Les vêpres siciliennes, Welsh National Opera review - spectacular, silly, but some great music

★★★ LES VÊPRES SICILIENNES, WELSH NATIONAL OPERA Spectacular, silly, but some great music

Verdi's reluctant grand opera colourfully staged, brilliantly played, unevenly sung

It’s not hard to see why The Sicilian Vespers has struggled since its surprisingly successful opening run at the Paris Opéra in 1855. Verdi had composed it reluctantly, despised the librettist, Eugène Scribe, who he regarded as a well-named cynical scribbler, and tried unsuccessfully to get a release from his contract. The result is undeniably patchy, narratively implausible to the point of silliness, and though tight by the standards of French grand opera, nevertheless at least one scene too long.

Alice's Adventures Under Ground, Royal Opera review - a blast for children of all ages

★★★★★ ALICE'S ADVENTURES UNDER GROUND, ROYAL OPERA A blast for children of all ages

Gerald Barry's manic dash through two Lewis Carroll classics has a staging worthy of it

"About as much fun as you can have with your clothes on," promised a member of the two Royal Opera casts teamworking their way through multiple roles and costume changes for what in effect is Alice's Adventures Under Ground and Through the Looking Glass in under an hour.

Ermonela Jaho, Stephen Maughan, Wigmore Hall review – emotional honesty in rare repertoire

★★★★ ERMONELA JAHO, WIGMORE HALL Emotional honesty in rare repertoire

An innate sense of pacing and dramatic timing in the Albanian soprano's recital

Wigmore Hall audiences don’t usually roar. But when a star soprano who has already made her mark at the world’s major opera houses pays a visit, they do.

Siegfried, LPO, Jurowski, RFH review - an incandescent journey to the mountain top

★★★★ SIEGFRIED, LPO, JUROWSKI, RFH An incandescent journey to the mountain top

Varying degrees of vocal characterisation, but the playing is breathtakingly detailed

Of Wagner's four Ring operas, Siegfried poses the biggest casting problem. Most heroic tenors with the lungs to last the evening are not going to be ideal incarnations of the stroppy adolescent who learns and fights his way through an often nightmarish fairy-tale landscape. Torsten Kerl, not an agile mover to say the least, certainly wasn't.

Street Scene, Opera North review - a true ensemble achievement

★★★★★ STREET SCENE, OPERA NORTH True ensemble achievement in Weill's 'Broadway opera'

Youth to the fore in Kurt Weill’s brilliant ‘Broadway opera’

Kurt Weill’s “Broadway opera” – his own preferred description – is an extraordinary and brilliant piece of work. Its music ranges from the seriously dramatic to fun numbers like the "Ice Cream Sextet" and the jitterbug dance song “Moon Faced, Starry Eyed”; there’s a lot of spoken-dialogue-with-music, as well as solos, duets and all manner of ensembles; and the story is both comic and tragic.

Sukanya, RFH review - Ravi Shankar's bright-eyed, varied fable

★★★ SUKANYA, RFH Ravi Shankar's bright-eyed, varied fable

Fine performances, but crude miking suggests this would work better as a chamber opera

Admirable as it was of the London Philharmonic Orchestra to launch its concerts in 2020 with a performance celebrating the Ravi Shankar centenary, the hard fact remains that this lively spectacle might have worked better without two-thirds of its players.

'Divinity is all around us': soprano Susanna Hurrell on Ravi Shankar's 'Sukanya'

'DIVINITY IS ALL AROUND US' Soprano Susanna Hurrell on Ravi Shankar's 'Sukanya'

Celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Indian master's birth with a return to his opera

In 2010, my best friend and I made a whimsical decision to go backpacking in India over the Easter break. I had developed an interest in Eastern philosophy through exposure to the teachings of the ancient Vedas, and through the practice of Transcendental Meditation, so I jumped on the opportunity to experience the culture that gave birth to so much wisdom and ancient knowledge.

Best of 2019: Opera

BEST OF 2019: OPERA Ballroom Shostakovich and high-jinks Berlioz top the bill

Haunted-ballroom Shostakovich and high jinks in Royal Albert Hall Berlioz top the bill

There's no question about my top opera choice for 2019, especially since the London houses rarely delivered at the same pitch of engagement. It's Graham Vick's walkabout Birmingham Opera Company spectacular, a production of Shostakovich's Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk that worked on every level.