Lisa Hirsch's Classical Music Blog.
The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve. Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.
Berce mollement sur ton sein sublime
Ô puissante mer, l’enfant de Dindyme!
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Monday, May 30, 2022
Friday, May 27, 2022
Nathalie Stutzmann at SFS
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
Principal Oboe Musical Chairs, LA Phil Edition
The excellent Mr. CKDH, who blogs at All is Yar, covers vacancies in the LA Philharmonic in great detail. He's been reporting on the orchestra and its members for long enough that he's been able to interview principal players and retirees. (See, for example, his two-part interview with Michele Zukovsky, legendary principal clarinetist for 54 years, on the occasion of her retirement. Part 1 Part 2)
For out-of-towners, this might not be of interest, unless you're a nerd, which I am. Also, as a former flutist, I followed the LA Phil's multi-year principal flute issues with some fascination.
There's a big exception this year, however. The LA Phil has an opening for principal oboe, where they choose someone who served for a few months before deciding that the job wasn't for him. And the other week, Eugene Isotov, San Francisco Symphony's fabulous principal oboist, was in LA playing a trial week.
He is a great player and I'm sure that he is under serious consideration for the job. Me, I hope that he stays here! If you're interested in SFS, in the audition process, or the LA Phil, definitely take a look at the principal oboe post at All is Yar.
Monday, May 23, 2022
News of the Day, Julia Bullock Edition; Media Round-up of History's Persistent Voice
- Joshua Kosman, SF Chronicle
- Janos Gereben, Classical Voice America
- Lisa Hirsch, SFCV
SAN FRANCISCO OPERA ANNOUNCES CASTING UPDATE FOR
WORLD PREMIERE OF JOHN ADAMS’ ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA,
OPENING SEPTEMBER 10
Amina Edris to Perform Cleopatra, Replacing Julia Bullock
San Francisco Opera today announced a cast change for the world premiere of John Adams’ Antony and Cleopatra, opening on September 10, 2022 as the first operatic presentation of the Company’s 2022–23 Centennial Season.
Soprano Amina Edris will create the role of Cleopatra, replacing Julia Bullock, who has withdrawn from the production. Bullock and her husband, conductor Christian Reif, are expecting the birth of their first child this fall. While Bullock will not debut the role in San Francisco, she remains connected with the project for future engagements.
San Francisco Opera Tad and Dianne Taube General Director Matthew Shilvock said: “Julia has been such an inspiration in the creation of John Adams’ Antony and Cleopatra and we will miss her dearly from the premiere, but it is for the happiest of reasons imaginable! We wish Julia and Christian great joy as they begin a family together. We are so grateful to Amina for joining us to create this extraordinary role and excited for the depth of character and beautiful artistry she will bring to Cleopatra. Amina is having such success around the world, and we’re thrilled to welcome her back to San Francisco Opera to help us launch our second century in such a special way.”
Julia Bullock said, “I am deeply grateful to Matthew and San Francisco Opera for being so respectful and supportive as I came to the decision to withdraw from the premiere to prepare for the birth of our first child. Amina will be thrilling in the role of Cleopatra, and I wish the entire cast and crew my very best as they bring this new work to life.”
Born in Egypt and raised in New Zealand, soprano Amina Edris is rapidly establishing herself as one of the most exciting young stars on today’s operatic stage. Following post-graduate studies at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, Edris participated in the Merola Opera Program (2015) and Adler Fellowship Program (2016, 2017). As a San Francisco Opera Adler Fellow, she performed roles in Carmen, Dream of the Red Chamber, Rigoletto, Elektra and La Traviata on the War Memorial Opera House stage. In 2019 she returned to the Company, starring as Juliette in Gounod’s Roméo et Juliette, opposite the Roméo of her husband, tenor Pene Pati.
Edris made her Canadian Opera Company debut last month as Violetta in a starry cast for Verdi’s La Traviata and her performance was hailed as “beautiful of tone throughout her registers, with accurate coloratura and no shortage of power” and “the revelation of the night” (Bachtrack). She has performed Manon in Massenet’s opera to widespread acclaim at Opéra National de Bordeaux and Opéra National de Paris where Opera Forum said of her interpretation: “Amina Edris literally brought the Opéra Bastille to its knees with her superlative incarnation of the title role, both vocally and theatrically.” Recent appearances include Alice in Meyerbeer’s Robert le Diable at Bordeaux, Micaëla in Carmen at Opéra du Rhin, Violetta for Opéra de Limoges. This summer, she returns to Europe for engagements with the Paris Opéra as La Folie in Rameau’s Platée and Festival d’Aix-en-Provence as Adalgisa in Bellini’s Norma. Next spring, she makes her house debut at Barcelona’s Gran Theatre del Liceu as Manon.
Edris is a featured artist in San Francisco Opera’s 2022 Webby People’s Voice award-winning video portrait series, In Song. Filmed on location in her native Cairo, In Song: Amina Edris follows the soprano’s journey from a childhood infused with Arabic music to her emergence as an operatic soprano. The free, 19-minute episode showcases Edris performing the song “Ghanili Shway Shway,” first performed by iconic Egyptian singer Oum Kalthoum, and the French art song “Adieux de l’hôtesse arabe” by Carmen composer Georges Bizet.
Edris joins a notable Antony and Cleopatra cast for San Francisco Opera. Bass-baritone Gerald Finley, an acclaimed Adams role creator for his performances as J. Robert Oppenheimer in Doctor Atomic, is the Roman general and triumvir, Antony. Tenor Paul Appleby, who created the role of Joe Cannon in the Company’s 2017 premiere of Adams’ Girls of the Golden West, is the young Caesar, Octavius. Bass-baritone Alfred Walker is Antony’s confidante Enobarbus and mezzo-soprano Elizabeth DeShong portrays Octavia, Caesar’s sister and the wife of Antony. San Francisco Opera Music Director Eun Sun Kimopens the 100th season with this highly anticipated world premiere by the distinguished composer and Bay Area resident.
Created for San Francisco Opera’s centennial, Antony and Cleopatra is a co-commission and co-production with Barcelona’s Liceu Opera, Palermo’s Teatro Massimo and the Metropolitan Opera. With a libretto adapted from Shakespeare’s tragedy with supplementary passages drawn from Plutarch, Virgil and other classical texts, Adams, director Elkhanah Pulitzer and dramaturg Lucia Scheckner blend the mythic imagery of antiquity with the starry glamour of 1930s Hollywood. Pulitzer heads a production team of Tony Award-winning set designer and MacArthur Fellow Mimi Lien, costume designer Constance Hoffman, lighting designer David Finn, projection designer Bill Morrison and sound designer Mark Grey.
Sunday, May 22, 2022
It Wasn't Actually Donizetti.
I went to the opera this afternoon, expecting to see a third-rate Donizetti comedy. What I got, though, was a better-than-first-rate Donizetti comedy.
The weirdest thing about it was that it wasn't by Donizetti and it most certainly wasn't written in Italian. That's because it was Das Liebesverbot, Richard Wagner's second opera, here performed by Pocket Opera in Donald Pippin's English translation as No Love Allowed.
Friends, mostly you wouldn't have recognized it as Wagner. The Sorcerer-of-Bayreuth-to-come peeped out occasionally in small harmonic pings, though what struck me most strongly was the composer's skill in structuring the music effectively. It's true that the source material, William Shakespeare's play Measure for Measure, is good, and in creating his libretto, Wagner apparently dealt well with it.
The music is lovely, sometimes better than that. The big ensembles that end both acts are mighty impressive; the composer did a good job of handling potentially difficult material. The Pippin translation is pretty funny. The singers were all excellent and appeared to be having a darned good time; they worked together fabulously as an ensemble. The staging by Nicholas Garcia is straightforward and effective and does a lot with about six pieces of furniture. The orchestra under Jonathan Khuner played well and with great spirit. One performance remains, at the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, on Sunday, May 29, 2022, at 2:30 p.m. You can buy tickets at Pocket Opera's web site.
Any opera company in search of a comedy should take a look at Das Liebesverbot. It's not canonical Wagner, but so? It's a fine romp through comic fields and should be performed regularly. (Here are Joshua Kosman's thoughts on the performance and work.)
As I said, everyone was darned good, so here are all of their names:
Leslie Sandefur as Isabella
Michael Dailey as Luzio
Spencer Dodd as Friedrich
Aléxa Anderson as Mariana
Sonia Gariaeff as Dorella
Michael Grammer as Brighella
Eric Levintow as Antonio
Julio Ferrari as Angelo
Pete Shoemaker as Danieli
Michael Mendelsohn as Pontius Pilate
Maria Caycedo, Ensemble
Daphne Touchais, Ensemble
Christopher Pilcher, Guard
Andrew Green, Ensemble
Chase Kupperberg, Ensemble
Friday, May 20, 2022
Media Round-up of the Past: Dream of the Red Chamber, 2016
I didn't blog about or formally review Bright Sheng's Dream of the Red Chamber in September, 2016, so here I am playing catchup on everyone else's reviews. One odd point: I cannot find the SFCV review and there must have been one. Perhaps it disappeared in the same data migration effort that wiped out some of my older reviews.
- Joshua Kosman, SF Chron
- Georgia Rowe, Mercury-News
- Ilana Walder-Biesanz, Bachtracks
- Ray Mark Rinaldi, Opera News
- Charles Kruger, Theaterstorm
Thursday, May 19, 2022
San Francisco Symphony Cast Change
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Oakland Symphony Change of Program
San Francisco Opera Cast Change: Don Giovanni
SAN FRANCISCO, CA (May 18, 2022) — San Francisco Opera today announced a cast change for its new production of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s Don Giovanni, opening June 4. Soprano Nicole Car will make her San Francisco Opera debut as Donna Elvira, replacing Carmen Giannattasio who has withdrawn from the production.
Giannattasio said: “I am incredibly sad to share that I will not be singing Donna Elvira in San Francisco Opera’s new production of Don Giovanni. I had been postponing a necessary surgery in my abdomen for quite some time. Between my performance schedule and COVID delays at the hospital it was not possible to have this procedure until just weeks ago, and I am facing a more difficult recovery than expected. I had hoped to be completely recovered by the time I started rehearsals, but unfortunately, I am not healed properly and must return home for additional physiotherapy to be able to meet the physical demands of singing in a staged production. I want to thank the San Francisco Opera and my colleagues, as well as my family and friends for their support, especially during these last couple of months. I look forward to returning to the stage this summer to sing Tosca in Macerata, Italy.”
San Francisco Opera’s Tad and Dianne Taube General Director Matthew Shilvock said: “We are deeply saddened that Carmen is having to withdraw from the role of Donna Elvira this summer, but we wish her all good health as she continues her recovery. Carmen is a great friend of San Francisco Opera, having made such an incredible impact on our stage as Tosca in 2018, and both we and our audiences were so eager for her return this summer. We look forward to working with Carmen in the future. We are deeply grateful to Nicole Car for joining this new production, making her house debut a few weeks earlier than planned.”
Nicole Car, who was already scheduled to make her first appearance with San Francisco Opera at the Eun Sun Kim Conducts Verdi concert on June 30, now makes her debut with the Company in the fully staged production of Don Giovanni. Car has performed the role of Donna Elvira on many leading stages, including in March 2022 at the Paris Opera under the baton of Bertrand de Billy, who also conducts San Francisco Opera’s performances. In San Francisco, Car joins a cast headed baritone Etienne Dupuis, her husband and occasional onstage colleague, who is making his Company debut as the title role of Don Giovanni.
Car regularly performs on the stages of the Vienna State Opera, Paris Opera, Royal Opera House Covent Garden, Metropolitan Opera and Deutsche Oper Berlin. Opera News praised her 2017 appearance in Puccini’s La Bohème at Covent Garden as “the evening’s exceptional vocal performance” and said “Car’s long-breathed, assured Mimì suggested a star in the making.” The Australian soprano’s repertory features leading operatic heroines, such as Mimì, Donna Elvira, Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte, Elisabetta in Don Carlo, Tatyana in Eugene Onegin, Marguerite in Faust and Micaëla in Carmen. Her recordings include Andre Messager’s Passionnèment for Palazzetto Bru Zane and two recital discs, Heroines and The Kiss, and Brahms’ A German Requiem for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC).
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
Speaking of Loud
Too Loud
Karina Canellakis guest-conducted at San Francisco Symphony last week. Here are the reviews that I'm aware of:
Not in my review, but something I definitely thought: "Guest conductors beware: Davies doesn't respond well to quadruple forte." I was well aware of the general loudness of the program, and I'd noticed the last several guests also tending to go overboard. Of those, Gustavo Dudamel was the worst because his Mahler completely missed the dynamic range from double-piano to mezzo-forte, and the work really suffered as a result.
With Canellakis, there was an absence of musical layering that blunted the potential effects of the works and made them too much of the same thing. I definitely did a mental compare-and-contrast with Esa-Pekka Salonen, whose conducting always has much more nuance than I heard last week. Well, except for that Strauss thing.
Monday, May 16, 2022
Friday, May 13, 2022
Monday, May 09, 2022
Friday, May 06, 2022
Friday Photo
Monday, May 02, 2022
Sunday, May 01, 2022
Women on the Podium
Joshua Kosman had a fine column the other day in the SF Chronicle, about the several upcoming concerts at San Francisco Symphony that are conducted by women, namely, Xian Zhang, Karina Canellakis, Nathalie Stutzmann, and Ruth Reinhardt.
This reminded me of my response, back in 2007, to a truly godawful profile of Marin Alsop, by Anthony Tommasini. Among other things, he had the nerve to say that "The dearth of leading female conductors is ultimately inexplicable," which, of course, it's not. (This is here to remind you that the NY Times paid him to be their chief classical music critic for quite a few years, years during which the women who were writing regularly for the classical music section failed to be hired as full-time employees and then largely disappeared from its pages. I'm sure that this is inexplicable too.)
Joshua goes on to write the following about conductor Talia Ilan on the lack of women on the podium:
Ilan subscribes to a mathematical explanation as well. If we assume that conducting talent is evenly distributed throughout the population, she points out, then an all-male profession makes space for the weakest 50% of men, who would be squeezed out of a workforce that was half female. That’s a lot of mediocre men with an incentive to oppose gender equity.
Also: men get appointed to multiple conducting positions, even though there is more than enough talent out there that organizations don't need to do this. Some examples, including one that came to mind reading the biography of this week's SF Symphony guest conductor:
- Yannick Nézet-Séguin leads the Metropolitan Opera, Philadelphia Orchestra, and Orchestre Métropolitain of Montreal.
- Andris Nelsons leads the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Leipzig Gewandaus Orchestra.
- Klaus Mäkelä leads the Oslo Philharmonic, Orchestre de Paris, and Turku Music Festival. He is
2526 years old. - Gustavo Dudamel leads the LA Phil and Paris Opera. (H/T Joshua Kosman for reminding me of this.)
Briefly Answering a Bad Take
John McWhorter, who is a guest columnist at the NY Times, decided last week that it was his turn to decry that awful modern music, meaning serialism, so he wrote a really pretty bad column. It starts with his personal experience with one piece of music that he sang in a chorus, but he doesn't say who wrote it or what it was. He then goes on to condemn serialism, state that melody isn't unsophisticated, and cite a limited number of sources, including Joseph Horowitz's recent book on Dvorak and John Mauceri's book on 20th c. classical music.
Where to start. Well, there is so much that could be said that I'm going to just give you an incomplete bullet list.
- McWhorter is entitled to like or dislike any music he wants to like or dislike.
- Some people like serial music, and they also get to like what they like.
- He's fighting the style wars of 50 years ago.
- He's not a musicologist. He is dabbling by reading music writing that fulfills his preconceived notions. It's possible to be better read than he is in current music writing.
- You'll hear a lot more music in U.S. concert halls by (for example) Adams, Reich, Glass, Harbison, Corigliano, Picker, Adamo, the other John Adams, Riley, Rouse, Holloway, Chin, Adès, Gubaidulina, Golijov, Saariaho, Lindberg, Ligeti, Dessner, Lutoslawski, Montgomery, Sallinen, Rautavara, Paart, Dutilleux, Messiaen, Bates, Stucky, Mackey, Clyne, Yi, Bernstein, Harrison, Feldman, Muhly, Diamond, Copland, Stravinsky, Salonen, and others than you'll hear by serialists or by composers using different compositional techniques whose music is dissonant.
- It's a bad idea to write about serialism as though all composers who use the technique write similar music. Remember, that means that you're lumping together composers as distinctive as Berg and Webern, to go back to early serialists.
- Whatever Boulez said....you need to look at the totality of his career. The guy who talked about blowing up opera houses ultimately conducted at a few opera houses.
- If you're going to read it at all, Horowitz's book must be read in tandem with Douglas Shadle's Antonín Dvořák's New World Symphony. Doug is a musicologist specializing in American music.