Bluebeard on the South Bank

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  • Ferretfancy
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 3487

    Bluebeard on the South Bank

    As part of their Bartok survey, the Philharmonis and Salonen were on terrific form at the RFH last night. Did anybody here attend, or hear the broadcast?
    In the first half, Yefim Bronfman gave a superb account of the 3rd piano Concerto, but the highlight was the magnificent performance of Bluebeard;s Castle after the interval, with Sir John Tomlinson and Michelle Deyoung.

    This was a semi-staged performance, and I wonder if the sound balance on air was different in any way. I ask because there were high walls of scenery behind and at the side of the orchestra which completely concealed the seating and organ. During the performance this functioned as a complex screen for the projected visuals for the opening of the seven doors. The work opened in complete darkness before the entry of the narrator, Juliet Stevenson, so that those wonderful opening chords arose out of the gloom as a grey landscape appeared. We were sitting in a box, the first time I have done so for many years, and the sound was excellent, the best I have heard so far in the refurbished hall.

    This was a memorable experience, I doubt if I have ever heard a better performance. Sir Jiohn Tomlinson assumed the part completely, still in amazing voice, and Michelle Deyoung was a perfect partner.

    Perhaps I'm gushing a bit, but the whole presentation was as good as any that I've seen in the opera house. Incidentally, although the organ was invisible, it was not missing at the opening of the 5th door. At the moment in the score with that huge crash as it opens, a brilliant lamp snapped on, filling the auditorium with blinding light, a great moment, and they didn't pussyfoot with the sighs either.but all the audiovisual effects did not detract from the inward argument in this wonderful opera.

    I would really like to know how this sounded on R3, I walked across the bridge afterwards with its imagery still burning in my head, but I won't be upset if there are dissenting voices, surprised perhaps.
  • EnemyoftheStoat
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1135

    #2
    Originally posted by Ferretfancy View Post
    ... the narrator, Juliet Stevenson...
    What, you mean she does Hungarian?

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    • aeolium
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 3992

      #3
      Ff, I didn't listen last night, as I had seen the same forces perform Bluebeard's Castle in Symphony Hall in Birmingham a couple of weeks back. That was a terrific performance (as was the Janacek Sinfonietta which accompanied it), superb sound, and I thought impressive visual effects (one of the reviewers seemed to think them superfluous but I thought they genuinely added to the effect of the whole performance). It was a great experience and I'm glad to hear that it also seems to have made a strong impression in the RFH. Salonen really does seem to get the best out of the Philharmonia in this music.

      Comment

      • Bryn
        Banned
        • Mar 2007
        • 24688

        #4
        Just listening again via the now active 320kbps AAC-LC option on the Listen Again iPlayer. Wow! A very fine performance indeed, by my reckoning.

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        • Chris Newman
          Late Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 2100

          #5
          I have just heard this concert on iPlayer. It was electrifying especially the Duke Bluebeard's Castle. I do hope the Philharmonia bring out a recording. It might be my third CD with Sir John Tomlinson but it was so moving. He is remarkable. He is older than me and I gave up singing five years ago. Michelle de Young was even better that her Berlioz Dido for Sir Colin Davis. I first heard this work in the late 60s at the Proms with Thomas Stewart, Evelyn Lear under Boulez. That was fabulous then but the Philharmonia under Salonel these days beats anyone. If Michael Tippett is listening from on high I bet he would have loved the heavy breathing effect for all future performances of his lovely Fourth Symphony.

          I know it is impossible for Bartok to have heard or read Sibelius Kullervo Symphony but there are powerful premonitions of the vocal effects in DB'sC in the movement Kullervo and his Sister.

          Comment

          • Petrushka
            Full Member
            • Nov 2010
            • 12309

            #6
            I was at the Chailly/Beethoven 9 in the Barbican the same night so missed this Bartok concert broadcast. Bluebeard is a profoundly disturbing work but one I adore so I'm off to the i-player to catch it before it disappears. Was the organ powerful enough?
            "The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink

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