Prom 43: Endgame, BBC Scottish SO, Ryan Wigglesworth review - beautiful sounds but slow, slow drama

★★★ PROM 43: ENDGAME, BBCSSO, WIGGLESWORTH Beautiful sounds but slow, slow drama

Astonishing orchestration and brilliant singing can’t overcome the snail’s pacing

György Kurtág is 97 and the last man standing of the post-war generation of avant-garde composers. Last night the Proms staged the UK premiere of his first opera, started in his eighties and premiered in 2018, a setting of Samuel Beckett’s typically mystifying play Endgame. Sadly, for all the brilliant passages of orchestral writing, and top-notch singing and playing, as an opera it’s a bit of a damp squib in which some minutes hung heavy.

Prom 31: Dialogues des Carmélites, Glyndebourne, BBC Radio 3 review - full force on air

★★★★★ PROM 31: DIALOGUES DES CARMELITES, GLYNDEBOURNE Full force on air

The atmospheric essence of this operatic triumph comes across without the visuals

“There will be more incense,” promised Glyndebourne Music Director Robin Ticciati of the company’s annual visit to the Proms. He was talking to my Opera Zoom class between the final rehearsal and first performance of Poulenc’s great masterpiece about the martyrdom of Carmelite nuns during the French revolution, as directed by Barrie Kosky with unsparing horror and humanity. And now here was the operatic company of the year taking its final bow after a sellout run in Sussex.

The Pilgrim's Progress, Three Choirs Festival review - revelatory performance by young musicians

★★★★ THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, THREE CHOIRS Revelatory performance by young musicians

Vaughan Williams opera that continues to echo in the mind

Whatever your opinion of Vaughan Williams, it’s unlikely that you think of him as an essentially theatrical composer. Yet he did write at least three important (as well as several less important) works for the stage: a ballet (not so-called), Job, a one-act opera (also not so-called), Riders to the Sea, and a full-length music drama, The Pilgrim’s Progress, based of course on Bunyan’s famous but probably no longer much read allegory of that name.

Semele, Glyndebourne review - the dark side of desire

SEMELE, GLYNDEBOURNE Sturdy, thoughtful, downbeat take on Handel's masterpiece

A sturdy, thoughtful but downbeat take on Handel's hybrid masterpiece

It never rains but it pours – and hails, snows or, above all, thunders. The presiding tone of Semele, in Adele Thomas’s new production for Glyndebourne, matches the current English summer with its grey skies, glowering clouds and stormy outbursts. Jove’s evidently in a rage, despite his rejuvenating lust for the Theban king’s daughter, Semele. He’s not the only one: the first of many lightning-bolts – designed by Peter Mumford with Rick Fisher – that flash around Annemarie Woods’s crepusular set illuminate lonely Juno, spurned and seething spouse of the heavenly overlord.

The Magic Flute, Clonter Opera review - inventive ideas on the farm

★★★★ THE MAGIC FLUTE, CLONTER OPERA Inventive ideas on the farm

Cheshire platform for emerging talent comes up with the goods again

Necessity has to be the mother of invention for many operatic enterprises these days – and there are few with such inventive powers as those of Clonter Opera in Cheshire.

Its avowed aim is to be a platform for emerging artists and a bridge from conservatoire training to the professional world, and its track record in achieving that for nearly 50 years is impressive. This summer production in the theatre-on-the-farm brought 10 young singers together, bursting with talent, and entertained its audience well.

L'Orfeo, Longborough Festival Opera review - landmark opera survives rock-star wedding and hospital soap

★★★★ L'ORFEO, LONGBOROUGH Landmark opera survives rock-star wedding & hospital soap

A strongly-sung descent into the underworld overcomes hit-and-miss stagecraft

Cotswold Line railway stations currently sport posters for Alex James’s “Big Feastival”, in which the ex-Blur bassist hosts a food-and-music jamboree on his cheese-making farm. Just up the road at Longborough Festival Opera, the crowd gathered on stage for the nuptials of Orfeo and Euridice would fit snugly in chez James as well.

theartsdesk at the Buxton International Festival - bel canto in the High Peak

★★★★ BUXTON INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL Bel canto in the High Peak

Re-thought story in Bellini comedy is the festival highspot

Bellini’s La Sonnambula is the highspot of a four-show lyric theatre bill at the Buxton International Festival this year, and demonstrates again how beautifully suited the small Matcham opera house in the High Peak is to mid-19th century bel canto repertoire.

The Bartered Bride, Garsington Opera review - brilliant revival of a comedy of cruelty

★★★★★ THE BARTERED BRIDE, GARSINGTON OPERA Brilliant revival of a comedy of cruelty

Idiomatic singing and playing in an opera of deceptive profundity

Smetana’s enchanting bitter-sweet comedy is probably on the danger-list for cancellation by the modern guardians of our moral sanctity. The plot hinges, like Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge, on the cash-sale of the hero’s bride (in Hardy, the wife and daughter): not nice, and surely a risky hint to any young men in the audience teetering on the brink.

Don Carlo, Royal Opera review - Lise Davidsen soars above routine

★★★ DON CARLO, ROYAL OPERA Lise Davidsen soars above routine

Fine voices aren't quite enough in Verdi's epic royal tragedy

Not a good start. The tenor (Brian Jagde) walks downstage and sings loudly, if securely, to the audience: hardly a characterisation of an idealistic young Infante meditating on love. The next voice, the Page’s, is barely heard (Ella Taylor gets better). Then we have The Presence: Lise Davidsen, who you know is Elisabeth de Valois in the only carefree mode she’s to experience throughout the opera.

Out of Her Mouth, Dunedin Consort, Mahogany Opera, Hera, Assembly Roxy, Edinburgh review - she carried a watermelon

★★★★ OUT OF HER MOUTH, DUNEDIN CONSORT, MAHOGANY OPERA, HERA, ASSEMBLY ROXY, EDINBURGH Superb storytelling in three semi-staged cantatas by and about women

Superb storytelling in three semi-staged cantatas by and about women

A joint venture between Dunedin Consort, Mahogany Opera and intersectional feminist opera company Hera, Out of Her Mouth is a semi-staged version of three short baroque cantatas. Written by French composer Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, each is based on a different woman from the Old Testament.