Diary of an opera fanatic, gardener and ecosocialist View RSS

In between visits to the opera, I find time for my organic garden, and for Ecosocialst campaigning...which does make for a rather eclectic choice of subject matter, I admit!
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AMARYLLIS IN GARDEN, 9/06/21 9 Jun 2021 3:30 AM (3 years ago)


The Amaryllis in my garden this morning





 

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William Morris: May Day 1892 1 May 2021 6:31 AM (3 years ago)

CHANTS FOR SOCIALISTS

 by 

WILLIAM MORRIS








THE WORKERS

O Earth, once again cometh Spring to deliver
Thy winter-worn heart, O thou friend of the Sun;
Fair blossom the meadows from river to river
And the birds sing their triumph o'er winter undone.

O Earth, how a-toiling thou singest thy labour
And upholdest the flower-crowned cup of thy bliss,
As when in the feast-tide drinks neighbour to neighbour
And all words are gleeful, and nought is amiss.

But we, we, O Mother, through long generations,
We have toiled and been fruitful, but never with thee
Might we raise up our bowed heads and cry to the nations
To look on our beauty, and hearken our glee.

Unlovely of aspect, heart-sick and a-weary
On the season's fair pageant all dim-eyed we gaze;
Of thy fairness we fashion a prison-house dreary
And in sorrow wear over each day of our days.

THE EARTH.

O children! O toilers, what foemen beleaguer
The House I have built you, the Home I have won?
Full great are my gifts, and my hands are all eager
To fill every heart with the deeds I have done.

THE WORKERS.

The foemen are born of thy body, O Mother,
In our shape are they shapen, their voice is the same;
And the thought of their hearts is as ours and no other;
It is they of our own house that bring us to shame.

THE EARTH.

Are ye few? Are they many? What words have ye spoken
To bid your own brethren remember the Earth?
What deeds have ye done that the bonds should be broken,
And men dwell together in good-will and mirth?

THE WORKERS.

They are few, we are many: and yet, O our Mother,
Many years were we wordless and nought was our deed,
But now the word flitteth from brother to brother:
We have furrowed the acres and scattered the seed.

THE EARTH.

Win on then unyielding, through fair and foul weather,
And pass not a day that your deed shall avail.
And in hope every spring-tide come gather together
That unto the Earth ye may tell all your tale.

Then this shall I promise, that I am abiding
The day of your triumph, the ending of gloom,
And no wealth that ye will then my hand shall be hiding
And the tears of the spring into roses shall bloom.

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Richard Wagner, PARSIFAL, Wiener Staatsoper, April 2021 27 Apr 2021 1:49 AM (4 years ago)

 





CAST (Unfortunately, I couldn't find an entire cast list, so only the major characters are listed here).

PARSIFAL                                                    Jonas Kaufmann
AMFORTAS                                                  Ludovic Tezier
KUNDRY                                                       Elina Garanca
GURNEMANZ                                               Georg Zeppenfeld
KLINGSOR                                                   Wolfgang Koch

YOUNG PARSIFAL                                       Nikolay Sidorenko
(Actor, silent role)

Orchestra and Chorus of the Vienna State Opera
CONDUCTOR                                              Philippe Jordan
DIRECTOR                                                   Kiril Sereberennikov

____________________________________________________________________


This is a very striking production of PARSIFAL, which has considerably divided opinions, although the majority verdict is in favour.....I will say at once that I absolutely loved it, although I was puzzled at first by the unfamiliarity of the setting.....which is a prison. I will just highlight a few salient points of the staging.





    In the second two images, we see Kundry as a Prison Visitor/journalist, who takes photos of the prisoners. Well, what has this to do with Wagner? i take it to be a metaphor for an all-male community like the Grail Temple, which is perhaps as much of a psychological prison as anything else. It was very well-staged, with close attention to detail and showing the prisoners as individuals, although of course they become a chorus again in the Grail Temple scene. Gurnemanz (Georg Zeppenfeld) is portrayed as a senior (long-term) inmate, who has curious, close relationship with the prison guards, and - tattoos Grail images onto the bodies of some of the inmates, Apparently there is an intense Tattoo Culture in Russian prisons. (I am indebted to  Paul Padillo for this information).

    This sets the scene - it is disturbing in many ways, but then PARSIFAL is a disturbing opera, it has never been easy to interpret. The first two acts are staged as if the older Parsifal (Jonas Kaufmann) is re-living his youth.....the younger Parsifal is a silent role played by actor Nikolai Sidorenko. The older Parsifal sings from the front of the stage, and sometimes he even lip-synches to Gurnemanz, because he is remembering everything. 




   
 I should say at this point that all three acts are set indoors, so the references to Nature must be imagined. In fact this works surprisingly well for the Good Friday music.....better than I expected......although we can't see the beauty of the meadow that Parsifal talks about, we can hear it the music, and obvious Parsifal and Gurnemanz can see it in their imaginations. The fact that everything is set indoors leads to a rather witty staging of Klingsor's Castle.....he appears to be the proprietor of a fashion magazine, and the Flower Maidens are all models.....with Kundry perhaps as a senior journalist. Again, unexpected, but it worked very well in the context.



    A few more detail of the staging are worth mentioning.  Just before the Grail Scene, the prison officials are inspecting the parcels that have been sent to the prisoners......first of all they find a menorah, which they examine with some puzzlement ......(who would have sent a menorah, and why?) and then they finally unpack the Grail.

    The end of Act II is especially striking, in that is is KUNDRY who destroys Klingsor (she shoots him, with the gun that she had previously been aiming at Parsifal).



 I can see that purists might have a problem with this....why is it a gun and not the Sacred Spear?  Because it reinforces the point that the whole confrontation has been a journey of self-discovery for Kundry as well as Parsifal.....she is transformed by the experience, and is thus able to become the agent of Klingsor's destruction. Elina Garanca conveys every aspect of this very complex character, not merely beautiful singing (and not always beautiful.....sometimes the tone of voice exactly parallels the inner torment!) but good acting......and she's a very attractive woman!!!


In this scene, as before, it is the younger Parsifal whom she tries to seduce, while the older Parsifal watches.......as the scene reaches its climax, he does obviously become very angry.
    For me the absolute climax of the performance was Ludovic Tezier as the tortured Amfortas. This was conveyed with such intensity of expression that I could hardly watch it......I don't recall EVER having seen such a performance, almost terrifying.....



    Whether we agree that Kundry survives at the end and is reconciled with Amfortas, as the image above suggests, must remain open to question......perhaps it is not entirely impossible.
    At the end, as usual, I was left with tears in my eyes at the sheer beauty of the final music.

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Violas in garden, 18 October 2020 18 Oct 2020 2:39 AM (4 years ago)

These are some of the violas in my garden, 18 October 2020







 

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LA FORZA DEL DESTINO, Royal Opera House, 2 April 2019 9 Apr 2019 3:08 AM (6 years ago)



Giuseppe Verdi LA FORZA DEL DESTINO,
 Royal Opera House, 2 April 2019 (Cinema Relay)


CAST

Marchese di Calatrava..........................................ROBERT LLOYD

Leonora di Vargas................................................ANNA NETREBKO

Curra, a maid.......................................................ROBERTA ALEXANDER

Don Alvaro..........................................................JONAS KAUFMANN

Don Carlo di Vargas............................................LUDOVIC TEZIER

Alcalde................................................................MICHAEL MOFIDIAN

Maestro Trabucco...............................................CARLO BOSI

Preziosilla............................................................VERONICA SIMEONI

Padre Guardiano................................................FERRUCCIO FURLANETTO

Fra Melitone......................................................ALESSANDRO CORBELLI

Surgeon...............................................................JONATHAN FISHER


Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House
Conductor.......................................................   ANTONIO PAPPANO

Producer............................................................CHRISTOF LOY



A great triumph for the Royal Opera House in every respect. This opera has not in the past been one of my favourites, although I have always loved the music. This production, however,  managed to turn this rather daft Victorian melodrama into a thing of beauty. I wonder if there will ever again be such a fortunate conjunction of cast, conductor  (Antonio Pappano) and orchestra?  I will never forget this as long as I live.

It may be the best performance that Anna Netrebko has given.




It can't be an easy role to play.....poor Leonora never has one moment of happiness....well, perhaps a fleeting few seconds before their flight is thwarted by her father and the inevitable tragedy ensues. I loved the soaring high notes in 'Pace, pace, mio Dio' and the passion and commitment  she brought to this tragic character. Whatever she tries to do, however sincerely penitent she is, she can't find peace, so tormented by the memories the death of her father and the loss of Alvaro.

However, this wasn't  a case of the the star soprano dominating the scene, the connections between the characters were truly reciprocal.....the relationship between Carlo and Alvaro has a lot of sub-text, I think, depicted with great intensity by Jonas Kaufmann and .Ludovic Tezier.





The performance of 'Solenne in quest'ora' broke my heart........almost a thwarted bromance!!  There is no better pairing than Kaufmann and Tezier, and in this performance they took the scene to heights of sublimity.



And their later confrontation is even more intense and tragic because of what came before.......Alvaro's fate is tied up with the whole Calatrava family, not just Leonora...it's almost as if Alvaro is thinking.....I have to kill you, but that's not really what I want to do.....
..


In this production, the crowd scenes scene with Preziosilla seemed a bit extraneous.....very well performed, but something of an irrelevance.....I assume that was Christof Loy's point. Veronica Simeoni was a very attractive and smooth-voiced Preziosilla. In the crowd/circus scene, I especially liked the Street Vendor, who reminded me of Cut-My-Own-Throat Dibbler, a character created by Terry Pratchett.

It was certainly cast from strength..... I was particularly happy to see beloved veteran Robert Lloyd as the Marchese di Calatrava, and Feruccio Furlanetto as Padre Guardiano. 

I liked the staging, although it has attracted some unfavourable comments. It is one set, based on a room in the mansion of the Calatrava family, which accommodates all the other scenes as well. I thought this was quite effective, especially in the final scene....I realise they are supposed to be in the monastery where Leonora has taken refuge, but the fact that it resembles the claustrophobic home in which Leonora was trapped at the beginning means that the wheel has come full circle..Alvaro and Leonora are re-united when it is too late.


.....During the overture, there was a staging of a 'back story', the childhood of Leonora and Carlo.....with another brother, who dies. It shows that Leonora never really had a chance.....claustrophobic childhood to doomed adulthood.
(In the play on which LA FORZA DEL DESTINO is based.....LA FUERZA DEL SINO.....there are in fact two brothers. Alvaro kills Carlo in their duel, then the other brother....Don Alfonso...tracks him down and forces him to fight a duel.....Alvaro kills Alfonso too).

This was one of the best performances of anything I have ever seen at the Royal Opera House. 

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The garden today 2 August 2018 2 Aug 2018 1:15 AM (6 years ago)




Today I had cherry tomatoes and wild strawberries from the garden for breakfast





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Garden in the snow, 28 February 2018 28 Feb 2018 1:11 AM (7 years ago)

After a heavy snowfall last night, this is how my garden looks this morning. (Taken from the safety of my doorway)







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Der Ring des Nibelungen, Bayreuth, August 2017 3 Sep 2017 8:09 AM (7 years ago)








Marek Janowski


Richard Wagner  DER RING DES NIBELUNGEN

Bayreuther Festspielhuas, 23 - 28 August 2017

Conductor: Marek Janowski
Director: Frank Castorf
Sets: Aleksandar Denic

DAS RHEINGOLD

Cast
Wotan                                                  Iain Paterson
Donner                                                Markus Eiche
Froh                                                     Daniel Behle
Loge                                                    Roberto Sacca
Fricka                                                 Tanja Ariane Baumgartner
Freia                                                   Caroline Weinborne
Erda                                                    Nadine Weissmann
Alberich                                             Albert Dohhmen
Mime                                                  Andreas Conrad
Fasolt                                                 Gunther Groissbock
Fafner                                                 Karl-Heinz Lehner
Woglinde                                            Alexandra Steiner
Wellgunde                                          Stephanie Houtzeel
Flosshilde                                           Wiebke Lehmkuhl

Actor                                                   Patric Seibert



I have finally achieved what I have been dreaming of for fifty years (literally....I first saw the RING at Covent Garden in 1967).......I have been to Bayreuth to see the RING. I am home now, sort of, but my head is still in the Golden Motel on Route 66!  Yes, you did read that correctly! I loved this witty, quirky, fascinating and at times infuriating production by Frank Castorf, which is set in a rather sleazy motel during the oil boom. I suppose I would have to admit that it isn't a production for beginners, perhaps you do need to be an experienced Wagnerian to 'get' it, but having said that, it was well worth the effort. I did have to acclimatize myself, although I had some idea of what to expect.

t's not possible to discuss the PRODUCTION separately from the PERFORMANCE, because the visual impact here is as important as the musical performance by the orchestra and the singers..... a Gesamtkunstwerk, as Wagner envisaged.  You usually assume that the musical performances are going to be outstanding..... I would single out for special praise the subtle, enticing  and sultry Erda of Nadine Weissman, and Iain Patterson's Wotan, striking just the right balance between shiftiness and the attempt at nobility. In a production like this, you have to be able to ACT as well, and in the scene where Loge is mocking them as they age due to the absence of Freia and her apples, you see Wotan on the screen, his face contorted in a frown of worry. Robert Sacca brought a great deal of dry wit and humour to the role of Loge.





 What we see here on the right is the motel swimming pool which earlier contained the gold, which Alberich has long since stolen. In the first scene, the Rhinemaidens mock Alberich cruelly, and then they play with the gold, throwing it out of the pool, laughing hysterically until it is too late...unfortunately, I was unable to find an image of this.


The staging does convey the essence of Wagner's drama, though it may not be conventionally 'beautiful'. After all, what does an unprepossessing middle-aged man (sorry, Albert Dohmann!) really expect when he tries it on with a group of pretty girls....!!!
The layout of the staging takes place on three levels.....the stage itself, then a balcony (the whole production makes a lot of use of stairs and platforms), then a screen on which the audience can see related but not identical actions during the stage action. After the theft of the Gold, we see the Rhinemaidens drinking and partying!!







This was funny, and unexpected.......I suppose we have always imagined that they cower in the darkness at the depths of the Rhine, lamenting their fate.......but here we see them putting a brave face on things!! (Perhaps it hints that they know that in the end things will work out).

When we transition to Valhalla - or the mountain top, I suppose, since Valhalla has only just been built and they are going to have a lot of problems before they can move in - we see that Wotan (Iain Patterson) is an incurable philanderer, canoodling with Freia on the bed in Fricka's presence. Later we'll see that he can't keep his hands off Erda either......





There were some really wonderfully witty touches, such as the scene in which, when Loge and Wotan have captured Alberich, Mime takes down the Confederate Flag (yes!!) and hoists a rainbow flag instead. Unfortunately, I can't find an image of this. However, there were also less felicitous aspects of the staging. It seemed a bit perverse that Wotan and Loge had ALREADY captured Alberich (AND Mime) as soon as they descended into Nibelheim. They have put paper bags over their heads, and tie them to the petrol pumps BEFORE the scene actually starts.....Alberich wrests the Tarnhelm from Mime and uses it to make himself invisible and terrorise the Nibelungs (whom we never see or hear in this production), and only after this do Wotan and Loge arrive in Nibelheim, to be told by Mime what has happened since Alberich forged the Ring.



All in all, though, I found Castorf's production very thought-provoking, with all its faults, because he has evidently put a lot of thought into it, and it IS largely consistent with Wagner's idea of Gesamtkunstwerk. 

When Janowski came on for a curtain call, I was surprised to hear people boo, as I thought he had conducted a fine performance, especially the finale (Entry of the Gods into Valhalla)......but it transpired people thought they were booing Castorf!!! People just don't think.......certainly there were no further boos for the conductor or the performers after DAS RHEINGOLD, and I think most of us quickly came to terms with the production.


DIE WALKÚERE

Siegmund                                 Christopher Ventris
Hunding                                   George Zeppenfeld
Wotan                                       John Lundgren
Sieglinde                                  Camilla Nylund
Brunnhilde                               Catherine Froster
Fricka                                       Tanja Ariane Baumgartner

VALKYRIES

Gerhilde                                  Caroline Wenborne
Ortrlinde                                  Dara Hobbs
Waltraute                                 Stephanie Houtzeel
Schwertleite                            Nadine Weissmann
Helmwige                               Christiane Kohl
Siegrune                                 Maerike Morr
Grimgerde                              Simone Schroeder
Rossweise                               Alexandra Petersamer


 Actor                                       Patric Seibert    

Act I          




For DIE WALKUERE, we have moved back in time, to the years just before, and just after, the Russian Revolution. Sieglinde and Hunding inhabit a farmhouse in Eastern Europe or Central Asia (in Act III it transpires that the location is Baku in Azerbaijan). The action again takes place on more than one level.....when Hunding arrives (with an enemy's head on his spear!) Sieglinde retreats to the balcony to prepare the meal......but nobody really bothers  to eat much. We then see on the screen Sieglinde preparing the drugged drink for Hunding - and on this occasion Castorf has obviously decided to follow Wagner's stage directions exactly. (There are times, as I've already indicated, where the staging does go against the text, if not necessarily contrary to what is being expressed in the MUSIC). Sieglinde has an expression of grim determination on her face......this is a Sieglinde who is angry, not sad, and is delighted that she might finally be close to getting her revenge.



Sieglinde steht eine Weile unentschieden und sinnend. Sie wendet sich langsam und zögernden Schrittes nach dem Speicher. Dort hält sie wieder an und bleibt, in Sinnen verloren, mit halb abgewandtem Gesicht stehen. Mit ruhigem Entschluss öffnet sie den Schrein, füllt ein Trinkhorn und schüttet aus einer Büchse Würze hinein. Dann wendet sich das Auge auf Siegmund, um seinem Blicke zu begegnen, den dieser fortwährend auf sie heftet. Sie gewahrt Hundings Spähen und wendet sich sogleich zum Schlafgemach..........

During the Love-Duet between Siegmund and Sieglinde, we can see Hunding writhing about in a nightmare during his drugged sleep........but this is one of the glorious musical moments when you forget about the staging and just concentrate on the glorious voices of Siegmund (Christopher Ventris) and Sieglinde (Camilla Nylund) as they reach heights of ecstasy. There are again a few ironic touches in the staging.....when Siegmund opens the door, we see a shed full of agricultural machinery, not the sun flooding in, but he does get a sword. (I thought the cage of live turkeys was a nice touch, as well).


(an image from two years ago, with Johann Botha, not Christopher Ventris, as Siegmund).

Meanwhile the screen shows a montage of early Soviet propaganda films, including the famous one of the butter churn.....and a page of PRAVDA appears on the screen.

Act II


John Lundgren takes over from Iain Patterson as Wotan in DIE WALKUERE, and has a very powerful and impressive stage presence. He tries to hold his own during the argument with  Fricka, but deep down he realises he has lost before it even starts.  I absolutely loved the portrayal of Fricka (Tanya Ariane Baumgartner) as a sort of exotic figure dressed in Tashkent silk.......reminding us that the setting is Soviet Central Asia. 
Catherine Foster's radiant 'Ho-jo-to-ho' resounded through the auditorium, she must be the best Brunnhilde of our time.  For me, the TODESVERKUENDIGUNG is one of the most poignant scenes in the Ring - the music rises to a pitch of almost unbearable tension as Siegmund asks.......

Begleitet den Bruder
die bräutliche Schwester?
Umfängt Siegmund
Sieglinde dort?

and then we hear Brunnhilde's calm reply - 'no, she can't come to Valhalla with you yet'. 
She knows what Siegmund and Sieglinde don't yet know.......that Sieglinde is to bear 
Siegmund's child.
Brunnhilde's moment of decision - to support Siegmund against her father's orders -
 was stunning in its intensity.

Act III



(Ride of the Valkyries)

And so at last we come to the oil fields of Baku......accompanied by silent film newsreels from 1942, when the Battle of Stalingrad prevented Hitler's troops from accessing the Caspian oil fields. The heroes transported by the Valkyries are carrying red flags as they collapse dead on the high platform of the oil derrick.
It is against this background that Brunnhilde sleeps, awaiting Siegfried. John Lundgren's Wotan excellently conveyed the pathos and grief hidden beneath the original anger, and his Farewell was heartrending.





SIEGFRIED

Cast

Siegfried                                          Stefan Vinke
Mime                                              Andreas Conrad
Der Wanderer                                 Thomas J. Mayer
Alberich                                          Albert Dohmen
Fafner                                             Karl-Heinz Lehner
Erda                                                Nadine Weissman
Brunnhilde                                      Catherine Foster
Woodbird                                       Ana Durlovski


Actor                                              Patric Seibert




This is the replica of Mount Rushmore that the designer Aleksandar Denic created for Siegfried.....it all takes place under the eyes of the Communist icons of Marx, Lenin, Stalin and Mao. The set again makes use of various staircases and platforms so that the performers can confront each other from different perspectives.....especially effective in the Wanderer/Mime scene, with Thomas J. Mayer a commanding, sonorous Wanderer, and Andreas Conrad a cringing Mime.

I would just like to explain something about this scene, because people sometimes ask, what is the point........surely we know all this already? Well, on one level yes, but there are two reasons why it is included. In the original plan for YOUNG SIEGFRIED, Wagner did need to use it as exposition, and it is drawn from the Riddle poems in the Old Norse sources, in which a God (Odin) in disguise visits a dwarf renowned for his wisdom, and proposes a Riddle Contest in which the loser is to forfeit his head. (The dwarf loses). The second reason is that, although we no longer need the exposition, we are now learning a lot about the inner landscape of Wotan's mind.......the fact the he is able to recognise that he and Alberich are each other's alter ego....he even refers to himself as Licht-Alberich. 

Stevan Vinke has the stamina and the high notes to portray this Siegfried convincingly as an untutored (in spite of Mime's best efforts), bumptious, thoughtless teenager. He does forge a weapon, but when he kills Fafner it turns out to be a Kalashnikov.......perhaps fitting, in the circumstances.



Act I takes place in and around the caravan that was previous used by Alberich and Mime in DAS RHEINGOLD. For Act II we move to Berlin Alexanderplatz....a very accurate model of the U-Bahn station.


So no, not in the forest. Nature is conspicuously absent from the stage in this production, which is largely set in urban surroundings. There is one major exception, which I shall come to in ,GOETTERDAEMMERUNG. For Siegfried, the forest is desolate, he is alone and unhappy, so really the empty underground station is equally a place of desolation. The problem, though, is that the Forest Murmurs really convey the idea of a tranquil environment......until we hear Fafner's motif!! 

So, Siegfried is thinking.....what shall I do,......and then the Woodbird appears.

BEST.WOODBIRD.EVER. (Ana Durlovski).

The production does have her (rather than IT!) approach Siegfried in a flirtatious, sexual way, which is perhaps not quite what Wagner intended, but it worked well within the context of the production, and was very entertaining. Ana Durlovski has a light soprano voice and made the most of her scene. We all applauded her enthusiastically at the end.

Act III starts with Wotan's last attempt to avoid the inevitable, to which end he summons Erda again, to ask if her wisdom can assist him....but the attempt is doomed. She can't, or won't help him, and he tells her that her wisdom is now at an end......Dein Wissen vergeht vor meinen Willen!! 


In this production they eat a meal together - here he is stuffing pasta into his mouth, and the waiter keeps bringing them more and more wine (the waiter is the actor Patric Seibert, about whom I have not had space to say very much, but he is a continuous presence throughout the RING, playing silent characters, especially waiters.....and in Siegfried the 'bear'.....not in a bear costume, but attached to a slave collar). Nadine Weissman is again a very sultry, husky-voiced Erda  (and she doesn't look old enough to be Brunnhilde's mother!!) She reacts angrily to Wotan's demands, and finally makes a very rude gesture at the waiter when he tried to present her with the bill (Wotan having disappeared).

The orchestral passage which indicates Siegfried's climbing the mountain and going through the fire was played with exquisite beauty......I always find this so beautiful that I don't want him to break the spell by starting to sing again!!!

Catherine Foster was again the outstanding performance of the evening, her clears conveying the whole range of  Brunnhilde's experience..... awakes to a new and very different life, it's puzzling and upsetting at first, but as she gradually adjusts she relaxes.......becomes more human, as Wagner says.




The Love Duet is interrupted by the famous - or infamous - crocodiles.....this is quite funny, if somewhat distracting...while they are singing their hearts out, exulting in their love, they are fending off the crocs, Brunnhilde finally shoves a patio umbrella down the throat of the largest one.




What was the point of the crocodiles - was it just to get a cheap laugh? I spoke to someone who said she had been to a talk in which they were informed that the Zoo was destroyed in a bombing raid in 1944, and some of the animals escaped, including the crocodiles, which made their way into the underground tunnel network. Well, maybe......but I am reminded of the urban myth about the alligators in the New York sewers.......





GOETTERDAEMMERUNG

CAST

Siegfried                                  Stefan Vinke
Gunther                                    Markus Eiche
Alberich                                   Albert Dohmen
Hagen                                      Stephen Milling
Brunnhilde                              Catherine Foster
Gutrune                                   Alison Oakes
Waltraute                                 Marina Prudenskaya
||1. Norn                                   Wiebke Lehmkuhl
2.Norn                                      Stephanie Houtzeel
Woglinde                                  Alexandra Steiner
Wellgunde                               Stephanie Houtzeel
Flosshilde                                Wiebke Lehmkuhl


Actor                                         Patric Seibert


The most memorable performance of GOETTERDAEMMERUNG that has ever taken place in Bayreuth - for various reasons.

Act 1




The Norns seem at one point to be performing something like a Voodoo ritual as they try to see the future before their rope breaks - perhaps this is in keeping with the general tone of the production. 

Catherine Foster and Stefan Vinke intone a rapturous love duet before he sets off with the horse (doll!) that she has given him. This wasn't quite as funny as the crocodiles, in fact by now some of us were beginning to tire of these little touches of humour, however welcome they may have been in DAS RHEINGOLD.  (I mean, by now we get the point!!)



When we see the Gibichung Hall, this is really a tour-de-force of theatrical design. Probably not quite what Wagner envisaged!! But a fitting background to Hagen (Stephen Milling - dark, brooding stage presence and voice) and his plans.







This is the kebab stall which does duty for the Gibichung Hall, and round the corner there is a fruit and vegetable stall. Hagen expertly manipulates Gunther and Gutrune.....it appears he is not without some affection for them,.....or at least for Gutrune......since he gives her a car!! (To reward her for agreeing to marry Siegfried).








I always wonder about Gunther and Gutrune - they are helpless, weak characters, but how far this excuses their perfect willingness to fall in with a scheme of deception and betrayal must remain open to question. I am also not sure that the staging IS particularly at variance with the music and text.....the empty exchange of courtesies between Siegfried and Gunther could take place anywhere, after all.

Marina Prudenskaya was a steady-voiced, sympathetic Waltraute, and I loved her Artemis costume (complete with bow, which you can just see in the lower image)!!






But Brunnhilde, of course, is no longer able to enter into the feelings and concerns of the Gods - as she says.....

Der Götter heiligem
Himmelsnebel
bin ich Törin enttaucht:
nicht fass ich, was ich erfahre.

I am a fool who has escaped from the holy heavenly mist of the Gods.....
I don't understand what I am  hearing.

She is a mortal woman now, for good or ill.........and indeed it soon goes ill with her.


ACT II

Now something completely unexpected happened. As we returned from the interval, 
an  announcement was made that Catherine Foster had injured her foot and was
 unable to actually perform.She was, however, going to sing from her wheelchair at
 the side of the stage, while a substitute mimed for her. This was a thoroughly 
professional action, and she sang as well as though she hadn't been injured, 
such exciting, soaring tones as she raged at Siegfried and Gunther.....
(but not Hagen, with whom she forms a temporary alliance).  Meanwhile the stand-in 
mimed, perfectly competently, and she was greeted with thunderous applause 
at the end of the act. 




And that is why no-one will ever forget this GOETTERDAEMMERUNG. 
But there is more to come!!
Hardly anyone realised at first, but the stand-in was actually a MAN!! 
Andreas Rosar, one of the Assistant Stage Managers. Now, most of the audience 
thought that it was a very brave thing to do -imagine being told at five minutes notice,
 'Here, put on this wig and this gold dress and go and mime Brunnhilde'. Even if he
 had  done it less competently, he still deserved the applause for agreeing to do it, but 
he  wasn't at all bad, Unbelievably, though, some idiots in the audience actually booed. 
WHY?? Should they have cancelled the performance? This was our last chance to see
 Castorf's production, obviously the production team did the right thing. But there has 
been a lot of discussion on social media -  by people who didn't see the production - 
about how awful it was, and it was a really stupid idea......
but the vast majority of the audience had nothing but praise for this ingenious
 solution  to the problem.

ACT III

The Rhinemaidens think they might have found a way to get the Ring from Siegfried without too much effort, but it backfires rather badly.



In a curious twist, after he has refused to give them the ring and shown  a .fine display of defiance and indifference to fate, they don't immediately go off to find Brunnhilde, but stay around, flirting and teasing.




#






Siegfried is not killed during a hunt, at least that's not what appears on the stage......it doesn't matter really though, does it, because it's just a plot device to get him somewhere where he is vulnerable. The action takes place in a dark alleyway, as Hagen persuades Siegfried to tell Gunther and the Gibichungs about his youth and how he killed the dragon and then - this is the crucial point, of course - gives him the drug that reminds him of Brunnhilde - and then strikes him down. (It actually takes him several blows to achieve this). And now comes the exception to the absence of Nature that I mentioned before - during Siegfried's Funeral March, the screen concentrates on Hagen, who is walking morosely home though the forest - so you HEAR Siegfried's Funeral March, but you experience, or are privy to, Hagen's thoughts. 

And then - here we are outside the New York Stock Exchange - seat, and symbol, of corruption and greed. It is this that needs to be destroyed.




Brunnhilde's Immolation was most poignant in her last Farewell to Wotan - 'Ruhe, ruhe, du Gott'. These few words always bring me close to tears. 

And then finally the Rhinemaidens drop the Ring, not into the river (swimming pool), but into a flaming brazier. Will this purify it, as the water was supposed to do, according to Brunnhilde? We will perhaps never know.




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The garden today, 27-06-17 27 Jun 2017 7:55 AM (7 years ago)

Some photos of my garden today (taken just before it started to rain!!)




HEBE (It is flowering really well this year)



LILIES


(These flowered this morning)


PETUNIAS (I love the white spots on the purple petunias)


JASMINE


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DON CARLO, Royal Opera House, 26 May 2017 1 Jun 2017 12:22 PM (7 years ago)












Giuseppe Verdi, DON CARLO, Friday 26 May 2017

Cast

DON CARLOS                                                        Bryan Hymel

Infante of Spain

TEBALDO, Elizabeth's Page                                 Angela Simkin


ELISABETH DE VALOIS                                        Kristin Lewis


COUNT OF LERMA                                               David Junghoon Kim


COUNTESS OF AREMBERG                                Rosalind Walters

(Silent role)

RODRIGO, MARQUIS OF POSA                         Christoph Pohl


PHILIP II, KING OF SPAIN                                    Ildar Abradazakov


PRINCESS EBOLI                                                 Ekaterina Semenchuk


PRIEST INQUISITOR                                           Josh Davies


FLEMISH DEPUTIES                                           Wyn Pencarreg,

                                                                              Gyula Nagy,
                                                                              Yuriy Yurchuk, 
                                                                              James Cleverton,
                                                                               Simon Shibambu, 
                                                                               David Shipley

VOICE FROM HEAVEN                                       Francesa Chiejina


GRAND INQUISITOR                                          Paata Burchuladze


Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House


CONDUCTOR                                                        Bertrand de Billy




DIRECTOR                                                            Nicholas Hytner



This is a revival of Nicholas Hytner's pared-down, but not minimalist, production, which is effective in conveying the gloomy,brooding atmosphere of Philip II's court - the predominant colours are black, red and grey. There is very little to lighten the darkness, either physical or psychological. Here is an image from the Fontainebleau scene./






Carlos and Elisabeth were sung by Bryan Hymel and Kristin Lewis, both new to these roles.  The young soprano Kristin Lewis brought a freshness and clarity to the role, she was especially touching in the Fontainebleau scene.....this is always heartrending, because you KNOW what is going to happen.......and you watch Elisabeth change from a hopeful young girl to a sad, disillusioned woman. Kristin Lewis is able to encompass all the varied demands of Elisabeth's role and obviously has a deep understanding of the text. She is well-matched by Bryan Hymel - the role of Carlo also makes varied demands on the voice of the tenor, as he is plunged from hope to despair. Here they are together in their brief moment of happiness (which has no equivalent in Schiller's play, but is nonetheless very moving). He was very convincing in his portrayal of Carlo's vulnerability.


All in all a splendid cast. Christoph Pohl as Posa was perhaps rather subdued in the first scene with Carlo, though his singing is never less than mellifluous. The scene with King Philip - Ildar Abdrazakov - was thrilling in its intensity, especially when Posa criticises Philip's 'peaceful' Spain as 'the peace of the grave'. 'Orrenda, orrenda pace! La pace e dei sepolcri!' (Literally from Schiller's 'Die Ruhe eines Kirchhofs!') Philip advances on Posa while the orchestra GROWLS, and I started thinking,...'He's going to hit him, isn't he......' But the moment passes.



Not all the scenes caught fire like this, but everything was very competently done, and the smaller roles - Tebaldo, the Count of Lerma, the Flemish Deputies - acquitted themselves admirably. Ildar Abdrazakov rose to heights of pathos and despair in 'Ella Giammai m'amo', and the scene with the Grand Inquisitor - Paata Burchuladze - was spine-chilling, especially when the Inquisitor enunciated 'Tutto tacer dovra per esultar la fe'......this is all on one note, and Verdi manages to extract the maximum terrifying power from it.


To sum up - a very competent performance, which at times rose to heights of dramatic tension. I loved the precision and the well-judged tempi of the orchestra under Bertrand de Billy.

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White rose bush this week. 25 May 2017 6:47 AM (7 years ago)

Last week the white rose bush had one tiny flower.......look at it now!!






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Orange rose from my garden 19 May 2017 3:07 AM (7 years ago)



Picked this rose in my garden last week. It smells beautiful too.





But now look how the bush has grown!!





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Views of Regent's Park 18 May 2017 9:33 AM (7 years ago)

We visited Regent's Park a year ago.....this is what we saw.
















#



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Hibiscus in my garden 18 May 2017 9:00 AM (7 years ago)

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Vase of flowers from my garden 18 May 2017 9:00 AM (7 years ago)

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White Rose in my garden 18 May 2017 8:59 AM (7 years ago)

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The garden today (17/05/17) 17 May 2017 5:14 AM (7 years ago)

This is what I saw in my garden this morning





Some beautiful violas




And some tulips that look like ice-cream

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The garden today (6 March 2017) 6 Mar 2017 10:12 AM (8 years ago)

This is what I saw in my garden this morning




Crocuses and daffodils




Viola odorata - first time I have grown them successfully from seed!!!

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The garden today (1 November 2016) 1 Nov 2016 8:16 AM (8 years ago)

This is what I saw in my garden today.


Gentians



Late-flowering roses




Violas


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The garden this morning (10 October) 10 Oct 2016 9:49 AM (8 years ago)





This morning I looked out of my window and saw these fuchsias - an Autumn flowering!!




And one lovely late-blooming rose!!! 



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DIARY OF ANNE FRANK by Grigori Frid. Edinburgh Fringe August 2016 28 Aug 2016 2:43 AM (8 years ago)





THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK, by Grigori Frid.
About Turn Theatre Company, directed by SEBASTIAN UKENA 
Singer POLLY OTT (shared with VERA HILTBRUNNER)
Pianist STAVROULA THOMA


This opera based on the Diary of Anne Frank is a very sparse staging by director SEBASTIAN UKENA.


 One woman (POLLY OTT when I saw it, she shared the role with VERA HILTBRUNNER) sings the role of Anne Frank, starting on her 13th birthday, which is when she gets the diary. 
When it opens, she and her family cannot guess the fate that is in store for them, and so the first scene is a happy young girl, just emerging from childhood, enthusing over her lovely birthday presents. The change from the happiness and security of childhood to insecurity, fear, and finally going into hiding, is movingly depicted in the music of GRIGORI FRID, which is more than an 'accompaniment;. but music as an integral part of the drama, depicting the emotions that words can't quite accomplish (so Wagnerian in effect, if not in scale!!) The piano was played by the excellent and talented STAVROULA THOMA.

Anne's experience is tied up with all the varied and turbulent emotions of adolescence, and leads to a heart-rending scene in which she prays almost inaudibly for help, or perhaps just the strength and courage to continue. Then this is followed by a comic scene in which she narrates a quarrel between the Van Daans, the other couple sharing their hideout. No-one was a saint, and the pressures of living like this must have been incredible, but she manages to extract humour from this situation.

It is the story of one young girl who never survived into adulthood, as the voice of a generation of victims and sufferers, and during the performance she fills the stage with photographs of other victims of oppression and persecution. Anne never lost her faith in the basic goodness of humanity, though, in spite of everything.




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The garden this morning (7 June 2016) 7 Jun 2016 9:23 AM (8 years ago)



BLACK PETUNIAS



GERANIUM FLOWERED THIS MORNING






RED ROSE IN GARDEN



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Der Fliegende Hollander, Bayreuth, 28 August 2015 3 Sep 2015 7:09 AM (9 years ago)

 

 

 

RICHARD WAGNER: The Flying Dutchman

(Romantic Opera in Three Scenes)

Bayreuther Festspielhaus, 28 August 2015

 
 
 
CAST
 
 
Daland                                                    Kwagnchul Youn
 
Senta                                                       Ricarda Merbeth
 
Erik                                                         Tomislav Muzek
 
Mary                                                        Christa Mayer
 
Steersman                                                Benjamin Bruns
 
Dutchman                                                Samuel Youns
 
Chorus and Orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival
 
Conductor                                               Axel Gober                                       

 
 
 
 
 
I have finally achieved my ambition, and made it to Bayreuth...nothing will ever be the same for me after this experience.....my first Pilgrimage up the Green Hill!! (Well, I got a taxi, since I have a mobility problem, but the effect is the same....still a pilgrimage for me). There are these rather entertainingly kitsch images of Wagner throughout the town....
 
 
 
Nothing really prepares you for experiencing the Bayreuth sound in real life....yes, I've heard countless broadcasts and recordings, seen countless DVDs, but this time I really felt the effect of the way the sound is projected by the covered orchestra pit. Such an exciting performance of the overture, the idea of the turbulent sea very convincingly portrayed, and the music of Senta's ballad echoing it sympathetically.
 
Musically, the performance was dominated by Senta (Ricarda Merbeth), making it as much her opera as the Dutchman's......she was well-matched by Samuel Youn as the Dutchman.
 
 
 
 
All the roles were well sung, Tomislav Muzek very lyrical as Erik, and Benjamin Bruns making the Steersman perhaps more interesting than usual, for reasons I shall come to when I discuss the staging. The chorus, such a vital part of this opera, were superb, their actions were choreographed almost like a ballet.
 
 
The production was a bit quirky, but I liked it. There isn't a vast amount of visual reference to the sea, but that doesn't matter, as it is so strong musically. The first scene seems to take place in the control room of a state of the art nuclear submarine (?), with Daland and the Steersman in a boat (lifeboat) hanging over the side. Unfortunately, I could not find an image of this impressive stage set, but here at least are Daland and the Steersman.
 
 

 
 
As you see, they are not dressed as sailors, but in rather smart civilian clothes, as are the other sailors.
 

 
There is a reason for this, in that there is a sub-plot in which Daland and the steersman run a (slightly dodgy?) business importing electrical goods, which is what the girls are unpacking during the 'Spinning Chorus'. I don't have a problem with this, the Spinning Chorus is just a plot device to mark the scene change (and if it were a Spinning Chorus, it would give me a chance to nit-pick about whether the spinning wheels were in any sense authentic!!) The sub-plot is going to turn out to have relevance to the Senta/Dutchman plot in the end.
 
 
 
 
 
I want to move on to the Senta/Dutchman scene - the 'Not Love Duet', as it were. (Remember he sings - translation by me - 'This deep burning sensation I feel....may I who am so wretched call it love? Oh no, it's the yearning for redemption....may it be mine through such an angel').  Senta has worked herself up into a passion of obsession during the Ballad, and the Duet was unbelievably intense. There is Daland's jolly tune as he exhorts Senta to seize the chance to gain a rich husband, and then it gradually dawns on him......they're doing just fine, I'll make myself scarce. (They are standing on the boxes that the electrical goods came in....there is a point to this!)
 


 
 
As soon as he leaves, the whole orchestral colouring changes, and any connection with ordinary life is severed......it isn't that they are actually communicating with each other, but that each is finding the fulfilment of their deepest dreams....she of the need to redeem him, he of the yearning for redemption. as soon as the duet is over, she goes up to him and grabs him, kissing him passionately.....just as Erik said she did in his dream narration.......and then they do communicate directly, and she reaches the height of exultation, as she goes to put on angel wings, and puts a crown (halo?) on the Dutchman's head. This was about the most intense performance, musically and dramatically, that I have seen...the production is perhaps built round Senta rather than the Dutchman, and I was impressed by the strong ringing tones, and the passionate characterisation.
 
 







 
For the chorus in the next scene, the girls have changed out of their blue overalls (about the only splash of colour in the staging), and put on party dresses in shades of while, grey and black.....it looks attractive, if somewhat stylised.
 
 
Then the final scene...no, she doesn't throw herself into the sea, she climbs onto the boxes on which he is sitting, and they are united in death.....the audience can see blood on his chest, earlier he tried to cut himself but of course nothing happened.......look at the blissful expression on her face as she cradles him.
 
 





In the final tableau, it looks as if Daland and the others have decided to make memorial statues of Senta and the Dutchman....that was the point of the packaging. I thought it was rather an interesting idea....they have achieved what they wanted out of life (i.e, death!!) but people will always remember them.


Such a splendid achievement by the Bayreuth team. Now I have to start saving up for next year!!!

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R.I.P. Terry Pratchett, 1948-2015 12 Mar 2015 8:39 AM (10 years ago)















A very sad day for his many admirers - Terry Pratchett, author of the DISCWORLD series, has died aged 66. I can't believe there will be no more Discworld novels - he never seemed to run out of ideas, and was so witty and stylish.

This is my favourite quote:

The proliferation of iridescent crystals and luminous fungi in dark caves where the torchlessly improvident hero needs to SEE is one of the most obvious examples of the intrusion of narrative causality into the physical universe.  (The last Continent).

Can never decide which is my favourite novel, but I loved GOING POSTAL, which is really a polemic against privatisation. 

Oh well....off to make some of Nanny Ogg's Carrot and Oyster Pie. I expect Terry is already leading Death a merry dance.

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Anti-TTIP Protest, Brussels, 3-4 February. Day 2 23 Feb 2015 4:02 AM (10 years ago)








The second day started with the Trojan Horse Protest outside the European Commission. This protest was organised in cooperation with Friends of the Earth Europe, who made this video of the event. The speakers explain why TTIP is considered to be a Trojan Horse, and why we should protest against it.





After the protest, we all walked (yes, including me!) from the European Commission to the European Parliament, to meet with our Green MEPs.






Our Green MEPs are Jean LambertKeith Taylor and Molly Scott Cato. Here they are at a discussion chaired by a member of the German Greens. They were also joined by Plaid Cymru MEP Jill Evans, who sits in the European Parliament as a Green. (I could hardly believe that I was really in Brussels, attending a meeting at the European Parliament. And they provided us with lunch!)



The Green Group has consistently opposed TTIP from its inception, as have the Left groups, but apparently not the Social Democrats. The discussion involved pointing out that there is much more to TTIP  than a trade treaty, it is not merely about 'goods crossing borders'. As we had already learnt, it is more about lowering standards of environmental protection so as to increase the profits of multi-national organisations, There was more discussion on ISDS, to which we had been introduced on the previous day, and we were reminded of the fact that corporations can sue governments, but not the reverse.  The introduction of TTIP would mean multinational corporations making the laws, not governments, The measure of the special tribunal would be whether INVESTMENTS had been damaged.

Keith Taylor pointed out that bilateral trade agreements are only about money (profits), and wider social and environmental issues are routinely ignored. 
Molly Scott Cato also spoke on the theme of finance, pointing our that a 'trade' treaty is really a corporate power treaty, enabling corporations to move finance, not goods.The banks are still not properly regulated, but TTIP asks for reductions on regulation.

Jean Lambert reinforced the theme that had already  been discussed, that implementation of TTIP would pose a threat to the UK National Health Service and to public services in general (throughout the EU).

Jill Evans spoke on the threat to food safety standards, and the question of food labelling, Apparently there is very little food labelling in the US, and the treaty would require a reduction in the standards of safety and explicitness in food labelling in the EU. It is a very political issue! 




We then moved on to a discussion with Labour MEPs, led by David Martin, a Scottish MEP. The Labour group are less committed in their opposition to TTIP than the Green group, perhaps more prepared to give it consideration under certain circumstances, David Martin said that he did believe in 'free trade if possible, but only if it's fair'. He said that there could perhaps be a 'good' TTIP, which would be good for jobs and good for growth,  but it would have to enshrine labour rights in law. He claimed that the discussions have not reached the point where it's possible to be for or against TTIP since it is still 'a blank sheet of paper'. 

He then told a heckler, 'If you're not here to listen, just piss off', which some of us thought was quite funny, but he then had to apologise. The hecklers were quite annoying......how often does anyone get the chance to go to the European Parliament and discuss serious issues? 

That was the final meeting, and then we returned to London, with a lot to think about, and with the intention of continuing the campaign.

I'll just finish with something that  is not connected with the campaign, but I found rather amusing,....at one point a woman came up to me and asked where I was was from. I said, 'London - Green Left', and she said....'Oh...you're not from Shetland, then?' This is why!!



This was what I was wearing......I did indeed knit it for Shetland Wool Week, interesting that someone in Brussels recognised the design!!

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