In amongst the welter of "safe" standard rep that's dominated the evening concerts since the Proms, something more interesting (well, to me, anyway!) live from the RFH tonight. Less unusual, given this, is that the concert will be given by the LPO cond. Jurowski - consistently the most daring of the London "big 3".
The (bleeding chunks from) Strauss' Frau Ohne Schatten (a slightly prolix confection IMO but liberally scattered with Straussian purple passages) is a comparative rarity, but the Zemlinsky Florentine Tragedy is the real gem.
Apart from a few usual suspects, one-act operas seem particularly prone to slide into obscurity, perhaps due to the cost and difficulty of staging them as part of a longer evening. In any case, Zemlinsky is (IMO naturally) firmly in the "somewhat unjustly neglected" category. The music is rich and darkly sumptuous somewhere in the area of R Strauss, Korngold, Franz Schreker etc. For those with some familiarity with the few Zemlinsky works that occupy a corner of the regular rep, I'd place the soundworld somewhere between the more straightforward romanticism of The Mermaid and the more abrasive, colder Lyric Symphony.
Not to be missed - well, for appreciators of these kind of fin de siecle works heavy with redolence of a world (and tonality) about to collapse.
The (bleeding chunks from) Strauss' Frau Ohne Schatten (a slightly prolix confection IMO but liberally scattered with Straussian purple passages) is a comparative rarity, but the Zemlinsky Florentine Tragedy is the real gem.
Apart from a few usual suspects, one-act operas seem particularly prone to slide into obscurity, perhaps due to the cost and difficulty of staging them as part of a longer evening. In any case, Zemlinsky is (IMO naturally) firmly in the "somewhat unjustly neglected" category. The music is rich and darkly sumptuous somewhere in the area of R Strauss, Korngold, Franz Schreker etc. For those with some familiarity with the few Zemlinsky works that occupy a corner of the regular rep, I'd place the soundworld somewhere between the more straightforward romanticism of The Mermaid and the more abrasive, colder Lyric Symphony.
Not to be missed - well, for appreciators of these kind of fin de siecle works heavy with redolence of a world (and tonality) about to collapse.
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