Gioacchino Rossini

March 16, 2008

Bruno Casoni Is Teh Mang: Rossini's Stabat Mater Explores Other Worlds

Xhiaii

La Scala, so often the reign of the overrated and the overhyped and the overpaid, nevertheless manages to mantain a few standards of excellence: one of these areas where, really, you can't touch them, is the Chorus of the Teatro alla Scala. Then let us praise the man who brings the chorus to such superhuman standards of excellence: Maestro Del Coro Bruno Casoni, whose work is always spotless, always world class.   

Riccardo Chailly and Casoni’s 100-person strong chorus played last nite at Scala for a short & sweet choralicious concert.

First up was Igor Stravinsky/Stravinskij’s Symphony of Psalms, which was too warm, too creamy, and too graceful -- it needed more edge, more hard edges, more threat. The tempi were pristine, but without that edge, it flowed together too elegantly for the at times terrifying Psalms. The audience reciprocated with a lukewarm applause.

Stravinsky

Gioachino Rossini’s Stabat Mater was next, but we were already familiar with Chailly's Stabat Mater from his 2003 recording with the Concertgebouw Orchestra (and la Frittoli) Chailly conducted sumptuous and layered, a perfect Rossinian sound that morphed into something more ethereal at times. Not as otherworldly as the best Rossini Stabat Mater that we will ever hear (Carlo Maria Giulini, the Proms, 1981) because Chailly became a little too muscled at the end, but only via the male chorus, the tenors during Amen, in sempiterna had an ugly, rough edge for the final series of climaxes.

Soprano Svetla Vassileva she was in good form, wearing a cream layered dress and crystal encrusted high sandals. Mezzo-soprano  Sonia Ganassi was the bomb, vocally, in a glittery black dress. Dmitry Korchak’s light tenor was sweet and lovely, but he couldn't quite attack those high notes so well. Bass Mirco Palazzi was good, but had a reedy quality to his voice that didn’t translate well enough against the passion of Chailly’s vision.

At the end of the night, the audience (which was a full turnout, but not packed by any means) went crazy with applause for over five minutes. Maestro del Coro Bruno Casoni got the hugest applause of the night, markedly bigger than the one for Chailly.

February 29, 2008

Happy Bissextile Day

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Yeah, that sounds kinda secksay, but it's actually not. Happiest Leap Day birthday to Gioacchino Rossini, born February 29, 1792.

(Thanks to Tjfloyd!)

December 18, 2007

"I wouldn't mind if I never heard a single note of this irritating opera ever again".

Madge

Rupert Christiansen, always a joy to read even if we often disagree, goes all Cranky McCrankykins on poor Rossini, blasting a hole through La Cenerentola, that masterpiece (ROH podcast here), with a rhetorical shotgun.

Despite a couple of lovely tunes and some ingenious ensembles, the musical substance of the opera is jejune and banal, stuffed with perfunctory runs, sequences and cadences, and buttressed with crude orchestration and raw harmony. Rossini wrote much better operas - Tancredi and La Gazza Ladra, for example - which get far less exposure.

Now, Toby Spence is no Juan Diego (duh), and Evelino Pidò is no Bruno Campanella, and you might like Madge or not (we do, o yes, we do), and anyway il maestro Alessandro Corbelli is firmly in the "can-do-no-wrong" team; but seriously, somebody must have badly interfered with il Ruperto's mood to the point that they horribly clouded his judgement.

Because one thing is clear to any clear-headed observer: between the blinding flashes of surreal humor (Dandini, DonMagnifico), the sweet moments of introspection (Angelina) and her big arias that sound ripped from an opera seria, Rossini wrote in Cenerentola -- also thanks to the libretto by Jacopo Ferretti that has the bulletproof structure and the sustained wit of a Hollywood classic from the 1930s -- a timeless masterpiece, one of his most musically sophisticated works, and a bedrock example of his true genius.

One does not need to listen to the very best version out there to figure that out.

August 21, 2007

Rossini Sells Out, Pesaro Rejoices; Juan Diego To Open 2008 Festival

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The 28th edition of Pesaro's Rossini Opera Festival has closed with a record attendance: 20,000 tkts sold for a total of 1,100,000 euros -- the Festival never had it so good. And 18 shows of Otello, Turco in Italia, Gazza ladra, Viaggio a Reims, Edipo/Nozze and Petite Messe Solennelle sold out. 70% of visitors came from abroad -- Rossini Opera Festival has been invited to tour Japan with two productions in late 2008.

Next year, ROF will take place from August 9 to 23, with two new productions: Ermione (directed by Daniele Abbado) and Maometto II (Michael Hampe). A Juan Diego Florez recital will open the Festival on the 9th.

June 17, 2007

Signor Bruschino: Molto Caldo!

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Even if only a Howard Hawks or a Preston Sturges or a Billy Wilder would be able to properly convey the slapstick genius of that masterpiece that is Il Signor Bruschino, Gioacchino Rossini at his youthful silliest, the photos of this production of the opera, opening tomorrow in Rome, Daniele Abbado director, make Opera Chic happy.

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(and remember that a kicka$$ Bruschino has just been reprinted by DG: Samuel Ramey and la regina Kathleen Battle for a deliciously low price)

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March 24, 2007

Pier Luigi Pizzi's Match Point: La Pietra del Paragone as Tennis Match, plus Seks

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Pier Luigi Pizzi makes Madrid feel all tingly (especially the tennis fans) with his refreshing, Lacosterrific production of Rossini's La Pietra del Paragone @ Madrid's Teatro Real.

Set! Match! Abs! Bewbs!

Pietra

March 08, 2007

Stabat Donkey Kong: aka, A Rossinian WTF

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Opera Chic buddy & Scala GM Stéphane Lissner, with his magnificent obsession for dress codes, would have pewpd his tailormade Frenchypants.

Because Opera Chic was watching an amazing Carlo Maria Giulini 1981 concert -- OC has for Maestro Giulini the kind of devotion that Catholics have for saints -- a truly transcendent Stabat Mater (Rossini), with the beloved maestro tall and gaunt and gawky and so handsome with his superlong arms, soaring with the music and singing along -- as he liked to do, a habit that would baffle us if it were not him -- with the huge Philharmonia chorus that obviously worshipped him (as they should btw).

And then the director cut to the audience & we saw the infidel:

D00d_1

a super-nerdy d00d in muttonchops & a Donkey Kong or Magilla Gorilla* or whatever T-SHIRT!!! "Prince Alberts"?

*(Opera Chic wasn't even born back then, giv it a rest)

Why oh why???!!!

For reals, man, you're getting out of the house to go listen to the greatest Stabat Mater like, ev4r -- couldn't you wear something really formal like a shirt? Shoes, even? (he was clearly wearing sandals). And LEAVE THAT BONG AT HOME!

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Anyway: the music was otherworldy, and a radiant Katia Ricciarelli (OC is a fan) totally looked like a plumper happier Hannah Schygulla without the creepy Fassbinder moments.

And Giulini, well, Giulini...

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A++++ WOULD WATCH /LISTEN TO AGAIN!!! AN ASSET!!!

July 2008

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