Opera North's Siegfried 'live'
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIf the two preceding years are anything to go by, this should be a remarkable concert performance
I can't get to any of the performances this year, so R3 will be my only contact with one of the finest performances (so far) of the work I know. Farnes and his band are magnificent.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Black Swan
I was in attendance last Saturday night at the Town Hall in Leeds. The performance is really fine. I enjoyed it immensely. It is as fine as the 2 preceeding years. I really would love to go again but will re-listen on R3 instead.
John
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If the two preceding years are anything to go by, this should be a remarkable concert performance
While largely irrelevant to the radio relay it is (or maybe isn't) worth pointing out that these are rather more than concert performances. Semi-staging is nearer the mark, and very effectively so IMO. Relatively simple use of abstract video imagery, lighting, a few props, symbolic dress rather than costume and a little well-chosen acting in the first two installments have, for me anyway, made much more impact than any amount of giant babies, abattoir settings, crashed spaceships, Siegfried and Brunnhilde unaccountably dressed as Noddy and Bigears in giant iridescent nappies etc etc.
Ok, so Wagner may not have intended the orchestra to be onstage, and indeed expected its sound to be suffocated in a pit, but, er, well, what did he know anyway? . In previous years, the (generally terrific) singers have had no trouble riding over the orchestra, at least in Birmingham's Symphony Hall, and it and Farnes' pacing have sounded magnificent.
I've just got to hope I don't get dive-bombed by a seagull (in Brum for goodness sake!) during the long interval again this time...
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Originally posted by Simon B View PostWhile largely irrelevant to the radio relay it is (or maybe isn't) worth pointing out that these are rather more than concert performances. Semi-staging is nearer the mark, and very effectively so IMO. Relatively simple use of abstract video imagery, lighting, a few props, symbolic dress rather than costume and a little well-chosen acting in the first two installments have, for me anyway, made much more impact than any amount of giant babies, abattoir settings, crashed spaceships, Siegfried and Brunnhilde unaccountably dressed as Noddy and Bigears in giant iridescent nappies etc etc.
Ok, so Wagner may not have intended the orchestra to be onstage, and indeed expected its sound to be suffocated in a pit, but, er, well, what did he know anyway? . In previous years, the (generally terrific) singers have had no trouble riding over the orchestra, at least in Birmingham's Symphony Hall, and it and Farnes' pacing have sounded magnificent.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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amateur51
Originally posted by Simon B View PostA Pedant (to which I'm considering changing my screen name to save typing) writes:
While largely irrelevant to the radio relay it is (or maybe isn't) worth pointing out that these are rather more than concert performances. Semi-staging is nearer the mark, and very effectively so IMO. Relatively simple use of abstract video imagery, lighting, a few props, symbolic dress rather than costume and a little well-chosen acting in the first two installments have, for me anyway, made much more impact than any amount of giant babies, abattoir settings, crashed spaceships, Siegfried and Brunnhilde unaccountably dressed as Noddy and Bigears in giant iridescent nappies etc etc.
Ok, so Wagner may not have intended the orchestra to be onstage, and indeed expected its sound to be suffocated in a pit, but, er, well, what did he know anyway? . In previous years, the (generally terrific) singers have had no trouble riding over the orchestra, at least in Birmingham's Symphony Hall, and it and Farnes' pacing have sounded magnificent.
I've just got to hope I don't get dive-bombed by a seagull (in Brum for goodness sake!) during the long interval again this time...
I'd go further and say that this is now how I prefer my Ring-cycling - no daft director, tremendous drive from the orchestra and decent singing, all at an affordable price
Bravo Opera North & Richard Farnes
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI'd go further and say that this is now how I prefer my Ring-cycling - no daft director, tremendous drive from the orchestra and decent singing, all at an affordable price
AND the way the singers in front of the orchestra means that they can sing without straining to be heard (the bane of so many Wagner productions) - as well as the orchestral detail being so clear (and, thanks to Mr Farnes and his band, so rich and warm). Yes, this is how I want to experience live opera, too![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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amateur51
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostSorry to keep popping up, but again, etc
AND the way the singers in front of the orchestra means that they can sing without straining to be heard (the bane of so many Wagner productions) - as well as the orchestral detail being so clear (and, thanks to Mr Farnes and his band, so rich and warm). Yes, this is how I want to experience live opera, too!
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Opera North's Siegfried
Anyone else listening to this? It's going pretty well so far, the odd moment of shouting apart. Mati Turi in the title role has just been described in the first interval as "a big chap with a voice to match" but (though it is of course quite unfair to judge by sound alone) for me he's just too big: there's more to the part than sheer heft, there's a tenderness and a vulnerability too, which I'm not really hearing so far. It will be interesting to see how he fares in act two.
I'm not warming to the announcer though, whose grasp on the piece seems to be pretty superficial and who has just informed me that "there are no really outstanding moments" in the opera. And - oh dear - he's just invited listeners to tweet their comments "so we can all join in with this".Last edited by Bert Coules; 19-06-13, 18:44.
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I've merged the two threads on Siegfried. Toss up whether it went on Performance or A Night at the Opera - I went for the first as there is more likely to be comment on the broadcast than the actual performance.
Originally posted by Bert Coules View PostI'm not warming to the announcer though, whose grasp on the piece seems to be pretty superficial and who has just informed me that "there are no really outstanding moments" in the opera. And - oh dear - he's just invited listeners to tweet their comments "so we can all join in with this".It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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The presenter knows absolutely nothing. He's reading out prepared questions which come straight out of Noddy's Siegfried Book for Kiddies, he is not engaging in debate or getting the best out of the speaker. Dreary and totally unnecessary.
Why not have Deathridge's pre-recorded stuff on the opera and thus leave it to an expert.
Groanworthy tat.
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