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Cher Public

  • Lindoro Almaviva: I worship the groud ATS walks in. For me she is a great example of how... 1:59 PM
  • luvtennis: When Sutherland was a mere lass of 60. Where was Cerquetti at that age? Not... 1:56 PM
  • luvtennis: Absolute rubbish if you are referring to Sutherland. She was greater musician... 1:45 PM
  • luvtennis: To which Anna TS replied to Gwyneth “Oh was that you singing, I thought... 1:40 PM
  • luvtennis: Sorry, but I must disagree. If you listen to Lehmann or Gadski it quickly... 1:28 PM
  • papopera: thats la Sutherland, isn’t she a pain though ? 1:14 PM
  • isepo: Well acc. to Robert Kraft, Stravinsky was continually revising Le sacre until the... 12:57 PM
  • Pelleas: I don’t know if there are plans to release any of these audio recordings... 12:32 PM
  • iltenoredigrazia: ATS sang a very beautiful Elsa at the Met to domingo’s Lohengrin. 12:25 PM
  • operalover9001: Does it come with a libretto? Because I’ve heard lots of good... 12:22 PM

Archives

Jewfro meets tone row

lulu_met“I just saw a woman upstairs,” said poet/translator Richard Howard, “wearing a very large pair of sunglasses that made her look for all the world like a great dragonfly.”

“Upstairs” was the balcony at the Met; at the time, I was taking Howard’s lecture on the subject of frivolity in literature, and so when I spotted him at the Lulu intermission I went up to say hi and grin vapidly, which is what I tend to do when I run into a dazzlingly smart person.

“And as she was sort of flitting about,” he continued, “she saw me standing there, just beaming, and she came up to me and said, ‘You certainly look as if you’re enjoying yourself!’ I had to confess that I was, I was enjoying it tremendously, and she said, ‘Well I’m not. I’m leaving.’” Read more »

Save the date

Dieux-du-stade-2009La Cieca is proud to unveil what she hopes will become your second-favorite calendar: The New York Opera Calendar at Parterre. This handy resource includes an exhaustive list of opera and opera-related performances for the 2010-2011 season, the better to plan your busy social life. Opera companies and members of the cher public who have events they want to include in the calendar (or who can provide your doyenne with an introduction to one of the dieux du stade) are asked to email La Cieca with details.

Franco-Russo-Sino-Roman

stravinskyIgor Stravinsky was a bit of a musical shapeshifter in his day, especially when compared to his contemporaries in early 20th century Europe. Given, the time in which Stravinsky was living in Europe was one of the most dynamic periods in recent history, but few were able to consistently generate music of such varying style as effortlessly and beautifully as he. This mastery of diversity can been seen clearly in the triple bill of Stravinsky works which was presented at The Met in 1984 titled simply: Stravinsky. Read more »

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Turn Lepage

La Cieca has managed to obtain a few minutes of video, pirated at great personal risk, from a dress rehearsal of the Met's new production of Das Rheingold. Read more »

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Rome (if you want to)

Everybody loves an orgy. But, in the words of Betsy Ann Bobolink (pictured), "a really good orgy takes preparation, and I don’t mean Preparation H." Our Betsy continues (discussing, I mean) after the jump. Read more »

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Gallows humor

La Cieca hears that Susan Neves has joined the cast of Washington National Opera's Un ballo in maschera to sing Amelia in two performances, and Tamara Wilson will sing two additional performances. The American sopranos take over dates held by Irène Theorin.

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Mad about the boy

It’s easy to see why the Met has chosen to include this 1982 performance of Der Rosenkavalier in their DVD set commemorating James Levine’s 40th anniversary: the marathon evening is a triumph for Levine from the frenzied blend of waltz melodies in the overture to the final, birdsong-like notes of hope at the end of Act III. Levine is confident and animated throughout the performance, which is spread out over two DVDs. Of course, Levine is always an excellent musician, but this Rosenkavalier reminded me how exciting he and the Met orchestra can be when they throw themselves wholeheartedly into a piece as rich and moving as this one.  Read more »

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Four saints in five acts

A quintessential theater man as well as a brilliant conductor, James Levine rightfully chose not only the five-act version of Don Carlo for this 1980 performance but begins the opera as Verdi had originally conceived it. The Woodcutters chorus and the episode in which Elisabetta gives her necklace to a destitute woman are pages essential to the structure of the whole opera: they articulate around that plangent acciaccatura which, as a micro-Leitmotiv snaking through the entire course of the opera, will drill into Filippo’s aria.  The effect is greater at that later point if the numerous times it has played—especially at the very beginning—has been indelibly impressed into our minds, allowing us to recognize it in each of its appearances. Read more »