Showing posts with label barcelona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label barcelona. Show all posts

May 10, 2008

Konwitschny's Don Carlos at the Liceu




Don Carlos
Opéra en 5 actes de Giuseppe Verdi (original version)
Livret de Joseph Méry et Camille du Locle (en français)

Production of Peter Konwitschny
Wiener Staatsoper / Liceu
Premiere in Hamburg in 2001
Premiere in Vienna on Oct.18 2004 (DVD available)
Premiere in Barcelona on Jan.27 2007 (review of the broadcast)
Last performances in Vienna on June 19, 24 and 28, 2008


Don Carlos - Franco Farina
Elisabeth - Adrianne Pieczonka
Princesse Eboli - Sonia Ganassi
Philipe II - Giacomo Prestia
Rodrigue, marquis de Posa - Carlos Alvarez
Le Grand Inquisiteur - Eric Halvarson

Conductor - Maurizio Benini



I. The staging

This was a very controversial production from the beginning, and I do understand why. While the motives of Peter Konwitschny are often appropriate, the aesthetics is rather disconcerting and preposterous.


Eboli's dream (Vienna 2004)


It was indeed a good idea - as this production is build on the integral 5 act version of the opera, including a 20 minute ballet (mandatory for the creation in 1867 in Paris) -, to use the time to a fantasy scene entitled "Eboli's dream" of the perfect suburban life she could have had with Carlos. But Suburbia and XVIth century aren't related in any way, and as Konwitschny chose costumes inspired from the XVIth century for the entire opera, the dream of Ebony ends up being totally awkward. The anachronism just didn't work at all for me (especially this one, where the audience is suddenly submerged into this burlesque movie from the 1960s).

The auto-da-fé scene was the highlight of this production and yet again, I couldn't make the switch from the XVIth to the XXIth-media frenzy century. What definitely didn't help was Carlos wearing a XVIth century dagger under his XXIth century tuxedo.

The moves the singers had to perform were also too exaggerated and I don't like it when the Opera House turns into a circus and the singers into clowns. I really don't.
It's the ultimate pleonasm if you think of it: "look at me, I'm singing I'm miserable because I'm trapped in that relationship, I'm feeling it but in case you still haven't noticed, with the music and all, I'm showing you with wide mimic gestures Konwitschny dug out from old Marcel Marceau's tapes".
It's very condescendent to the audience and I can't really see beyond that.

The set on that production is non-existent, for the most part, and it gets utterly boring in the last two acts. The light designer must have been desperate for something to do in that production, I'm afraid he either died of desolation or boredom, as Konwitschny had no interest whatsoever in that department.



II. The cast

Adrianne Pieczonka


Lots of disappointments there.
Franco Farina was awful as usual (this tenor I especially don't like), with awful high notes and awful diction (see by yourselves how he ruins the most beautiful aria of this opera, the duet with Rodrigue in Act 2, "Dieu, tu semas dans nos âmes"); Giacomo Prestia (Philippe II) abuses of vibratos in hopes nobody notices he can't sing in French; Sonia Ganassi (Eboli) was musically weak but managed a good acting performance (especially in Act 4); Adrianne Pieczonka was vocally the best of the cast but her acting skills are limited to one facial expression; Carlos Alvarez lacked something as Rodrigue - authenticity I suspect, and the stage directions obviously didn't help.




III. The music

Another huge disappointment there.
The reading Maurizio Benini has of that piece seems to be that, since Don Carlos is so long it's bound to be boring, the best thing to do is to rush the musicians, speed things up - and be done with it. The problem with that assumption is that it doesn't reveal the beauty of the score at all, as he used no nuance, lacked finesse and passion. His conduction was flat and linear yet extremely speedy (very disturbing indeed).

I'll stick to my DVD conducted by Pappano with Alagna, Hampson and Van Dam.




Further readings:

- A piece (in French) written by Jaime Estapà including the historical discrepancies of the opera
- Michael Milenski (in English)


Jan 12, 2008

2009-2010 preview



Building of the underground station in front of the Garnier Opera in Paris

In the operatic world, the best way not to be left behind is to plan way ahead. I've never been very good at planning, quite the opposite actually. But since my failure to attend any performance of Donizetti's La Fille du Régiment at Covent Garden last year, with the brilliant production of Pelly (feat. Natalie Dessay and Juan Diego Florez), I've decided to take matters into my own hands, for a change. For the first time ever, I started planning. My record so far is buying tickets 13 months before the performance (for the Lehnhoff's production of Rigoletto in Dresden in June/July 2008, feat. Diana Damrau and Juan Diego Florez). This week, some US Opera Houses started to disclose their 2008-2009 schedules (LA, Seattle, Dallas, Washington). So obviously, I'm now focusing on the 2009-2010 season (exacerbated by the fact that the previews I have read so far about the 2008-2009 season in Europe aren't especially appealing to me). And what a year the 2009-2010 season is going to be. Absolutely amazing. So far, worth noticing, we have:
  • Gounod's Mireille to open the first season of new Paris Opera director Nicolas Joël
  • La Sonnambula, Opéra National de Paris, in a Marco Arturo Marelli's production, already seen in Vienna (2001) and London (2002), with Natalie Dessay
  • Norma, Toulouse, with Anna Caterina Antonacci
  • La Fille du Régiment, Liceu Barcelona (march 2010) with Patrizia Ciofi and Juan Diego Florez
And at the MET, some amazing previews as well:
  • Verdi's Attila, conducted by maestro Riccardo Muti and directed by amazing Pierre Audi, with Violetta Urmana, Ramon Vargas and Carlos Alvarez
  • La Fille du Régiment with Juan Diego Florez and Diana Damrau
Also worth noticing:
  • this will be the first season of Dominique Meyer as director of the Wiener Staatsoper

Mar 28, 2007

Lyon 2007-2008


Pour faire suite à mon billet sur la prochaine saison ici, à l'Opéra de Lyon, quelques informations complémentaires (source: Opéra de Lyon); Le Siegried de Wagner est annoncé pour Octobre 2007. A midsummer’s night dream, de Britten, pour Avril 2008. Quant au Maria Stuarda de Donizetti en version de concert, dont j'ai déjà parlé, en coproduction avec le TCE, il sera naturellement dirigé par Evelino Pido et ouvrira la saison de l'Opéra de Lyon: Maria Stuarda - Patrizia Ciofi Elisabeth 1ère - Iano Tamar Talbot - Giovanni Furlanetto Anna Kennedy - Paula Gardino Orchestre et choeurs de l'Opéra de Lyon Opéra de Lyon: 26 et 28 septembre 2007 Théâtre des Champs Elysées: 30 septembre 2007 Des infos supplémentaires sur l'oeuvre, Ciofi, Pido et Tamar ici. En Mars 2008, pour l'année du Japon en France, Festival No, 4 opéras dédiés au pays du soleil levant: Lady Sarashina, en création mondiale (commande de l'Opéra de Lyon), opéra de Peter Eötvös (livret en anglais), mis en scène par Ushio Amagatsu (4, 7, 9, 11, 13 et 16 mars 2008), inspiré du journal de Lady Sarashina, poétesse de la Cour du Japon au XIe siècle pendant l'ère Heain, As I crossed a bridge of dreams. Hanjo, de Toshio Hosokawa, mis en scène par Anne Teresa de Keersmaeker (5, 9, 12 et 14 mars 2008), opéra de chambre, livret du compositeur (en anglais) d'après Hanjo, le dernier des Cinq Nô Modernes de Yukio Mishima, créé au festival d'Aix-en-Provence en 2004 The Curlew River, déjà évoqué ici, de Britten, dans la mise en scène de Py, dirigé par Georges Walker, qui sera donné au Théâtre des Célestins (bonjour l'acoustique) les 6, 8, 10 et 15 mars 2008 Der Jasager / Der Neinsager, de Kurt Weil (1930), livret de Weil d'après La Chute dans la vallée, conte japonais du XVe siècle, mis en scène par Richard Brunel, donné au théâtre d'Oullins en mars 2008 (en français) Des infos supplémentaires sur les oeuvres, etc... ici.

Présentation de la saison: Lundi 16 avril, 20h, entrée libre.

Sinon, la saison 2007-2008 du Liceu (Barcelone) est en ligne, de même que celle du Deutsche Oper (Berlin) et de l'Opéra Royal de Wallonie (récapitulatif ici; à noter qu'ils proposent eux-aussi un Maria Stuarda avec Ciofi).

Oct 17, 2006

La Gioconda, MET NY

Amilcare Ponchielli

Conductor: Bertrand de Billy la Gioconda: Violeta Urmana Laura Adorno: Olga Borodina Enzo Grimaldo: Aquiles Machado

Last performances: tomorrow night 7:30pm & Saturday Oct.21, 1:30pm

YouTube extract from NY fans

Extract: Liceu, Barcelona, Oct.7, 2005
Conductor: Daniele Callegari La Gioconda: Deborah Voigt Laura Adorno: Elisabetta Fiorillo Enzo Grimaldo: Richard Margison

Review in French here.