Month: February 2003

  • It was asserted to me that Hemingway’s novel Across the River and Into the Trees was less bad than Da Ponte’s libretto to Così fan Tutte. I find it a very bizarre comparison, but find myself unable to judge any opera libretti against actual literature. Voltaire put this best: Anything too stupid to be spoken…

  • The Bavarian State Opera performance of Il Trovatore yesterday night was perhaps the most traditional production I have seen there to date. Zubin Mehta conducted quite well. Luca Ronconi’s staging was conservative, it appears to be the only opera she has staged here. My only complaint was the gratuitous use of a scrim to separate…

  • Last night’s performance of Bellini’s I Puritani at the Bavarian State Opera was quite good. Friedrich Haider conducted competently, though the orchestra was, on occasion, rather louder than some of the singers. Also, sometimes the timing appeared off between singer and orchestra. But the blame more likely lies with the singers than the conductor. Jonathan…

  • If all the operas at the Bayerische Staatsoper were as good as their current production of Don Carlo, I would never leave the Nationaltheater. It wasn’t perfect, but all the singers were good, and Zubin Mehta is a fine conductor. They chose to do their own version of Verdi’s Don Carlo, something in-between the full…