Reviews and Commentary from Last Night’s Met Opener: Anna Bolena

Here is Anthony Tommassini’s article in today’s New York Times

A Queen’s Delusion and Defiance Opens the Met

By 
Published: September 27, 2011

Since arriving at the Metropolitan Opera as general manager in 2006, Peter Gelb has been angling to make the soprano Anna Netrebko a house prima donna in the old-world sense: a first among equals. On Monday night Mr. Gelb must have felt that the plan was working.

Ms. Netrebko sang the punishing title role of Donizetti’s “Anna Bolena” to open the Met’s season, the company’s first production of this breakthrough Donizetti work from 1830. The extended last scene was the high point of Ms. Netrebko’s performance as the distraught British queen (based on the historic Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII). Having been falsely condemned for betraying her husband, Anna drifts in and out of sanity.

Ms. Netrebko sang an elegantly sad aria with lustrous warmth, aching vulnerability and floating high notes. When the audience broke into prolonged applause and bravos, Ms. Netrebko seemed to break character and smiled a couple of times, though her look could have been taken as appropriate to the dramatic moment, since the delusional Anna is lost in reverie about happy days with her former lover.

Then at the end of this “Mad Scene,” when Anna, restored to horrific reality, curses the king and his new queen, Giovanna (Jane Seymour), and stalks off to her execution, Ms. Netrebko dispatched Donizetti’s cabaletta, all brilliant coloratura runs and vehement phrases, with a defiance that brought down the house.

Yet Ms. Netrebko’s Anna and the overall performance of “Anna Bolena” were not what they could have been. The production, by the director David McVicar, is uninventive and safe. The sets, by Robert Jones (in his Met debut), are handsome and efficient but tamely traditional, using a matrix of rotating white brick walls and sliding wood panels to evoke the interiors and environs of Henry’s palaces. In Act I, when the king’s hunting party gathers, complete with two impressively large dogs, a bit of abstraction is introduced into the look of the production through some sculptural gray trees. Jenny Tiramani’s costumes are colorful, detailed and true to the period. Too true. This Henry could have come from the set of almost any of the innumerable films and television shows that have been made about the Tudors.

But the bigger problem was Marco Armiliato’s routine conducting. Mr. Armiliato has been valuable to the Met’s Italian repertory wing since his 1998 house debut. In “Anna Bolena” he conveyed an understanding of bel canto style, in which arching lines must be given room to spin and cast their spell and accompaniment patterns have to be flexible.

The singers seemed to feel supported by Mr. Armiliato, who was always there when they took expressive liberties. That was the problem. This performance needed a conductor to instill some intensity into the music, to keep the cast more on edge, especially in the early scenes. Much of the action occurs in highly charged bursts of dramatic recitative. But too often here the orchestra chords that buttress the vocal lines were listless. And the orchestra’s playing lacked character.

Previously, Ms. Netrebko had sung the role of Anna only at the Vienna State Opera this spring. She started tentatively on Monday, perhaps settling in for the long, hard night of singing that awaited her. She looked regal and splendid. And in a nice directorial touch, Anna first appeared with a little red-haired girl, clearly her daughter, the future Queen Elizabeth.

At 40, Ms. Netrebko may be in her vocal prime. Her sound is meltingly rich yet focused. Sustained tones have body and depth. Her contained vibrato exposed every slight slip from the center of a pitch, especially in midrange, but I’m not complaining. This remains a major voice, with resplendent colorings and built-in expressivity.

Bel canto purists have long debated whether Ms. Netrebko is a natural to the style, especially in her execution of coloratura passagework. She may not have the nimble precision exemplified by Beverly Sills (who was criticized in some circles for that very accuracy). Ms. Netrebko’s approach is to sing coloratura as an expressive elaboration of the vocal line, as she did affectingly as Anna. And she exudes vocal charisma.

Still, at moments throughout the evening her singing seemed cautious. She was at her best when sparring with other singers, especially the mezzo-soprano Ekaterina Gubanova, who was Giovanna (the queen’s lady-in-waiting Jane Seymour, though it’s best to stick to the Italian names, since “Anna Bolena,” with a libretto by Felice Romani, plays very loose with history). Ms. Gubanova has an ample, dark voice with a slightly hard-edged quality that takes some adjusting to. She sang Giovanna with incisive delivery, folding embellishments and runs into impassioned vocal lines.

Her character was a bundle of nerves in Donizetti’s inspired Act II scene in which Giovanna finally confesses to the queen that she has been the king’s mistress and will become his new wife. Again the orchestra under Mr. Armiliato seemed to hold back, rather than empower, the intensity these two artists were trying to summon on stage.

The bass Ildar Abdrazakov brought his earthy, muscular voice to the role of Enrico (Henry VIII). Though his passagework was muffled by his gravelly tones at times, he was an imposing presence, and he did not overplay the king’s brutishness. The tenor Stephen Costello won a hearty ovation for his Riccardo (Lord Richard Percy, Anna’s former lover). This was a big assignment for the gifted and game young tenor. Mr. Costello captured the character’s consuming adoration for Anna through his impetuous and anguished singing.

The role includes a touchstone tenor aria, “Vivi tu,” in which the condemned Riccardo implores his friend Lord Rocheford (Anna’s brother, here the solid bass-baritone Keith Miller) to evade the king’s wrath and go on living. Mr. Costello mostly navigated the music’s demanding passagework and exposed high notes. To hear this rising artist stretching himself was part of the excitement.

The mezzo-soprano Tamara Mumford took on the trouser role of Mark Smeaton, a court musician with a fatal crush on Anna. Her singing was sometimes shaky but always honest and ardent. The able tenor Eduardo Valdes as the court official Hervey rounded out the cast. Every role is significant in an opera so rich with ensembles, including a climactic Act I sextet almost as memorable as the enduring sextet from Donizetti’s “Lucia di Lammermoor,” and more contrapuntally intricate.

Mr. Gelb has said that ideally the Met should make an artistic statement by presenting an ambitious new production every opening night. Two years ago he took a chance on Luc Bondy’s ill-conceived staging of Puccini’s “Tosca.” Last season came the premiere of Robert Lepage’s production of Wagner’s “Rheingold,” which is still being argued over, as audiences await the last two installments of the complete “Ring” cycle this season.

“Anna Bolena” represented a different sort of risk. To make a case for this great, overlooked opera a company must have a stellar soprano in the title role. Ms. Netrebko is that artist. If only she and her colleagues on stage had received more help from Mr. McVicar and Mr. Armiliato.

The gala evening performance was relayed to Times Square and to Lincoln Center Plaza, where there was seating for some 3,000 people who had scooped up free tickets earlier. After the curtain calls on stage, the “Anna Bolena” cast appeared on the Met’s outdoor balcony to the cheers of the crowd. This is becoming a welcome tradition under Mr. Gelb.

“Anna Bolena” runs through Oct. 28, with additional performances in February, at the Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center; (212) 362-6000, metopera.org.

As ever, in the history of music, the “critics” are the ones who write and in many cases enhanced or destroyed a singer/musician’s career.  This has been the constant case from the inception of musical criticism with Schumann and Berlioz in the mid-nineteenth century.  This is not to say that Tommassini has any power to ruin Netrebko’s career, but he does have a huge audience by being the critic of one of the most powerful and well-read newspapers in the world.  So, NOW, now he chooses to talk about Bel Canto, about Italian singing when the last year brought absolutely horrifying presentations of Puccini and Verdi?  I absolutely agree with Mr. Tommassini, that Netrebko’s voice is one of the most beautiful voices cast at the Met this year, but let’s not discuss pitch or wavering from it, shall we, or we ought to have a new society for it.  Forgive me but Netrebko is the LEAST off pitch and her tone is unparalleled by her colleagues singing at the Met.  It seems that nothing was said about the extravagant flatness, sharpness, and completely disgusting Italian diction that was presented last season, was it?  In all, her singing is always expressive and she carries some of the mystique that singers of old carried with them, that implausible something that elevates them to the level of artists.  I agree that Armiliato was probably not the best choice to conduct Bolena and it is certainly too bad that Maestro Levine was not able to conduct this opening.  However, Bel Canto as the opening opera is not a choice made just to appease the rowdy public after that disastrous Tosca premiere last year (truly abominable), as Tommassini writes.  Bel Canto is the heart’s blood of the operatic machine that has withstood centuries.  More Bel Canto should be performed so that young singers will approach it without fear and with a more familiar ear.  I applaud the Met for presenting this difficult opera and to those who stretched their limits in trying to do the only thing they could in an age when those who truly understand Bel Canto are few and far between.

More Reviews:

Review by Mike Silverman of the Associated Press

“A Philadelphia Son Storms The Met” (Wall Street Journal)

 

L’Accordéoniste to make “Latin Heat” at Opera in Concert Opening 2011 (Toronto)

L’Accordéoniste: Peter Tiefenbach (piano), Kimberly Barber (mezzo-soprano), Mary-Lou Vetere (accordion) with

Carol Bauman, percussion

The Last Verista’s Pick of the Week on MET OPERA RADIO: OPENING NIGHT AT THE MET! Donizetti’s “Anna Bolena” starring Anna Netrebko

Don’t miss opening night, tomorrow night!!! Catch it all on Sirius/XM Radio MET OPERA RADIO!! 

Don’t have Sirius/XM? Click here to listen live from the Met’s Live Stream for FREE!

Met’s Live Stream of Opening Night


Monday, September 26, 2011
6am: Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg  3/7/1959-Böhm; Edelmann, Nordmo-Lövberg, Feiersinger, Franke, Dönch, Resnik

12pm: Verdi: Otello
4/2/1994-Gergiev; Domingo, Vaness, Leiferkus, Bunnell, Croft

3pm: Janácek: Jenufa
12/21/1974-Nelson; Kubiak, Vickers, Varnay, Lewis, Kraft, Norden, Reardon, Di Franco, Love, Gill, Ordassy, Smith

6pm: Donizetti: Anna Bolena (LIVE FROM THE MET – SEASON PREMIERE)
Armiliato; Netrebko, Gubanova, Mumford, Costello, Abdrazakov

12am: Bellini: Il Pirata
2/8/2003-Campanella; Fleming, Giordani, Croft

Tuesday, September 27, 2011
6am: Verdi: Il Trovatore: 2/18/1967-Molinari-Pradelli; Tucker, Arroyo, Merrill, Cvejic, Michalski

9am: Massenet: Werther
1/23/1999-Runnicles; Hampson, Graham, Robertson, Evans

12pm: Wagner: Tannhäuser
1/21/1978-Levine; McCracken, Kubiak, Weikl, Bumbry, Macurdy

3pm: Corigliano: The Ghosts of Versailles
1/4/1992-Levine; Stratas, Hagegård, Quilico, Horne, Clark, Fleming

7:30pm: Verdi: Nabucco (LIVE FROM THE MET – SEASON PREMIERE)
Carignani; Guleghina, Tatum, Lee, Lučić, Colombara

12am: Donizetti: Lucia di Lammermoor
12/31/1966-Bonynge; Sutherland, Tucker, Colzani, Ghiuselev

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

6am: Verdi: I Vespri Siciliani
12/11/2004-Chaslin; Radvanovsky, Casanova, Nucci, Ramey

9am: Mozart: Don Giovanni
2/2/1991-Levine; Hampson, Studer, Schuman, Upshaw, Blochwitz, Plishka, Cokorinos

12pm: R. Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos
1/5/1985-Davis; Norman, Cochran, Rolandi, Ewing, Weller, Duesing

3pm: Puccini: Madama Butterfly
9/25/2006-Levine; Gallardo-Domâs, Giordani, Zifchak, Croft, Fedderly, Courtney, Won, Kulczak, Miller

6pm: Verdi: Otello
4/2/1994-Gergiev; Domingo, Vaness, Leiferkus, Bunnell, Croft

9pm: Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
3/7/1959-Böhm; Edelmann, Nordmo-Lövberg, Feiersinger, Franke, Dönch, Resnik

Thursday, September 29, 2011

6am: Janácek: Jenufa
12/21/1974-Nelson; Kubiak, Vickers, Varnay, Lewis, Kraft, Norden, Reardon, Di Franco, Love, Gill, Ordassy, Smith

9am: Bellini: Il Pirata
2/8/2003-Campanella; Fleming, Giordani, Croft

12pm: Verdi: Il Trovatore
2/18/1967-Molinari-Pradelli; Tucker, Arroyo, Merrill, Cvejic, Michalski

3pm: Massenet: Werther
1/23/1999-Runnicles; Hampson, Graham, Robertson, Evans

6pm: Donizetti: Lucia di Lammermoor
12/31/1966-Bonynge; Sutherland, Tucker, Colzani, Ghiuselev

9pm: : Wagner: Tannhäuser  1/21/1978-Levine; McCracken, Kubiak, Weikl, Bumbry, Macurdy

12:00 AM ET Corigliano: The Ghosts of Versailles
1/4/1992-Levine; Stratas, Hagegård, Quilico, Horne, Clark, Fleming

Friday, September 30, 2011

6am: Verdi: Otello
4/2/1994-Gergiev; Domingo, Vaness, Leiferkus, Bunnell, Croft

9am: Puccini: Madama Butterfly
9/25/2006-Levine; Gallardo-Domâs, Giordani, Zifchak, Croft, Fedderly, Courtney, Won, Kulczak, Miller

12pm: Wagner: Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg
3/7/1959-Böhm; Edelmann, Nordmo-Lövberg, Feiersinger, Franke, Dönch, Resnik

6pm: Verdi: I Vespri Siciliani
12/11/2004-Chaslin; Radvanovsky, Casanova, Nucci, Ramey

9pm: Mozart: Don Giovanni
2/2/1991-Levine; Hampson, Studer, Schuman, Upshaw, Blochwitz, Plishka, Cokorinos

12am: R. Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos
1/5/1985-Davis; Norman, Cochran, Rolandi, Ewing, Weller, Duesing

Saturday, October 1, 2011

6am: Wagner: Tannhäuser
1/21/1978-Levine; McCracken, Kubiak, Weikl, Bumbry, Macurdy

9am: Corigliano: The Ghosts of Versailles
1/4/1992-Levine; Stratas, Hagegård, Quilico, Horne, Clark, Fleming

1pm: Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia (LIVE FROM THE MET –SEASON PREMIERE) Benini; Leonard, Camarena, Mattei, Muraro, Burchuladze 

6pm; Bellini: Il Pirata:  2/8/2003-Campanella; Fleming, Giordani, Croft

9pm: Verdi: Il Trovatore
2/18/1967-Molinari-Pradelli; Tucker, Arroyo, Merrill, Cvejic, Michalski

12am: Janácek: Jenufa
12/21/1974-Nelson; Kubiak, Vickers, Varnay, Lewis, Kraft, Norden, Reardon, Di Franco, Love, Gill, Ordassy, Smith

Sunday, October 2, 2011

6am: R. Strauss: Ariadne auf Naxos
1/5/1985-Davis; Norman, Cochran, Rolandi, Ewing, Weller, Duesing

9am: Donizetti: Lucia di Lammermoor
12/31/1966-Bonynge; Sutherland, Tucker, Colzani, Ghiuselev

12pm: Verdi: I Vespri Siciliani
12/11/2004-Chaslin; Radvanovsky, Casanova, Nucci, Ramey

3pm: Mozart: Don Giovanni
2/2/1991-Levine; Hampson, Studer, Schuman, Upshaw, Blochwitz, Plishka, Cokorinos

6pm: Puccini: Madama Butterfly
9/25/2006-Levine; Gallardo-Domâs, Giordani, Zifchak, Croft, Fedderly, Courtney, Won, Kulczak, Miller

9pm: The Met on Record: Verdi: I Lombardi (1996) Levine; Anderson, Leech, Pavarotti, Ramey

12am: Massenet: Werther
1/23/1999-Runnicles; Hampson, Graham, Robertson, Evans

Canadian Opera Company Launches New Online Venture: COC Radio


Toronto – The Canadian Opera Company’s award-winning website has taken its first steps to becoming an online resource for opera in Canada by launching COC Radio.   Through this exciting new venture, visitors to coc.ca will now be able to find, in one place, a variety of audio and digital features available for downloading and live streaming, all aimed at exploring an opera and its background as well as the artists appearing with the COC.

Among the features accessible through COC Radio, visitors can listen to recordings of productions by the COC’s broadcast partner CBC Radio 2; enjoy interviews with singers and members of a production’s creative team; listen to podcasts of COC-hosted talks, from pre-performance opera chats to Opera 101; and go through listening guides on an opera and watch specially-created production videos.  COC Radio will be updated with new interviews, recordings and videos on an ongoing basis.  Currently available for viewing are all interviews, recordings and videos from the COC’s 2010/2011 season as well as those podcasts and video interviews that have been created for Iphigenia in Tauris and Rigoletto as part of the 2011/2012 season.

“COC Radio is a resource for people to discover and explore their love of opera,” says COC General Director Alexander Neef.  “The materials there offer fascinating insight into the operatic art form and the artists who work with the COC.  As we grow and develop as a company, COC Radio will develop too.  Our aim is to have it go beyond relating exclusively to the COC, so that COC Radio may join other online sources nurturing and cultivating knowledge of opera in Canada.”

Users of COC Radio have the option to select from COC-curated content as well as customize their listening and viewing experience.  The immediate future plans for COC Radio include music playlist recommendations from visiting artists as well as staff members of the opera company.

Based in Toronto, the Canadian Opera Company is the largest producer of opera in Canada and one of the five largest in North America. The COC enjoys a loyal audience support-base and one of the highest attendance and subscription rates in North America. The COC celebrates its 62nd anniversary during the 11/12 season. Under its leadership team of General Director Alexander Neef and Music Director Johannes Debus, the COC is increasingly capturing the opera world’s attention. The COC maintains its international reputation for artistic excellence and creative innovation by creating new productions within its diverse repertoire, collaborating with leading opera companies and festivals, and attracting the world’s foremost Canadian and international artists. The COC performs in its own opera house, the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts, hailed internationally as one of the finest in the world. Designed by Diamond and Schmitt Architects, the Four Seasons Centre opened in 2006, and is also the performance venue for The National Ballet of Canada. For more information on the COC, visit its award-winning website, coc.ca.

Here is a link to the website, which is very easy to use and has interactive listening

COC RADIO

The New Opera Season Is Upon Us!!!!

Soprano, Anna Netrebko will leave her mark on the Bel Canto repertoire

The Diva, Defined: Netrebko Has Arrived (Zachary Woolfe, NY Times)

Across the world, this weekend brings the sizzling anticipation of the 2011/2012 to a fever pitch.  In what proves to be an exciting year in North America, there are some truly exceptional and rare operas to see and, moreover, fabulous new voices and familiar ones that never cease to please.  Friday night brought the opening night of the Canadian Opera Company 2011/12 season, with mezzo-soprano Susan Graham and outstanding Canadian Baritone, Russell Braun in Gluck’s Iphigenia in Tauris. 

Susan Graham as Iphigenia in Tauris, in Toronto

Review in “NOW” Magazine (Toronto)

In New York City, opera aficionados wait in anticipation of opening night on Monday the 26th at 8pm, when the fabulous Anna Netrebko makes her debut performance as the incomparable Anna Bolena, alongside the vibrant voiced up-coming tenor, Stephen Costello.  Costello has caused quite the stir with his beautiful tones and glimmering upper tessitura, and Netrebko remains the beloved singer of the house but now she may leave her own indelible mark on this repertoire.

Tenor, Stephen Costello

Last night was the opening of the San Francisco Opera, with another Bel Canto favourite, Lucrezia Borgia, starring the ever-lovely Renee Fleming and the magnificent young tenor, Michael Fabiano.  Both Fabiano and Costello are electrifying the opera world and it will be an absolute joy for opera lovers to watch these careers flourish and bloom. Lucky are Mme’s Fleming and Netrebko to sing alongside these two great men and vice-versa.

Fleming stars as Lucrezia

“Singing Sensation Michael Fabiano” (SF Examiner)

“Young Borgia Tenor To Star With Top Diva” (San Francisco Examiner)

Review of Lucrezia Borgia from San Francisco Weekly

As the season begins, the Last Verista wishes all a successful and safe one, filled with excitement, great singing, and devotion to the art.  In Bocca al Lupo per tutti!!!

The Last Verista’s Pick of the Week on Met Opera Radio: Remembering Salvatore Licitra

This week, Met Opera Radio is offering some pretty impressive broadcasts.  I especially recommend: the 1963 Sonnambula with Sutherland, the 1957 Gioconda with Milanov, and the 1989 Aida with Domingo and Millo.  In honour and memory of the young tenor who passed away, tragically, on Sept 5th, 2011, Met Opera Radio is broadcasting a 2006 production of Licitra in Verdi’s La Forza del Destino. It is the last Verista’s Pick of the Week in honour of Mr. Licitra and his love of opera.

Licitra in Verdi’s Forza with Nina Stemme

Monday, September 12, 2011

page1image1088

6am: Verdi: La Forza del Destino

3/11/2006-Noseda; Voigt, Licitra, Delavan, Ramey, Komlósi, Pons

9am: Bellini: La Sonnambula
3/30/1963-Varviso; Sutherland, Gedda, Flagello, Scovotti

12pm: R. Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier
1/29/2000-Levine; Graham, Fleming, Hawlata, Murphy, Ketelsen

3:20pm: Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin
2/23/1985-Järvi; Nucci, Griffel, Raitzin, Jones, Plishka

6pm: Ponchielli: La Gioconda
4/20/1957-Cleva; Milanov, Poggi, Rankin, Warren, Siepi

9pm: Gounod: Roméo et Juliette 4/13/1968-Molinari-Pradelli; Gedda, Freni, Macurdy, Baldwin, Reardon

12am: Verdi: Aida
1/7/1989-Levine; Millo, Toczyska, Domingo, Milnes, Plishka

Aprile Millo as Verdi’s Aida

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

6am: Wagner: Tristan und Isolde

12/18/1971-Leinsdorf; Thomas, Nilsson, Dooley, Dalis

12am: Verdi: Rigoletto
3/7/1992-Santi; Nucci, Swenson, Leech, White, Rootering

3pm: Handel: Rodelinda
1/1/2005-Bicket; Fleming, Blythe, van Rensburg, Relyea, Daniels

6pm: Rossini: L’Assedio di Corinto 4/19/1975-Schippers; Sills, Verrett, Theyard, Díaz

9pm: Puccini: Tosca
1/4/1997-Badea; Guleghina, Larin, Morris

12am: Mozart: Le Nozze di Figaro

4/22/2006-Wigglesworth; Relyea, Rost, Mattei, Isokoski, Coote, Muraro

The great Zinka in Gioconda

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

page2image1688

6am: Meyerbeer: Le Prophète
1/29/1977-Lewis; McCracken, Scotto, Horne, Hines

9am: Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin
2/23/1985-Järvi; Nucci, Griffel, Raitzin, Jones, Plishka

12pm: Ponchielli: La Gioconda
4/20/1957-Cleva; Milanov, Poggi, Rankin, Warren, Siepi

3pm: Gounod: Roméo et Juliette 4/13/1968-Molinari-Pradelli; Gedda, Freni, Macurdy, Baldwin, Reardon

6pm: Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/11/2006-Noseda; Voigt, Licitra, Delavan, Ramey, Komlósi, Pons

9pm: Bellini: La Sonnambula
3/30/1963-Varviso; Sutherland, Gedda, Flagello, Scovotti

12am: R. Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier
1/29/2000-Levine; Graham, Fleming, Hawlata, Murphy, Ketelsen

Sutherland as Amina

Thursday, September 15, 2011

6am: Verdi: Rigoletto
3/7/1992-Santi; Nucci, Swenson, Leech, White, Rootering

9am: Handel: Rodelinda
1/1/2005-Bicket; Fleming, Blythe, van Rensburg, Relyea, Daniels

12pm: Rossini: L’Assedio di Corinto

4/19/1975-Schippers; Sills, Verrett, Theyard, Díaz

3pm: Puccini: Tosca
1/4/1997-Badea; Guleghina, Larin, Morris

6:00 PM ET Verdi: Aida
1/7/1989-Levine; Millo, Toczyska, Domingo, Milnes, Plishka

9:00 PM ET Wagner: Tristan und Isolde
12/18/1971-Leinsdorf; Thomas, Nilsson, Dooley, Dalis

Friday, September 16, 2011

6am: R. Strauss: Der Rosenkavalier

1/29/2000-Levine; Graham, Fleming, Hawlata, Murphy, Ketelsen

9:20am: Mozart: Le Nozze di Figaro
4/22/2006-Wigglesworth; Relyea, Rost, Mattei, Isokoski, Coote, Muraro

12:15pm: Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/11/2006-Noseda; Voigt, Licitra, Delavan, Ramey, Komlósi, Pons

3:15pm: Bellini: La Sonnambula
3/30/1963-Varviso; Sutherland, Gedda, Flagello, Scovotti

8:00pm: Verdi: Il Trovatore (2010-2011 ENCORE BROADCAST)

4/23/2011-Armiliato; Álvarez, Radvanovsky, Hvorostovsky, Zajick, Kocán

12am: Meyerbeer: Le Prophète
1/29/1977-Lewis; McCracken, Scotto, Horne, Hines

Saturday, September 17, 2011

6am: Handel: Rodelinda

1/1/2005-Bicket; Fleming, Blythe, van Rensburg, Relyea, Daniels

9am: Gounod: Roméo et Juliette 4/13/1968-Molinari-Pradelli; Gedda, Freni, Macurdy, Baldwin, Reardon

12pm: Verdi: Aida
1/7/1989-Levine; Millo, Toczyska, Domingo, Milnes, Plishka

3pm: Wagner: Tristan und Isolde

12/18/1971-Leinsdorf; Thomas, Nilsson, Dooley, Dalis

9:00 PM ET Tchaikovsky: Eugene Onegin
2/23/1985-Järvi; Nucci, Griffel, Raitzin, Jones, Plishka

12:00 AM ET Ponchielli: La Gioconda
4/20/1957-Cleva; Milanov, Poggi, Rankin, Warren, Siepi

Sunday, September 18, 2011

6am: Rossini: L’Assedio di Corinto 4/19/1975-Schippers; Sills, Verrett, Theyard, Díaz

9am: Puccini: Tosca
1/4/1997-Badea; Guleghina, Larin, Morris

12pm: Meyerbeer: Le Prophète
1/29/1977-Lewis; McCracken, Scotto, Horne, Hines

3pm: Mozart: Le Nozze di Figaro
4/22/2006-Wigglesworth; Relyea, Rost, Mattei, Isokoski, Coote, Muraro

6pm: Verdi: Rigoletto
3/7/1992-Santi; Nucci, Swenson, Leech, White, Rootering

9pm: The Met on Record: Wagner: Das Rheingold (1988) Levine; Morris, Ludwig, Jerusalem, Wlaschiha, Moll, Rootering, Zednik

12am: Verdi: La Forza del Destino
3/11/2006-Noseda; Voigt, Licitra, Delavan, Ramey, Komlósi, Pons

The Day The Music Stopped: 9/11, A Decade Passed in Remembrance of Tragedy, Bravery, and the Hope for Peace

It was a typically beautiful fall day here in Niagara, 10 years ago on September 11th, 2011. That morning I got ready for the 40 minute commute from Niagara to the State University of New York at Buffalo, where I had just begun my masters studies.  The course that morning was my favourite, a specialized course on Mahler’s Symphonies with the incomparable professor, Christopher Gibbs (who now teaches at Bard College). Over the couple of weeks since the course began, I had fallen in love with Mahler and everything his style exuded.  It was rich, passionate, tortured, tragic, peaceful, and ethereal, with a full orchestral palette that I adored.  So, that fateful morning I put my newly acquired CD set of the symphonies next to me on the seat and listened to our assignment for the day, the Symphony No. 2, the “Resurrection.” Every other morning on my way over the Canadian/U.S. border I  usually listened to CBC Radio or WNED (our local classical station in Buffalo), but not that morning.  I realized in the aftermath that had I turned on the news instead of listen to Mahler I probably would not have driven into the United States at all.  It was around 8:30am and a beautiful sunny day.

When I arrived on campus, excited for the morning class, Prof. Gibbs was late in arriving, which was very unlike him.  I will never forget him coming into class and sitting down and not saying a thing.  He  barely looked at us, was pale and visibly shaken.  Since the class was an upper level class there were only a few students in the course and we all sat staring at him until he said, “We’re under attack.”  Those words rang like lasers in my ears and I had no idea what he meant…none of us did.  He proceeded to tell us about the plane that had crashed into the World Trade Center, not knowing yet about the Pentagon or that another plane was striking as we were sitting there ready to listen to Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony.  We immediately got up and he dismissed class, saying that he could not reach his wife Helena.  The two of them lived in New York City and of course, all circuits were busy.

Feeling for him, I asked for her number so that I could also try to reach her and then left class.  I went downstairs to tell my other professor what had happened.  He was happily immersed in his teaching Medieval History and also had no idea of the horrible events that were occurring as we spoke. It wasn’t my place but I felt that there was no need to discuss music or anything, for that matter, at that particular moment.  Failing to truly comprehend what I had heard moments ago,  I ran to the library to see if I could get on the internet but I  could not, so I ran upstairs to my office and turned on the radio. When I heard what was happening, I fell to my knees right then and there.

And…everything stopped.  The music stopped, everything stopped.

The sound of news anchors in fear, with trembling voice, and the horrible sounds of crashing and screaming coming from the streets of a city that holds my heart became the only audible sound.  No Mahler, no music, just explosions and horror followed by a great silence.  Only silence can quench the horrible sounds of tragedy–silence and prayer.  I suddenly realized that I needed to get my things and get in my car and try and drive back home to Canada before the international border to Canada would be closed.  I was only 20 minutes into the U.S from Canada, and so I gathered my things as quickly as I could and left Baird Hall.  I had tried to phone my parents from my cell phone to no avail.  Even the pay phones were not working and so I knew they’d be worried.  The campus was already filled with police and fire trucks.  It appeared that the U.S. was under attack and the most populated places, like Universities, might be targets so the campus was quickly being evacuated.

I turned the keys in my car and suddenly Mahler’s Resurrection symphony that had remained in my CD player began ringing out.  I wanted to live in that moment, in the safety of Mahler’s beautiful expressions but I turned it off and listened to the radio instead.  As I drove off, I heard that the international border to Canada had now been closed, and I needed to get back home.  When I approached the border the officials, who had by that time seen me every day for the last 5 years, asked me to get out of my vehicle.  It was the first time I allowed myself to cry.  I cried as I stood there watching them rip the carpeting from my trunk and open the panels in my doors while people were dying in New York and I began to grow hatred and anger toward the person or persons who had done this to innocent people.  I pleaded with the officials to let me pass and finally, after an hour and a half, they allowed me to go home.

I drove home in silence.

When I walked through the door, the television was on and it was the first time I had seen the images of horror that I had only listened to all morning and into the early afternoon.  I fell on my knees again in front of the television and prayed .  I prayed for those souls…the poor innocents who had not known that their lives would end that day.  That evening, I was able to get a hold of Prof. Gibbs, whose wife was safe in Manhattan, and my other colleagues and friends who lived there. I did not sleep that night and did not return to campus for several days after the events.  In those days, I remained silent.  I didn’t listen to music.  It seemed there was no place for music in that moment when lives had been lost and families could hardly claim their loved ones to give them a proper burial.

When I did return to music, it was Barber’s Adagio for Strings that I played first, then the Gloria from Palestrina’s Missa Papa Marcelli, and then after much contemplation, I went in my car and turned on the radio to the moment that the music of Mahler’s Resurrection had stopped.

Almost ironically, the Urlicht…the beautiful movement sung by an alto, illustrating the longing for a release from earthly woes, rang like a necessary hymn.

Primeval Light

O red rose!Man lies in greatest need!

Man lies in greatest pain! How I would rather be in heaven.

There came I upon a broad path when came a little angel and wanted to turn me away.

Ah no! I would not let myself be turned away!

I am from God and shall return to God!

The loving God will grant me a little light,

Which will light me into that eternal blissful life!

Ground Zero 9/11 Memorial Pool

On this, the 10th anniversary of that tragic day, I will listen to Mahler’s Resurrection Symphony again, but before the Urlicht, I will stop the recording and pray for those who lost their lives and those they left behind who have suffered 10 years without their loved ones.  The United States has sought justice and received it, and those lives were not lost in vain.  To a country that has given me so much, to New York City…city of freedom, artistry, excellence, and the hand that holds my dearest of friends, my heart and the hearts of many millions will be in remembrance with you on Sunday.  May God protect the land of the free and the home of the brave, forever.


©Mary-Lou Vetere, 2011

Last Verista’s Pick of the Week on MET Opera Radio/XM/Sirius for September 5, 2011: 1977 “La Boheme” with Luciano Pavarotti and Renata Scotto

Also, please listen to the Messa da Requiem of Verdi that will play on Sunday, September 11, 2011 at 9:00am and pm.

Monday, September 5, 2011

6:00am: Britten: Peter Grimes
12/31/1994-Conlon; Rolfe Johnson, Fleming, Opie, Walker, Howard

9:00am: Mozart: Così fan tutte
2/24/2001-Summers; Diener, Graham, Groves, Gilfrey, Upshaw, Pertusi

12:00pm: Verdi: Falstaff
3/8/1986-Levine; Taddei, Neblett, Monk, Cossotto, Blegen, Ahlstedt, Boozer

3:00pm: Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia
3/9/1963-Strasfogel; Guarrera, D’Angelo, Shirley, Corena, Tozzi

6:00pm: R. Strauss: Die Frau ohne Schatten
12/9/1989-Perick; Meier, Schunk, Martin, Courtney, Dernesch

9:00pm: Bizet: Carmen
1/31/1953-Reiner; Barbieri, Del Monaco, Güden, Guarrera

12:00am: Giordano: Fedora
4/26/1997-Abbado; Freni, Domingo, Arteta, Croft

Tuesday, Sept. 6, 2011

page1image9544

6:00am: Wagner: Siegfried

4/15/2000-Levine; Andersen, Eaglen, Morris, Svendén, Clark, Wlaschiha

12:00pm: Donizetti: L’elisir d’amore
3/14/1998-Benini; Swenson, Pavarotti, de Candia, Plishka

3:00pm: Verdi: Ernani
4/10/1965-Schippers; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Siepi

6:00pm: Puccini: La Bohème
3/19/1977-Levine; Scotto, Pavarotti, Niska, Wixell, Monk, Plishka

9:00pm: Massenet: Manon
4/8/2006-López-Cobos; Fleming, Giordano, Chaignaud, Tian

12:00am: Wagner: Lohengrin

2/10/1968-Klobucar; Kónya, Arroyo, Dvoráková, Cassel, Macurdy

Wed. Sept. 7, 2011

6:00am: Janácek: Kát’a Kabanová
1/9/1999-Mackerras; Malfitano, Forst, Karnéus, Straka, Baker

9:00am: Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia
3/9/1963-Strasfogel; Guarrera, D’Angelo, Shirley, Corena, Tozzi

12:00pm: R. Strauss: Die Frau ohne Schatten
12/9/1989-Perick; Meier, Schunk, Martin, Courtney, Dernesch

3:00pm: Bizet: Carmen
1/31/1953-Reiner; Barbieri, Del Monaco, Güden, Guarrera

6:00pm: Britten: Peter Grimes
12/31/1994-Conlon; Rolfe Johnson, Fleming, Opie, Walker, Howard

9:00pm: Verdi: Falstaff
3/8/1986-Levine; Taddei, Neblett, Monk, Cossotto, Blegen, Ahlstedt, Boozer

12:00am: Mozart: Così fan tutte
2/24/2001-Summers; Diener, Graham, Groves, Gilfrey, Upshaw, Pertusi

Thurs. Sept. 8, 2011

6:00am: Donizetti: L’elisir d’amore

3/14/1998-Benini; Swenson, Pavarotti, de Candia, Plishka

9:00am: Verdi: Ernani
4/10/1965-Schippers; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Siepi

12:00pm: Massenet: Manon
4/8/2006-López-Cobos; Fleming, Giordano, Chaignaud, Tian

3:00pm: Puccini: La Bohème
3/19/1977-Levine; Scotto, Pavarotti, Niska, Wixell, Monk, Plishka

6:00am: Giordano: Fedora

4/26/1997-Abbado; Freni, Domingo, Arteta, Croft

9:00 PM ET Wagner: Siegfried
4/15/2000-Levine; Andersen, Eaglen, Morris, Svendén, Clark,

Fri, Sept. 9, 2011

6:00am: Verdi: Falstaff
3/8/1986-Levine; Taddei, Neblett, Monk, Cossotto, Blegen, Ahlstedt, Boozer

9:00am: Wagner: Lohengrin
2/10/1968-Klobucar; Kónya, Arroyo, Dvoráková, Cassel, Macurdy

12:00pm: Britten: Peter Grimes
12/31/1994-Conlon; Rolfe Johnson, Fleming, Opie, Walker, Howard

3:00pm: Mozart: Così fan tutte
2/24/2001-Summers; Diener, Graham, Groves, Gilfrey, Upshaw, Pertusi

8:00pm: R. Strauss: Capriccio (2010-2011 ENCORE BROADCAST) 4/23/2011-Davis; Fleming, Rose, Kaiser, Braun, Connolly, Larsen

12:00am: Janácek: Kát’a Kabanová
1/9/1999-Mackerras; Malfitano, Forst, Karnéus, Straka, Baker

Sat, Sept 11, 2011

6:00am: Massenet: Manon
4/8/2006-López-Cobos; Fleming, Giordano, Chaignaud, Tian

9:00am: Bizet: Carmen
1/31/1953-Reiner; Barbieri, Del Monaco, Güden, Guarrera

12:00pm: Giordano: Fedora
4/26/1997-Abbado; Freni, Domingo, Arteta, Croft

3:00pm: Wagner: Siegfried

4/15/2000-Levine; Andersen, Eaglen, Morris, Svendén, Clark, Wlaschiha

9:00pm: Rossini: Il Barbiere di Siviglia
3/9/1963-Strasfogel; Guarrera, D’Angelo, Shirley, Corena, Tozzi

12:00am: R. Strauss: Die Frau ohne Schatten
12/9/1989-Perick; Meier, Schunk, Martin, Courtney, Dernesch

Sun, Sept 11, 2011

6:00am: Verdi: Ernani

4/10/1965-Schippers; Corelli, Price, Sereni, Siepi

9:00am: Verdi: Messa da Requiem
9/18/2008-Levine; Frittoli, Borodina, Giordani, Abdrazakov

12:00pm: Janácek: Kát’a Kabanová
1/9/1999-Mackerras; Malfitano, Forst, Karnéus, Straka, Baker

3:00pm: Wagner: Lohengrin
2/10/1968-Klobucar; Kónya, Arroyo, Dvoráková, Cassel, Macurdy

6:00pm:  La Donizetti: L’elisir d’amore
3/14/1998-Benini; Swenson, Pavarotti, de Candia, Plishka

9:00pm: Verdi: Messa da Requiem
9/18/2008-Levine; Frittoli, Borodina, Giordani, Abdrazakov

12:00am: Puccini: La Bohème
3/19/1977-Levine; Scotto, Pavarotti, Niska, Wixell, Monk, Plishka

 

Remembering Luciano Pavarotti: The Seminal Voice Of Our Generation, Unparalleled.

The past week has brought a series of difficult moments in both opera and sports.  The NHL lost former Toronto Maple Leaf, Wade Belak, and now an entire Russian team tragically lost their lives in a senseless plane crash.  In opera, many hearts were torn at the news of the young tenor, Salvatore Licitra, at only 43, losing his life after a tragic accident and possible aneurysm.  So many losses surrounding a time in which people around the world are preparing themselves emotionally for the 10th anniversary of 9/11.  But amidst these high profile tragedies and losses, I chose to remember another artist who passed away four years ago.  His voice brought peace and joy, light and beauty to many millions of people, and so it seems appropriate to remember Luciano Pavarotti as the great beacon of light, even in a time of loss, one that was perhaps extinguished as a human life but continues to glow strongly for those of us who adored him.

The Best

Might a voice like his re-surface in some young singer? Maybe, but there is also the bleak possibility that we may never hear another voice like his again Although some tenors today have been said to have “high notes that resemble those of Pavarotti,” perhaps we might actually recall what it sounded like when Signor Pavarotti rang those high notes into the sipario’s stratosphere and beyond.  For whatever reason, and I unfortunately never had the pleasure of meeting him in person, I feel the need to protect his legacy and retain the truth about the unique quality of this man’s voice and his pure Bel Canto artistry.  There remain only a couple of living artists who exhibit this type of singing and who remain fervent in their tradition rather than cater to the mishmash of imprecise fach distrubution that has become commonplace in opera houses.  Pavarotti possessed the seminal voice of our generation, unparalleled.

From the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians:

He studied in Modena with Pola and in Mantua with Campogalliani, making his début in 1961 at Reggio nell’Emilia as Rodolfo (La bohème) and quickly making an impression for his eloquent lyrical singing. In 1963 he sang Edgardo (Lucia) in Amsterdam and made his Covent Garden début as Rodolfo, returning as Alfredo, Elvino, Tonio (Fille du régiment), Gustavus III, Cavaradossi, Rodolfo (Luisa Miller), Radames and Nemorino (1990). In 1964 he sang Idamantes at Glyndebourne; in 1965 he made his American début at Miami, toured Australia with the Sutherland-Williams company, as Edgardo, and made his La Scala début as Rodolfo, returning for the Duke, Bellini’s Tebaldo and Massenet’s Des Grieux. At La Scala he also sang in a remarkable performance of Verdi’s Requiem to mark the centenary of Toscanini’s birth. He first sang at San Francisco in 1967 as Rodolfo, and the following year made his Metropolitan début, again as Rodolfo, later singing Manrico, Fernand (La favorite), Ernani, Cavaradossi, Idomeneus, Arturo (I puritani), Radames, Rodolfo (Luisa Miller, 1991) and the Italian Singer (Der Rosenkavalier).

Pavarotti had a bright, incisive tenor with a typically free, open, Italianate production and penetrating high notes. He made it a practice never to sing beyond his own means; even when he tackled more dramatic roles such as Otello late in his career he never forced his fundamentally lyric tenor. Above all he had a directness of manner that went straight to his listeners’ hearts. His voice and style were ideally suited to Donizetti, the early and middle-period works of Verdi (he was particularly admired as Alfredo and Gustavus III) and to Puccini’s Rodolfo and Cavaradossi. His impassioned singing of Calaf’s ‘Nessun dorma’ (Turandot) turned the aria into a bestseller, though in this role and some of the other heavier parts he essayed he arguably lacked the true spintopower.

Pavarotti’s art is liberally preserved on disc and video, which give a true reflection of his voice and personality: no opera singer understood better than he the new power of the media. He recorded most of his major roles, some of them twice, and was one of the ‘Three Tenors’ combination (with Domingo and Carreras) of the 1990s that brought opera to an unprecedentedly wide public. His genial looks and generous, outgoing personality were ideally suited to that kind of phenomenon; indeed, it might well have not existed without his enthusiastic participation. Despite his enormous popular acclaim, Pavarotti was anxious to preserve his reputation as a serious artist, and his voice retained much of its colour and vibrancy into his 60s. In 1999 he sang Cavaradossi at the Metropolitan, followed in 2001 by Radames, although by then the tone production had become noticeably more effortful. His last opera performance was Cavarodossi at the Metropolitan in 2004, and he retired, following a farewell tour, in 2005.

Alan Blythe/Stanley Sadie/R

About tenors, Signor Pavarotti said the following:

There is always tremendous pressure on a tenor to expand his repertoire, to take on new roles. Often this pressure comes from the people who like your singing the most.  They want to hear you in all of their favourite roles.  Others try to push you to your limits.  If you can sing “Aida,” they say, let’s hear you in “Il Trovatore.” Okay, now you’ve done “Trovatore,” how about “Otello?” They want to keep pushing you until you are singing Wagner–or until you destroy your voice […] There is a natural process in which a tenor’s voice becomes darker as he grows older.  Singing the more dramatic roles that require a darker voice will help push the voice down, help make it darker.  But once you have altered the voice in this way, there is a danger the voice might not go back up.  If you sing “Otello,” you may be saying good-bye to “I Puritani.” But maybe you have already said good-bye to “Puritani.” It works both ways.”  

From “Pavarotti: My World” by Luciano Pavarotti and William Write,” 291.

Of all the rewards, making other people happy is the best.  After my Central Park concert in 1993 the New York Times wrote that all of the 500,000 people who saw the concert had forgotten their problems by the time they left the park.  Maybe for only a short time they were happy.  No one can imagine how happy this makes me.” (Pavarotti/Wright, 290).

And you cannot imagine how happy you have continued to make us, Maestro Pavarotti.  Your memory and legacy will never be forgotten as long as there are voices and as long as opera continues to withstand the test of time, we remain devoted and in your humblest service as musicians, historians, and opera lovers.  From the world over, vi ringraziamo carissimo e gentile Signore.

©Mary-Lou Vetere, 2011