Daniel Barenboim

May 15, 2008

Mussbach Leaves Berlin's Staatsoper, Barenboim ftw

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Opera Chic wasn't crazy about Peter Mussbach's production of Don Giovanni (your usual trademark German, white/black/gray, minimalist, modern costume production) that she saw at la Scala two years ago (conducted by Gustavo Dudamel) but she was grateful to Mussbach anyway for shaking things up a bit with his Donna-Elvira-on-a-moped thing, that made the usual Scala parrucconi (the staid oldskoolers who never saw a living, breathing singer or artist or director they liked because apparently all the good ones died like 50 years ago, in a golden age more imagined than real, as it it always the case) all sweaty with disapproval (and anything that wakes them up a bit from their habitual slumber is always welcome here).

Anyway, the Staatsoper Unter Den Linden was like a Xbox360 console and both General manager Peter Mussbach and Music Director Daniel Barenboim wanted to play, and they never could agree on which game to play, and now after little more than five years on the job Mussbach has lost the fight, got duly pwnd, and is now leaving the Staatsoper.

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Daniel "Since the 60s I have no longer felt comfortable in Israel" * Barenboim, as it's usually the case with superstar conductor / Music Director having Ultimate Fights with GM/director, ftw

* (that's what conducting too much Wagner may do to you)

January 14, 2008

Daniel Barenboim, Palestinian Citizen

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Maestro Scaligero Daniel Barenboim, who has just given a recital in Ramallah, has accepted from the Palestinian authorities there a Palestinian passport: he considers it "a great honor".

Now we always leave politics out of this blog, because the lord knows the topic is already quite well covered on the Internet, and we generally support Barenboim's sincere commitment to peace in the region (we still think conducting Wagner in Israel like he did was probably uncool, but maybe it's just us) but Opera Chic cannot avoid thinking that Maestro Barenboim, who already carries Argentinian, Spanish, and Israeli passports, now needs to go to Valextra or Prada and get himself a custom-made passport holder that is big enough to contain his many national identities.

Also, ne needs to sweet talk signora Merkel into giving him German citizenship as well; so that he may run for Chancellor there.

Now wouldn't that be fun.

January 01, 2008

Vienna Strikers: Georges Pretre Plays Soccer At 83; Barenboim Debuts Next Jan 1 At The Wiener's New Year Concert

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To p1mp a tiny bit this coming summer's European Cup of soccer that takes place in Austria & Switzerland, Maestro Pretre this morning in Vienna toyed a bit with a soccer ball under the worried eyes of a Wiener member (lol).  OC's impressions of the Vienna concert telecats are in the post below. Here we'll just mention that Daniel Barenboim, Maestro Scaligero who has already had to endure three strikes from the Scala orchestra, will conduct  next year's Jan 1 concert in Vienna.

We're betting the Wiener won't strike.

Barenboim

December 16, 2007

Attack of gli orsetti!

We have found the true reason for Barenboim's idiosyncratic flinch, visible on the televised versions of Teatro alla Scala's Tristan und Isolde la prima from December 7, 2007. We hear it from a good source that the rogue teddy bear was hurled @ Barenboim by one of the pissed Fials workers .

//You can find the real version here on teh utoobes @ 6:40.

Bearykinsfinal

December 13, 2007

Three Strikes Against Barenboim: The Maestro Flies Back To Berlin, Scala Management Slams "Incomprehensible" Strike

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Poor Daniel Barenboim.

We really feel like giving him a cookie now: here's a cookie, Maestro.

He's a world-class pianist and conductor, a writer, a peace activist, and a humanitarian: he arrived at la Scala after the stormy Muti years (19) and everybody assured him that the very tense situation of trouble-prone la Scala would vanish, and his arrival would be justly celebrated as a great triumph for the opera house and its future, and rightly so.

Instead.

Instead the Scala unions canceled  his two Verdi Requiems (one at la Scala, one in Parma) in memory of Arturo Toscanini, they disrupted the rehearsals for his Tristan Und Isolde with endless union meetings, they barely allowed the premiere and the second show to be staged and then they went on strike again, against their Maestro Scaligero (the only other conductor to obtain the prestigious title of guest conductor was Wilhelm Furtwaengler).

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An "appalled and saddened" -- a source told Opera Chic -- Barenboim flew to Berlin immediately after the strike was declared earlier today (he has a Don Giovanni there); Scala GM Stephane Lissner, who had agreed to find in the cash-strapped Scala coffers (as reported here on Opera Chic, they keep losing sponsors and city government funding, millions of euros of loss) 3.2 MILLION euros for the end of the year bonus, and Lissner has also succesfully lobbied the central government to change the laws (the so-called Legge Asciutti) that at the moment make it illegal for him to greenlight a new comprehensive bonus package for his more than 1,000 workers. 

And 60 orchestra players, after getting their share of the bonus and agreeing to go ahead with la Prima, went on strike earlier today, as we reported as it happened a few hours ago (scroll down 2 posts).

Which opens a question: if the three unions that gather most of the Scala workers (CGIL, CISL, UIL) cannot basically guarantee the management that after an agreement has been found the operas and concerts will indeed happen, what is the point of dealing with them in the first place?

Seriously. Why should one waste one's time if they cannot control the situation after an agreement has been found?

This was a very bad day indeed. Today a Milanese court awarded the family of a Scala worker who died in 2000 at 56 of a rare lung ailment 200,000 euros in damages: the man had apparently been hurt by asbesto particles present in the Scala stage machines.

December 09, 2007

Baci @ Classica For the Following Post

(**Please go here if you're looking for Marcelo Alvarez's surprise La Scala cancellations...)

OC gets down on her knees and sends giant, soft kisses to Classica Italia for last night's re-broadcast of the December 7, 2007 Tristan und Isolde live from Teatro alla Scala. How sweet it was to stay in last night and nurse my lingering Tristan und Isolde hangover with the hair of the dog that bit me: moar vagnair. Although this time, Triscuits Underpantsies went much better with OC draped across the couch, wrapped in 00s Eres & 90s Paul Costelloe under a 80s Bardelli cream cashmere blanket & sipping on some gin & juice Cremes Gaja red. Yah, it was teh bomb and yah u wish u were here.

We have to say that live, Barenboim's warmth and delicate mastery of the orchestra didn't translate as we had wished to the plasma, nor did the impact of Meier's acting. The suckiness of Act II lulled me again to sleep, but I was roused promptly by some of Meier's howling. So it's all good. 

Here below are screenshots of the spectacle. And damn...on 42" plasma, Meier's forehead barely cracked an inch under her most forced of laments. And now the legal stuff: The following shots are pictures taken from a television broadcast, and are not promotional materials of Teatro alla Scala.

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Above: Act I, The chorus & Kurwenal, sung by Gerd Grochowski

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Above: Act I, scenery.

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Above: Act I, Waltraud Meier singing Isolde.

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Above: Act I, Waltraud Meier singing Isolde.

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Above: Act I, Ian Storey singing Tristan.

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Above: Act II, Waltraud Meier singing Isolde and Brangäne's Michelle De Young

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Above: Act II, Ian Storey singing Tristan & Waltraud Meier's Isolde

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Above: Act II, Ian Storey singing Tristan & Waltraud Meier's Isolde

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Above: Act II, König Marke's Matti Salminen

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Above: Act III, Barenboim arrives for Act III's awesomeness

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Above: Act III, Dying Tristan & Kurwenal's Gerd Grochowski

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Above: Act III, You're all gonna die!

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Above: Waltraud Meier's Isolde takes a final bow @ curtain call

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Above: König Marke as Matti Salminen @ curtain call

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Above: Ian Storey singing Tristan @ curtain call

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Above: Barenboim @ curtain call

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Above: Director Patrice Chéreau

December 08, 2007

Shoeless Dan Brings Down Teh Haus

Rule # 1 for aspiring conductors: wear comfortable shoes.

Maestro Daniel Barenboim, a most pragmatic man, last night on the podium realized that the powah of Wagner had badly torn one of his shoes. So he came back for Act II wearing a new, borrowed pair of black shoes. That were too tight and uncomfortable, and you don't want to conduct an opera that long in uncomfortable shoes.

So he took them off, for the amusement of the orchestra, and led Act II and III of la prima at la Scala in his socks (one hopes they weren't holes in them).

So much for dress codes.

Tristan & Isolde Invade Milan (And Give OC A Splitting Headache)

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OC is v a r y  s l o o o o w l y recovering from a Wagner-induced hangover today, which not even the strongest caffè macchiato & brioche have yet chased away. Since the last time La Scala performed Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, OC was just planetary fumes, she thought she’d go out in style: I arrived last night @ the Piermarini in Alexander McQueen round, bubble toe platform stilettos with white stitching, sans stockings (c’mon…those are for old Milanese grannies), and a matching McQueen black silk suit: cigarette skirt covering my legs, and a fitted matching jacket with a ribbon tie. Underneath instead of ridiculous jewels (OC wanted to go as minimal as Patrice Chéreau’s streamlined production), I wore a Dior white silk ruffle collar blouse. Then to hold lipstick & cash, a vintage Lanvin patent leather clutch, and over everything, a vintage black Chanel wool jacket found this summer at Resurrection Vintage in Los Angeles (although we passed on the Chanel fanny pack).

Sadly last night, OC was in the minority for her choice of outerwear, as there were more old women in fur than you could shake Toscanin's baton at: fur wraps, fur collars, and miles of fur jackets. It honestly made OC a little queasy, all that old, natty, syrupy fur wrapped around black dresses. And yes, as always, black was the color to be seen in, a safe and predictable wardrobe standby @ the Piermarini. And all VIPs -- doctors, lawyers, former heads of media houses, architects -- all the old European money marking that glistens as bright as the ancestral jewels and that scary plastic surgery on the blondest of former brunettes.

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OC arrived easily at the theater, having learned from last year the most crowded and anxiety-ridden routes to avoid. Awesomely, this year was markedly less skankeriffic, and displayed more Milan elegance as opposed to last year’s load of horribly appointed escorts and their balding lawyer pimps. @ this year's Teatro alla Scala la prima, the Italian newspapers have a few lovely photo galleries, which you can find online: 24 photos here, 20 photos here, and 5 photos here [ed: found 7 photos here @ Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung].

To describe the scene outside, the police close-off the entire Piazza della Scala, with the statue of Leonardo pleasantly looking on, and many surrounding streets as most arrivals stream from via Manzoni. Cops in riot gear lollls heh and police on horseback roamed the cleared areas in the streets, and tons of tourists and locals stood behind the metal barriers to get a good look at the arriving VIPs. A mountain of paparazzi hovered by the front doors. Across the piazza, there is almost always a large demonstration in front of Palazzo Marino (City Hall) where this year, almost 1K VIP guests would be dining after the performance, making a fuss for the heads of state (this year it was a protest from Alfa Romeo – we want moar hoarspowah!!). Again, this year arriving at the theater under overcast skies (better for OC so she didn’t have to figure out where to put her Tom Ford sunglasses during the performance), but leaving the theater in the cold Milan rain was such a huge pain in the a$$ when hauling around all this gorgeous vintage.

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The smell of fresh paint greeted us @ the theater, all the burnt-out bulbs had been replaced, and garlands of red roses were hanging over the central Palco reale (the prestigious President’s Box), where sat Italian President Giorgio Napolitano, with the premiers from Austria, Germany, Qatar, and Greece...among others). There were cameras throughout the auditorium, as the show was being broadcast live via Italian Classica channel, and on the French ARTE channel.

A few minutes after 5’o clock, applause for the five heads of state in the central Palco reale, as Italian president Giorgio Napolitano entered. The lights went down, and then an announcement (in Italian, natch) that requested a moment of silence for a Fiat workers who had died the day before in Torino at the German steelmaker plant ThyssenKrupp. [«La direzione, gli artisti, gli ospiti e i lavoratori del teatro invitano a un minuto di silenzio in commemorazione del grave incidente sul lavoro avvenuto a Torino».]

Everyone stood and kept silent, as we shifted around our clutches. Then a final Grazie to mark the end of the silence, and Barenboim took to the podium in all black: a black button down shirt, black jacket, and black pants. Can’t this man wear a freaking frak for once? White tie it's where it's at. This is la Scala. Then Big B raised his magic wand and led the orchestra in the national anthem.

Applause and show time:

The overture began, showcasing Barenboim’s thorough understanding and embrace of Wagner, washing the audience in the most gorgeous strains of orchestral brilliance. Act I's curtain rose on a very dark and misty stage, Tristan’s ship. Slowly a weak light strengthened, and revealed a stone wall background with a cutaway arch. The arch framed a high platform about the size of a tennis court, where all the action took place, which was nice because it pushed everything to the center of the stage for those @ the theater with not-so-central seats. Luggage, wooden boxes, and steamer trunks were stationed all over the floor, and our Isolde, Waltraud Meier, was crouched in a large, sunken section in the middle. Costumière Moidele Bickel had dressed Meier in a long black jacket of fine wool, with a black silk slip beneath. A long, dirty blond wig covered her normally short reddish, brownish wavyish ‘do. Out came her maid, Brangäne, sung by Michelle De Young, who was equally drab in a long grayish, blue jacket with a matching dress underneath, and a white blond bun pulled behind her head.

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The excellent Scala chorus appeared, a mixture of men in port-appropriate clothes, suspenders and lots of pirate caps, and some shirtless, but not like in a hot way. They were also clothed in all grays and blues, gritty, a very smoky palette. Then we hear Kurwenal, Gerd Grochowski, and were pleased. But not with his Dragonballz blond wig. Ew. He was also in a rubbery-looking motorcycle suit, with a gray trench coat too, of course. Tristan's Ian Storey was equally given a long gray trench coat. Brangäne and Isolde had a nice convincing dynamic. Meier was off to a great start in Act I, and I was expecting worse. The dirty-blond extensions worked for her, and she had a great stage presence. After Meier drank, she was wrapped in a red coat, which brought a nice burst of color to the drab stage and scenery. Patrice Chéreau’s overall direction didn’t really work for OC. It came across as totally generic for that minimalist thing. It was just too shallow held against Barenboim’s creamy and full conducting, and was a bad match. With Act I over, the crowds loved it, and answered to the curtain call with feet-stomping and screams of bravi all around.

The first intermission came at 6:30 pm, and OC was gifted with a headache, which was expected. The break was a very long 45 minutes, and Act II began at 7:15 pm. The curtain rose again to gloominess and darkness, another stone wall, blue light coming into the scene from the right, and a few cutouts. König Marke’s castle. I had thought that Act I was barely visible, but this was ridiculous yay. After 45 minutes of intermission, I was expecting um, something more. This act was really terribly boring and lame. Everyone around me seemed to be snoozing, and I can’t honestly deny that I didn’t drift off a few times. Brangäne was in the same costume as Act I, and Meier again in a red robe, very boxy and large. I wasn’t crazy about Ian Storey, which didn’t bring the impression I was searching for. The dynamic between Storey and Meier went well enough, but Meier’s singing took a nosedive, and was barely sustainable.

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After their big duet, the back of the castle splits apart, and yay, it’s finally daylight. Two giant pine trees and some better lighting make the action turn a bit more exciting, and my eyes can at last make-out something colorful on the stage. The fight between Melot and Tristan was vary cool, with a very shaolin warrior feel to it with everyone holding long sticks. The second pause came at 8:30 pm, and again lasted for 45 minutes.

At 9:15 pm, we sat for the final installation of Triscuits & Iced Tea. There was insane applause this time when The Big B stepped up to the podium. It was thrilling. Everyone was excited for the prelude, especially OC after suffering through Act II. Which was off the hook. Oh noes, the curtain rose again on that same brick wall. Ugh. This time we had some stairs on the left and a big bed on the right (well, a concrete slab) where Tristan was laying, to represent the castle @ Kareol.

Then Tristan dies, crawling around the stairs, blood all over...Melot dies, and Kurwenal says bi. Meier is singing her butt off, and OC’s mild headache has turned into a throbbing hummingbird. Then Isolde dies, blood on her temple, and it’s over, and it’s 10:30 pm. Dang. Followed ten minutes of applause for the curtain call, and tons of flowers raining down on the stage, singers included.

At the end of the night, we just weren’t impressed with Storey’s Tristan. He saved his a$$ in Act III, but was overall a downer. Meier was much better than expected, and excluding her Act II blow-out, we were happy to have her singing Isolde. Barenboim led the orchestra on a gorgeous Wagner quest that made us not hate his composition a little bit less, although we always truly hate the playa.

Corriere della Sera annually does a special 20-ish-page supplement in their December 7th newspaper (screen shots -- not production stills -- below), which includes interviews, production shots, special advertisements, and the T&I libretto. You can find the link for the December 7, 2007 pdf download here. Enjoy~

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Wagner In An Almost Classical Mode: I Went To La Prima And All I Got Was Five And A Half Hours Of Music

Very few notes very late at night after la prima of Barenboim's Tristan Und Isolde -- full review tomorrow because, really, our McQueens are soaked (it went on so long that the mildly cold afternoon -- the performance started at 5PM -- turned into a wet rainy messy Milanese horror winter night by the time we exited la Scala). The paparazzi frenzy + endless Wagner + 40-minutes-long intermissions +  the usual horrible hangers on that plague every Prima here + rain on the way to dinner then home = not good.

Daniel Barenboim gave -- as expected -- a textbook performance on how you conduct a classic Wagner (with an orchestra that doesn't really play Wagner more than once every 20 years or so), a delicately precise, loving, warm and muscular piece of conducting. If Barenboim were a watch he'd be one of those beautifully sturdy submarine Rolexes from the 70s.

Waltraud Meier, as expected, showed everybody that no matter how old she gets, time isn't taking her Isolde away -- a crystal clear first act, much trouble in the second, an earth-shattering third, and a death scene that almost paralyzed the entire house with its intensity.

Ian Storey, all ears on him, started out pretty weak and gained confidence in the course of the performance -- a crescendo that saved  Barenboim, and the Scala management, the embarrassment of having to explain  to pitchfork-wielding Milanese opera lovers why they had chosen someone who hadn't really sung Tristan before and had to learn the part in six months. Nice acting, but how do you avoid being owned by Meier? You don't.

Patrice Chéreau's staging -- his Wagner comeback after his historic Ring 31 years ago -- was surprisingly static and drab, all slate gray sets and gray walls and those horrendous heavy gray overcoats for everybody --  Tristan in the DDR, only even more glum. Like a black and white movie from the old Eastern bloc shot on expired Russian film or something.

The chorus? Maestro Bruno Casoni does not make mistakes. He doesn't. No, he doesn't. That's the Coro del Teatro alla Scala, period -- and he runs it beautifully. He may be the best out there, seriously. It's what he does.

Now OC needs to go to baed; it was a long long night for us who don't worship Wagner.

November 08, 2007

Strike @ La Scala Kills Barenboim's Requiem For Toscanini; La Prima Of Dec. 7 Much More At Risk Now

Toscanini

As previously reported by Opera Chic, tomorrow's strike at la Scala will cancel the performance of Verdi's Requiem conducted by Daniel Barenboim in memory of Arturo Toscanini (the great maestro and humanitarian who, besides his awesome musical achievements, gave in secret a monster donation -- several million euros in 2007 money -- to the theatre in 1945 in order to rebuild the bombed-out opera house).

The Scala workers are on strike because their unions are working out a new contract with Scala management and a deal seems to be very far at the time being.

The Dec. 7 season premiere, Tristan Und Isolde conducted by Barenboim and directed by Patric Chéreau, is much more at risk.

Personally we think that such a slap in Toscanini's face is much worse than a slap in Wagner's -- we'd have happily traded the Dec. 7 performance with tomorrow night's, because Toscanini, when you consider all he has done for la Scala, artistically and financially and in terms of PR, should be worshiped by anybody connected to the Milanese opera house the way Catholics worship their saints.

Instead.

***update***

Have you been so naive as to buy those very expensive tickets for the performance assuming that the concert would actually happen? If you bought your ticket online you need to mail them back to La Scala's Box Office, Galleria Del Sagrato, Piazza Del Duomo, Milan "by November 17", according to la Scala's instructions (good luck with that unreliable Italian post office by the way!). Your credit card will then -- hopefully! -- be refunded. If you've bought them in person at the box office, you have to go back there, give back your ticket(s), and you'll be refunded on the spot. If you cannot show up in person, mail them back and you'll receive in the mail (hopefully!) a check.

If you're a ticket holder and you need more info -- or just feel like expressing your opinion re: this cancellation -- la Scala's switchboard is (+39) 0288791

November 02, 2007

Strike At La Scala Kills Barenboim's Requiem; La Prima Is Only 35 Days Away

Quarto_stato

Teatro alla Scala workers (all 800+ of them -- yes, more than eight hundred, this is not a typo) will go on strike next Friday, November 9: the already-sold-out performance of Verdi's Requiem conducted by Daniel Barenboim is no more.

The big season opening, la Prima, is scheduled as always on December 7 (Tristan Und Isolde, conducted by Daniel Barenboim staged by Patric Chereau).

Protesttiredarms

October 19, 2007

"The Waldbuhne was built by Hitler. The music is Wagner. Played by us!"

Wagners

A Wagner opera.

In a German open-air theatre built by Hitler for the Berlin Olympics.

Performed by an orchestra made up of Jews and Muslims.

Conducted by a Jew.

Hilarity ensues.

(The joke would of course be funnier if Bayreuth had already been turned into a Holocaust Museum, as Opera Chic has argued in the past).

July 02, 2007

Stürmisch bewegt: Mahler's Fifth at Teatro alla Scala With Staaaaaaaaatskapelle Berlin

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Tonight OC was chillaxing @ la Scala for the Staatskapelle Berlin + Daniel Barenboim = awesome concerto of Gustav Mahler's 5th. Tomorrow night OC probably won't be there for the conclusion of the double-header: the Mahler 6th under the baton of Boulez, but we don't have any doubt the the Staatskapelle will perform with any less finesse than they had demonstrated tonight.

An oppressively humid afternoon, everyone arrived at the theater 20 minutes before a torrential rain hit (how appropriate a greeting for Mahler's 5th), which thankfully chased away the hot grody polluted winds that greeted us walking down to the theater. In an Ann Demeulemeester cream cotton wife-beater tank, a Paul Smith printed cotton cardigan (green and olive mini diamonds), a pair of lightweight stretch & cropped denim Seven capris, sage alligator Tod's driving shoes, and trusty LV speedles bag (and a black metro Burberry compact umbrella inside), OC arrived just as the first big drops were beginning to fall.

Barenboim was in modified summer frac, and instead of white shirt and tie, he wore a plain black nehru shirt beneath his tails. Thankfully, there was no scolding of the audience this time, and the evening unfolded without incident. The audience was mostly seniors, with full loggione intact. 

Ultimately, from the trumpet to the gigantic climax, I wasn't moved. But it was nevertheless brilliant, and I was duly impressed. Barenboim led a bright, moody, and very Mahlerian orchestra. They were immense, from the bassoons to the violas with a giant and dynamic sound. 

The first two movements (Trauermarsch and Stürmisch bewegt), about 15 minutes each, were constant conflicts between light and dark, turbulence and calm. The Adagietto was angst-ridden like a surly teen, and the Rondo-Finale was well-paced for the awesome climax. At the end of the concerto, the applause was insane, with constant shouts of bravi. Barenboim must have come out to acknowledge his fans like 8x. But he gave no encore, despite the audience breaking-out in hisses of ‘bis’ for his final curtain call.

On the way to the theater, there were two giant transport buses on Via Verdi from Gerhard Kanitz Orchester und Theatertransporte, stamped with line drawing representations of the Skaatskapelle that would make any fanboy cry.

Wir fahren die Gastspielreise der Skaatskapelle Berlin!!! Maybe they were transporting mountains of Eisbein and Berliner Weiße...

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June 10, 2007

Barenboim: Bach Is More Of An Antisemite Than Wagner

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In today's Repubblica, during a loooong interview that could basically be summed up as "Yeah I was a piano prodigy!!!111 blah blah Scala orchestra cool blah blah Tristan at La Scala on Dec 7 very very cool etc etc" makes an interesting point trying to defend his conducting Wagner in Israel for the first time a few years ago:


"The problem of fascism is elsewhere: fascism begins when one says, only Germans can understand this music. And anyway antisemitism does not involve just Wagner; Bach's Passion According To St. John follows the most antisemitical text there is. Does that mean nobody should perform it or listen to it?".

Personally, Opera Chic kind of answers, whatevs, don't perform it, who cares: that work bores her even more than Wagner does and she likes St Matthew's Passion much better anyway, and maybe Matt was slightly less of an antisemite than crazy ole John, the Louis Ferdinand Céline of the evangelists.

 

Now, one has to be thankful that at least neither Bach nor Wagner put to music Von den Jüden und iren Lügen, OK, (it probably wasn't hardline enough for Richard because it didn't advocate genocide forcefully enough so Wagner had to write his own pamphlet for that).

But leaving Luther aside, the question still stands -- who was more of a douche, Wagner or Bach?

We still say Wagner.

May 29, 2007

Barenboim's Hissy Fit, Part II

Big update!! Okay, so we know that there was a bit of mystery last night surrounding the Daniel Barenboim recital at Teatro alla Scala, as he shunned the adoring Milan audience by hastily leaving the theater without a single encore.

We just didn't understand: we showed Barenboim much love and respect last night and the audience (Maurizio Pollini among the crowd) applauded him heartily. We called for encores, and even gave him standing ovations (well, the platea seats are too expensive to raise one's a$$ off of them, people there never give standing ovations) but he still refused.   

Word has it that it was indeed the 2nd row camera sniper that had Barenboim's panties in a twist (btw, it seemed to OC last night that the photo detractor was in the first row, but apparently not)...

Opera Chic has learned that Barenboim was visibly pissed during the intermission, even after he scolded the detractor during his first curtain call (in front of the entire auditorium) by charging towards the camera-wielder and wagging his finger angrily.

La Scala General Manager Stéphane Lissner was brought in for damage-control, and asked a reluctant, still-pissed-off Barenboim to make the audience happy and play again, just once. But Barenboim was all like, awwww hells naw. And he decided to punish the entire hall (Maurizio Pollini included) for one guy's lack of discretion.

Even more jarring about his abduction is that a lovely reader from Bologna had written OC with a full report of Barenboim's Bologna recital just two days prior, where he treated the fans to a *full hour* of bis:

“The public started screaming non-stop, and we then had an hour of encores, Evgeny Kissin style. Mostly Frédéric Chopin, including a Polonaise that brought the house down!!!” [thanks for the review, again, Big D!]

Now, Opera Chic is on the record in this blog and in IRL as saying that Barenboim is a wonderful artist, a committed musician, a man of peace, and a generous intellectual.

He's also an ex-child prodigy...and OC knows he's still a prodigy; she just thought he wasn't a child anymore. *snaps*

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(photo from daniel barenboim)

Barenboim at La Scala: Troppo Forte!

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Opera Chic fought too many hours of traffic on the slick roads from Salzburg to Milan this afternoon, and with the constantly falling rain and crowds, we vow to fly next time – no more awesome Rosenberger Autobahn restaurants, no more awesome green scenery, no more bootleg gas station shops to explore – we’ll take our chances. And we’ll tell you more about the Salzburg festivities later, as well as full reports from the very awesome Muti Don Calandrino.

Arriving cranky and exhausted to a chilly Milan, OC quickly showered and changed into a pair of Levis and Aspesi windbreaker thrown over gray-as-rain cashmere sweater, Paul Smith fold-up umbrella thrown into my LV Speedles 30, and headed down to La Scala where Barenboim was scheduled to grace the La Scala stage with a piano recital, an Omaggio all'Italia that still managed to bring out the crowds into a soggy evening.

Here's a quick recap, since OC is seriously in need of some beauty rest: Maestro Scaligero Barenboim took the stage and began bowing. Simultaneously, a La Scala page came dashing over to an elderly man sitting in the first row. He stood directly in front of said man, placing his hand over the man's camera for at least five seconds until the camera was put down.

Here's the fun part: At the first curtain call after the first three Liszt selections, Barenboim jumped up from his piano bench and stared directly at the violator, waving/wagging his finger at him angrily, scolding him for his prior recording actions. He was visibly pissed. He was like, “Don’t make me come down there and smack that camera out of your hand!”

The last work before the intermission (from "Années de pèlerinage. Deuxième Année. Italie": Après une lecture de Dante. "Fantasia quasi sonata") was stellar, and Barenboim flogged the piano like a raging animal. He pounded on the keys like a man with a vengeance…like he had a beef with the piano or something...like he had cast Orichalcum’s Most Holy WTF, and the house went wild with his mad orc rushing skills.

During the intermission, two little stage elves came out and mopped up a puddle (??) from underneath the piano bench, and then changed the old busted one with a new sweet model. After the intermission, Barenboim began three little parafrasi of Verdi (Il Trovatore, Aida, and Rigoletto), which were sweet and enjoyable.

But here’s what is teh suck: Barenboim performed the same program in Bologna two nights ago at the Auditorium Teatro Manzoni, and a very adorable reader from Bologna wrote me a synopsis. He told me that on Saturday night to the Bologna audience, Barenboim commanded an hour of encores, reaching into a Chopin-heavy repertoire, bringing the house down. WTF?! Tonight at La Scala, Barenboim came out for maybe three curtain calls, and then at the fourth, he pushed the piano bench towards the piano, and closed the keyboard! WTF? Snubbed! No encore. La Scala gets no love. ;__;

Honestly? We think he was going to find the detractor from the first row who tried to film him, and kick his a$$.

April 06, 2007

Barenboim, La Scala Go to Ghana: Durch des Himmels prächt'gen Plan

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Fifty years ago, the nation of Ghana freed itself from the slavery of colonialism, the first sub-Saharan country to achieve that: to celebrate the 50th anniversary, on April 23 La Scala orchestra, Maestro Scaligero Daniel Barenboim and mezzo Waltraud Meier will perform Beethoven's Ninth (of course) in Accra, Ghana's capital.

Through Heaven's Glorious Plan, indeed.

And we'd like to think that Lenny, somewhere, will be smiling that irresistible smile of his that night, wishing he could be on Barenboim's podium, tinkering with Schiller's and Beethoven's stuff one more time.

April 03, 2007

Barenboim + La Scala = Lugano Festival Goodness

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On April 25, Maestro Daniel Barenboim, will conduct the Orchestra Filarmonica della Scala in Beethoven's Eroica at Lugano Festival in Switzerland. More info here.

March 25, 2007

Legion d'Honneur For Daniel Barenboim!!!111

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As we write, Jacques Chirac is heading to the French Embassy in Berlin to award the awesome Maestro Scaligero Daniel Barenboim a knightship: give it up for Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur, le maestro Daniel Barenboim! In Chirac's words, the Legion d'Honneur  has been award to "l'immense artiste, l'ami de la France et l'intellectuel engagé pour la paix au Proche-Orient".

Vive la France! Vive Barenboim! Kol Hakavod! כל הכבוד

February 20, 2007

Awesome Berlin/Parisfal Recap

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American blogger Of the Kosmos was in Berlin this past weekend to take-in the Thursday, February 8th performance of the René Pape-sung, Daniel Barenboim-conducted Wagner's (discreetely spits v. lady-like) Parsifal at the Staatsoper. Although OtK's excellent seats provided great photos of Pape et alia, here are a few more. Thanks OtK for the review.

/btw, what is it with Pape? He is devastatingly handsome in person...but I have yet to see a picture where his features don't slide around all Picasso-like, and land indiscriminately on his face. Further proof needed before I can laugh at this.

Also, New York City opera-blogger SarahB shares on her website a lovely curtain-call video clip from the current h0ttest ticket in town: the Gergiev-conducted, Fleming-Vargas-Hvorostovsky-sung Eugene Onegin at the NYC MET Opera. A huge brava to SarahB, who fills her free time with the most exhausting list of cultural events, you'd think she is in reality a super-human robot ninja.

/Can I just say that I *hate* the new website format that the MET has implemented this season: that inane feature where they progressively erase all the prior, expired performances from the current production details. COME MAI?! MAH ZEH?!

February 06, 2007

La Scala Files: Handicapping The Future

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Among Milanese opera fans, the most popular game that does not involve drinking à la Quarters  is "Who Would You Choose As Musical Director When In A Couple Years It Will Be Impossible To Keep Pretending That Barenboim's Part Time Job As Maestro Scaligero Is Enough For Such A Big Opera House" (long name, I know, funny Italians -- in the original language it's even longer).

Opera Chic has been subjected to it several unhappy times -- unhappy because it usually ends with bitter arguments, sneering comments, fist-fights, the occasional stabbing in the neck with a broken CD jewel case. And even now that she's temporarily back in the USA, OC hears the question a lot from friends: Who will replace Muti? The orchestra, after all, cannot remain without a Music Director forever.

Well, actually, part of the problem (of General Manager Stephane Lissner's problem) is that the orchestra (many professori, at least, if not all of them...it's far from a unanimous crowd, except when they fire a Music Director, as Claudio Abbado and Riccardo Muti know too well) like the present situation *a lot*: Daniel Barenboim flies-in every once in a while (3-4 times a year, not exactly the same as Muti's notorious military drills), dazzles everybody with his charm, as well as his almost scary genius and his super-stimulating ideas, leads them in super-charged performances that bring the house down, then races back to Malpensa Airport, never to be seen again for months. OC also hears that the famously snappy (during rehearsals, at least) Barenboim very cannily keeps his powders dry whenever he conducts here, never scolding, always suggesting, and heaping lots of praise; no wonder he's crazy-popular with the orchestra: he behaves like their dandy uncle who lives abroad & pops-in for Christmas with an armful of gifts -- or cigars, in Barenboim's case).

It is also true that sooner or later, reality will interfere with the orchestra's wishes, and Lissner will have to appoint a Music Director -- guest conductors and music directors and experiments playing for young young young baby-faced sweet exciting newcomer conductors like Harding and Dudamel only help up to a point. To keep the "La Scala sound" -- a beautiful, precise opera sound, with the Italian repertorio as king, but with the indispensable ability to shift to Wagner, Strauss, and the great symphonic masters -- you'll eventually need another Abbado, another Muti, is the general consesus here (well, Milan, actually...whatevs).

The sad fact is that Maestro Scaligero Barenboim, the natural, perfect candidate (unique background, huge charisma, interest in new music, unimpeachable taste, fantastic experience and ability in the German repertorio) just won't take a full time job as Music Director of La Scala, this is clear. At least for the foreseeable future.

Consider that to replace Muti after his always stormy but often awesome reign you need a rare mix of great talent, a huge international high profile, big brassy brass ballz and at least a tiny bit of those peeple $kill$ that Muti so proudly lacked. You don't really want to hire sonmeone who'll soon lock horns with the orchestra and the press, since the orchestra yields awesome veto power (as I said above, in early 2005 they effectively fired Muti the way they kicked poor Abbado out in 1986) and the press can really make a Music Director's life miserable (it didn't happen with Muti, ok ok, he enjoyed fawning reviews and lots of ink-stained love from the papers, but it doesn't mean the press will accept just anybody -- especially anybody with a lower profile and lower standing that Muti had in the mid-80s.)

Let us now try to handicap the race for the future leader of our beloved opera house, then:

~o~ DANIELE GATTI (aka THE LOGGIONISTI IDOL) ~o~

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Many loggionisti love Daniele Gatti with a burning, throbbing, moist passion. heh. His experience at Covent Garden with the RPO and at Santa Cecilia really gives him an excellent edge, and his Lohengrin, as OC reported, brought the house down so hard that there was instant talk of Gatti as the man for the job of Music Director

  • OC's opinion: he's really really good, he'd make an excellent MD, he'd bring some seriously needed fresh air. But, who knows, he's from Milan, and studied in Milan and now seems ready and, to boot, he's probably the frontrunner... And we all know what often happens to frontrunners and to those who look so perfect for a job...
  • The buzz: he did all the homework, he's got the credentials, the audience really likes him. But some see him as not being either old enough or exciting enough to get the job -- we often hear that he'd be perfect if only he were even more experienced (read: older) or more exciting. Mark my words: if you cannot have someone as awesome as Muti (that'd be Barenboim), exciting is what you need.

~o~ ROBERTO ABBADO (aka THE UNDERRATED ONE) ~o~

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Not all Milanese music fans root for Gatti: many are happy to endorse & support Roberto Abbado, Claudio's nephew, an elegant, sophisticated international maestro who knows La Scala well and who, last year, conducted a crystal-clear Lucia di Lammermoor -- seldom being on the verge of a nervous breakdown has sounded -- or looked -- more fabulous, largely thanks to Abbado.

  • OC's opinion: he's waaay underrated by most but, frankly, better than the otherwise excellent Gatti. He's just subtler, more elegant -- sometimes reminds OC of Thomas Schippers, another underrated conductor.
  • The buzz: "But his uncle Claudio did this", "But his uncle did that", "He's not his uncle". If he doesn't get the job for this reason, some people seriously need to grow the hell up, OC thinks.

~o~ RICCARDO CHAILLY (aka THE PERENNIAL CANDIDATE) ~o~

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Riccardo Chailly still has many fans (even if they're not as vocal), despite a too-muscular Rigoletto last year and a correct, but uninspiring, Aida last December. Alagna ruined his standing -- when he pulled out of Aida and then tried to get back in when he got scared of the consequences, we heard from Lissner, from Zeffirelli, even from the half-naked (bless his shiny butt) Roberto Bollé. Chailly waited for two months before speaking up. It looked like Lissner was running the show 100% and Chailly's low profile was seen as either a sign of weakness, or of being kept out of the loop. Even the biggest Muti haters acknowledge that Muti would not have taken the hit of the Alagna tantrum silently, leaving to Lissner the role of the only enforcer in the house. Say what you want about Muti (that's what they do here, anyway) but when the orchestra went suddendly on strike right before a performance in the mid-90s, he barged ahead and turned Traviata into a piano recital (himself at the piano), and went ahead with the singers and the show went on (as the proverb says).

  • OC's opinion: Chailly's got a massive international experience and the right profile. Excellent conductor, he'd be an excellent choice. Aida damaged him, though.
  • The buzz: he has a good relationship with Lissner, the orchestra doesn't mind him. But the question remains: why didn't they offer him the job last year, then, and went looking for Barenboim's weird special-guest-with-privileges role?

~o~ MYUNG-WHUN CHUNG (aka THINK DIFFERENT) ~o~

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Giulini nostalgics madly endorse Giulini's former student and Zen maestro Myung-Whun Chung

  • OC's opinion: he's cool, really cool, a thinker and a sweet man who'd never alienate the orchestra. OC loves his ethereal sound. The pros: he's a Giulini clone, and you couldn't clone a greater maestro. The cons: his greatest asset is also an albatross around his neck. He's no Giulini; nobody is, nor will ever be.
  • The buzz: he's BEYOND a dark horse, BUT he'd be the first non-European Musical Director in an opera house where visitors from Asia have an ever-growing presence in the audience, and an increasing financial weight, and has a very good American profile. He'd be a very exciting choice, and -- as we said above -- if you cannot have someone as awesome as Muti (that'd be Barenboim), exciting is what you need.

Opera Chic's final recommendation?

All four candidates should be put into an iron cage (inspired by Mad Max Beyond the Thunderdome) and duke it out with fisticuffs!

FOUR MEN ENTER. ONE MAN LEAVES.

Q(o_oQ) Q(o_oQ) Q(o_oQ) Q(o_oQ)

February 05, 2007

יום הולדת שמח Happy 70, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra!

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...Bernstein disappeared from view in the middle of a concert. "He jumped up into the air to punctuate a particularly forceful part of a symphony," says Mishori, "but he then vanished. He'd fallen off the podium. Two of the musicians helped him regain his feet and the rest of us carried on regardless.

Priceless.

A big fat huge warm HAPPY 70th to the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, now engaged in a tour of the US! You all make Opera Chic's very proud.

It's OC's duty to remember the brave maestro who conducted the first-ever performance of the IPO, in the terrible year of 1936: Arturo Toscanini.

And in closing, let's hear it from two of Opera Chic's favorite maestri and humanitarians:

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"For two and a half hours every evening, we have peace." -- Zubin Mehta

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"...in an orchestra you learn to hear one another." -- Daniel Barenboim

יום הולדת שמח

(OK, the serious post is over: Opera Chic will now return to her usual pointless ways.)

February 03, 2007

Dottor Barenboim!

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Maestro Scaligero Daniel Barenboim has been awarded a honorary doctorate in music by Oxford University. Teh Doctor is IN!

January 22, 2007

Daniel Barenboim Plays Carnegie, Shrinks. Scroll Down 4 Teh Incredible Images

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OMG they shrunk the Maestro! WTF Carnegie? Look at the little baby piano I will play for yoooouuuuu!

Daniel Barenboim played Bach's The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I & II at NYC's Carnegie Hall, each one a successive night of Saturday, January 20 and Sunday January 21, 2007. He reflected on his earliest musical impressions of Bach's WTC:

"At the age of 12 I moved to Paris to study harmony and counterpoint with Nadia Boulanger. When I arrived for my first lesson, The Well-Tempered Clavier was on the music stand of the grand piano. She turned the pages forward and back; finally she settled on the Prelude in E minor from Book One and said: 'Right, my boy, now play it for me in A minor.' She held a wooden ruler in her hand and every time my fingers played a wrong note she tapped them with it. Thus, The Well-Tempered Clavier became the foundation for everything."

Happy 50th anniversary at Carnegie Hall, Maestro; may you play and conduct for 50 more. The Opera Chic "Barenboim Plays Carnegie" Flickr set is here.

מזל טוב

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cya in meeeylan 4 caffe' @same table @teh principe di savoia bar ok? hugs OC

January 19, 2007

Barenboim at La Scala

An image of Barenboim conducting Tuesday night's Beethoven Eroica for Toscanini's 50th passing, at Teatro alla Scala.

Below, the great Maestro Toscanini at La Scala.

Btw,I'm sure you have all read by now that Lorin Maazel, before the January 16 Toscanini concerto at Avery Fisher Hall, was given one of Toscanini's old batons?

January 18, 2007

Digesting Toscanini

BarenboimPlease excuse Opera Chic if she has been a bit aloof and distracted lately...but she had been preparing for a stateside visit, in order to split time between precious friends and family in New York and the verdant suburbs. So as of earlier today, I am nestled back into the brash land of SUVs, 7-11s, indoor plumbing, and Jello. (j/k about indoor plumbing)...In the sage words of Jay-Z: Guess who's bizack, y'all?

But don't worry, gentle readers...

Opera Chic keeps close to her trusted Milanese contacts, who are always ready to relay juicy stories and the latest tidbits fresh from the ensconces of the opera stage. I also promise a few Manhattan outings, as the calendar is already brimming full...

Anyway, last night, while I was preparing my vintage English luggage for my trip back to New York, I made myself a little packing party... opened a bottle of Nebbiolo Langhe, and listened to the live broadcast on Rai Radio Tre of Tuesday night's concert at La Scala to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the death of Arturo Toscanini. Maestro Barenboim conducted the La Scala orchestra in Beethoven's Symphony No. 3, the Eroica Symphony.

The Eroica is the piece of music that La Scala always employs to commemorate the greats: the second movement, the Marcia Funebre, had been played there the day of Toscanini’s funeral, the day of Gianandrea Gavazzeni’s funeral, and the day of Carlo Maria Giulini’s funeral. The great maestri who have been associated with the theatre are honored by the Marcia Funebre. (In a little known anecdote, the great and always humble Maestro de Sabata, who had been asked to conduct the orchestra the day of Toscanini’s funeral, refused on the grounds [at least that day] that nobody was deserving enough of the honor of conducting on the same podium that had been Toscanini’s. Therefore, the first violin led the orchestra instead, and the podium remained empty).

I was expecting to hear a dark, moody, very Wilhelm Furtwänglerian Eroica from Barenboim, who is one of Furtwängler’s most ardent fans and is seen as one of the great maestro heirs (Furtwängler in the early 1950s held the same title, Maestro Scaligero, that now Barenboim holds at La Scala...it’s a sort of Conductor Emeritus thing).

Instead, Barenboim chose a fascinating, burnished, solemn sound: a mournful prayer instead of the apocalyptic, disquieting Requiem-like sound that many conductors choose, especially for the Second Movement. Tempi were indeed deliberate but not extremely slow (enough, anyway, to contradict the entire Toscanini ethos of sustained, speedy tempi). The audience’s reaction (the Italian President Giorgio Napoletano was also at the event) was ecstatic: the occasion did not allow for the wild cheering that Barenboim got on December 23, 2005 with Beethoven’s Ninth at the Concerto di Natale, with soccer-stadium-like ovations at the end, but applause was sustained and enthusiastic.

There is a bit of insight to Barenboim's delivery, because in yesterday's Corriere, Barenboim was asked to give a few thoughts about Toscanini and the significance of conducting the Eroica (see column above). Aside from his Toscanini anecdotes, musings on the next season at La Scala, and thoughts on fascism, Barenboim advised everyone to look for a hidden message within his conducting during the Eroica. He highlighted that Beethoven had wanted to emphasise in the Eroica that death is much the same part of life, and everything is bundled into the same cycle, and how everything is rejoined in the flux of beauty and joy...and this was to be the maestro's inspiration.

At the end of the concerto last night,