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Elektra, Strauss
D: Patrice Chéreau
C: Daniel Barenboim
Irre und traurig: Familiendrama Elektra an der Staatsoper Berlin

Ricarda Merbeth verkörperte eine Elektra, die in ihren eigenen Gedanken gefangen ist. Schon mit den Rufen nach „Agamemnon“ ergriff sie die Herzen des Publikums. Ihre starke Stimme mit großem Vibrato, kann nicht nur markerschütternd sein, sondern auch überraschend fein und warm, als sie die Rückkehr ihres Bruders Orest besang. Sie wurde immer mehr zur Elektra und selbst in den hohen Lagen war sie gut zu verstehen.

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29 Januar 2019bachtrack.comSarah Schnoor
Elektra, Strauss
D: Patrice Chéreau
C: Donald Runnicles
Metropolitan Opera 2021-22 Review: Elektra

To stage a successful production of Strauss’ “Elektra” is a monumental feat all its own, but to do it with such sophistication and finesse as the Metropolitan Opera’s Friday night performance is herculean." The complexity of the libretto and score are second to none in the operatic repertory. It was the first of several famed collaborations between Austrian librettist Hugo von Hofmannsthal, one of the founders of the Salzburg Festival, and one of the great champions of late romanticism and early modernism, Richard Strauss. The demands on the singers are staggering as they attempt to navigate the extremities of their instruments while both soaring above and piercing through one of opera’s most intricate and robust orchestral compositions

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13 April 2022operawire.comM. Thaddius Banks
Two Sopranos Make an ‘Elektra’ Both Mythic and Human

in this revival, you could home in even closer to just its two sisters, antipodal soprano roles sung by Nina Stemme and Lise Davidsen with floodlight luminosity and painfully human sensitivity. Chéreau’s staging, which premiered at the Aix-en-Provence Festival in 2013 before coming to the Met six years ago, doesn’t seem to have aged a day. And it’s difficult to imagine that happening soon with a placeless production that suits the timelessness Sophocles’ classic tragedy.

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03 April 2022www.nytimes.comJosué Barone
Mitridate, re di Ponto, K. 87, Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
D: Clément Hervieu-Léger
C: Emmanuelle Haïm
Mithridates, King of Pontus

MITRIDATE, RE DI PONTO was written in 1770 by the fourteen-year-old Mozart for his first tour of Italy. The prodigy stuck rigidly to the opera seria form, and Mitridate’s string of da capoarias is varied only by a wonderful duet and a brief final ensemble. What points to the composer’s great future is the keen sense of characterization, along with the age-defying depth of emotion in the best of the arias. The new production at the Théâtre des Champs Élysées was directed by Clément Hervieu-Léger of the Comédie-Française, with Emmanuelle Haïm conducting her ensemble, the Concert d’Astrée. Hervieu-Léger, who has an impressive classical-theater background, may have been inspired to draw the opera toward its French theatrical origins; the libretto was based on a play by Racine. But though the achievement of the teenage composer is extraordinary, nothing in the libretto, apart from the story line, suggests the verbal grandeur of Racine’s tragedy Mithridate(1673). The unchanging set of a disaffected eighteenth-century theater was attractive, but the work needs more spectacle to hold the public’s interest through its three hours of music. Despite the efforts of the cast, who played out the drama with physical commitment, this production longed for Racine and failed to address the coded formality of the opera seria story of of Mitridate, King of Pontus; his fiancée, Aspasia; and his two sons, Sifare and Farnace. Haïm began the evening with her usual frenetic energy in an aggressive overture, the dull thud of the timpani drums clearly placing the opera in the Baroque tradition with too little Classical poise. The strings of the Concert d’Astrée never matched the excellent work of the woodwind and brass sections. Fortunately, the conductor relaxed as the evening progressed and allowed the music to breathe, although some of the ornamentation remained of questionable taste. Mitridate endures as a celebration of great singing. The young composer was inspired by the vocal virtuosity he discovered in Italy. The title role, especially, abounds in huge intervals from the lowest to the highest range of the tenor voice. Michael Spyres did as well as humanly possible and lent an appropriate nobility to his character, who anticipates the protagonist of La Clemenza di Tito, but he never sounded entirely comfortable with the technical challenges of the role. Soprano Sabine Devieilhe provided breathtaking virtuosity as the Parthian princess Ismene; her perfectly placed pyrotechnics brought a shiver of excitement to the evening. Despite glorious dynamic control above the staff, the young soprano lacks a convincing trill, which in Mozart’s and Haïm’s final cadenzas was an evening-long problem for most of the cast. Soprano Patricia Petibon was on her best vocal behavior as Aspasia, without indulging in too many willful expressive nudges, and brought dramatic truth to the role. Her singing of “Pallid’ombre,” one of the most profoundly moving arias in the score, was a performance of time-stopping beauty. Mitridate’s two sons were sung by soprano Myrtò Papatanasiu (Sifare) and countertenor Christophe Dumaux (Farnace). Papatanasiu has a creamy soprano, especially at the top of her range, but she suffered from cloudy Italian diction, while Dumaux brought his treacherous sibling to life with firmly voiced coloratura. Soprano Jaël Azzaretti was a delightful Arbate. The promising young tenor Cyrille Dubois confronted the technical challenges of Marzio’s aria with surprising virtuosity

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11 Februar 2016www.operanews.comStephen J. Mudge
Mitridate - Champs Elysées Theater (2016) - Mitridate - Champs Elysées Theater (2016)

We never cease to admire Mozart's precocious genius... At an age when many teenagers naturally have dreams and concerns of their age, he composed Mithridates, his first opera seria on a libretto adapted from the Racine's eponymous tragedy. From the outset, the work was both a masterstroke and a major success for his young career as a composer. In 1770, Mozart was 14 years old and made his first trip to Italy with his father. The book depicts the strange relationship that unites King Mithridates to his two sons, Xiphares and Pharnaces, because all three covet the same woman. Young Aspasia is indeed promised to Mithridates but her heart beats for Xiphares. Against the background of the war of succession to the throne and the inevitable betrayals, Mozart wrote a score that was both fiery and emotional (Aspasie's aria “Nel grave tormento”, torn between love and duty, is one of the most beautiful of its kind). According to the codes of the seria form, the work is full of virtuoso airs for each of the performers. Only the brief final quintet will bring them together. A youthful page, Mithridates already contains the seeds of the work of the musician's maturity, both musically and theatrically. A young team has also been brought together to serve this jewel of grace and emotion. The resident of the French and director Clément Hervieu-Léger reconstituted with him that of La Didone de Cavalli presented here three seasons ago. Emmanuelle Haïm will conduct her Concert d'Astrée with the energy and talent for which she is known. As for the coveted beauty, she will be embodied by Patricia Petibon, overwhelming Blanche at Poulenc and also a fine Mozartian for a long time. Gentlemen father and son, we have no doubt that you will want to shine in the eyes of beautiful Aspasia.

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11 Februar 2016www.opera-online.com

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