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Old Jul 12, 2004 | 9:09 am
  #1  
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SF Opera suggestions

Anyone here familiar enough with SF Opera so as to recommend what would be good productions to see in their upcoming season?

http://sfopera.com/os_ourseason.asp
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 12:59 am
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Hi.

I guess that really depends on your taste and your tendencies toward established v. up-and-coming singers or traditional v. "experimental" productions...

Ignoring casts and production considerations and as a fan of Russian Opera, I am quite keen on the Tchaikovskys (2 of them--one this fall, the other next summer), followed by the Bizet and then the Mozart (for some reason Cosi fan tutte has really grown on me (von Stade on the cast as a bonus*).

Then of course, there are the romantic-tragedies of Puccini and Verdi... I would be inclined to see La Traviata for the cast (Ruth Ann Swenson, Dmitri Hvorstovsky), and would skip Tosca for the same reasons (Carol Vaness has ruined for me a few otherwise good evenings at the opera house).

And while I do like Wagner, I've never really warmed up to Dutchman so I'll most likely skip it. The Ligeti piques my curiosity, but I'll probably end up not making it. And I won't go anywhere near the Britten.

So that's my highly arbitrary "priority" list of the upcoming season.


* I had the pleasure of sitting next to her on an SFO-IAD flight.
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 10:14 am
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As WindFlyer mentioned, it's all about personal taste. Are you a stodgy Met traditionalist, or an avant-garde and hip NYC Opera type?

If you are somewhat new to opera, I would suggest the following:

Cos fan tutte
La Traviata
Tosca
Der Fliegende Hollander (maybe)
Les Pecheurs de Perles (rarely performed)

I saw Ruth Ann Swenson in the role of La Contessa in Le Nozze di Figaro this past autumn at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. Her voice is truly beautiful though some opera buffs characterize here voice as colorless. Chacun a son gout. Dmitri Hvorstovsky has a solid baritone voice.

The general director of the Lyric Opera of Chicago once said that there are four pillars of opera: Mozart, Puccini, Verdi, and Wagner. Some will disagree, though I think it's a fair statement.

I personally hate experimental opera. I'd also rather spend an evening watching WWF than attend an opera performed in English (ok, that's an exaggeration).
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 11:00 am
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Thanks for the suggestions!

I am still fairly new to opera so I can't say I've developed any particular taste one way or the other. I just go for the pure enjoyment of listening to wonderful music and getting wrapped up in it all.
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 2:47 pm
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Originally Posted by StudentExplorer
I am still fairly new to opera so I can't say I've developed any particular taste one way or the other. I just go for the pure enjoyment of listening to wonderful music and getting wrapped up in it all.
In that case, I'd recommend in the following order (taking into account casts and the like...):

Cos fan tutte
La Traviata
Yevgeny Onegin
Les Pecheurs de Perles
(as francophile noted, rarely performed)
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 2:56 pm
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Since you're a student (by your pseudomyn, I can tell), I'm guessing you are on a limited budget. I find that the number of available seats for the lowest price category at SF Opera, Balconly Sides at $25, to be very limited. The Balcony Sides section at SF Opera is quite small (it's almost to slivers that serve as book ends, if you ask me).

Compare this to the fairly large section of the Family Circle at the Met where tickets go for $26.

http://sfopera.com/st_seatingchart.asp

http://www.metopera.org/infodesk/seatingchart.html

If I were, you I would take advantage of the fact that you live in New York. The Met is the best opera company in the world. Period. Better than Covent Garden, Paris, La Scala, Bavarian State.
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Old Jul 13, 2004 | 7:26 pm
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Originally Posted by francophile

If I were, you I would take advantage of the fact that you live in New York. The Met is the best opera company in the world. Period. Better than Covent Garden, Paris, La Scala, Bavarian State.
Definitely have while I've been here!

But as I am moving to SF end of summer, plan ahead I must!
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Old Jul 20, 2004 | 3:17 pm
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I agree with the comments on Cosi, Traviata, and Pearl Fishers. All have wonderful music. Pearl Fishers was done here in Detroit this spring, and I think SF will be the same production. I wonder why no one recommends Billy Budd? I saw it at Chicago Lyric a couple years ago and thought it excellent. As a 20th century opera, it isn't as melodic as Verdi or Puccini, but tells a great story and a lot of the music is very good. Britten makes more demands on the listener.
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Old Jul 20, 2004 | 10:47 pm
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I write this response with fond memories of the War Memorial Opera House, as it was there that I cut my operatic teeth in fact it was the live Friday Night radio broadcasts that first made me aware of opera, and which awakened me to this great dramatic art form.

Youre lucky in the sense that youll get to experience a couple of years of SFO under the leadership of the dynamic Pamela Rosenberg, a native Bay Area-n who brought SFO out of its treacle-ey, cobwebbed doldrums with innovative productions and bold repertory and casting choices (she will probably take over either the Salzburg Festival or the Bayerische Staatsoper in 2006/7).

Anyway, heres my (opinionated) view of the 04 season, from the perspective of one who enjoys the fusion of the music and dramatic values equally:

COSI

A great opera, IMHO equal to the other two Mozart-DaPonte works. Its essentially a piece for six lead singers no real supporting bit parts, and no real chorus.

Cast: Gielen is a very good conductor, former GMD of the Frankfurt Oper, among others. Von Stade is a national treasure and her voice is intact an older Despina is dramatically valid. Groves is a good actor and has a sweet voice which tightens a tiny at the very top. The star should be Mller-Brachmann, a young baritone who sings this role on the Doris Dorrie DVD from the Berlin Staatsoper (the hilarious yet moving 1970s-era hippie production highest possible recommendation). I don't know the Dorabella and Stillwell is long in the tooth not sure how much he has left. My fear would be over Deshorties. Her train-wreck "performance" as Konstanze (another high Mozart lead part) at the Met a couple of years ago caused the normally somnambulant Met audience to erupt in violent booing and catcalling. Of course, YMMV 

Cox is a good mainstream producer, usually with lots of static group poses because of the six-person cast, this shouldnt be a handicap here.

Verdict: GO - but take earplugs for Come Scoglio.


TRAVIATA

Verdis most tuneful work, where he really hit his stride. A personal favorite (I saw the 1980 SFO performance- it may have been this production).

Villazon is the next great hope for the new generation of tenors. Ive only heard him on the radio and over the Internet (a good Hoffmann from Covent Garden), but he sounds like the real deal. Hvorostovsky is a wooden actor, but the voice usually makes it worth it. Ruth Ann is not one of my faves someone once said she has a beautiful voice too bad she doesnt know what to do with it. Maybe a little harsh, but she strikes me as bland.

Verdict: GO - for Villazon (and for Verdi)


BUDD

I am a great admirer of Britten I think he and Stephen Sondheim are (maybe) the two most important composers of the latter half of the 20th century. Budd is a thrilling ride into the human psyche that never sinks into bathos.

The excellent SFO music director, Runnicles, should be a good exponent of Brittens music.

Nathan Gunn (he of the excellent pecs and looks) has a baritone that grows in stature as he gets older hes also physically perfect visual casting. Begley is good and incisive (I saw him in Mahagonny at the Bastile about 10 years ago). The Canadian Philip Ens is young and tall and has a very dark bass perfect for Claggart (and a good counterpoint to Gunn).

Decker is an excellent producer whose concepts are fully grounded in the musical and dramatic storyline.

Verdict: GO GO GO



TOSCA

I actually like Puccinis shabby little shocker in fact, quite a lot (I despise other Puccini mush such as Boheme and Buttefly). But I see a lot in this production listing that screams stay away: Vaness out of her fach (although I saw her gave a stupendous performance on the opening night of the Mets current Cosi production, upstaging Bartoli, whose debut night it was). The tenor part is essentially two hit songs at the beginning and near the end, and Delevan is OK but not great.

Mansouri, the former General Director, is known for overstuffed Zeferelli-Lite productions borrrrrrrrring .

Verdict: BIG TIME EL PASSO



GRAND MACABRE

Its a great work IF you want to broaden your horizons.

The cast is excellent. Sir Willard White (he just got his KB a month ago) and Graham Clark are stellar singing actors. Fulgoni has star potential and Resmark is a excellent dramatic mezzo (I heard her create the role of Serena Joy in Poul Ruders opera THE HANDMAIDS TALE in Copenhagen in March 2000).

Disclaimer: Ive met Holten and know him very slightly. Hes a dynamic guy he became the director of opera at the Royal Danish Opera at the tender age of 27, and is preparing a new Ring cycle intended for the new opera house that is currently being built on an island in Copenhagen harbor that will open in 2006).

Verdict: ILL BE THERE



DUTCHMAN

I loved the SFOs old Ponnelle production. Its Wagners most accessible score, and unlike his later works, he didnt say everything in three times the length that was necessary.

Lemhi is another excellent producer who uses striking (often modern) visuals to tell a traditionally-based story (in other words, he doesnt impose a concept that bears no relation to Wagners story).

Stemma and Ventris are reported to be the real deal ( I havent heard either on except on the Internet, but those were good instances). I dont know the Dutchamn or the Daland.


Verdict: SHOULD BE OK (I like that its being done in the single act form).



YEVGENY ONEGIN

To me, a weaker work than PIKOVAYA DAMA (with some admittedly nice melodies and a good final duet for the ill-starred lovers).

Schaaf is a thinking (if sometimes too dark) producer.

Having an idiomatic Tatiyana should pay dividends, as should the casting of a younger singer (the Canadian Russell Braun) as Onegin,


Verdict: SKIP if its a choice between this one and the other Tchaikovsky production.




PEARL FISHERS

Juvenile Bizet, with one great hit tune duet for the male leads. Not my cup of tea, Im afraid.

The physical production is a riot of color and spectacle by the fashion maven Zandra Rhodes,.

Verdict: A decent cast, but given the other superior choices, Id SKIP.



PIKOVAYA DAMA


My favorite Tchaikovsky work dark and brooding

Richard Jones is a great producer, and this production got raves in Cardiff (where it was conducted by Vladimir Jurowski, who is now the MD at Glyndebourne).

The Swedish soprano Dalayman is (from Internrt hearings) intense and dramatic (she had a success in this part in Munich in 2002). Schwartz is a veteran mezzo whose excellent acting skills (a moving Countess Geaschwitz) should prove perfect for the Countess. A lot will depend on who gets cast as Ghermann.


Verdict: GO, especially for the production (assuming the Ghermann is not a stinkeroo).

Last edited by Non-NonRev; Jul 20, 2004 at 11:08 pm
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Old Jul 21, 2004 | 3:04 pm
  #10  
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^ ^ Thanks for the great insights!
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