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Monday, September 30, 2024

SFS/Salonen: Hindemith, Muhly, Bach/Elgar

 


Davies Symphony Hall in Blue
Photo by Lisa Hirsch
Taken the week of MTT's last SFS subscription concerts

I saw the second of two performances of what turned out to be the first subscription concert of Esa-Pekka Salonen's last year as music director of the San Francisco Symphony. He got a giant round of applause at the beginning and another at the end. However disposable the Board of Governors and management think he is, the audience does not agree. We'd really prefer to keep him, though why he would even consider sticking around when he's been treated so shabbily by the board and management, I don't know.

Anyway, it was a kind of wild program, built around sorta-Baroque and Baroque-adjacent music. The theoretical big work on the program was Nico Muhly's new piano concerto, a Symphony commission, played by pianist Alexandre Tharaud. Apparently Muhly had something of an obsession with the pianist and his recordings, and this concerto seems to be the result. It's Baroque-adjacent because Muhly used Baroque forms and melodies as his inspiration, with references to Rameau scattered around.

I found it lightweight, though with some charms, sort of Philip Glass crossed with Music From the Hearts of Space. Muhly's concerto has some nice touches in the orchestration; the piano is discreet, actually too discreet for my taste. I like the piano in a new concerto to be more present than this piano part is. And I have to admit: my initial reaction to the opening two minutes was to wonder why we were hearing outtakes from a Harry Potter movie.

The sorta-Baroque works were Edward Elgar's orchestration of J.S. Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in C minor and Hindemith's Ragtime (Well-Tempered). The Elgar orchestration is something, setting a full late-romantic orchestra loose on the Bach, with Elgar claiming in a letter that surely this is the kind of thing Bach would have wanted had an early 20th c. orchestra been available to him and you know, I think that's nonsense (we cannot read the minds of people who've been dead since 1750, or even 1950), but I love transcriptions for their imagination and sometimes sheer cheekiness. I mean, if Bach had written for trombones and the tambourine, it probably wouldn't have sounded anything like the way that Elgar incorporates them into his transcription. BUT it was a ton of fun to hear how Elgar imagines updated Bach, and the different instrumental timbres made it easy to hear the counterpoint in the fugue. Salonen and the orchestra played it with dignity and noble sound, and it was good to hear.

The four-minute Ragtime (should it be played on a program with Stravinsky's Ragtime some time? Of course it should.) was a firecracker of an opener that left me wanting more, and at the end of the program, I got it in the form of Hindemith's Mathis der Maler (Mathis the Painter) Symphony. It's three episodes drawn from Hindemith's opera Mathis der Mahler, which is about the German painter Matthias Grünewald and his struggles in the early 16th century.

I will never understand why, exactly, more Hindemith isn't performed in the United States. I have at least half-concluded that early 20th c. German music isn't of interest here unless it was written by Richard Strauss, Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, or Anton Webern. You don't hear much Schmidt, Schmitt, Hindemith (unless you have played one of his multitudinous works for solo orchestra instrument), Shrecker, Zemlinsky, etc. Hindemith was an enormously skilled composer who seemingly wrote for every instrument and every combination of instrument. Probably what he needs is a champion.

Esa-Pekka Salonen led a great performance of the Mathis der Mahler Symphony. I wasn't taking notes and don't have a lot to say other than that it's a big, serious work and it got a suitably grand and serious performance. I have to wonder whether the Muhly felt lightweight in part because of what followed it. 

Elsewhere (check back to see whether Joshua Kosman weighs in on this program)(he did):
  • Joshua Kosman, On a Pacific Aisle, liked the Muhly a lot more than I did, so now I'd like to hear it again.
  • Rebecca Wishnia, SFCV (and the SF Chronicle). I'll note that while a passacaglia can often be a lament (see "When I am laid in earth"), they're often instrumental (see the last movement of the Brahms 4th symphony). The usual definition is something like "a work with variations over a repeating bass line."
  • Michael Strickland, SF Civic Center

Daughter of the Regiment, LVO

 


Eugene Brancoveanu and Véronique Filloux
The Daughter of the Regiment
Photo by Barbara Mallon, courtesy of Livermore Valley Opera

I won't be seeing LVO's The Daughter of the Regiment until next weekend, but it opened yesterday and the photos look like it's a charming production. Their Otello a couple of years ago was terrific and I'm looking forward to seeing this one. Yes, it's one of the silliest plots in a genre that's full of them, but the music is late Donizetti and more sophisticated than you might anticipate.

Starring: Véronique Filloux, Marie; Chris Mosz, Tonio; Lisa Chavez, Marquise of Berkenfield; Eugene Brancoveanu, Sulpice; Deborah Lambert, Duchess of Krakenthorp; Gilead Wurman, Hortensius.

Remaining performances:

  • October 5th, 2024 @ 2:00pm
  • October 6th, 2024 @ 2:00pm


Museum Mondays


Imperial War Museum with a pair of 15" naval guns
London, July, 2024
Taken the day after I arrived. I was too tired to do much more than wander around a bit. The exhibits are fascinating, so....next London visit.

 

Friday, September 27, 2024

Friday Photo


Westminster Abbey, London
July, 2024

 

Monday, September 23, 2024

Richard Dyer

Richard Dyer, music critic of the Boston Globe from 1976 to 2006, died on September 20 at 82, following a series of strokes. He had an enormous influence on Boston's musical life and I think commanded a lot of respect.

More Ives

Kathryn King Media send out the following press release, which contains news of many events celebrating the 150th birthday of Charles Ives:


**BREVARD MUSIC CENTER SUMMER INSTITUTE & FESTIVAL

Monday, 15 July - Friday, 19 July 2024 / These events, also funded by the NEH, have already taken place: Monday, 15 July: Charles Ives: A Life in Music with baritone William Sharp and pianist Steven Mayer; Wednesday, 17 July: Concord Sonata with Michael Chertock; Friday, 18 July: Orchestra (Delta David Gier, conductor): Symphony No. 2, with source tunes


**JACOBS SCHOOL OF MUSIC at Indiana University

Charles Ives at 150: Music, Imagination and American Culture

Monday, 30 Sept - Tuesday, 08 October EDT/ Chief among four Ives festivals supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, curated by preeminent Ives scholar J. Peter Burkholder and cultural historian Joseph Horowitz, this cross-disciplinary festival will be by far the most ambitious celebration of the Ives Sesquicentennial. All events are free, registration is recommended: Registration link. N.B.: The entire Charles Ives at 150 festival will also be live-streamed.


**THE ORCHESTRA NOW: 10th Anniversary Season / Bard College

IVES AND THE PIANO

Saturday, 09 Nov at 6pm EST at Olin Hall / Bard College campus

Recital, readings, artwork, and discussion

Featuring Donald Berman , Leon Botstein , Kyle Gann , and Joseph Horowitz

Free and open to the public. No RSVP necessary.

https://www.bard.edu/news/events/ives-and-the-piano


CHARLES IVES: A LIFE IN MUSIC

Saturday, 16 Nov at 5:00pm EST at Olin Hall / Bard College

Scripted playlet with songs and commentary

Featuring Richard AldousDonald BermanJ. Peter BurkholderKyle GannJoseph Horowitz and William Sharp

Free and open to the public. No RSVP necessary.

https://www.bard.edu/news/events/charles-ives-a-life-in-music


CHARLES IVES' AMERICA

Saturday, 16 Nov at 7:00pm EST at Fisher Center / Bard College

Orchestral concert including performances of songs quoted in Ives’ music, followed by a discussion

Featuring The Orchestra Now (TŌN)Leon Botstein, conductor; Donald BermanJ. Peter BurkholderJoseph Horowitz and William Sharp

Tickets from $15. Livestream pay-what-you-wish.

https://ton.bard.edu/events/ives/


CHARLES IVES: A LIFE IN MUSIC

Sunday, 17 Nov at 12:00pm EST at Olin Hall / Bard College

Scripted playlet with songs and commentary

Featuring Richard AldousDonald BermanJ. Peter BurkholderKyle GannJoseph Horowitz and William Sharp

Free and open to the public. No RSVP necessary.

https://www.bard.edu/news/events/charles-ives-a-life-in-music-2024-11-17


CHARLES IVES' AMERICA

Sunday, 17 Nov at 2:00pm EST at Fisher Center / Bard College

Orchestra concert including performances of songs quoted in Ives’ music, followed by a discussion

Featuring The Orchestra Now (TŌN)Leon Botstein, conductor; Donald Berman,, J. Peter Burkholder, Joseph Horowitz and William Sharp

Tickets from $15. Livestream pay-what-you-wish.

https://ton.bard.edu/events/ives/


CHARLES IVES' AMERICA

Thursday, 21 Nov at 7:00pm EST at Carnegie Hall

Orchestral concert including performances of songs quoted in Ives’ music, preceded by a discussion at 6:00pm EST

Featuring The Orchestra Now (TŌN), Leon Botstein, conductor; Donald BermanJ. Peter BurkholderJoseph Horowitz and William Sharp

Tickets from $29 ($25 + $4 fee)

https://ton.bard.edu/events/america/


**CHICAGO SINFONIETTA / Illinois State University

CHARLES IVES' AMERICA

Wednesday, 19 Feb at 7pm CST at Normal Theater / 209 W North St, Normal, IL 61761

Film screening: Charles Ives' America with commentary by producer Joseph Horowitz and featured participants


CHARLES IVES: A LIFE IN MUSIC

Thursday, 20 Feb at 11:00am CST at Kemp Recital Hall, Centennial East, Illinois State University

Ives' songs tell the story of his life. Featuring baritone Sidney Outlaw, pianist Steven Mayer et al. Commentary by J. Peter BurkholderJoseph Horowitz and Alan Lessoff


MASTER CLASSES

Thursday, 20 Feb / times and locations tba

Master classes for ISU students by Sidney Outlaw and Steven Mayer

Free and open to public / for more information contact Alan Lessoff: ahlesso@ilstu.edu


IVES, TRANSCENDENTALISM, AND THE CONCORD SONATA

Thursday, 20 Feb at 7:30pm CST at Kemp Recital Hall, Centennial East, Illinois State University

Performances by Steven Mayer, piano, with readings by Sidney Outlaw and commentary by J. Peter BurkholderJoseph Horowitz and Alan Lessoff



CHARLES IVES AND THE GILDED AGE

Friday, 21 Feb at 11:00am CST at Kemp Recital Hall, Centennial East, Illinois State University

Lecture by Joseph Horowitz with commentary by Alan Lessoff


CHARLES IVES' AMERICA

This concert takes place in Mandel Hall / University of Chicago

Saturday, 22 Feb 2025 at 6:00pm CST

Pre-Concert Recital

Songs by Charles Ives with Sidney Outlaw, baritone; Steven Mayer, piano

Saturday, 22 Feb 2025 at 7:00pm CST

Chicago Sinfonietta concert / Mei-Ann Chen, conductor

Music of George Walker and Charles Ives

event page / ticket link


Other explorations of Charles Ives,

his music and his legacy include:

**Extensive coverage in the autumn 2024 issue of Phi Beta Kappa's journal The American Scholar, which includes essays by Tim BarringerSudip BoseJ. Peter BurkholderAllen C. Guelzo and Joseph Horowitz.

**The Charles Ives Society itself has been preparing for the sesquicentennial for years. Among the initiatives undertaken by the Society and continuing to this day are:


**A series of videos about Charles Ives, including panels - All the Way Around and Back - and twelve commentaries - From the Ives Studio - posted online via the Society's website, charlesives.org.


The All the Way Around and Back panels examine Ives and his works from many perspectives. The first of them features distinguished author J. Peter Burkholder, pianist Jeremy Denk, conductor Leonard Slatkin, soprano Susan Narucki, and pianist and Charles Ives Society President Donald Berman for a discussion on / introduction to Charles Ives, moderated by BMI Foundation President Deirdre Chadwick. The second panel, released in Spring 2024, is a discussion on Ives and Improvisation featuring John T. Cooper, composer/arranger and professor, Scheidt School of Music/University of Memphis; Bill Frisell, guitarist/composer; Eric Hofbauer, guitarist and department chair, jazz and contemporary music/Longy School of Music of Bard College; Ethan Iverson, pianist/composer/writer; jazz faculty, New England Conservatory; Phil Lesh, bass player, The Grateful Dead; and David Sanford, composer/leader, David Sanford Big Band; professor of music, Mt. Holyoke College, with moderator Judith Tick, Professor Emerita, Northeastern University and author: Becoming Ella Fitzgerald. A third panel, currently in production, is populated entirely by composers and features Martin BresnickRobert Carl (moderator), Jason EckardtDavid LangLei Liang, and Tania León. This third panel will be released in late 2024.


The From the Ives Studios commentaries are posted in each month of the sesquicentennial year, as follows:


January / Eve Beglarian (Composer) 

February / Jan Swafford (Composer; Author: Charles Ives: A Life with Music) with James Sinclair (Music Director, Orchestra New England; Executive Editor, Charles Ives Society) 

March / J. Peter Burkholder (Professor Emeritus, Indiana University School of Music; Author: Listening to Charles Ives) 

April / Denise Von Glahn (Professor of Musicology, Florida State University)

May / Cody Upton (Executive Director, American Academy of Arts and Letters)

June / Eric Hofbauer (Jazz and Contemporary Music - Department Chair, Guitar: Longy School of Music of Bard College; Prehistoric Jazz volume 3: Three Places in New England / Eric Hofbauer Quintet)

July / Suzanne Eggleston Lovejoy (Music Librarian for Access & Research Services, Yale University Music Library)

August / Joel Sachs (Conductor; Pianist; Author; Co-Director, Continuum; Professor Emeritus, The Juilliard School) 

September / James Sinclair (Music Director, Orchestra New England; Executive Editor, Charles Ives Society)

October / Kyle Gann (Composer; Author: Charles Ives's Concord: Essays After a Sonata; Professor of Music, Bard College) 

November / Carol Oja (William Powell Mason Professor,

Department of Music and Graduate Program in American Studies; Faculty Director of the Humanities Program, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies / Harvard University)

December / Jan Swafford (Composer; Author: Charles Ives: A Life with Music) 


**One of the core missions of the Charles Ives Society is to create critical editions of all the composer's works, a mammoth project that has reached its culmination in 2024. Among the most challenging of these endeavors is establishing the critical edition of Ives' Sonata No. 1 for Piano, a five-movement work edited by George Barth which if anything presents even more daunting editorial challenges than the better-known Sonata No. 2 for Piano: Concord, Mass., 1840-60. The principal players in the decades-long preparation of the critical editions of all of Ives' works have been Donald Berman, General Editor of the piano works; Thomas Brodhead, who issued the critical performing edition of Ives' fourth symphony; James Sinclair, Executive Editor of the Society, who has produced authoritative editions of all of Ives' orchestral sets (which he has recorded with Orchestra New England on nine discs for Naxos), as well as, with Neely Bruce, all 192 songs of Ives; and David Thurmaier, general editor of Ives' choral music. Inquiries about the Ives Society's critical editions can be directed here.


**The completion of 30 years' editing of the smaller works for piano, now published in their entirety in three volumes issued separately by Peermusic and Associated Music Publishers (AMP).


**The establishment of a priceless resource of data about Ives on charlesives.org the Society's website, including a complete discography of recordings of Ives' music, a Borrowed Tunes Index, a complete list of compositions, a list of Ives' publishers (by individual work), a list of programming suggestions from Ives scholars linked to key milestones in Ives' life and career, and much more.


**A collection of images and videos of important places and physical objects which figure in Ives' life.


**Critical commentaries by authoritative scholars on specific works have been housed on charlesives.org, analyses that have not been published in print or anywhere else.


In short, in this 150th anniversary of Ives' birth and for all the years to come, Ives enthusiasts can be assured that a wealth of information, images, performances and new insights into the extraordinary Mr. Ives will be made available.


Museum Mondays


"Nonchaloir", by John Singer Sargent
Sargent and Fashion, Tate Britain
July, 2024

 

Friday, September 20, 2024

Friday Photo


Organ, St. Lawrence Jewry
London, July, 2024

 

Thursday, September 19, 2024

It's Here!

If you've been missing Joshua Kosman's voice on all things western classical music in the Bay Area, well, you are not alone––I certainly have. When he retired, he mentioned that he had plans for a weekly newsletter. After a well-deserved break, he has it up and running. You can subscribe here.

The first newsletter includes his takes on Un ballo in maschera and The Handmaid's Tale at San Francisco Opera, as well as a couple of shorter notes.

Adriana Mater


Cover art c/o Deutsche Grammophon
Black & white photo of Kaija Saariaho
Text on photo:
Kaija Saariaho
Adriana Mater
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Fleur Barron Axelle Fano Nicholas Phan  Christopher Purves
San Francisco Symphony    San Francisco Symphony Chorus
DG logo

The world premiere recording of Kaija Saariaho's Adriana Mater was released a few weeks ago by Deutsche Grammophon. It's drawn from performances at the San Francisco Symphony in June, 2023, just days after Saariaho's death from glioblastoma. The performers are listed above in my description of the artwork accompanying the release; I think that alt text doesn't actually work on Blogger.

The performances were a deeply emotional event for the performers and director Peter Sellars. Salonen and Saariaho had been friends since their school days and Sellars directed the premieres of her first two operas, L'amour de loin and Adriana

The recording is currently available only as a download, but physical media will become available next year.

 

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

The New York Philharmonic in the New York Times


Lincoln Center Fountain
Photo by Lisa Hirsch

Javier C. Hernandez published an article in yesterday's NY Times about the NY Philharmonic, which is having troubles that might seem familiar to anyone in the Bay Area: the musicians haven't gotten a raise since 2019; they are between music directors (Jaap van Zweden is gone, Gustavo Dudamel comes on board in two years); their chief executive, Gary Ginstling, resigned after less than 18 months on the job. They also are dealing with an old scandal, where two players were investigated for raping a third player, but they were never charged; the orchestra fired them in 2018, but the contract required arbitration and the arbitrator restored them. The two are currently on paid leave and at least one is suing the heck out of the orchestra. (You can read about the case in Sammy Sussman's Vulture article and various other places around the web.)

The comments....well, they're closed or I would have a couple of my own, mostly in response to people who don't actually know how the orchestra business works and aren't familiar with, say, 990 forms. So a few responses to those comments here.
  • "It takes special talent for an orchestra to drive out both its executive AND artistic leader in the same period. " A reminder that the artistic leader (music director) is hired by the board of directors, not the orchestra, though generally there are musicians on the search committee. As far as is publicly known, Jaap van Zweden wasn't driven out by the orchestra, but decided to resign. Whether he was actually let go by the orchestra, we'll never know. He did stay for a year past his initial contract.
  • "The NY base salary is low, but the principal players are paid twice as much as principals from Chicago and LA, so it's a question of priority, financial and artistic." Let's check the 990s and see if this is the case. Well, it is; the NY Phil's principals are paid extremely well, based on what I can see on the 990s.
    • Concertmasters: Frank Huang, NY: $909,000 (whoa), Martin Chalifour, LA: $476,900, Robert Chen, CSO, $576,000. Okay, Huang's salary....a lot.
    • Second highest paid principal: Carter Brey, principal cello, NY: $589,000; Denis Bouriakov, LA, principal flute; $345,000 David Cooper, (former) principal horn, CSO, $329,000.
    • Third highest paid principle: Liang Wang, NY, principal oboe (on leave): $580,000; Andrew Bain, LA, principal horn, $342,000; Stephen Williamson, CSO, principal clarinet, $324,000
  • "The odds are high that Dudamel stays in Los Angeles." I expect that he will fulfill his contractual obligations in NY. The LA Phil is undoubtedly already looking around for its next music director, and they've got a new CEO who might or might not want Dudamel back.
  • "I believe the Chicago Symphony is still paying for the 1990s renovation of Orchestra Hall (I refuse to call it Symphony Center), and doesn't have the endowment the NY Phil has." I cannot speak to the renovation of the CSO's concert hall, but the CSO's endowment on its most recent 990 is $373 million, while the NY Phil's is $236 million. The CSO's endowment, in other words, is $140 million more than the NY Phil's. The LA Phil's is $344 million. (The largest orchestra endowment in the country is the Boston Symphony's, at something approaching a half-billion.)
  • "A Music Director who only spends SIX weeks actually conducting his orchestra is just a Principal Guest Conductor, and not worth whatever he is being paid." This is a reference to the amount of time Dudamel will conduct the NY Phil in the year before he becomes its music director. I don't know what his contract says about the first year he is actually music director. (How much time a music director should spend with his or her orchestra is an interesting question, isn't it.) The rest of this person's comments...oy. I certainly wonder why James Conlon's U.S. career hasn't been bigger, as he has been terrific nearly every time I've heard him, in opera or orchestra concerts. But the comments then go on to say that the accusations against the two players seem bogus, and well, they don't look that way to me.

 

Monday, September 16, 2024

Challenge to the Reader

 


Christopher Oglesby, left, as the Chief Magistrate and Mei Gui Zhang, right, as Oscar
Act I, Verdi's Un ballo in maschera
Photo by Cory Weaver, courtesy of San Francisco Opera

Found in various reviews of Verdi's Un ballo in maschera at San Francisco Opera:
  • Lisa Hirsch, SF Chronicle: "In a weak staging, Oscar, the king’s page, can be an annoyance, but not here."
  • Michael Anthonio, Parterre Box: "I belong to the camp that thinks Oscar is one of the most annoying characters in opera. Still, on Friday, Mei Gui Zhang made the role much more bearable with her dazzling coloratura and carefree mannerisms." 
  • Michael Strickland, SF Civic Center: "In the photo above, Gustavus is accompanied by his young male page, Oscar, a trouser role that can be one of the most annoying in all of opera, but soprano Mei Gui Zhang was an absolute delight as she continually interrupted serious scenes with silly trills."
We're all in agreement about the potential for Oscar being an annoyance and also that Mei Gui Zhang was not personally annoying. Long ago, a friend mentioned that he finds Cherubino, from Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro, extremely annoying, and it's certainly true that the page––it's always a page––gets into all kinds of trouble during the opera.

So here's the challenge: who do you consider to be the most annoying character in opera? Please show your work.

San Francisco Symphony: Change of Program


Davies Symphony Hall
Photo by Lisa Hirsch

When the San Francisco Symphony's 2024-25 season was announced, the first concert (not the gala, which isn't until next week, don't ask, I have no idea) was just the Verdi Requiem. Then three works for chorus and orchestra by Gordon Getty appeared, to be performed before intermission: St. Christopher; the Intermezzo from Goodbye, Mr. ChipsGetty’s 2021 opera based on James Hilton’s classic novella; and The Old Man in the Snow, featuring a poem by Getty

The program has been updated yet again. The Getty works have been postponed to a later date, and this week's concerts will be the Verdi Requiem only.

 

Museum Mondays


Teatro Pisano, by Giancarlo Girard
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024



 

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Seen in Santa Fe



Michael Mayes (David) and Greer Grimsley (Paul) in The Righteous.
Photo by Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera.


I made my more or less annual vist to Santa Fe Opera in August, seeing four of this year's five operas. (I passed on La Traviata.) My Letter from Santa Fe is posted at San Francisco Classical Voice. If you want to compare notes with my thoughts, Der Rosenkavalier and Elixir of Love are still streaming and can be heard at KFHM. This post is both a media roundup and further commentary; I couldn't fit a few things in. Apologies for not getting this post up before The Righteous and Don Giovanni came down.

The big event was, presumably, the world premiere of Gregory Spears and Tracy K. Smith's The Righteous. I was not very happy with the opera, which sags a lot. It is overly long, overstuffed, awkward, and generally unsuccessful.
  • Zachary Woolfe, NY Times, makes many of the same points I do but is gentler about making them. I'll note that the text "Life is long and wisdom slow" appears long before David's exit aria. I'm surprised he doesn't mention the Biblical basis of the story.
  • Heidi Waleson, WSJ
  • Thomas May, Memeteria (but the review is at Musical America and paywalled)
  • James Sohre, Opera Today
  • Scott Cantrell, Dallas Morning News
  • Mark Tiarks, Santa Fe New Mexican
  • Julia Goldberg, Santa Fe Reporter
  • OperaGene
Related:



Don Giovanni and his ego: a wall covered with portraits of the character, with another on its way.
Ryan Speedo Green (Don Giovanni), photo by Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera.

For a long time, I really was not fond of Don Giovanni, ranking it far under The Marriage of Figaro and Cosi fan tutte, the other two Mozart-da Ponte operas. The libretto is far messier, the time frame of the action less clear. It's got a tenor role that is difficult to make persuasive, because of the two arias and the tendency to cast a light lyric tenor in the role even when the Donna Anna is, say, Jane Eaglen.

I saw two productions of Don Giovanni in less than a week, and realized that the reason I had trouble with it was crappy productions at San Francisco Opera. The production they saddled Marc Minkowski with was awful, and unfortunately the recent new production by Michael Cavanagh has good moments but he did not really follow through whole-heartedly with his dystopian future idea. So I hadn't seen a really persuasive production since the David McVicar (!) in 2007.

The two I saw recently persuaded me of the opera's greatness, though I am not not not willing to go as far as to say "greatest opera ever written." If I had to choose a Mozart opera as a candidate for that spot, no question, Marriage of Figaro

But here's a surprise: the Merola Opera production, which I reviewed for SFCV, outshone Santa Fe Opera's, for two reasons: they had a better and more convincing Don Ottavio and Patricia Racette's direction was excellent with no major errors. 

I cannot say the same for Stephen Barlow's production in Santa Fe. His direction was mostly good and the physical production looked great, but oh dear, he really screwed up the end of the opera. The details are in my review, though here's a picture that explains the problem:


Ryan Speedo Green and Rachael Wilson
Photo by Curtis Brown for Santa Fe Opera

You might be forgiven if you think you've stumbled into a production of Tosca. I go into some detail about why this is such an awful mistake in the review, but I must mention that my notes say "...he's sprawled on the floor like Scarpia OH SHIT." I mean....why didn't someone tell Barlow that a mashup of Tosca and Don Giovanni was a bad idea? A friend has noted that perhaps it was an inside-opera joke, but I am dubious.

No photos of Elisir, but it was a charming delight. And the Rosenkavalier performance I saw was lovely, with Rachel Willis-Sørensen in gloriously beautiful voice as the Marschallin. 

San Francisco Opera: The Handmaid's Tale


Irene Roberts, center, as Offred; Sarah Cambidge, seated at right, as Aunt Lydia
Photo: Cory Weaver, courtesy of San Francisco Opera
 

San Francisco Symphony's second opera of the 2024-25 season is The Handmaid's Tale, the 2000 opera by Poul Ruders and Paul Bentley, based on Margaret Atwood's 1985 novel. It is stunning, strongly sung and directed, and extremely harrowing.

The photo gives you a good idea of the set at its most austere. It was bleak even when the set was dressed as multiple rooms in the Commander's house.

Related: