Showing posts with label santa fe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label santa fe. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

Die Walküre, Santa Fe Opera


Soloman Howard (Hunding), Vida Miknevičiūtė (Sieglinde), and Jamez McCorkle (Siegmund) in Die Walküre
Curtis Brown for Santa Fe Opera
 

I was very happy with the singing and staging and very unhappy with the conducting in Santa Fe's Die Walküre. As I said to a friend, it's the third time this year that James Gaffigan has disappointed me! I'm told that his Tristan three years ago –– I didn't go to Santa Fe that year –– was good, so who knows what was up with Die Walküre. But it was astonishingly dull conducting of an exciting opera that gives the conductor lots of opportunities.

Let me also note that it occurred to me more than once that the excellent Santa Fe Opera Orchestra doesn't have a long tradition of playing Wagner, and in some hard-to-define way, it showed. The phrasing and articulation weren't quite idiomatic at times (the weak conducting didn't, of course, help.) The San Francisco Opera Orchestra has some players who've been in nearly every Wagner performance in the last 45 years, meaning five full Ring cycles, individual performances of some of the Ring operas, and numerous performances of Lohengrin, Tristan, Die Meistersinger, Parsifal, and so on.

Meanwhile, next May, the L.A. Phil is performing Die Walküre sort of in concert (Frank Gehry is designing the sets), with a similar cast and a more exciting conductor. I mean...I haven't loved everything I've heard from Dudamel but I'd be surprised if he is dull. The singers for the May performances are:

  • Siegmund: Jamez McCorkle (pronounced Ja-MEZ, not James)
  • Sieglinde: Jessica Faselt (change....one...letter...)
  • Hunding: Soloman Howard
  • Wotan: Ryan Speedo Green
  • Brünnhilde: Christine Goerke
  • Fricka: Sarah Saturnino
Note that the two performances are each spread out over three nights, one act per evening, so this is...an unusually expensive ticket.

Santa Fe press round-up:

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

Rigoletto, Santa Fe Opera

 


Duke Kim (Duke of Mantua) and Kayla Nanto (Countess Ceprano)
Rigoletto, Santa Fe Opera
Curtis Brown for Santa Fe Opera

In my review, I said that Duke Kim was made up such that he looked like a cross between Prince and Raul Julia as Gomez Addams. If you don't believe me, web search is your friend. Last year, Greer Grimsley, in The Righteous, looked like a cross between Barry Sonnenfeld, director of The Addams Family and Addams Family Values, and Michael Tilson Thomas. Maybe these pop culture references are a thing at Santa Fe.

Monday, August 18, 2025

House Debut


La Bohème, Act 1
Santa Fe Opera, July, 2025
 Soloman Howard (Colline), Long Long (Rodolfo), Efraín Solís (Schaunard), Szymon Mechliński (Marcello), photo by Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera


Not at the Santa Fe Opera, which I've been attending since 2008, when I saw Adriana Mater, Billy Budd, and Radamisto, but at Parterre Box, which published my review of Santa Fe's La Bohème today. Grateful thanks to Harry Rose for the opportunity to write for Parterre Box, although it's bittersweet: Parterre Box's intended reviewer, Patrick Mack, died unexpectedly earlier this year.

I'm expecting more reviews. John Allison, editor of Opera Magazine, saw a different performance from the one I saw. Note that registration is required for Opera Now and a subscription is required to read Opera Magazine.
  • Lisa Hirsch, Parterre Box. Did the well-nigh perfect La Bohème at San Francisco Opera make me crankier than I otherwise would have been about this production? You bet. (NB: will get embarrassing errors, both mine, fixed post-haste.)
  • Thomas May, Memeteria; continues at Opera Now; he is much more positive about this production than I was.
  • John Allison, Opera Magazine (link to follow; his Santa Fe reviews will not be published for a while)
  • Heidi Waleson, Wall Street Journal (paywall)
  • William Burnett, Opera Warhorses 

Monday, April 07, 2025

Museum Mondays


Chinese Zodiac Animals, c. 1848
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024

 

Wednesday, April 02, 2025

Belated Museum Mondays


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


 

Monday, February 17, 2025

Museum Mondays


Jogak Bo
Korean patchwork style
Museum of International Folk Art
Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024

 

Monday, February 10, 2025

Museum Mondays


Dance of the Devils Mask
Museum of International Folk Art
Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024

 

Monday, January 20, 2025

(Belated) Museum Mondays


 From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Belated Museum Mondays (November 11, 2024)


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


 

Belated Museum Mondays (November 4, 2024)

 


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


Monday, October 28, 2024

Museum Mondays


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


 

Monday, October 21, 2024

Museum Mondays


Cart
Palermo, Sicily, Italy

Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


 

Monday, September 16, 2024

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. 

Monday, September 09, 2024

Museum Mondays


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024


 

Sunday, September 08, 2024

Name That Portrait

 


Michael Fabiano as King Gustavus III
Un ballo in maschera
Photo: Cory Weaver / San Francisco Opera

I recognized two of the portraits in this wall of paintings as real portraits, so probably the rest are as well. Do you recognize any?

Portraits seem to be a thing right now. There was a giant wall of portraits of Ryan Speedo Green as Don Giovanni in the eponymous opera, in Santa Fe's production this summer. Presumably they have to be reconstructed for every new singer in the title role.


Ryan Speedo Green as Don Giovanni
Curtis Brown Photography
Courtesy of Santa Fe Opera



Monday, September 02, 2024

Museum Mondays


From La Cartonería Mexicana, an exhibit of Mexican paper and paste art
Museum of International Folk Art, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2024

 

Friday, January 26, 2024

Monday, January 22, 2024

Museum Mondays


Slightly creepy overdressed doll on.a fainting couch?
International Folk Art Museum, Santa Fe, NM
August, 2019