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Hallé/Elder review— Beethoven’s Ninth was delivered with verve, but could have been more daring

...delivered with verve by the Hallé, and rounded off by four excellent soloists (Elizabeth Atherton, Sarah Castle, David Butt Philip, Neal Davies...

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03 febrúar 2020www.thetimes.co.ukRichard Morrison
Staatsoper Berlin 2019-20 Review: King Arthur

Neal Davies satisfied as “A Priest, Grimbald, The Cold Genius, A Sylvan, Aeolus, Peasant, Comus,” his strong bass impressively portraying the Cold Genius in tones of frozen anguish touched with appropriately brief moments of waking warmth.

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10 nóvember 2019operawire.comElyse Lyon

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Rodelinda, regina de' Longobardi, HWV 19, Händel
D: Richard JonesDonna Stirrup
C: Christian Curnyn
Lucia Di Lammermoor and Rodelinda review: Two stunningly performed classics

Under baroque specialist Christian Curnyn, the orchestra of English National Opera plays Rodelinda’s sublime score to perfection. Designer Jeremy Herbert’s three-room set, comprising the cross section of a house, switches scenes instantly from a panelled office where Juan Sancho’s usurping king Grimoaldo obsessively watches closed circuit television, to the adjoining whitewashed cell where Rebecca Evans’s imprisoned queen Rodelinda mouths curses at the surveillance screen.

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05 nóvember 2017www.express.co.ukClare Colvin
Richard Jones' Rodelinda given a strong revival by ENO

Tim Mead is excellent as Bertarido. Lamenting his fate – all but Garibaldo lament their fate at at least one point in the opera – he lets the pure sound of his voice and the music do the work, rather than emoting. Yet he can convey exasperation or desperation both vocally and in his occasionally shambling gait. His Act 2 duet with Rodelinda (Io t’abbraccio) is delicious – and so poignant as they are physically parted by their rooms separating off to the wings.

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03 nóvember 2017theoperacritic.comCatriona Graham
Così fan tutte, Mozart
D: Phelim McDermott
C: Kerem Hasan
Cosi Fan Tutte review: Laughing with Mozart

Sams takes the opportunity to re-write the libretto when necessary, not only making his words fit the music but even achieving the near impossible feat of making it all sound completely natural as though it were all written in English in the first place.

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18 mars 2022www.express.co.ukHarston William
First Revival of Phelim McDermott’s Così fan tutte at the London Coliseum

Many directors today choose to set operas in the 1950s or ’60s, and the reasons why are not hard to find. The period is still recent enough to retain a certain air of familiarity, which can help make the action relatable. At the same time, it is still ‘historical’ enough to maintain many of the traditional values and hierarchies on which the works originally played. This is not, however, the only reason why Phelim McDermott’s production, a joint venture between English National Opera and The Metropolitan Opera that first appeared at the London Coliseum in 2014, sets the drama on Coney Island in the 1950s. To McDermott, amusement parks take us into a different realm with their magic, exuberance and allure, and it is this type of territory that the quartet of lovers enter as they all go on their extraordinary adventure.

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20 mars 2022www.opera-online.comSam Smith
King Arthur, Purcell
D: Sven-Eric BechtolfJulian Crouch
C: René Jacobs
Staatsoper Berlin 2017-18 Review – King Arthur: A Highly Imaginative Take on the Purcell Work

The music, conducted by Rene Jacobs, was excellent. From the Akademie Für Alte Musik Berlin, the orchestra maintained a lively and rhythmic pulse, the distinct sounds of Purcell’s instrumentation constant in the midst of the whirligig of activity of actors and singers unrolling the narrative on the stage above them. Continuo too emphasized the constancy of the musical line. The Staatsoper Choir, under the direction of Martin Wright, retained its elegant weight throughout.

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13 maí 2018operawire.comLois Silverstein