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May 2008

May 31, 2008

Stay On Top Of The Season's Trends With These Catwalk-To-Boardwalk Winners... Steve Reich @ Ojai, No 12-Tone, No Denim

Composers denim
He has never wanted to write 12-tone music. Back in his student days he was forced to, but tried to do it in his own way. He remembers bringing in a 12-tone work to his teacher, the Italian avant-gardist Luciano Berio, at Mills College.

"My solution was simple," Reich said. Instead of putting the 12-tone row through its de rigueur permutations, he simply repeated it, over and over.

"So, Berio saw this and he said 'You know, if you want to write tonal music why don't you write tonal music?' And I said, 'That's what I'm trying to do.'"


Steve Reich's New Deal

(as Tim Mangan alerts us, even if Reich seems to have a penchant for corduroy and khakis, composers nowadays wear denim -- a GAP ad can't be that far in the future).

Elogium Musicum: Hans Werner Henze's Elegy For Fausto

Die Bassariden 3
In today's Corriere della Sera, a very cool interview with Maestro Riccardo Chailly -- who'll conduct the Gewandhaus at la Scala tomorrow night, Opera Chic will be there and, as always, you won't -- reveals that on October 2 in Leipzig he will unveil to the world Hans Werner Henze's latest work, Elogium Musicum Amatissimi Amici Nunc Remoti, an elegy for Henze's companion of 42 years, Fausto Moroni Henze, who suddendly and unexpectedly passed away last year.

"I have just received the score in the mail; I've read it, and it has moved me very deeply", Chailly told the Milan newspaper.

Opera Chic, a big fan of HWH, the greatest living composer, is in so much awe of this man who, past 80, suddendly alone in his beautiful Italian villa, La Leprara in Marino, finds the strength to sit in his studio and write music to deal with his loss and say farewell to the man with whom he shared much of his life.

(the photo above comes from Henze's Munich triumph earlier this month with his 1966 opera Die Bassariden, in a new production at the Bayerische Staatsoper. In the image below, via controluce.it, HWH and dear Fausto in happier times).

Henze Moroni

The Doctor Is In: Rolando Villazon's Verdian Therapy

Snoopy
"Alfredo [in Verdi's La traviata] would say: 'Well I have this problem with my father'," he says. "Then Don Carlo is saying, 'Yeah but your father didn't marry Violetta', and Nemorino [from Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore] says: 'I don't know my parents'. Then I join in and start speaking about myself."
Rolando Villazón: back from the burn-out

May 30, 2008

Rules of the Game: Don't Fake the Funk on a Nasty Dunk

Which top soprano is receiving a Cease & Desist from The National Grammy Academy, requesting that she take down erroneous information from her website? On said diva's website, one of her promoters incorrectly claims she has won a Grammy award. However, the diva in question has *never* won a single Grammy, and was only nominated once...seven years ago.

May 29, 2008

Lilli Paasikivi: "Warm Voice From Cold Finland"

Warm voice cold finland_r
We don't care if her zany website will resize our browser: Lilli Paasikivi is not only a cool (literally) mezzo who has worked with some of the top conductors out there (Chailly, Salonen, Ashkenazy, Paavo Jarvi, Michael Tilson Thomas) and one Finnish MILF: she also owns the personal website with the wackiest photo/tagline possibly ever.
Lilli herself -- blissfully without makeup -- explains the genesis of her crazy website front page:

Sono in Retardo: Daniel Harding's Triumph @ La Scala with Dallapiccola & Bartók

Harding01
We regret that Daniel Harding's Dallapiccola/Bartók doubleheader (currently in its last performances at Milan's Teatro alla Scala) was sandwiched between such an amazing stretch of events for OC -- an exciting Inter victory, a lovely Austrian vacation for Muti's Paisiello, and Torino's excellent Graham Vick la Clemenza -- which sadly deferred the proper praise that it warranted.

Suffice to say that the Italian media was completely wooed by the elastic talent of the young Maestrino Harding, offering lots of praise in the Italian-language press for both the conductor and the principals.

Harding02

Corriere della Sera's review found Daniel Harding infused with a new sense of maturity and understanding (as during his last appearances at la Scala in March 2007 for Strauss's Salome, the critics found him unanimously precocious...although OC argues that it isn’t necessarily a bad thing), this time calling his performances nothing short of "superb".

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Daniel Harding shared a few keen insights with la Repubblica last week as well for Luigi Dallapiccola's Il Prigioniero/Béla Bartók's Il castello del duca Barbablù, who were equally overwhelmed at the coherency and temperament of the two separate operas. 

The Financial Times reviewed as well:
"What impresses most is the lucidity and beauty of the score under Daniel Harding’s baton. The music may be 12-tone but it is leavened by such moments as the Jailer’s jaunty revolutionary song and it underscores the Prisoner’s hopefulness with perky textures and tempered astringency."
We sadly regret we won't see the conductor in Milan next season for Scala's just announced role-call, although the Associate Press seems to think that Harding indeed will be conducting Idomeneo in place of the scheduled Myung-Whun Chung. (click for a legible version)

Hardinglies

MITO Milano-Torino Festival Internazionale della Musica Will Restore Your Faith: Jansons, Gergiev, Mehta, Masur, Bartoli, Devia, Casoni, Ughi Will Rawk The Show

Jansons
Tragically deprived -- for the most part -- of great conductors and great singers in the extremely low key, on-the-cheap Scala opera season that was unveiled yesterday (the symphony and recital season is better, as we'll report later this week), Opera Chic was instantly cheered up today while checking out the really cool program of MI-TO, the classical music / theater extravaganza that will take place in September in Milan and Turin.

230 shows in 25 days between Turin & Milan, from September 1: music will go from Haydn (the Harmoniemesse conducted in Milan's Chiesa di San Marco -- where Verdi himself conducted the premiere of his Requiem -- by the great Maestro del Coro of Teatro alla Scala, the priceless Bruno Casoni) to Zemlinsky and Stockhausen and Birtwistle.

The opening event: Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by Mariss Jansons, in a Messiaen/Debussy/ Musorgskij night at la Scala. In Milan, the next day, a Bruckner/Ades program with Cleveland Orchestra and Franz Welser-Most.

And then, la Ceci Bartoli, Mariella Devia, Kurt Masur, Valery Gergiev, Kurt Masur, Uto Ughi, Gianandrea Noseda, and much moah.

The whole program, in pdf, is here

May 28, 2008

Scala, Stagione 2008-2009: Lamest Season Ever, With Rehashed Aidas & Tristans & Idomeneos. Still No Music Director. Tickets Prices To Go Up 10%. And In 2011, A New Opera With Libretto By Al Gore (Seriously)


The 2008-2009 Scala season was introduced today to a disbelieving audience of journalists, flacks, various lackeys & hanger-ons, and it's as bad as we had heard it would be. Also, the already crazy expensive tickets will cost 10% more.

First things first: no Music Director in sight, all the power remains firmly in GM Stephane Lissner's canny hands (Daniel Barenboim remains as "Maestro Scaligero" figurehead, a glorified guest conductor who flies in once a year to conduct an opera -- when the orchestra is not on strike, as they were last year for his second performance of Tristan -- then plays the piano a few times, cashes the check and promptly disappears: we are also sure that Barenboim himself is not eager to take credit for the artistic direction la Scala is taking as of late, so all the talk about his role as "Maestro Scaligero" is essentially moot).

Anyway:

This coming season three (underwhelming) productions from the past three seasons will be rehashed -- Zeffirelli's Aida (Urmana/Licitra/Smirnova, conducted by Barenboim this time, in 2006 it had been conducted by Chailly in the infamous Alagna incident), Chereau's Tristan Und Isolde (it was last year's premiere on Dec 7), Bondy's Idomeneo (la prima in Dec 2005), in perfect "repertorio" style, just like the much-ridiculed (here) Vienna, la Scala as tourist destination, with safe operatic blockbusters ready for the various tourists and business visitors to enjoy.

La prima of December 7 will be, as already indicated, Don Carlo directed by Stefan Braunschweig, conducted by Daniele Gatti, Giuseppe Filianoti (who's 33 and vocally going on 63) as the big star (on Dec 4 they'll have basically a dress rehearsal open to students, in a gesture of goodwill toward the non-millionaire masses).

The rest of the season? Very slim pickings: I due foscari (conducted by Carlo Montanaro), Viaggio a Reims (Ciofi/Barcellona/Remigio, conducted by the underwhelming Ottavio Dantone and directed by Luca Ronconi), Donizetti's Le convenienze e inconvenienze teatrali (directed by TV comedian Antonio Albanese in what I assume has to be his opera debut, there are no singer names yet available), Monteverdi's Orfeo (directed by Bob Wilson, conducted by Rinaldo Alessandrini), Rake's Progress (Robert Lepage director, David Robertson conducting), Midsummer's Night Dream conducted by Andrew Davis, directed by Robert Carsen, with David Daniels)

The ballet season, thanks to a world-class corpo di ballo and to the greatest dancer alive, Roberto Bolle, is our consolation: there's a Roland Petit ballet based on music by the Pink Floyd that we'll probably skip.

Funniest moment of the day: an opera has been commissioned  to composer Giorgio Battistelli for the 2011 season, based on An Inconvenient Truth, the best-selling book by Al Gore (Gore had recently been hired by Milan's Mayor to prepare a presentation supporting the nomination for Milan as host city of the 2015 Expo, arguing that the shockingly gray, polluted, bike lane-deprived city is in fact a paragon of green virtue).

Milan duly won, and now Al gets his opera at la Scala.

To sum it up:

zzzzzzzzz

Now if you'll excuse Opera Chic, she needs a cappuccino.
 
Al

The Final Word on Graham Vick's La Clemenza di Tito @ Teatro Regio di Torino

Tito00

As initially reported here (and lots of pictures here), OC took in Graham Vick's staging of La Clemenza di Tito at Teatro Regio di Torino while you were all busy stocking-up for your Memorial Day BBQs @ Costco. Since it was a Sunday matinée, and a gray rainy day to boot, OC went extremely casual, in black J Brand Black Label jeans, black silk Viktor & Rolf off-the-shoulder blouse, Costume National black boots, black Aspesi hooded windbreaker, and the Prada shopper in ruched, black leather. And a fabulous Paul Smith umbrella in pastel, Pucci-esque swirls.

The theater was filled with like 95% senior citizens for the Sunday 3PM show, which was fine by OC. Ten minutes before the performance began, as people were taking their seats and milling about, without any cues of lighting or curtains rising, two white-gloved butlers arrived stage front and unrolled a sliver of area rug from under an art deco chair. Brilliant.

Brilliant because we think, ok, they are making a DVD out of this, but this moment can in no way be captured by the HD cameras that hadn't yet started rolling. And this is what Graham Vick is all about. The goal is that old-school, lofty ambition of luring people out of their comfort zones for live theater. In a day and age where DVDs are sealed and inked with every major recording company traversing the entire spectrum of opera theaters, it's all too easy to go months (years?) without seeing a live show and just netflixing & p2ping & Siriusing everything (while keeping a blawg or a bulletin board about it all). Why bother with the uncomfortable seats and the smelly crowds and the rude ushers and the overpriced parking when we can just pop in a DVD of your favorite opera in the comfort of our own home? We’ve grown so borooooed and cynical of stamped-out, recycled productions, all given the Broadway in&out, drive-thru seal, that going to the theater seems a scam rite?. Well, our main man Graham Vick is out to smash that, making each performance unique and exclusive, infusing live opera with the thrill of witnessing fresh blood and stuff, flaws and all. We were ready.

Tito02

A black gauze curtain obscured the set stage, which was peeled back by a butler mid-overture. Before it was all revealed, only outlines of the set could be seen: a salon in a large hall with art deco tables and chairs, all in gorgeous blond wood. As the curtain was peeled away, one of the strong visual elements of the set was slowly revealed...French double doors leading to the darkness, topped by a long, horizontal row of windows, realized by set designer Jon Morrell.

During the first scene of Act I, the windows to the outside world remained inert and barely noticeable, abstract and blended into the wall as a strong design element. As the scene progressed, the approaching dawn filled and defined the windows and doors, making apparent the passage of time and sentiments. Vick's idea of using the same, static set throughout Acts I & II worked (as it did for Carsen's Teatro Regio di Torino Salome which we saw here), and it was no issue to suspend backgrounds interchanged for the Capitol, the imperial palace, the public hall, or the arena. 

This we love about Vick. He handles his big ideas with such smatterings of care and tempi. He's in no hurry to broadcast his genius. He proceeds at his own pace and slowly & elegantly uncovers his gigantic, understated ideas at his leisure. He's not going to spoon-feed you anything. Pay attention or you'll miss it all!

The slight detraction of the night was Carmela Remigio's Vitellia. She had noticeable problems with her r's and her s's...rolling those r's heartily, and strangely slurring (lisping, acthually) over her s’s. Her breath control was sloppy, but we're hoping that it was because it was the final showing of Vick’s la Clemenza and maybe she was tired. We cannot argue that her tone was anything aside from lovely, with a pleasant color...but those rough edges that kept surfacing were just too distracting. Her Act II showstopper Rondò, "Non più di fiori" was technically solid, careful, and her color and tone were pleasant…but very rough edges appeared when she pushed the high notes. The higher she went, the wilder her voice grew. It was almost like a neurotic voice. For "Non più di fiori", however, the basset horn solo was outstanding, as were the remainder of the woodwinds.

Any detractions from the event were forgiven by Monica Bacelli's insanely excellent Sesto. Dressed in black pants, with a white dress shirt and shiny black shoes, well, dang. Physically perfect in the role, her body language dictated believably to be riddled with issues. She used excellent pronunciation, and a flawless technique. Her Act I aria, "Parto, ma tu ben mio" was the most stunning. Even conductor Roberto Abbado put down his baton and clapped his hands happily. "Brava" rained down from the 90+-year-old-crowd as enthusiastically as if the audience was filled with 20-somethings. She deserved it all. Gently caressed, lovingly washed, and above all, convincing in the resolve. The final scene's Recitativo accompagnato "Oh Dei, che smania è questa" was another stellar moment mastered by Bacelli, as well as Act II, Scene IX's Rondò "Deh, per questo istante solo" which was another standout, and was met with loads of applause.

Other players, Annio's Daniela Pini and Servilia's Rachel Harnisch were bright lights, and their Act I, Scene V's duet "An, perdona al primo affetto" was a standout.

Tito01
(above: this is an awesome little chill-out room they have in the theater's lobby. So 70s.)

Abbado's overture OC found a bit too stylized, cursive, and polite, but this was nonetheless heeded by the tiny orchestra and period instruments. The rest of the conducting was a light, nervous, carefully layered style, which worked and never drowned out or fought with the singers (except during a few of Act II's arpeggi tackled by a lagging Filianoti). Abaddo's conducting and control got better and better as the afternoon progressed.

Filianoti's appearance was perfect for the greasy and slick Tito. His voice, however, was definitely worrisome, and frankly has been for a bit now. Technically, he hit all his notes, and his understanding of the role was spot-on. But when he did reach those higher registers and punched forward the precise tone, his remaining voice was audibly exhausted. Every time he reached up, he fell back down to recovery. His voice is now like a sweetly-loved teddy bear, all the fur rubbed off from too many bedtime kisses and scary dreams. It's worn through in spots.

Filianoti is 33.

He pushed hard his notes, all throat, and the sound became the kind of strained voice you'd think would make him bright red in the face. Act II, Scene XI, Tito's aria, "Se all'impero, amici Dei" was pretty scary on the arpeggio, and Abbado slowed down the orchestra. But Filianoti, hit each and every note, and made it strikingly obvious.

Vick's depiction of the burning capitol was truly frightening, making "Si teme che l'incendio" all the wiser. The totally real, flaming (gas) fire Vick ignited was sandwiched between the two rows of French doors, burning high and bright, a true roar of flames for like 5 minutes. And props to lighting director Giuseppe Di Iorio, who filled this scene with overhead light provided only by the sets, as opposed to very theatrical spots.

Act II began with powerful imagery, all the poor townsfolk who bore framed images of the demigod Filianoti, as the dictator bathed in the attention and flattery. The children rushed to his sides in warm embraces, hailing him the new leader and vowing unconditional love and support, and the fascist colors only grew from there. Fast forward to the final scene, where the political prisoners were brought into the scene blindfolded, and sporadically beaten by Tito's guards dressed in the typical Mussolini Blackshirt garb. In front of OC, there were four senior citizens who were squirming and rolling in their seats like itchy bear cubs, and we loved that Vick made them squirm -- whose side were you on back then, gramps?

Thought so.

Vick is a genius because he's basically offending Italy’s oldest living generation, who aren't just old in years, but old in mentality. So Vick rules because it's not like they're going to start a Facebook group denouncing Vick or make an online petition or anything. This isn’t your Grandma in Boca Raton uploading her vacation pictures to Flickr or updating her Twitter page. They’re just going to sit at their local bar and b*tch about it. I mean, who's listening...the walls? Yeah, more power to you.

Tito03
(above: panorama from the top level of the Teatro Regio di Torino. Click for bigger)

May 27, 2008

Vinyl Gallery: Vintage classical album cover graphics

Mozart
Via Tim Mangan: someone on flickr has raided some really bada$$ old collection of LPs: the artwork is off tha hook, and they get bonus points because at least there are no polar bears in sight for the Sibelius, for once.

Breaking News: Chailly Leaves Leipzig Music Director Post

Chailly_Riccardo

Maestro Riccardo Chailly, chief conductor of the Gewandhaus orchestra and music director of the Leipzig Opera, according to a report by the daily Leipziger Volkszeitung is about to officially resign his office as Leipzig Opera's music director on May 30.

Tomorrow la Scala is about to introduce the 2008-2009 season.

Will they also announce Chailly* as Music Director?

We think that Scala GM Stephane Lissner is enjoying way too much his absolute control over the theater to name a (much, much-needed) Music Director so soon. But we'll see.

* Chailly has certainly paid his dues, and he has a very proper International resume, and his love for music is very real. Again, we'll see.

Arte TV To The Rescue: From Dresden, JDF's Duke of Mantua, Almost Live

Grabby
We lucky duckies who have Arte (best TV station ev4r) on our satellite feed, will enjoy on June 21 @ 9PM an almost live broadcast (a very bearable 2 hour delay) of Juan Diego Florez's European debut as the Duke of Mantua (after his Lima spectacular + wedding). Zeljko Lucic as Rigoletto, Diana Damrau as Gilda, the sehr kool Italian maestro Fabio Luisi conducting the new production by Nikolaus Lehnhoff.

via gtl torn t

May 26, 2008

From La Clemenza To La Demenza: Anna Netrebko & Andrea Bocelli-Classical Brit Awards-2008

Mozart Was A Blackshirt: La Clemenza di Tito @ Teatro Regio di Torino, The Teaser Review

Gioconda coi baffi
Opera Chic took part in a very interesting experiment of sociology and musicology: she chose to check out Graham Vick's staging of La Clemenza di Tito at Teatro Regio di Torino on a Sunday afternoon, the perfect moment to examine the reactions of a most conventional, staid, in large part elderly, audience, when confronted by Tito as Mussolini, and I Century CE Rome teleported to 1923.

The opera house wasn't sold out (due, maybe, to bad word of mouth on the omg toga-less staging omg) and defections at intermission were very few. And applause, at the end, by the part of the audience that loved the show was heartfelt and  there was even a standing ovation (as documented in our picture below).

But how many of the elderly operagoers in the audience were audibly grumbling at intermission at the nice second-level café: our favorite, by a long shot, and we're sure Mr. Vick (and Monsieur Duchamp) would love this quote, was the elderly gentleman who complained about the Fascist-era staging by huffing that "E' come disegnare i baffi alla Gioconda", "It's like drawing a moustache over Mona Lisa's face".

Standing o

Because Graham Vick is the same guy who in Salzburg, three years ago, decided to make Sarastro the bad guy in his Magic Flute, leaving audiences horrified and convincing the Festival glum d00dz to hire the harmless Pierre Audì for the 2006 Mozart Birthday party instead of Dangerous Graham, and more powah to Vick for that, he's someone who envisions the opera house as a place you go to have your sh^t f*cked up, not a place to go spend a happy evening between aperitivo and a nice dinner).

La Clemenza, of course, is an ode to a guy, Tito, who built a political career by slaughtering thousands of Jews, destroying the Temple, and coming back to Rome a hero, where an arch (that's unfortunately still standing) was built to honor his deed, an arch that carries gleeful basrelief of the plunder of Jerusalem and was in later centuries used by Popes as the appropriately ghoulish scene for the Roman Jews yearly pledge of submission to the Vatican.

It's not as crazy, then, that Vick chose to depict Tito not as enlightened leader but as slick-haired Duce, surrounded by sycophants in white ties and thuggish squadracce in black shirts and shiny boots, ready to graphically beat and kick the living cr4p out of randomly selected bystanders -- enjoy your Emperor's powah, bebbe.

What Vick is saying, in effect, is, if you're walking down the street and you see a little bug scampering by, and you decide to crush the bug under your shoe, and in the end you change your mind and you don't crush it, does that make a tolerant, enlightened Emperor? Not really, because you simply avoided to crush a bug -- because Sesto, Vitellia, all the others, can not touch Tito, because he has all the power that they don't have any, even an attempted coup won't do the trick of changing the power balance.

Tito's choice not to kill them is in a way irrelevant, because they don't exist anyway, they're bugs (however pretty Sesto comes across to the obviously gay Tito imagined by Vick). But then this is a director who deals in paradox and it is not a very popular currency nowadays.

Black shirts

Vick's staging wasn't the only cool thing -- Roberto Abbado rawked teh haus. He, for the occasion, chose a heavily-HIP inspired performance, a shallow orchestra pit and period instruments and oldskool bows by the ultra-cool maestro archettaio Emilio Slaviero and created a nervous, unsettling Tito, with elegant shifts in tempi and an underlying sense of sneaky danger -- in short, the opposite of the deadly, boring Clemenzas of the ex-musicologists, ex-countertenors with a baton that make up the large part of the "baroque specialists" troops.

HD camera
More tomorrow in Opera Chic's full review -- suffice to say for now that a DVD is in the works (there were HD camers everywhere), that the production will appear in Dario Argento's new film, now shooting in Turin, Giallo, that Sesto (Monica Bacelli, in a world-class performance) was so awesome that even Roberto Abbado put down his baton and started clapping his hands after a killer aria, and that Tito, our dear Giuseppe Filianoti, was in such bad shape that we are now officially very worried about his forthcoming Don Carlos at la Scala on December 7.

But of all this, more later.

Happy Random Picture Post

It's a holiday weekend in the USA, so sip your coca cola slurpees, chug some bud lite, eat your ball park franks, make some s'mores, and enjoy these pictures from Vienna, Salzburg, Manhattan, and Milan while you stuff your faces with french fries & heinz ketchup cuz gawd help us poor uncivilized souls in Milan who don't have the luxury of Henry Heinz's 57 varieties.

Bigthree
(^^^^^^^^^^above: In Vienna on an advert kiosk, the Domingo & Netrebko & Villazón June 27 concert @ Schloss Schönbrunn. Villazon is really excited about it. It's homage to Karate Kid, like he's about to take down Daniel. Johnny, sweep the leg. DO U HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THAT??? NO MERCY, SENSEI!!)

Bruson
(^^^^^^^^^^above: Passed by this display window like 100x times in Milan, and one day in the outside world I happened to look up to Renato Bruson toasting us to his 2001 catalog, 40 years of "Recitar Cantando". Cin cin, you silly man!)

Popup
(^^^^^^^^^^above: From April in NYC, the Los Angeles Walt Disney Concert Hall as a pop-up, part of an entire Frank Gehry pop-up book, found at the always excellent Rizzoli Bookstore on West 57th in Manhattan. I wish it came with a little pop-up Esa Pek, complete with a Kung-fu grip.)

Callasricordi
(^^^^^^^^^^above: I <3 this Callas poster at the Ricordi in Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II...a very vintage feel to it. )

Kissin
(^^^^^^^^^^above: omg i was literally dying for like 20 minutes. JEWgenij Kissin. Whut?)

Kleeeber
(^^^^^^^^^^above: DEMON DEMON DEMON! 666!!)

Figaro
(^^^^^^^^^^above: In Vienna, Demel & their Figaro nougat yummies.)

Mbomb01
(^^^^^^^^^^above: Demel offered the "Mozartbombe" along with their daily cake selection. that piece of cake better Mitridate itself over to my Idomeneo or I'll Zauberflote its Zaide.)

Mbomb02
(^^^^^^^^^^above: Waaaaay faulty advertising...the Mozartbombe was NOT the bomb. Ew.)

Salz11
(^^^^^^^^^^above: this was by far the most rawkinist d00d seen in Salzburg. I'm guessing he's into wolves? And denim. And yes, he was holding hands with a real live breathing living girl.)

Magnum
(above: omg this is the secret of Tchaikovsky's innate coolness. He shares the same magic initials as Thomas Magnum.)

ok, i have to go do some things in the outside world. cya!

May 25, 2008

Muti Magic in Salzburg: Images from the Salzburger Pfingstfestspiele 2008

While Opera Chic heads to Teatro Regio di Torino to witness the omg vary last Graham Vick la Clemenza, she'll sate you with some pictures from the recent Salzburg trip (Vienna shots later tonight) while she's in the clutches of Vick's ecstasy.

For the record, the Salzburger Festspiele has announced that Riccardo Muti officially extended his contract with the festival through 2011, which means a rainbow in our pocket and a bag of magic beans in our panties.

Salz04
(above: Muti advertisement hanging at Tomaselli's)
Salz01
(above: Composite of the Kollegienkirche, where Muti conducted Hasse’s oratorio "I pellegrini al sepolcro di Nostro Signore" & the Orchestra Giovanile Luigi Cherubini to end the festival. Willy @ Willy or Won't He? has a great review here.)
Salz05
(above: Close-up of advert on the Kollegienkirche)
Salz03
(above: A marquee on the Haus für Mozart still lists la Netrebko as singing in Romeo et Juliette, although she's been dropped from the All Performers list.)
Salz02
(above: view of the Haus für Mozart, which is on the immediate right, where we took in Giovanni Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato )
Salz08
(above: Haus für Mozart directly on the left)
Matrimo01
(above: For Giovanni Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato.)
Matrimo04
(above: Curtain call for Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato.)
Matrimo06
(above: Curtain call for Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato.)
Matrimo06a(above: Curtain call for Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato.)
Matrimo08
(above: Curtain call for Paisiello's Il Matrimonio Inaspettato, Muti & the Cherubini.)

byebye!

"Honeymoon High Jinks in Operatic Style"

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Ew. I didn't make up that title. TRUST. Remember when we reported a few months ago that the paps snapped Sarah Jessica Parker as she fell the eff out while shooting a big hot Vogue photo-shoot with Miley Cyrus's BF4E&E Annie Leibovitz on the red-velvet draped grand staircase of NYC's Metropolitan Opera House?

The final result is out, which can be seen in the June 2008 issue of U.S. Vogue, touting SJP cozying-up to Chris Noth on the main staircase of "everyone's favorite opera house in the whole world"...in Versace, Blahnik, Tom Ford, and Brooks Brothers. I hope they steam-cleaned that rug before letting Carrie roll around in her Versace gown.

Here it is below. Click 4 a humongoid version.
0010x1qs  

May 24, 2008

There Is Too Much Fabulousness in Here: A Peelk Into Natalie Dessay's Life

Save it: "Peelk" is a typo of mashed keys, but it's so super kewl, so sit on it!  Suck it dot com. Sometime in the not so distant past, one of the artsy-fartsy channels aired a short French documentary, "Une Rencontre avec Natalie Dessay", on our favorite petite opera diva, Natalie Dessay. We say the documentary was short...not because the five-footish singer is so pocket-sized, but because one hour of Dessay fabulousness is just not enuff!!11! Just when you're finishing your second glass of Brunello di Montalcino, she rips it from your hand, throws you your Brioni cape, calls you a taxi, and slams the front door in your face. That Dessay is shameless!!

The documentary followed la Dessay through a handful of performances, from an d'Aix-en-Provence recital to her 2004 Santa Fe debut in la Sonnambula. She spoke about her inflamed nodes, her kids, her religion, and all the rewards and sacrifices of being an ^*artist*^. Below we ripped the screencaps so you, too, can bathe in the glory of Dessay.

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(^^^^above: omg so fierce!)

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(^^^^above: a close-up of her make-up artist's secksay Magen David)

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(^^^^above: her cute little mousie kids!)

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(above: looking very J-Lo circa 1996 in L.A. Lakers t-shirt and silver hoops)

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omg, heweyll yaes!

May 23, 2008

"What Audiences Want": Tim Mangan's Fighting Words

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One of our favorite quotes from Riccardo Chailly, that passionate optimist, is that  "one day, not now, but one day, you'll hear people whistling Varèse's Ameriques as they walk down the street".

Tim Mangan, to say the least, disagrees:


The average classical music listener – that is, the majority of those who attend concerts and opera performances and listen to the radio – is a simple soul. Looking into it, one finds that he prizes melody above all else. But not just any melody. The melodies of Hindemith, Stravinsky or Schoenberg, Lutoslawski, Glass or Adams, to name a few, will not do at all, and the average listener, in so far as he is able to define what a melody is, would not recognize these composers’ efforts as such. No, by melody, the average listener means something narrower in scope, a tune, really, a song.

His definition of melody, though he doesn’t realize it, also includes a type of phrasing, regular and foursquare, and a question-and-answer design to the harmony. It’s this whole melody package that he enjoys most, which limits his aesthetic scope to the music from roughly 1750-1900. Beyond that he can find himself in rough waters.

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The Moderns are a problem, of course, and will ever remain so, because they require a musical ear and curious mind that the average listener doesn’t have now nor ever will. The Moderns require the engagement of the mind as much as the heart. Schoenberg’s claim that his time would come is nonsense. Whether you make a case for the human brain being hardwired this way or just that the average listener is aurally dim, it amounts to the same thing. Much of the great music of the 20th century is lost on him and always will be.

But then, a great deal of 20th century music, including Schoenberg’s, was written for the elite ear, not the average one, so we shouldn’t be surprised, nor blame the average listener all that much. But to the extent that the average listener limits the repertoire – dictates concert programming by his taste – he has a lot to answer for. And that, in sum, is just what he does. Thus the endless rehashing of Brahms and Tchaikovsky on our concert programs, and of Puccini in the opera house.


zing!

Gustav & Gustavo: Dudamel Rawks Santa Cecilia With Mahler's Third

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We all have our favorite Mahler 3, that monstrously sneaky masterpiece -- Opera Chic's used to be, by far, Glorious John Barbirolli's 1969 live recording with the Berliner (as a bonus, Testament adds to the 2-cd set a cute, if baffling, work by Barbirolli himself, an Elizabethan suite).

Then, last year, she fell madly in love with Bernard Haitink's recording with the CSO -- Milan's Corriere della Sera, in the rarest of rave reviews, called the recording, "unless something wondrous happens in the next three years, the best CD of the decade" -- and maybe, maybe, Haitink's is her new all-time favorite Mahler 3 (Sinopoli's analytical, cool as the proverbial cucumber, monstrously intelligent reading of the symphony, and Chailly burnished, gorgeous wonder are the other two OC fave recordings).

Tomorrow night, less than two weeks after tackling the Titan (not OC's favorite Mahler symphony, to say the least, so we stayed home, with all due respect to the two Gustavos) at la Scala, Gustavo Dudamel attacks the 90-minute-M3-monstah in Rome, with Accademia di Santa Cecilia, and Michelle de Young.

L.A., London, Venice, You Name It: Tosca Around The World

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Almost simultaneously:

Los Angeles.

London.

And tonight (in bocca al lupo!), Venice.

Puccini's 150th birthday has spawned, among other things, a flood of Toscas all around the world -- Teatro La Fenice di Venezia joins the fray with the Robert Carsen production (that had its debut with la Dessì in Hamburg, the photo above is from that production): Daniela Dessì (and Tiziana Caruso) as Tosca, Walter Fraccaro and Daniela's hubby Fabio Armiliato taking turns as Cavaradossi, Carlo Guelfi and Giuseppe Altomare as Scarpia, Daniele Callegari conducting.

May 22, 2008

A Journey with Peter Sellars (To Harvard, Trump Tower, Guantanamo; Or Maybe Just To The Pool)

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He set Mayakovsky's The Bedbug in an American supermarket, he led the audience in a procession through the mean streets of Cambridge, Mass., only to find Boris Godunov's body in the basement of his college dorm. He cast a bunch of old newspapers as the lead of When We Dead Awaken. He did the Ring with puppets, he set Macbeth in a hallway, Antony and Cleopatra -- and Giulio Cesare, too -- in a swimming pool, Nozze di Figaro @ Trump Tower, Don Giovanni in Harlem and Così Fan Tutte in Despina's Diner.

He considers, quite rightly, Lorenzo Da Ponte to be the most merciless playwright who ever lived.

The more he gets hated on (or dismissed as a charlatan), the more Opera Chic comes to like even more that crazy spike haired old Harvard boy, il maestro Peter Sellars.

Appropriately, someone has now made a documentary about him.

May 21, 2008

O Cecilia! Jubilation! She Loves Me Again! (She Loves King Kong and cows, too)

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Blond(er), bolder, and streamlined, la Cecilia Bartoli gifts the world with her larger-than-life presence again (omg b3wbs), but this time she’ll be battling for the spotlight betwixt a giant red ape and an ugly lime couch.

Opening this Friday night at Opernhaus Zürich is the Swiss première of Jacques Fromental Halévy's Italian-language opera Clari (no he didn't just write la Juive, and no, this isn't Sir Henry Bishop's 1823 opera by the same name), with Cecilia Bartoli singing the title role.

The opera in three acts premiered in 1828 at the Théâtre-Italien in Paris. It was written specifically by Halévy for la Ceci's ghostly crush, the great Maria Malibran, with composition to match her unique vocal stylee. If anyone is up to the job, it's la Ceci. It was the first of only two operas written in Italian for Halévy, with libretto by Pietro Giannone.

The Moshe Leiser/Patrice Caurier production looks insane. Ceci in a Jackie O pillbox hat, a red rubber King Kong monstah, Ceci milking a cow...  The opera also stars Austrian soprano Eva Liebau as Bettina and American tenor John Osborn as the Duke. Ceci looks good! Here r the pictures..u make clicky-click, its twice as noice...u wont believe ur @~@!!

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