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Babylon, Widmann
D: Andreas Kriegenburg
C: Christopher Ward
Elenco: Susanne Elmark, Mojca Erdmann, Charles Workman, John Tomlinson, Otto Katzameier, Marina Prudenskaya, Andrew Watts, Florian Hoffmann, Felix von Manteuffel, David Oštrek, Sarah Aristidou, Samantha Britt, Corinna Scheurle, Linard Vrielink, Matthew Peña, Jaka Mihelač, Jakob Ahles, Anna Malesza-Kutny, Katharina Kammerloher, Rowan Hellier, Alexandra Ionis, Noriyuki Sawabu, Giorgi Mtchedlishvili
An Ancient City Revisited

Christopher Ward provided the evening with focused, balanced direction, making sense of the score’s metallic textures, interjections of arrhythmic percussion and myriad musical references without depriving the most grandly-scaled scenes of their force. The choir, too, were on fine form, bringing a vast, weighty sound to key moments. If Mr Widmann intended the opening chorus and the surprisingly optimistic conclusion to sound unwieldy and slightly chaotic, the massed forces of the orchestra and choir gave them an accessible immediacy. Indeed, the musical clarity of Babylon’s most ambitious moments went some distance to tempering the story’s dramatic imbalances. If Mr Sloterdijk’s libretto was unwilling to let plot or character get in the way of large themes, Mr Widmann’s flirtations with traditional operatic pleasures and his ability to construct scenes on an epic scale may prove enough to draw audiences into the opera’s intellectual world. Babylon has traditionally been a world of spectacle, and the opera, for all its attempts at revisionism, was not without its own sense of the spectacular.

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02 abril 2019www.mundoclasico.comJesse Simon
La fanciulla del West, Puccini
D: Lydia Steier
C: Antonio Pappano
Elenco: Anja Kampe, Michael Volle, Lukasz Goliński, Jan Martinik, Grigory Shkarupa, Siyabonga Maqungo, Jaka Mihelač, Adam Kutny, Florian Hoffmann, David Oštrek, Zilvinas Miskinis, Natalia Skrycka, Spencer Britten, Viktor Rud, Andrés Moreno García, Stephan Rügamer, Frederic Jost, Marcelo Álvarez
Frontier Justice

Of the three principals, Marcelo Álvarez was most successful at integrating a strain of lyricism into an otherwise dramatic role. His Dick Johnson stood apart from the patrons of the Polka bar not only in sartorial terms – his crisp black suit put him immediately at odds with the jeans and flannel around him – but in his suave, supple delivery, especially his elegantly sculpted expressions of feeling for Minnie at the end of the first act. As Jack Rance, Michael Volle distinguished himself as much through intelligence as force; he was the most charismatically dangerous figure on stage, yet his glowering, contemptuous manner with the miners made his brief flashes of humanity all the more disarming. He was also an ideal vocal partner for Ms Kampe, and in an opera full of grandly-wrought emotion, the palpable malice in the scenes between Minnie and Rance emerged as perhaps the most authentic; for all the production’s visual flash, it was the simple confrontation between these two forces that provided the evening with its greatest excitement.

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22 junio 2021www.mundoclasico.comJesse Simon

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