The Magic Flute, Glyndebourne review - deeply moving light in darkness

★★★★ THE MAGIC FLUTE, GLYNDEBOURNE Deeply moving light in darkness

Ninety minute concert staging showcases superb young singers

How does Mozart do it? His music can provoke deep emotions even in the unlikeliest operatic situations, if well done, and present circumstances stirred them up all the more on Sunday afternoon. Those flirtatious ladies flouncing around the prone prince in the first musical number of The Magic Flute – no overture here – only had to sing “although it breaks my heart in two/I have to bid farewell to you/until we meet again" for another tearful turn of the screw.

Meet the Young Artists Week recital, Linbury Theatre – four big personalities

★★★★ MEET THE YOUNG ARTISTS WEEK RECITAL, LINBURY THEATRE Frissons and high drama from Royal Opera acolytes in song

Frissons and high drama from Royal Opera acolytes in song

Throughout this most difficult of years, the Royal Opera has done the right thing for the singers on its Jette Parker Young Artists Programme. They were fortunate to finish the run of Handel’s Susanna before the Linbury Theatre closed down for over seven months (yesterday saw its reopening to a necessarily small audience).

First Person: tenor Nicky Spence on working with Blackheath locals on screen Stravinsky

NICKY SPENCE The tenor on working with Blackheath locals on screen Stravinsky

'The Rake's Progress' distilled and introduced by its star and community opera patron

As patron for a community organisation, I see clearly how opera is the biggest collaboration going. Between stage, orchestra  pit, school liaisons, chorus leaders, make-up bays and the magicians of the technical team, every cog is of equal importance. For the last 12 seasons, Blackheath Halls Community Opera has staged an opera each year, bringing together world class soloists and enthusiastic members of the local community who make up the orchestra and opera chorus.

Fidelio, Garsington Opera review - heart of darkness, light-filled liberation

★★★★ FIDELIO, GARSINGTON OPERA Heart of darkness, light-filled liberation

Fine singers equalled by Philharmonia soloists in revelatory chamber-music Beethoven

It may be only six and a half months since many of us saw a production of Beethoven’s Fidelio in the opera house, but that was another world, and this post-lockdown admittance to Garsington Opera’s spacious, award-winning pavilion with its impressive acoustic was always going to be something extraordinary.

Eavesdropping on Rattle, the LSO and Bartók’s Bluebeard

EAVESDROPPING ON RATTLE, THE LSO AND BARTÓK'S BLUEBEARD A privileged preview

Ahead of the London Symphony Orchestra’s streaming next month, a privileged preview

One source of advance information told us to expect a reduced version of Bartók’s one-act Bluebeard’s Castle, among the 20th century’s most original and profound operatic masterpieces.

La bohème, Scottish Opera – pandemic Puccini

★★★★ LA BOHEME, SCOTTISH OPERA Top-quality cast and players in a parking lot

Top-quality cast and players put on a potted version in a parking lot

Picture the scene. A vast steel gazebo covers a nondescript parking lot next to an industrial unit in Glasgow. With a clear plastic covering, it is the most rudimentary of shelters, sides open to admit the roar of the M8 and the wailing of sirens, carried on a keen autumnal breeze.

The Royal Opera: Live in Concert review - Italianate fizz with a patch of flatness

★★★ THE ROYAL OPERA: LIVE IN CONCERT Italianate fizz with a patch of flatness

A glorious orchestra and chorus under their inspiring music director are back in style

What could be better than Mozart’s Overture to The Marriage of Figaro to celebrate the Royal Opera’s next step on the path out of lockdown? Ideally, the rest of the opera, especially remembering Antonio Pappano’s lively interaction with his singers playing the continuo role.

Sāvitri, Lauderdale House review - death and life in a Highgate garden

★★★★ SAVITRI, LAUDERDALE HOUSE Death and life in a Highgate garden

Hampstead Garden Opera works a little miracle with Holst's mystical music-drama

In seach of Orpheus, and following a route from the Hades of (thankfully) masked beings on the underground to Archway, then up to a windy, grassy plateau just below Highgate village, this wandering critic encountered another myth about the power of life over death.

The Encore, Opera Holland Park review - stylish return for a squad of old friends

★★★★★ THE ENCORE, OPERA HOLLAND PARK Stylish return for a squad of old friends

A moving and delightful al fresco feast of opera favourites

As Dvořák’s "Song to the Moon" from Rusalka rose to its impassioned climax, Natalya Romaniw had to battle a helicopter thumping overhead. The helicopter lost (well, of course it did). As Nardus Williams and David Butt Phillip disappeared into the wings after a heart-rending "O soave fanciulla" from La Bohème, a squirrel scampered centre-stage to fill the dramatic vacuum.