CDs/DVS September 2019 (2)

Debussy: Pelleas et Melisande
Zurich Opera, Alain Altinoglu
BELAIR BAC 157

Debussy’s only opera was conceived as a fairy tale, a fantasy, but there has been a recent spate of productions which try to give it a naturalistic gloss. Glyndebourne’s most recent production did this with considerable success, by putting the whole story into the thinking of the composer. In Dmitri Tcherniakov’s approach we are in a highly realistic modern, and very expensive, flat which serves for all the scenes. Characters eat, drink and move about in the most relaxed way but the text regularly has nothing to do with the visual impact. Melisande, a convincing portrait of neurosis by Corinne Winters, is either insane at the start or becomes increasingly so as the work progresses. Golaud is her psychiatrist – there is no hint of royalty or palace about the production – and Pelleas his younger sparring partner.

It is unclear how much of what is said is aimed to help Melisande come to her right mind – to unlock the causes of her neurosis – or whether they are all equally mad.

Thankfully the singing is splendid and the orchestral playing beautifully balanced. I found myself quite often simply listening. Yet again the CDs might have been more impressive than the DVD.

Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia
Theatre des Champs Elysees, Le Cercle de l’Harmonie, Jeremie Rhorer
NAXOS 2.110592

This is an odd but remarkably successful combination of forces. Le Cercle de l’Harmonie under Jeremie Rhorer bring us original instrument tonalities and a really sparkling support where on stage Laurent Pelly’s production is as post-modern as one might wish for with its setting of vast pages of manuscript paper.

The cast are in modern dress but the interaction of characters is so forceful as to sweep away any lurking objections. Add to this some very fine singing, particularly from Michele Angelini’s glorious high tenor as Almaviva, and there is a great deal here to admire and enjoy.

 

Jaromir Weinberger
Orchestral works
Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Karl-Heinz Steffens
CPO 777 513-2

It would be easy to dismiss Weinberger as a one-work-wonder but this would be a disservice to his abilities as this new cd shows. We may all know the Polka from Schwanda, the Bagpiper but the excerpts here show the work is full of lovely folk melodies and a creative use of orchestration.

Set alongside the six Bohemian Songs and Dances, and the overture to the ill-fated The Beloved Voice, and we get a sense yet again that the one popular hit can be a mill-stone to a composer who might be much better known without it.

 

Mieczyslaw Weinberg
Chamber symphonies 1 & 3
East-West Chamber Orchestra, Rostislav Krimer
NAXOS 8.574063

I have to admit not knowing Weinberg before encountering this new recording and made the mistake of assuming it was by Weinberger. No connection of course and these lyrical chamber pieces speak eloquently for themselves. The composer did not have an easy time and spent the last years of his life in obscurity, his style now very much out of fashion. Thankfully we are – I hope – more open to recognising quality regardless of whether it happens to be fashionable or not and these are certainly worth following up in their own right.

 

 

A CHANGE OF SEASON FOR THE BRIGHTON PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA

The Brighton Phil announces their new season at Brighton Dome: the same excellent orchestra, a new approach to programming. 

The Brighton Philharmonic looks forward to its 2019/20 season in the orchestra’s ‘spiritual home’, the Brighton Dome, with an exciting series of Sunday afternoon concerts that is something of a departure from previous seasons.

Artistic Administrator Ian Brignall explains: “This season is, without doubt, a bit of a change from the norm, with a mix of symphonic repertoire (including the ever-popular New Year’s Eve concert) and concerts showcasing the talents of our wonderful musicians in different sections of the orchestra. We will welcome a superb array of guest artists to perform with us including conductors Natalie Murray-Beale and Stephen Bell, violinist Thomas Gould and soprano Ailish Tynan.”

The Brighton Philharmonic Strings will open the season with the “Violin Operator” Christian Garrick in November playing, amongst other things, the jazz Violin Concerto written for him by Sir John Dankworth, alongside music by Piazzolla, Anne Dudley’s Poldark TV theme and some of Christian’s own compositions.

Our concert on 1 December (dedicated to the memory of Sarah Gershon) includes perennial favourites Vaughan Williams’ The Lark Ascending, Mozart’s Eine kleine Nachtmusik and Haydn’s Farewell Symphony.  

Brighton Philharmonic Brass will open the second half of the season in February with a delightful programme of music spanning nearly 500 years, from Purcell’s Trumpet Tune and Air to Chris Hazell’s jazzy, light-hearted Brass Cats suite (loosely based on the cats, all former strays, who were living with him at the time).

We have also gone back to the Society’s roots as a musical promoter, welcoming back the hugely popular piano duo Worbey & Farrell (who closed our 2017/18 season so spectacularly with Carnival of the Animals) at the beginning of March, of whom our own Conductor Laureate Barry Wordsworth has said: “They have an astonishing ability to convey to their audience the joy and fun inherent in making music.”

And, of course, no season would be complete without an appearance by our beloved Barry Wordsworth, who returns to Brighton Dome to conduct the season finale on 29 March, joined by popular regular soloist Thomas Carroll who will perform the wonderful Elgar Cello Concerto.

Describing the changed format for the season Nicolas Chisholm, MBE, Chairman of the Brighton & Hove Philharmonic Society, which manages the orchestra, said: “Our programme is, to some extent, a response to the financial climate; it is an expensive and challenging business to put on a concert season and although the orchestra has benefited over the years from the generous financial support of the John Carewe Brighton Orchestra Trust, as well as the continued support of Brighton Dome, it is simply not economically viable for us to continue to put on large symphonic performances for a whole season.”

He went on to comment that “Equally importantly, however, we wanted to develop an innovative programme that allows our musicians to continue to perform enjoyable music to the very high standard our regular audiences have come to expect, while providing something to attract audiences we may not have reached before. The BPO board is determined that the orchestra will survive and thrive as we approach our centenary six years from now. We are about to embark on an exciting journey, and we are sure we can count on our loyal supporters and Dome audiences to accompany us every step of the way.”

Tickets for the new season will go on sale on Monday 7 October 2019 from Brighton Dome Ticket Office.

Merry Pirates at Opus Theatre in Hastings

As part of its UK tour in 2019, Merry Opera is coming to the Opus
Theatre in Hastings on Saturday September 21st with an exuberant
production of Gilbert & Sullivan’s Pirates of Penzance. Buckle your
swash and enjoy an evening packed full of sentimental pirates,
blundering policemen, absurd adventures, improbable paradoxes –
and realistic women. A cocktail of Victorian light party fun with a
twist of Merry Opera.

Founded by someone who got fed up with falling asleep in operas,
Merry Opera is a professional company that has been touring for
the last 10 years, developing a reputation for staging classic operas
with a cheeky twist. This tour takes us to theatres across the UK, a
Wetherspoon pub in Tunbridge Wells and the Cutty Sark ship in
Greenwich.

 

Opera Now magazine wrote: ‘Merry Opera has a nice line in these
slightly off-beat touring shows, performing them with charm,
energy and wit’. The Daily Telegraph wrote: ‘The future of opera is
being seeded here, and it needs nurturing’.

 

Our singers go on to Glyndebourne, Grange Park, Wexford and
young artists’ programmes in Frankfurt, Stuttgart and Freiburg. The
leading ladies in our la Traviata which we toured to Malaysia in
2012 were snapped up by Wexford and Vienna for that same role.
One of our singers won the UK Bayreuth Wagner prize and has since
sung at the Royal Opera House and the Festival Hall.

 

The Pirates is directed by John Ramster, who trained under Clare
Venables at Glyndebourne and now combines teaching opera
stagecraft at the Royal Academy of Music and at the Guildhall in
London with an international career. His work takes him to Serbia,
Portugal, Denmark, France, Finland and most recently Norway,
where he directed Wagner’s Flying Dutchman, and will take him to
Iceland in 2019. He has created original operas for Merry Opera,
including a staged production of Handel’s Messiah that has been
touring to much acclaim to churches every year since 2011.