Category: Reviews

  • Kai Kluge ~ Schumann’s Dichterliebe

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    Tenor Kai Kluge sings my favorite song-cycle for male voice, Robert Schumann’s Dichterliebe, in a live performance before an empty hall in Stuttgart during the pandemic. Alan Hamilton is the pianist.

    Watch and listen here.

  • Kai Kluge ~ Schumann’s Dichterliebe

    Snapshot kai 3

    Tenor Kai Kluge sings my favorite song-cycle for male voice, Robert Schumann’s Dichterliebe, in a live performance before an empty hall in Stuttgart during the pandemic. Alan Hamilton is the pianist.

    Watch and listen here.

  • EUGENE ONEGIN: Letter Scene ~ Elena Stikhina

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    Elena Stikhina (above) sings Tatyana’s Letter Scene from Tchaikovsky’s EUGENE ONEGIN from a 2019 performance at the Mariinsky Theater. Zaurbek Gugkaev conducts.

    Watch and listen here.

  • Montserrat Caballé Sings Verdi

    Montserrat

    Montserrat Caballé sings arias from Verdi’s LA FORZA DEL DESTINO and DON CARLO.

    Her “Pace, pace mio dio” is from a 1981 telecast, conducted by James Levine. Watch and listen here.

    The “Non pianger, mia compagna” is from a complete performance of DON CARLO at Orange in 1984. Watch and listen here.

  • Carreras/Ricciarelli/Zancanaro TRAVIATA ~ 1976

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    An audio-only 1976 TRAVIATA from Trieste brings together Katia Ricciarelli (above), Jose Carreras, and Giorgio Zancanaro, under the baton of Bruno Bartoletti. I find it a very moving performance, though the singers and conductor occasionally part company.

    Listen here.

  • Elena Mauti-Nunziata Has Passed Away

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    Above: Elena Mauti-Nunziata as Violetta

    The death of the Italian soprano Elena Mauti-Nunziata has been reported. An interview with the soprano, conducted by Bruce Duffie, dates from 1983 and provides details of her career. Read it here.

    Watch a film of a performance of TRAVIATA given in Madrid in 1977 with Elena Mauti-Nunziata, Alfredo Kraus, and Vicente Sardinero in the principal roles. Unfortunately, part of Act II (including “Di Provenza“) is missing, and the video quality is middling. But it’s a valuable document of Ms. Mauti-Nunziata in one of her finest roles. Watch and listen here

    Elena Mauti-Nunziata sang several performances of Mimi, Violetta, and Nedda at The Met from 1977-1979. I’m not sure how I managed to miss them. In 1982, I caught the last act of a broadcast of MADAMA BUTTERFLY from Dallas and was much taken with Ms. Mauti-Nunziata’s rendering of the opera’s final scene:

    Elena Mauti-Nunziata – Morte di Butterfly – Dallas 1982

    In 1985, I saw Ms. Mauti-Nunziata onstage for the only time: as Violetta at The Bushnell in Hartford, Connecticut. She gave a memorable portrayal.

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    Above: as Francesca da Rimini, with Nicola Maritnucci

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    Above: Elena Mauti-Nunziata greets Maria Callas at the opening night of La Scala, 1970

    Update: This scene from Act IV of TROVATORE from Verona 1985 has just surfaced on YouTube. Listen here.

    The sound quality is mediocre, but I love the way Mauti-Nunziata spins out those ethereal high notes in the aria. After a Miserere where the recordist had some problems, we hear the cabaletta. (It’s best to listen with headphones.)

    Giuliano Ciannella sings Manrico, and Reynald Giovaninetti conducts.

  • Camille Saint-Saëns ~ Piano Quartet

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    Above: Camille Saint-Saëns

    A performance of Camille Saint-Saëns’ Piano Quartet, Opus 41, by members of the WDR Symphony Orchestra in 2022.

    Watch and listen here.

    The artists are Caroline Kunfalvi, violin; Katharina Arnold, viola;  Martin Leo Schmidt, cello; and  Nenad Lečić, piano.

  • 2024 Chelsea Music Festival ~ Opening Night

    Lili

    ~ Author: Lili Tobias

    Friday June 21st, 2024 – The opening night concert of the 2024 Chelsea Music Festival was held in by far the most surprising venue I’ve ever been to. It took place in Genesis House, which is a restaurant/car showroom/performance venue associated with the luxury car brand, Genesis. In fact, the audience walked into the building through the showroom, so we were surrounded by new cars as the event staff offered glasses of wine. We then descended down a flight of stairs, through a lounge area, to the performance space. 

     

    The stage floor was actually a large screen itself, as were the back wall and the ceiling. This concert featured not only music but visual art completely surrounding the musicians as they played. While I thought the visuals were beautiful and intriguing, I didn’t quite see how they were connected to each specific piece. I think both the music and the visual art could have stood on their own just as well as together!

     

    The concert opened with two pieces by Augusta Read Thomas: Bebop Riddle V and Dancing Stars. Both were very joyful and bouncy! I particularly enjoyed the juxtaposition of staccato and legato moments in Dancing Stars. This piece was primarily staccato throughout, but there were brief moments when more legato phrases rose up and then dissipated. These moments got more expansive as the piece progressed, and culminated in one bright pluck, followed by its echo in the resonance of the piano strings.

     

    Wooden Bodies, by Tebogo Monnakgotla, was next on the program, performed by the Aizuri Quartet. Beginning with a slow melody in the lowest register of the viola, this motif was then explored by the other instruments in turn. In general, this piece was very fugue-like with all the motifs that got passed around within the quartet. My favorite moment was when the two violins traded off short, choppy phrases, creating a sort of panning effect between them. As a nice contrast to the explorative nature of the previous piece, Augusta Read Thomas’s next piece, Clara’s Ascent, felt calmer and more relaxed. The music stayed slow and legato for most of the time, punctuated by a fun pizzicato solo for the cello near the very end.

     

    Next was a beautiful string quartet arrangement of Clara Schumann’s song, Die stille lotosblume. Having played the original piano and voice version myself, I really appreciated the liberties Miho Saegusa took in adapting the music for strings. First of all, the vocal melody is traded between string instruments which creates fun contrasts within one performance of the piece. And second, Saegusa added some delicate arpeggios which don’t exist in the piano part. These added interesting variety to the texture which the piano part just doesn’t have, and the half cadence ending left me wanting more!

     

    To end the first half of the program was the world premiere of Nicky Sohn’s wind quintet, A Night at Birdland. Despite being accompanied by images of birds, this piece has nothing to do with birds, but rather is inspired by Charlie Parker, who is known as “Bird.” It was a really wonderful piece, and WindSync performed it so well. The music traversed many different musical textures, often featuring a consistent bouncy rhythm and really lush chords.

     

    Beginning the second half of the program were two solo piano pieces, first the theme from the 2022 movie, The Fabelmans, composed by John Williams. Melinda Lee Masur, one of the artistic directors of the festival, performed this piece herself. It was a beautiful progression of a melody through different accompanying textures. Next was Against Time, written and performed by 2024 composer-in-residence Ania Vu. Starting with a single barely-there note, the music evolved into an exploration of different piano textures and techniques: full chords vs single notes, clusters vs octaves, steady pulses vs filigree. I’d love to try out playing this one myself!

     

    The concert ended with Poulenc’s Sextuor (1931-32, performed impeccably by WindSync and pianist Andrea Lam. After the music, the audience was invited back upstairs to the Genesis House Restaurant for more drinks and canapés. This opening night concert featured such a wide variety of artistic ideas, and I’m sure the rest of the festival will live up to that as there’s a full week of performances ahead—from Bach to jazz to Brazilian forró. Congratulations to the Chelsea Music Festival on their 15th season!

     

    ~ Lili Tobias

  • BALLO IN MASCHERA @ Covent Garden ~ 1975

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    Above: Elizabeth Bainbridge

    A performance of Verdi’s UN BALLO IN MASCHERA in 1975 was televised live

    Watch and listen here.

    Conductor: Claudio Abbado

    Riccardo – Plácido Domingo; Renato – Piero Cappuccilli; Amelia – Katia Ricciarelli ; Ulrica – Elizabeth Bainbridge;  Oscar – Reri Grist; Silvano – William Elvin; Samuele – Gwynne Howell; Tom – Paul Hudson

    Placido Domingo and Reri Grist were in my first-ever BALLO at The Met in 1970. And Ms. Bainbridge is a grand, Olde School English contralto Ulrica.

  • AIDA ~ Vienna 1973

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    Audio-only: a performance of Verdi’s AIDA given at Vienna in 1973.

    Listen here.