Pat Kirk.
Michael J. Vaughn is a 25-year opera critic and author of
thirteen novels, including “The Popcorn Girl,” available on Amazon Kindle.