Verdi's Requiem / Capriccio, Edinburgh International Festival 2024 review - words, music, judgement

★★★ VERDI'S REQUIEM / CAPRICCIO, EIF Words, music, judgment

Philharmonia Orchestra closes the festival with grandeur and intimacy

The Philharmonia’s residency was the centrepiece of the Edinburgh International Festival’s final weekend, and it’s right that the orchestra should be the focus because they were consistently the finest thing about both their Verdi Requiem and their concert performance of Richard Strauss’ last opera Capriccio.

The Fabulist, Charing Cross Theatre review - fine singing cannot rescue an incoherent production

 THE FABULIST, CHARING CROSS THEATRE Plenty of ambition, but achieves very little

Beautiful music, but curious decisions in scripting and staging sink the show

On opening night, there’s always a little tension in the air. Tech rehearsals and previews can only go so far – this is the moment when an audience, some wielding pens like scalpels, sit in judgement. Having attended thousands on the critics’ side of the fourth wall, I can tell you that there’s plenty of crackling expectation and a touch of fear in the stalls, too. None more so than when the show is billed as a new musical.

Le nozze di Figaro, Komische Oper Berlin, Edinburgh International Festival 2024 review - great singing wasted

★★ LE NOZZE DI FIGARO, KOMISCHE OPER BERLIN, EIF Great singing wasted

Entertaining in places, this is Kirill Serebrennikov’s piece, not Mozart’s

I’m all in favour of the EIF taking artistic risks, and of them bringing a high-prestige international production to Edinburgh. This Marriage of Figaro from Berlin’s Komische Oper is both of those things, because it is the first production by Kirill Serebrennikov – the high profile Russian director, placed under house arrest by the Putin regime, now based in Berlin – to be seen in the UK.

Oedipus Rex, Scottish Opera, Edinburgh International Festival 2024 review - beautifully uncomplex

★★★★ OEDIPUS REX, SCOTTISH OPERA, EIF 2024 Beautifully uncomplex

Organic immersion for this memorable night at the museum

Immersive opera such as this can be tricky to pull off, but the magic of Roxana Haines’s new production of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex lies in its simplicity, letting the material organically weave around the audience without overcomplications or deliberately clever trickery.

Prom 24, The Fairy Queen, Les Arts Florissants/Le Jardin des Voix, Agnew review - hip-hop hornpipes

★★★★ PROM 24, THE FAIRY QUEEN, LES ARTS FLORISSANTS / LE JARDIN DES VOIX, AGNEW A spectacularly skilful show lacks the human touch

A spectacularly skilful show lacks the human touch

“One charming night gives more delight than a hundred lucky days”. So claims one of the gorgeous (and, in this case, risqué) numbers that stud Purcell’s “semi-opera” The Fairy Queen like sequins on a flamboyant party gown.

Tristan und Isolde, Glyndebourne review - infinite love at white heat

★★★★★ TRISTAN UND ISOLDE, GLYNDEBOURNE Electrifying, ferocious, transcendental

The London Philharmonic Orchestra burns for the country house opera’s music director

Richard Strauss described conducting Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde for the first time as "the most wonderful day of my life". It’s understandable that Glyndebourne’s music director Robin Ticciati should wish to improve upon “wonderful” in conducting a concert staging in 2021 with "miraculous" in charge of the full Nikolaus Lehnhoff production. I challenge anyone to cite another Tristan more alert to every possibility – the electrifying, the ferocious, the transcendental.

The Butterfly House, Clonter Opera review - Puccini in biographical briefs

★★ THE BUTTERFLY HOUSE, CLONTER OPERA The life and many loves of the composer told with his own music

The life and many loves of the composer told with his own music

For 50 years Clonter Opera, the song-on-the-farm project in rural Cheshire, has been encouraging would-be opera stars by giving them a chance to perform in undemanding conditions under the guidance of experienced professional.

It all began with audiences sitting on straw bales in a barn, and only after a purpose-built theatre came into being was there a small pit enabling something more than piano accompaniment for major productions.

ll Segreto di Susanna/Pagliacci, Opera Holland Park review - on with the motley, out with the fags

★★★★ IL SEGRETO DI SUSANNA / PAGLIACCI, OPERA HOLLAND PARK An intriguing comic partner for the great backstage melodrama

An intriguing comic partner for the great backstage melodrama

Could “Cav and Pag” give way to “Sue and Pag”? As a double-bill partner for Leoncavallo’s backstage shocker Pagliacci, Opera Holland Park have scheduled not the standard Cavalleria Rusticana but an entirely different one-act work. Premiered in Munich in 1909, Wolf-Ferrari’s Il Segreto di Susanna plays droll, even farcical, variations on the same theme of male jealousy as newlywed Count Gil suspects his bride Countess Susanna of having an affair. 

First Person: trans opera singer Lucia Lucas on Tippett’s 'New Year' and her life in music

FIRST PERSON: TRANS OPERA SINGER LUCIA LUCAS On Tippett's New Year and her life in music

The baritone’s success with Birmingham Opera Company has led to further reflections

Until last week, Tippett’s New Year had not been staged since 1990, probably because it’s considered very hard to produce. I think it is generally harder than Britten. It’s also an ensemble piece; you need 10 people who are fairly accomplished in performing new works.

There are parts that needed to be updated. Some of the libretto, seen through our lens of 2024, seemed insensitive. You can’t sanitise everything and take the drama out of the story, but it was important to update, with the blessing of Tippett’s estate.