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Das Rheingold, Wagner, Richard
C: Kent Nagano
Dresden, Konzert: „Das Rheingold“, in historischer Aufführungspraxis

Letztlich war aber das Orchester des 19. Jahrhunderts durchaus mit seinem zurückhaltenden Klangbild sängerfreundlicher. Andererseits war den Orchestermusikern auf dem Podium vergönnt, die Sänger auch einmal zu hören.

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15 červen 2023deropernfreund.deThomas Thielemann
Waldhyazinthe statt Dezibelrausch

Hinzu kommt die ätherisch-transzendentale, an Mahlerlieder erinnernde Erda von Gerhild Romberger und Tijl Faveyts’ überzeugender Fasolt, der uns von allem plump Riesenhaften befreit einen auf Gerechtigkeit dringenden, gegen die Willkür der Götter aufbegehrenden Menschen nahebringt.

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17 červen 2023www.musik-in-dresden.deBjörn Kühnicke
Wozzeck, Berg
C: Andris Nelsons
BSO ~ WOZZECK @ Carnegie Hall

boy-soprano Linus Schafer Goulthorpe was outstanding as the hapless young son of Wozzeck and Marie

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15 březen 2022oberon481.typepad.comOberon
Salome, Strauss
D: Andreas Homoki
C: Simone Young
Une Salome haute en couleur

Mauro Peter incarne un Narraboth lumineux et émouvant, qui pointe son poignard sur Jochanaan avant de le diriger contre lui-même. Michaela Schuster est une Hérodiade cynique et condescendante, alors que Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke compose un Hérode faible et veule qui ne peut à aucun moment masquer son désir pour Salomé. Pour la petite histoire, on signalera que chacun des cinq juifs est chanté par trois interprètes différents, Andreas Homoki ayant découvert dans la partition une note de Strauss disant que les voix des solistes pouvaient être remplacées par des choristes talentueux, à la discrétion du chef. La saison lyrique zurichoise a démarré sous les meilleurs auspices.

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11 říjen 2022www.concertonet.comClaudio Poloni
„TANZE FÜR MICH, SALOME“ – PREMIERE IM OPERNHAUS ZÜRICH/SALOME AM 12.9.2021

Das interessante Bühnenbild besteht aus einer Scheibe am Himmel, welche den Mond darstellt und sich auf dem Boden in gleicher Größe widerspiegelt und als bewegliche Spielfläche dient. Aus dem verborgenen Palast, führt ein Steg hinüber zur sichtbaren Welt. Über sie betreten die Darsteller die Bühne. Dort symbolisiert ein riesiger Mahlstein die zerstörerische Kraft, welche sich langsam und drohend auf das Geschehen zubewegt.

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16 září 2021opernmagazin.deMarco Stücklin
Don Giovanni, Mozart
D: Sebastian Baumgarten
C: Jordan de Souza
ZÜRICH/Opernhaus: DON GIOVANNI. Wiederaufnahme. Der Vorhang zu und alle Fragen offen

Die musikalische Leitung des Abends hat Jordan de Souza. Mit sparsamen, sehr deutlichen Gesten hat er das Geschehen immer unter Kontrolle. Die Tempi überzeugen, die Lautstärken dürften noch unter Kontrolle zu bekommen sein. Die Philharmonia Zürich im hochgefahrenen Orchestergraben folgt ihm höchst konzentriert und mit viel Spielfreude. Ein Extra-Lob verdienen die wunderbaren Holzbläser. Der Chor der Oper Zürich absolvierte seine nicht immer einfachen Auftritte mit schönem Klang und bewundernswerter Motivation.

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26 leden 2022onlinemerker.comJan Kobrot
A l'Opernhaus Zürich : un Don Giovanni iconoclaste mais d'une certaine cohérence

En fosse, avec une alacrité inaccoutumée dans cet ouvrage, le jeune et bouillonnant chef canadien Jordan de Souza dirige une brillante Philharmonia Zürich, aux sonorités contrastées et à la riche palette de nuances. Toute la flamme, l’énergie, la rage et la poésie qu’appelle le chef d’œuvre de Mozart sont ici restituées avec autant de force que de conviction, et la direction musicale n’est ainsi pas la moindre des satisfactions de notre soirée lyrique suisse !

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13 únor 2022www.opera-online.comEmmanuel Andrieu
Die Zauberflöte, Mozart
D: Josef Ernst Köpplinger
C: Christoph GedscholdJonathan DarlingtonKillian FarrellEvan RogisterGábor KáliNicholas Carter
Köpplinger’s child-friendly Die Zauberflöte returns opera to Dresden’s Semperoper

This was the first opera performance by Semperoper Dresden after several months of lockdown and Josef E. Köpplinger’s new Die Zauberflöte was also the last one before their doors shut last November. Mozart’s Singspiele is presented as a coming-of-age story and we see a young Tamino in denim jacket and trainers on a darken stage at the start during the overture: when the curtains close at the end of the opera he is there with a ‘flute’ and the medallion we have seen presented to Pamina. So everything else – including the Masonic ritual – is from the boy’s overactive imagination and emphasises the fairy tale aspects of Zauberflöte. Both Tamino and Pamina are in their own ways rebellious teenagers with Tamino seeming rather naïve to begin with and easily manipulated by the Queen of the Night. Despite the path to true love being a rocky one – quite apposite because of the imaginative landscape videography from Walter Vogelweider we frequently see – literally love blossoms for them as roses grow and it seems absolutely right that when Sarastro seeks to nominate Tamino as his successor – as Hans Sachs recognises Walther von Stolzing is the future in Wagner’s Die Meistersinger – he goes off hand-in-hand to an indeterminate future with Pamina as they reject the male-dominated society. Die Zauberflöte was the culmination of Mozart’s increasing involvement with Emanuel Schikaneder’s theatrical troupe which since 1789 had been the resident company at Vienna’s Freihaus-Theater auf der Wieden. Mozart was a close friend of a singer-composer in the troupe, Benedikt Schack (who eventually was the first Tamino), and they often worked collaboratively. In 1790, Mozart was involved in Schikaneder’s opera Der Stein der Weisen (The Philosopher’s Stone) and just like Zauberflöte it was also a fairy tale opera, and almost its precursor since it employed much the same cast in similar roles. Zauberflöte – as Mozart intended – features Masons because both Schikaneder and the composer were lodge brothers. The opera shows the triumph of reason over despotism and is influenced by Enlightenment philosophy and can be regarded as an allegory propounding enlightened absolutism. The Queen of the Night is the dangerous form of liberalism, whilst her antagonist Sarastro is the reasonable sovereign who rules with paternalistic wisdom and free-thinking insight. Unfortunately, the libretto also contains a racial stereotype in the form of Monostatos (who is a Moor and black and makes unwelcome advances to Pamina) and some equally dreadful misogyny with all women regarded as subservient to men. (Although Mozart provides full choruses in both acts that include female voices, it must be remembered the solemn choruses are for men alone.) Köpplinger – of Munich’s Gärtnerplatztheater – downplays the racial and misogynistic elements in his essentially child-friendly Zauberflöte; Monostatos is just a black-hearted villain with a cyberpunk look to him and the pink-haired(!) Pamina – in her colourful anime cosplay outfit – proves to be quite feisty. Köpplinger’s version is only a few minutes over two hours so much of Mozart’s original has been lost. It was created by adhering to coronavirus safety measures, involving social distancing and a few masks, and unfortunately this is something we will have to get used to for the foreseeable future in theatres and opera houses. There is so much eclectic imagery right from the start. There are some shenanigans with blue and yellow – the most popular colour in this Zauberflöte – ropes culminating in a tug-of-war between figures entirely in black (who will reappear from time to time), and there has been a sun and a moon followed by an eclipse. At the back we see a blueish barren landscape in which a solitary garish yellow tree is shown growing. When chased across the stage the ropes suggest snakes and it is now the grown-up Tamino who will face off against a long yellowish serpent. The Three Ladies in multi-coloured wigs and carrying rifles vanquish it before sprinkling a prostrate Tamino with something (fairy dust?). The feathered Papageno flies in on a fantastical mechanical bird that will eventually – to Tamino’s astonishment – lay an egg. Papageno (in stripey shirt, yellow again!) faints after his boastful heroics and the leaves on the three fall to leave just a single one. As Tamino looks at Pamina’s portrait there is a shilouette of her on the screen at the back. Though the Queen of the Night has a glittery skull cap and no horns she still reminded me of Maleficient from Disney’s Sleeping Beauty. The Three Boys have extravagant white wigs and are colour-coded in red, green and blue and enter with a wheel, wing and some balloons and will be later seen with other memories of childhoods long ago. Sarastro’s temple is signified by strips of neon lighting and the lowering words Vernunft Natur Weisheit (Reason Nature Wisdom) with the emphasis on Natur and the priesthood will be seen to be more formally suited and booted with (initially white) cloaks. There is the suggestion of a castle tower whilst in the second act there is the illuminated outline of a cage and the priests will enter with white globes. As Act I draws to a close Tamino gets a flute which lights up and there are comical animals straight from the stage musical The Lion King. A red feather is shown gaining in importance (for some reason) though this may have something to do with the legend of the Firebird and at the conclusion of the act the young Tamino will be seen sitting on the prompt box and eating an apple. And so it continues through Act II to huge Armed Men each manipulated by three puppeteers; for the ordeals of fire and water the tree burns and crumbles and then we see a tsunami; Papageno and Papagena’s eight large, coloured eggs raise a laugh; and there is a sunrise for the final scene. Sarastro sings ‘The rays of the sun chase night away; the hypocrite’s surreptitious power is utterly destroyed!’ yet offers the Queen of the Night a reconciliatory hand and although she ignores it, she is still on stage with everyone at the end. Christoph Gedschold sounded as if he favoured fairly brisk tempi, and since any longueurs had been excised his account had freshness, great verve and lucid textures, and he encouraged focused playing from the Staatskapelle Dresden. Sebastian Wartig was an engaging, charismatic Papageno with plenty of wit and presence and a clear vibrant baritone. Obviously, his character’s more comic moments really needed an audience. Evelin Novak brought wilfulness and strength to Pamina and revealed a bright, expressive voice and her ‘Ach ich fühl’s’ – believing her love for Tamino was unreciprocated – was earnest, passionate and anguished. Her mother, the Queen of the Night, was sung by Nikola Hillebrand who looked suitably dramatic though sounded less so. The high notes in ‘O zittre nicht’ were not given their full value though she was somewhat more persuasive in the Queen’s Act II aria, ‘Der Hölle Rache’, where those same stratospheric notes sounded better supported, even though it was still rather shrill. Julia Muzychenko was an absolutely delightful Papagena and her ‘Pa… pa… pa…’ duet with Wartig’s Papageno was irresistible and full of charm. Aaron Pegram’s whipcracking Monostatos was deceitful, threatening and firmly sung. The Three Ladies were a cohesive and amusing ensemble though the three boy sopranos of the Dresden Kreuzchor were a little underpowered and this was entirely understandable in the circumstances. All the minor roles were solidly cast – most notable was Alexandros Stavrakakis’s deep bass as the Speaker – though they only got limited opportunities. René Pape brought a wealth of experience to his paternalistic Sarastro, he was imposing, stentorian, and with the remarkable low-register heft this character demands, especially for ‘O Isis und Osiris’. Klaus Florian Vogt made a rare mid-career return to Tamino with this performance and concentrated on wide-eyed innocence. As he scampered off with Pamina at the end I am not sure whether Köpplinger believes Tamino has learnt anything – apart from about falling in love – with all he has gone through. ‘Das Bildnis ist bezaubernd schön’ showed Vogt’s pure choirboy-ish tenor with its bleached tone to best effect and flowed beautifully and expressively. Vogt sang throughout with Mozartian grace, but his homogeneous tenor occasionally sounded a touch dry and a little too bland.

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04 červenec 2021seenandheard-international.comJim Pritchard
Die Zauberflöte, Mozart
D: Tatjana Gürbaca
C: Cornelius Meister
Sprecher in Die Zauberflöte by Mozart

As Sprecher and first priest one experiences the beautiful voice of Andri Björn Róbertsson.

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28 září 2016Oper-Aktuell - Kaspar Sannemann