The Merry Widow, English National Opera review - glitter but no sparkle

★★★ THE MERRY WIDOW, ENGLISH NATIONAL OPERA It's hard to know whether to mourn or celebrate this uneven production

It's hard to know whether to mourn or celebrate this uneven production

It’s all there. High kicks and tight corsets; silk and sequins and shenanigans in a broom closet; hot pinks and still hotter can-can girls; waltzing, scheming, sparring, and a bit with a banquet table. There’s even a dancing beaver. So why don’t I feel more elated?

Così fan tutte, Royal Opera review - fine singing and elegant deceits

★★★ COSÌ FAN TUTTE, ROYAL OPERA Fine singing and elegant deceits

Metatheatrical devices turn the screw on Mozart’s not-so-funny comedy of manners

Give hope to all, says Despina: play-act. Così fan tutte has always been a piece about four young and silly people being appalling to one another without much need for encouragement from a cynical old manipulator and a confused maid who, in the main, is the one character capable of arousing real sympathy.

The Monstrous Child, Royal Opera, Linbury Theatre review - fresh operatic mythology for teenagers

★★★★ THE MONSTROUS CHILD, LINBURY THEATRE Fresh operatic mythology for teenagers

Move over Wagner, there's a new set of operatic gods in town

Hel, heroine of Gavin Higgins and Francesca Simon’s new opera, is the illegitimate daughter of the Norse god Loki. In many ways The Monstrous Child itself feels like a bastard offspring, born – moody, mouthy and full of fragile rage – to Wagner’s Ring Cycle and Skins or possibly 13 Reasons Why.

The Rite of Spring/Gianni Schicchi, Opera North review - unlikely but musically satisfying pairing

THE RITE OF SPRING/GIANNI SCHICCHI, OPERA NORTH Unlikely, satisfying pairing

Odd-couple double bill of Stravinsky and Puccini with plenty to delight ear and eye

Stravinsky acknowledged that his orchestra for The Rite of Spring was a large one because Diaghilev had promised him extra musicians (“I am not sure that my orchestra would have been as huge otherwise.”) It isn’t huge in Opera North’s production (★★★★★), and for practical reasons they're using the edition arranged by Jonathan McPhee in 1988 for a standard pit band.

Brighton Festival 2019 launches with Guest Director Rokia Traoré

BRIGHTON FESTIVAL LAUNCHES WITH GUEST DIRECTOR ROKIA TRAORÉ South-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The south-coast's arts extravaganza reveals its 2019 line-up

The striking cover for the Brighton Festival 2019 programme shouts out loud who this year’s Guest Director is. Silhouetted in flowers, in stunning artwork by Simon Prades, is the unmistakeable profile of Malian musician Rokia Traoré.

Akhnaten, English National Opera review - still a mesmerising spectacle

★★★★ AKHNATEN, ENO Still a mesmerising spectacle

ENO's most successful contemporary opera ever makes a triumphant return

You start off fighting it. Those arpeggios, the insistent reduction, simplification, repetition, the amplification of the smallest gesture into an epic. Then something happens. Somewhere among the slow-phase patterns pulsing on ear and eye, you surrender to Glass-time and the hypnosis is complete.

Un ballo in maschera, Welsh National Opera review - opera as brilliant self-parody

★★★★ UN BALLO IN MASCHERA, WELSH NATIONAL OPERA Middle-period Verdi watchable, listenable and sometimes laughable

Middle-period Verdi watchable, listenable and sometimes laughable

Why is Un Ballo in maschera not as popular as the trio of Verdi masterpieces – Rigoletto, Traviata, Trovatore – that, with a couple of digressions, preceded it in the early 1850s? Its music is scarcely less brilliant than theirs, and if its plot is on a par of absurdity with Trovatore’s, it is at least, on the whole, more fun. One problem might be a certain thinness in the portraiture, as if Verdi was more interested in the incidents than in his characters.

La Damnation de Faust, Hallé, Elder, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester review - 'concert opera' indeed

Vivid choral and orchestral sounds in a thrilling account of Berlioz masterpiece

Berlioz called it a "concert opera". His telling of the Faust story is in scenes and highly theatrical, but a bit of a challenge to put on in the theatre, with its marching armies, floating sylphs, dancing will-o’-the-wisps and galloping horses. It seems he expected it to be a kind of giant cantata, and that’s the way the Hallé and Sir Mark Elder perform it.