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"Worse, the intended Tannhäuser, Stefan Vinke, was unwell. The Viennese tenor Norbert Ernst sang the notes creditably from the side while Vinke walked the action. It was nobody’s fault, but the effect could only disappoint.
What a relief, then, that the soprano Lise Davidsen as Elisabeth gave a positively divine performance. The living, breathing meteor of the current opera world, she offered total security from her first jackpot-ringing notes – the mind-bending sonic equivalent of an ace in a Wimbledon final." (iNews review of the opening night)
...BUT on the second night, Vinke began badly then got worse. At the end of the first act the audience were told that he would continue [singing terribly] but requested our 'understanding'. What I understood was that the Royal Opera had not arranged for an understudy in the title role - why?
Gerald Finley was a very fine Wolfram, Ekaterina Gubanova and Mika Kares were satisfying, while the ROH Chorus (including the Tiffin Children's Choir) sang with fulsome tone.
The massive contrast on stage between the vocally crippled Stefan Vinke and the sublime Lise Davidsen was extreme, and extremely frustrating. She was worth the onerous journey from Kernow, involving a train strike and the collapse of Flybe. (Another of our rewards was the game on offer at Rules.)
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"Worse, the intended Tannhäuser, Stefan Vinke, was unwell. The Viennese tenor Norbert Ernst sang the notes creditably from the side while Vinke walked the action. It was nobody’s fault, but the effect could only disappoint.
What a relief, then, that the soprano Lise Davidsen as Elisabeth gave a positively divine performance. The living, breathing meteor of the current opera world, she offered total security from her first jackpot-ringing notes – the mind-bending sonic equivalent of an ace in a Wimbledon final." (iNews review of the opening night)
...BUT on the second night, Vinke began badly then got worse. At the end of the first act the audience were told that he would continue [singing terribly] but requested our 'understanding'. What I understood was that the Royal Opera had not arranged for an understudy in the title role - why?
Gerald Finley was a very fine Wolfram, Ekaterina Gubanova and Mika Kares were satisfying, while the ROH Chorus (including the Tiffin Children's Choir) sang with fulsome tone.
The massive contrast on stage between the vocally crippled Stefan Vinke and the sublime Lise Davidsen was extreme, and extremely frustrating. She was worth the onerous journey from Kernow, involving a train strike and the collapse of Flybe. (Another of our rewards was the game on offer at Rules.)
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