Browsed by
Day: August 10, 2021

AGAIN, THE SUBS SAVE THE OPERA

AGAIN, THE SUBS SAVE THE OPERA

If the Santa Fe Opera’s “Eugene Onegin” lacks the direct punch of the Pushkin poem originating it, perhaps it’s that Tchaikovsky never wrote an opera at all, but rather these “lyric scenes,” as he called them. The SFO brought it off rather miraculously, once again dealing with major cast changes attributable to Covid and related border lockdowns—by now, General Director Robert Meya has likely had enough casting headaches to deal with to run his own headache commercials. Here, Lucas Meachem…

Read More Read More

Bard, Britten, Britain, Combined

Bard, Britten, Britain, Combined

SANTA FE, NM—Another brave start to live, in-person performances, where apart from your required masks, you can pretend there’s no pandemic any more. After the 2020 shutdown, the Santa Fe Opera (summer) Festival has resumed with a near-full complement of four operas, playing in the semi-outdoor Crosby Theatre with its spectacular views of the high desert and Sangre de Cristo Mountains. This is arguably the most breath-taking site for opera in America, with open side vistas and yet a solid…

Read More Read More

NEW OPERA, AGELESS MYSTERIES

NEW OPERA, AGELESS MYSTERIES

SANTA FE, N.M.—The best review of the new opera runs thusly: “It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” Never mind that the quote came from Winston Churchill the better part of a century ago, never mind that it dealt with an unrelated topic. The great new enigma spanning millennia is John Corigliano’s “The Lord of Cries.” In Mark Adamo’s evasive and elusive libretto you get spooks, Greek gods, werewolves, oracles, nightmares, a very bloody murder with…

Read More Read More

GOOD MANNERS = GOOD MUSIC

GOOD MANNERS = GOOD MUSIC

SANTA FE, N.M.—Call it the battle of the sexes. A group of mostly female composers produced new works to be played by an all-male string quartet at the Santa Fe (N.M.) Chamber Music Festival. The first came equipped with pens and printers, the second with bows more eloquent than any archer’s weaponry. And music was in flux, matching the name of the ensemble. Happily, the outcome was harmonious, and the fest’s latest package of the new and latest evolved without…

Read More Read More