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Carmen, Bizet
D: Francesca Zambello
C: Bertrand de BillyAlexander Joel
A workmanlike Carmen at the Royal Opera

In the title role, Elena Maximova disappointed. She has the looks and moves for the part, power to burn and the right sort of dark colour in the voice. But a thick accent was allied to awful diction, with hardly a consonant intelligible all evening. I spent the evening struggling to work out the words from a combination of memory and back-translation of the surtitles, and that kills any possibility of being swept away by siren-like sexuality, which is required to make the whole opera plausible. Just like the singing, the orchestral performance was mixed. Bertrand de Billy kept things moving nicely and strings and woodwind gave good, precise performances: the prelude to Act III, when they’re playing on their own, was the orchestral highlight of the evening. But there were simply too many errors and hesitancies in brass and percussion: this is a score where anything less than immaculate timing of triangle or tambourine notes can throw the whole flow of the music. The result was an orchestral performance that was adequate without ever touching greatness. Zambello’s staging is appealing: her take on 19th century Seville is well lit and bustling, very much one’s ideal of a Hispanic city in the burning sun gathered from Zorro movies or elsewhere. But it gives a lot of rope on which a revival director can hang himself: there is a huge amount of movement on stage and it all needs to be executed crisply. Under the revival direction of Duncan Macfarland and choreography of Sirena Tocco, last night’s cast and chorus were good enough to execute it all correctly, but not good enough to give the sense of doing so with abandon. The defining example was extras abseiling down the walls, who landed with care rather than with a thump and a flourish; the exception was the Royal Opera Youth Company, with the children throwing themselves into the action with delightful abandon and brio. For anyone seeing Carmen for the first time, this production will have been a more than satisfactory evening. Old hands hoping to see something extra will find it in Hymel and Car, but not elsewhere.

Les mer
20 oktober 2015bachtrack.comDavid Karlin
Oedipe, Enescu
D: Alex OlléValentina Carrasco
C: Leo Hussain
Visually spectacular, musically even more so: Enescu's Oedipe at the Royal Opera

The opera two of its best vocal performances, from Štefan Kocán, grave and urgent as the watchman who tries to dissuade Oedipus from his quest, and from Marie-Nicole Lemieux, who takes on the Sphinx’s ferociously difficult lines with aplomb, swooping up and down through the extremes of the range, and creates a real flesh-and-blood character out of the agent of fate. The title role makes extraordinary demands on the baritone, who is the centre of attention almost continually for two and a half hours. Johan Reuter gave a compelling rendering, with plenty of steel in the voice. At his best in the big emotional highs, he couldn’t keep up the highest standard for the whole time – I’m not sure I can think of a singer who could, which might explain why Oedipe isn’t performed more often – so some details were lost in the quieter moments. But this was a performance that reached deep into the heart of the drama and dug out enormous amounts of characterisation. There are no other lead roles. I could mention half a dozen others in an exceptionally strong supporting cast, but I’ll limit myself to one: the blind prophet Tiresias gets two interventions where his pronouncements alter the course of the whole drama. Sir John Tomlinson proved himself still capable of making a dramatic entrance and making us quail in our seats. My one cavil is that Peter van Praet’s lighting will have been too dark for anyone up in the amphitheatre, while blinding anyone in the stalls in the scene of Oedipus’ killing of his father, presented as a road rage incident. But my last word goes to conductor Leo Hussain, starting his Royal Opera career the hard way with a score of exceptional complexity, making it instantly accessible to first-time listeners and delivering colour and power throughout. Oedipe is opera at its most potent – visually, musically, vocally, dramatically. Go see it!

Les mer
24 mai 2016bachtrack.comDavid Karlin
La forza del destino, Verdi
D: Nicolas Joël
C: Paolo Arrivabeni
Au Théâtre du Capitole, une Force du destin abrégée – mais ô combien enthousiasmante !

(…) le Don Alvaro du ténor franco-tunisien Amadi Lagha qui renouvelle le choc de son Calaf toulonnais il y a deux ans. En plus de posséder un timbre particulièrement flatteur, il offre un organe parmi les plus puissants que nous ayons jamais entendus, avec des aigus d’une incroyable insolence, sans obérer la ligne de chant, et il nous prouve dans son fameux air « La vita è inferno all’infelice » qu’il est aussi capable de nuances et de demi-teintes.

Les mer
28 mai 2021www.opera-online.comEmmanuel Andrieu
La Force du destin rouvre les portes du Capitole

Amadi Lagha, qui incarne Don Alvaro, est un ténor à la voix claire et vaillante (spinto), sonore de part en part, pour ce rôle qui sollicite partout la plus grande étendue, de même que toute la gamme dynamique (du triple piano au triple forte) qu'il assure avec facilité. Le timbre solaire est pleinement Italien et se marie à une prononciation modèle du texte. Le rôle est incarné dans la richesse de ses situations expressives, et passions contrastées, assumées de la tendresse à l’expression torturée des passions contradictoires (culpabilité, amitié, compassion, amour propre blessé) dans les deux grandes scènes de duos (duels métaphoriques) avec Don Carlos. L'interprète investit beaucoup d’émotion dans l’unique très bel air (bien que méconnu), O tu che in seno agli angeli, ainsi que dans le remarquable trio final. Sa prestation est saluée par le meilleur accueil du public au salut final.

Les mer
23 mai 2021www.olyrix.comHeuillon Joël