Showing posts with label Kusej. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kusej. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Ah Rusalka (2): Tutti Bravi!

Rusalka, BSO Munich, October 31 2010

Nadia Krasteva, Kristien Opolais, and Klaus Florian Vogt


Production ..... Martin Kušej
Conductor ..... Tomáš Hanus

The Princ ..... Klaus Florian Vogt
The Foreign Princess ..... Nadia Krasteva
Rusalka ..... Krístīne Opolaís
Vodnik ..... Günther Groissböck
Ježibaba ..... Janina Baechle
Gamekeeper ..... Ulrich Reß
Kitchen Boy ..... Tara Erraught
1st Wood Sprite ..... Evgeniya Sotnikova
2nd Wood Sprite ..... Angela Brower
3rd Wood Sprite ..... Okka von der Damerau
Hunter ..... John Chest

The Bavarian State Orchestra
The Chorus of the Bavarian State Opera


Here are the links to the files of the radio broadcast of one of the shows at BSO: part-1 and part-2.
I'll remove them in a week from now.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Ah Rusalka (1): Mĕsíčku, nezhasni!

Why I like Rusalka? I like romantic operas, and this is arguably the best romantic opera not composed by Wagner. Written in the best wagnerian tradition it brought in a new quality, Slavic sensibility. Its libretto is based on a legend about Rusalki -- a Slavic equivalent to mermaids, nymphs, Undine... Its lyricism reminds us of Lohengrin but the symmetry of its libretto is close to that of Tannhäuser.

The Prince and The Foreign Princess (Klaus Florian Vogt and Nadia Krasteva)

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Le Vaisseau fantôme d'une confrontation sociale (2)

This was maybe the first opera in which Wagner announced his approach to composing, to structuring the musical language in such a way that it supports the flow of the dramatic action [instead of interrupting it by the occasional arias]. This opera is still far from what Wagner would make later, but here you can already see a clear distinction from what's been done before him.

The smartest element in the libretto of The Flying Dutchman is its ambiguity that allows countless interpretations, and as many ways to keep this opera in life in theaters (is it about the Dutchman?, or about Senta?; is the Dutchman real?, or he's just a product of fertile imagination?...) Martin Kusej goes a step beyond and stresses the role of Erik much more than the other directors did/do.


Kusej exhibits his cold way to depict the "naked truth" (always with a white background to emphasize the contrasts), and his well-known "cruelty" to push his interpretation of the libretto farther than necessary. In the process he often goes against the expectations of typical operatic audience, i.e. there is no happy-ending nor you leave the show filled with optimism. His work forces you to think rather than dream.

In a sense his show was telling the audience that they are being insensitive [self-centered] and borderline obnoxious, which is why I found the joyful applause at the end quite incongruent. [Apparently he was booed at the premiere ---> a far more conceivable reaction, if you ask me :-)]

Monday, February 15, 2010

Der fliegende Holländer in Amsterdam (1)


Director Martin Kusej
Conductor Hartmut Haenchen

Daland Robert Loyd
Senta Catherine Naglestad
Erik Marco Jentzsch
Mary Marina Prudenskaja
Der Holländer Juha Uusitalo

Friday, February 12, 2010

Kusej kills the Dutchman in Amsterdam. And Senta too!

What a show! What a sensational show!

You may wish to see the pics from the DNO web site, but you need the underlying story too -- which I'll try and bring to you tomorrow evening (hopefully).

Kusej definitely delivers his best when premiering his productions in Amsterdam. It's clever, it's positively "ambiguous", and although the finale is rather depressing this is just good theater (opera or not!) He modified the [poor] ending of the libretto and his Erik kills both Senta and the Hollander. ;)



The chorus was very good and  Maestro Haenchen confirms once again that he's got Wagner's music in his fingers. Juha Uusitalo and Catherine Naglestad were mind-blowing as Hollander and Senta. Towards the end you could feel your jaw dropping as the intensity of their singing was  progressing (!!!) After 2 hours of unbelievably strong singing, they had enough gas to add extra power to their extraordinary performance... Standing Ovations totally deserved!


Sunday, February 7, 2010

¿Qué pasa en otra parte?

I've been enjoying immensely the Barenboim concerts with his Staatskapelle these days at Pleyel. Today is the 3rd out of 5.

Meanwhile, great things are happening on the European Operatic Stages...