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Every year, the Royal Opera showcases up-and-coming talent.

‘…Andrés Presno’s ferociously passionate – though never coarse – Don Carlos. ‘

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20 juli 2021www.musicomh.comBenjamin Poore
The present and the future of opera: JPYA summer performance at Covent Garden

The other future Verdian star was tenor Andrés Presno who, despite only having been cast in lighter roles thus far, displayed an impressive squillo as Don Carlos that rang through the entire theatre – a name to keep an eye on.

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17 juli 2021bachtrack.comKevin W Ng

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Concert, Various
D: Isabelle Kettle
C: Michael PapadopoulosRichard Hetherington
Every year, the Royal Opera showcases up-and-coming talent.

‘…Andrés Presno’s ferociously passionate – though never coarse – Don Carlos. ‘

Læs mere
20 juli 2021www.musicomh.comBenjamin Poore
The present and the future of opera: JPYA summer performance at Covent Garden

The other future Verdian star was tenor Andrés Presno who, despite only having been cast in lighter roles thus far, displayed an impressive squillo as Don Carlos that rang through the entire theatre – a name to keep an eye on.

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17 juli 2021bachtrack.comKevin W Ng
Macbeth, Verdi
D: Maxine Braham
C: Francesco Cilluffo
A weird and wonderful Macbeth, Grange Festival

The son of slain Duncan (and what a gruesome corpse we had from Xavi Monreal) is taken well by Andres Presno. The chorus was in great voice and entered the physicality of this heady and swirling production, filled with gore, severed heads in bags and wince-making stabbings.

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26 juni 2022operascene.co.ukMike Smith
Otello, Verdi
D: Keith Warner
C: Antonio Pappano
A strong cast for Verdi's take on Shakespeare's Otello

This opera and Warner’s production show very clearly Otello’s descent into jealous madness, contrasted with the jubilant scenes at the start, where the wonderful movement among the actors forms a prelude to his victorious arrival after defeating the Saracens in the eastern Mediterranean.

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12 december 2019www.thearticle.comMark Ronan
Keith Warner’s 2017 Otello returns to London’s Royal Opera House

Keith Warner’s 2017 production at London’s Royal Opera House, now revived, takes us beyond these shores into the darkest corners of Otello’s tower. Gregory Kunde sings the titular role of Otello. He steps into Jonas Kaufmann’s shoes. No easy task. But Kunde has become a familiar face at the ROH, performing three times in as many years since his 2016 debut. And he can clearly hold his own.

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22 december 2019theoperacritic.comJulian de Medeiros
Otello, Verdi
D: Keith Warner
C: Antonio PappanoDaniele Rustioni
Opera review: Otello at Royal Opera House

He was widely admired as the grand old man of Italian opera but had not produced a new work since Aida some 15 years earlier. Yet Otello features some of his most powerful music, bursting with impressive originality and energy. With a very strong cast and Antonio Pappano conducting, Covent Garden does glorious justice to this fine work.

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11 december 2019www.express.co.ukWILLIAM HARTSTON
“Esultate!” Kunde's Otello impresses at Covent Garden

It’s good to have expectations confounded. For much of his career, American tenor Gregory Kunde specialised in bel canto repertoire, his light, flexible voice ideal for Rossini with easy top notes that also meant he could tackle Berlioz’ stratospheric tenor roles like Énée and Benvenuto Cellini with distinction. In recent years though, Kunde has taken an unexpected lurch into heavier repertoire. I was unconvinced by his Manrico and approached his Otello in this first revival of Keith Warner’s production at The Royal Opera with trepidation, having missed him when he played second fiddle to Jonas Kaufmann in 2017.

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10 december 2019bachtrack.comMark Pullinger
La Traviata, Verdi
D: Richard Eyre
C: Keri-Lynn Wilson
BWW Review: LA TRAVIATA, Royal Opera House

If it's not broke, don't fix it!" Most clichés gain their status through being true, but that one is honoured in the breach as often as in its application, the desire to sell something new (even if it isn't really) as addictive to the vendor as it is to the buyer. Not always though. "25 years of Richard Eyre's La Traviata" is emblazoned (in gold, no less) on the cast list and the programme compiles a Who's Who of opera stars who have sung the roles in that quarter century - it was staged here as recently as January after all! So you've every right to expect something good, something slick, something that can fill hundreds of seats on wet Tuesday night a week before Christmas. And that's what you get.

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18 december 2019www.broadwayworld.comGary Naylor
La Traviata

Apart from Oropesa’s Violetta, the superb tenor Liparit Avetisyan gives a convincing performance as the passionate Alfredo, a role that is rarely achieved in operatic productions. The German baritone Christian Gerhaher in the role of Giorgio Germont, the man responsible for the break-up, also offers an impressive performance. The entire leading cast as well as the rest of the cast secured the narrative’s realism that is so brilliantly embedded in its musical fabric, which translates on stage in a manner that even those not musically trained, gain a satisfying musical and dramatic experience. The stamp of the director of this revival, Pedro Ruibeiro, is much in evidence. The dramatic performance, highlighting the conflict between father-son, the shift in Germont’s attitude towards Violetta, the ‘saintly courtesan’, is made clear in their first encounter in Act II. His hard tone and demeanour towards this fallen reveal early signs of softening and gestures of respect. The social norms layered with hypocrisy are superbly probed musically and dramatically in that first encounter between the two. The dramatic tension is given momentary relief by the colourful and beautifully performed gypsy’s singing dancing and the matadors. They lighten up the atmosphere before the mood darkens.The evening, in its entirety, can be summed up as memorable

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29 oktober 2021playstosee.comRivka Jacobson
Die Zauberflöte, Mozart
D: Barbara LluchDavid McVicarThomas Guthrie
C: Leo HussainRichard Hetherington
The Magic Flute, Royal Opera House review: an ideal if imperfect Christmas prelude

The cast is entirely new, and it’s led by a British tenor who is now deservedly moving centre-stage in London after a long apprenticeship in Germany. Benjamin Hulett’s sound is simply glorious – rich, rounded, warm, and expressive – and he incarnates Prince Tamino as though born to play the part.

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03 november 2019www.independent.co.ukMichael Church