Operabase Home

Profile reviews

1
Review – RSNO Beethoven 5 / Britten / Walker

But the bulk of the credit for this lively and compelling performance must go to Scots tenor Nicky Spence. His versatility as a vocalist was astonishing, with a broader, richer quality in the mid- and lower ranges that would be far more typical of a baritone, yet entirely capable of both a steely ‘forte’ and a poised ‘sotto voce’ in even the highest registers. This command of his art was especially noticeable in his stunningly accurate intonation in the second movement (‘Villes’), his spine-tingling soft top notes in the opening of the third (‘Phrase’) and his agility and control with the aspirated, staccato phrases in the fifth (‘Marine’) and the rapid semiquavers of the seventh (‘Parade’). Yet most of all, during the whole performance Spence displayed a truly special sense of confidence with the drama of the work, his earnest, unpretentious attitude inhabiting the musical narrative (as his biography puts it, he is a ‘singing actor’), without falling into the singers’ trap of seeming laboured or melodramatic. Having Spence as soloist was a real treat

read more
02 March 2021theedinburghreporter.co.ukDavid Lewis

Past Production Reviews

7
Kát'a Kabanová, Janáček
D: Damiano Michieletto
C: Robin Ticciati
The week in classical: Káťa Kabanová; Ragged Music festival – review

The set looks airy and minimal, Káťa’s sense of imprisonment and desire for freedom achieved by Alessandro Carletti’s intense use of lighting and high white walls that shut out the world. Three standard visual motifs, drawn from references in the libretto, are brought into play: bird, cage and angel. Magritte’s disturbing birdcage paintings, one of which he pointedly called The Therapist, come to mind. By the end, these symbols have multiplied to the point of distraction. This might irritate more had musical standards not been so outstanding in every quarter, steered by Glyndebourne’s music director, Robin Ticciati.

read more
29 May 2021www.theguardian.comFiona Maddocks
Glyndebourne Festival 2021 Review: Kat’a Kabanova Kateřina Kněžíková Towers Over an Intimate, Searing Vision of One of Opera’s Most Complex Selves

Michieletto’s production is symbolic and psychological first and foremost. The white set designs by Paolo Fantin suggest an abstract dream space – there is no village or river, only the interior of Kat’a’s mind. Their acute angles are redolent of the kinds of vitrine-like structures that so fascinated Francis Bacon in his paintings; these walls close in on Kat’a at the end of Act one, trapping her in the room with Kabanicha, which then ingeniously segues uninterrupted into the beginning of Act two.

read more
29 May 2021operawire.comBenjamin Poore
Orphée, Glass
D: Netia Jones
C: Geoffrey Paterson
Opera review: The Mask of Orpheus at English National Opera

The tenor Peter Hoare was very impressive in the hugely demanding part of Orpheus the man (as opposed to Orpheus the myth and Orpheus the hero, also played well by Daniel Norman and Matthew Smith respectively) but the whole cast coped magnificently with the outlandish score.

read more
02 November 2019www.express.co.ukWilliam Harston
Opera review: Orphée at English National Opera

This is the last of the four operas based on the Orpheus myth which the ENO had the wonderfully crazy idea of bringing together for the last few months of this year and on the whole the quartet has been a success. It began with Gluck’s Orpheus and Eurydice which is full of great music and tells effectively the basic story of Orpheus travelling to Hades to try to bring back his beloved Eurydice after her untimely death.

read more
26 November 2019www.express.co.ukWilliam Harston
Die Walküre, Wagner, Richard
D: Richard Jones
C: Martyn BrabbinsAnthony Negus
THE VALKYRIE, LONDON COLISEUM

Nicky Spence rings out like a heroic peal of bells as Siegmund. Emma Bell’s Sieglinde, in jeans and a tee-shirt, was the abused wife from The 39 Steps, welcoming a stranger (here with an industrial-sized jerry of water). Like Brünnhilde, a decent woman surrounded by vile men. The siblings work well together, despite schematic direction which initially has them moving like the figures in a German weather house.

read more
23 November 2021criticscircle.org.ukLucien Jenkins
Alice's Adventures Under Ground, Barry
D: Antony McDonald
C: Thomas Adès
We were all in Wonderland! Gerald Barry's Alice Adventures Under Ground is a joyous, hour-long opera that will delight audiences of all ages

And the singers have to be versatile; for instance, the accomplished British baritone Mark Stone (who will be performing Wotan in Norway next month) has to sing ‘The White Knight, The Cheshire Cat, a Soldier, Bottle 3, Cake 3, Baby 3, Oyster 3, Passenger 5, and Daisy 3’

read more
08 February 2020www.dailymail.co.ukDavid Mellor