Das Rheingold

December 2, 2016 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | Classical Music, MUSIC, OPERA, Opera, THUMBNAIL REVIEWS, WAGNER |

(Opera Australia, Melbourne, 30 November 2016) (Dir. Neil Armfield) This reprise of the production from 2013 seems tighter but the essentials of staging and (thankfully) the precision of the Melbourne Ring Orchestra under Pietari Inkinen, are retained. In a minor miracle of timing, we have had the election of Mr Trump, an Alberich for our times. Moreover, reports of a dark-haired, wide-browed man – Nibelungen-like – making off with $2.1m in gold from the back of a bank truck in Manhattan – suggest that the stars had aligned for this production. Having said that, there is a lot of tosh written about The…

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Tristan and Isolde at the Met

November 7, 2016 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | FILM, MUSIC, Opera, OPERA, THUMBNAIL REVIEWS, WAGNER |

(2016, Directed by Mariusz Trelinski; conducted by Simon Rattle) The Varnished Culture had previously set out a prescription for the correct staging of Wagner’s greatest one-off, Tristan und Isolde.  Now we had the chance to see if the Met would rise to our vision, in opening its 50th season at the Lincoln Centre. It didn’t, but there were still good things in it.  The orchestra under Simon Rattle was superb.  Each of the three sublime Acts carry various challenges, including the liaisons with the singers, and all were handled impeccably, to this ear at any rate. Met favourite Nina Stemme was Isolde;…

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South Australia Venerates the Maestro

September 13, 2016 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | ART, Classical Music, LIFE, MUSIC, Opera, OPERA, WAGNER |

12 September 2016: Thirty Years of the Richard Wagner Society of SA Inc. 1986: what a year!  South Australia’s 150th birthday.  John Bannon was Premier – remember him?  Ronnie Reagan was U.S. President; Bob Hawke was Prime Minister.   Glenelg won a stirring Grand Final against the odds. And SA State Opera, eclectic as ever, staged Wagner’s The Flying Dutchman, at Her Majesty’s Theatre, then the Opera Theatre, which inspired three men of letters, Professor Andrew McCredie, Malcolm Fox and Ralph Middenway (with spiritual father Brian Coghlin absent but there in spirit), to convene a hasty public meeting on 20 June 1986, in…

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Das Ende

August 17, 2016 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | HISTORY, LIFE, MUSIC, Opera, OPERA, WAGNER |

"Wakey, wakey Brunhild!" (Otto Donner von Richter) (c. 1892)

17 August, 1876 In Bayreuth, Wagner’s great dream of a music festival playing nothing but Wagner (specifically, the Ring Cycle), concluded today 140 years ago.  How many in the crowd cried “Danke Gott!”  Or maybe, being mostly Bavarian and made of sterner stuff than most, many  said “Grüß got!” For it had been a good day, a great week in fact.  The Twilight of the Gods ended some 16 hours of music drama that left the audience drained and etiolated, but in a good way, like a pious married couple on the morning after the wedding. For his part Wagner…

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Werther

August 4, 2016 | Posted by Peter Jakobsen | FILM, MUSIC, Opera, OPERA, THUMBNAIL REVIEWS |

(by Jules Massenet, 1892) Royal Opera House, London, June 2016 Werther loves Charlotte but she is affianced to Albert and a sense of duty. Werther understands the score; she must do her duty.  He will (so he threatens) vanish, violently. But will he, a poet not a marksman, manage to blow himself away? Well, we liked this production. It is a slight piece of work, modern, situational rather than plot-driven, and it can glow only if the doomed non-couple have the requisite conviction.  In this production, they did.  Massenet’s adaptation of Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774), his animalistic Sturm und Drang…

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