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Our motto: "Critical thinking in the cheap seats." Unbiased, honest classical music and opera opinions, occasional obituaries and classical news reporting, since 2007. All written content © 2019 by Paul J. Pelkonen. For more about Superconductor, visit this link. For advertising rates, click this link. Follow us on Facebook.
Showing posts with label romeo and juliet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label romeo and juliet. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Metropolitan Opera Preview: Roméo et Juliette

Charles Castronovo and Ailyn Perez are Shakespeare's star-crossed lovers.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Everybody onstage: the masquerade ball from Roméo et Juliette.
Photo by Ken Howard © 2018 The Metropolitan Opera.
The news is that tenor Bryan Hymel has withdrawn from this run of Romeo et Juliette, the evergreen Charles Gounod adaptation of Shakespeare's play. Charles Castronovo is his replacement, but he's been replaced by Andrea Shin in a plague that seems to only affect members of the House of Montague.  Ailyn Perez, fresh off a mostly successful run in the Massenet chestnut Thaïs, is his Juliet. Placido Domingo conducts this first revival of the Met's staging by Bart Sher.

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Concert Review: The Man With Three Countries

Stéphane Denève brings Prokofiev back to the Philharmonic.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
"If you want them to take you seriously you've got to have serious hair." Stéphane Denève.
Photo from the Royal Scottish Opera by Chris Christodoulou.
Sergei Prokofiev gets a bad rap.

Oh sure, he's a major composer of the 20th century, a fearless innovator whose music pushed boundaries in the areas of piano, orchestral work, opera and ballet. And yet there is something of the sidelong glance, something of the raised eyebrow among music elitists that keeps his huge catalogue from being programmed regularly outside of Russia. Sure, the works are technically difficult, but this writer would postulate that said programmers are never quite sure if the composer was being serious or was secretly laughing at his audience.

Saturday, December 24, 2016

Metropolitan Opera Preview: Roméo et Juliette

"A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life..."
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Publicity photo of Diana Damrau and Vittorio Grigolo as Juliette and her Roméo.
Photo by Kristian Schuller for the Metropolitan Opera.
The Met unveils a new take on Shakespeare's classic story of doomed young love, with Vittorio Grigolo and Diana Damrau singing Charles Gounod's gorgeous music. This new production by Bart Sher was first seen at Salzburg and La Scala. It arrives at the Met on New Year's Eve.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Concert Review: The Exotic and the Forgotten


The New York Philharmonic plays Franck, Prokofiev and Julian Anderson.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Conductor Sir Andrew Davis led the New York Philharmonic this week.
Image © 2013 Glyndebourne Opera Festival.
The standard, stolid format of the modern symphony concert (an opening piece, a concerto and a symphony) was established some time in the 19th century. This week's subscription series at the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Sir Andrew Davis and featuring Canadian pianist Marc-Andre Hamelin followed that format, but drew its works from three very different historic eras.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Opera Review: No Shakespeare Allowed

Bel Canto at Caramoor presents I Capuleti e i Montecchi.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Bellini's I Capuleti e i Montecchi retells the story of Romeo and Juliet
--
but it's not based on the Shakespeare play.
Saturday evening at Caramoor afforded New York area opera lovers the chance to hear the Vincenzo Bellini rarity I Capuleti e i Montecchi ("The Capulets and the Montagues") in a concert performance featuring the Orchestra of St. Luke's. This version of the story of two star-cross'd lovers was a tremendous early success from Bellini but like many bel canto works, fell out of fashion.

Closer examination of this non-Shakespearean Romeo and Juliet reveals that it contains some of Bellini's most compelling music, although much of the score was cannibalized from his earlier flop Zaira. I Capuleti brims with strong choral passages for the feuding houses and chromatic writing that anticipates Tristan and the most romantic passages of Die Walküre. (Richard Wagner, never above borrowing a melodic idea from a quality source, conducted this opera on many occasions in his early career.)

The libretto ignores the Shakespeare play based on this story, using as its source Matteo Bandello's version of a story by Luigi di Porto--which also inspired the British playwright. In this version, the two noble houses are on opposite sides of the Renaissance conflict between the Guelphs and the Ghibilines. Romeo woos Giulietta by pretending to be an ambassador from the Montecchi (Montagues.) Familiar figures like Old Montague, the Nurse, and Mercutio are not present.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Concert Review: The Kid Goes Wild

Daniil Trifonov joins the Mariinsky Orchestra at Carnegie Hall. 
Daniil Trifonov displays fearless technique.
Photo by Dmitri Lovetsky © International Tchaikovsky Competition.
To celebrate the 120th anniversary of Carnegie Hall, Valery Gergiev and the Mariinsky Orchestra played a five-night stand at the famous venue, focusing on the music of Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, who conducted the first Carnegie Hall concert in 1891.

Tuesday's fifth and final concert featured the evergreen First Piano Concerto, led with gusto by Mr. Gergiev. Daniil Trifonov, a fast-blooming 20-year old virtuoso and winner of the 2011 Tchaikovsky Competition, brought fire and skill to the solo piano part. This pianist has technique to burn, an played here at astonishing speed. This was not Mr. Trifonov's Carnegie debut, but judging from the thunderous reception, it may have been the young pianist's coming-out party.

The first thing you notice about Mr. Trifonov's playing is his hands, long, with delicately formed fingers. He opened the concerto with a fierce attack, hunched over the piano as if hacking into a difficult corporate mainframe. For the loping opening theme, the pianist drove the notes hard, playing from his shoulders and driving the work forward. He then raced into the first cadenza, and jaws dropped.

Through three movements, Mr. Trifonov tempered his attack with delicate playing that shimmered through the second movement. The finale, taken at a break-neck speed by Mr. Gergiev, tested the young pianist, putting the artist through his paces and letting audiences hear the potential in this young man. It was not the most technically perfect performance, but the passion and meaning of Tchaikovsky came through in both soloist and orchestra.

Mr. Trifonov's performance met with approval, and he obliged with two encores. The first: a quicksilver performance of Chopin's Grand Valse brillante emphasizing his liquid tone and light touch in the delicate passage-work. The second was a death-defying La Campanella, the treacherous, transcendental etude constructed by Franz Liszt from a work by Paganini. Mr. Trifonov thrilled the audience as he trilled up the keyboard, playing the highest keys (and shortest strings) with ease and speed in a region of the instrument where most pianists fear to tread.

The rest of the program gave Mr. Gergiev plenty of opportunity to show off the abilities of his Russian orchestra, choosing repertory that played to their strengths. The concert opened with three excerpts from Prokofiev's Romeo and Juliet ballet, climaxing in a lurching rendition of "Montagues and Capulets" that made the boards of the Hall shake with the powerful brass and dark-colored cellos and basses.

The concert ended with Shostakovich's muscular First Symphony, which lets the listener hear the sardonic young composer before censorship and despair came to dominate his life. The "D-S-C-H" musical signature ( crucial in his later, coded compositions) is heard, along with piano, celesta and a nose-thumbing timpani solo before the last coda. The short symphony allowed the Mariinskys to end their Carnegie Hall stand with two showpieces. First, Liadov's tone poem Babi Yar. Then, more Tchaikovsky: the beloved Polonaise from the opera Eugene Onegin.

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