Originally posted by Caliban
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Opera and sex - alright, gender.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostI guess I'm an operaphobe, yes, certainly with anything before 1900... I've enjoyed some Mozart - some years ago - but couldn't sit through one now. I was a Perfect Wagnerite in my 20s and 30s - well The Ring and Tristan at least - wonder if I'll ever take them on again, though the response to the music is still there. But then I'm something of a theatrephobe too so... In the 20thC, I have enjoyed Berg, Schoenberg, Birtwistle and so on, but it remains very selective and it's always recordings, not live attendance.
I could say it's the voices that are the problem, but then I love Beethoven's 9th finale (don't all shout at once) and other choral works, whereas others say the opposite for the same reasons!
But I'm never entirely comfortable, physically, listening to most traditional, operatically sung vocal music. It's "Evenings in the Orchestra" for me.
It's "Evenings with the Orchestra" for me, too."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostOh dear. I've never heard a Met relay. I can't get to the ROH Trojans in cinemas, so am planning to go instead to the Met relay in January. Is this a good idea? Susan Graham will certainly be ok - what about Deborah Voigt (Cassandra)?
Of course going to the relays may make a more social occasion, and most are live - though does that really make a difference? This is opera, not horse racing or football.
Worth going once or twice to see if you like it.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI went to one Met relay. It wes quite fun, but neither the quality of the visuals nor the sound was up to the atandard of what one can experience in a real opera house. I'm not even sure that the video quality was as good as some HD videos. For example, the HD video of Glyndebourne's Die Fledermaus is very good, and you can get it on Blu Ray. FWIW Deborah Voigt was OK in what I saw.
Of course going to the relays may make a more social occasion, and most are live - though does that really make a difference? This is opera, not horse racing or football.
Worth going once or twice to see if you like it.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThis is opera, not horse racing or football.
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI have no idea what that is supposed to mean, partly because I have never attended a horse race, and been to only one football match.
I once went to a theatrical performance of Pride and Prejudice in the open air. It rained a lot, so we all got wet. My companions wanted us to leave at the interval, which we did. I suggested we stay to the end, to find out how it all ended
For streamed video productions of opera I believe that many would find a delayed relay, or even a recording as satisfactory as a live stream. I suppose it depends whether one intends to communcate with others who were in the live audience (as opposed to the dead one??).
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI have no idea what that is supposed to mean, partly because I have never attended a horse race, and been to only one football match. Good seats at the ROH for Trojans would have set me back a great deal of money. I have seen three opera recordings (not live relays) in the cinema: Figaro and Carmen from ROH and Billy Budd from Glyndebourne. All these experiences were deeply satisfying and together probably cost the same as one trip to a live performance in London. I do not have a Blu-Ray player. I'm keen to know whether a Met relay is likely to be as satisfactory as an ROH or Glyndebourne recording but I don't think I'm going to find out here.
[This is all pretty much off-topic for the subject of this thread, but on that I have no opinion, or as far as I have one, agree with ardcarp earlier]
* and plays (nb NT live broadcast of Timon of Athens on 1st November)
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostAt that price I wouldn't go. The whole point of the exercise is to bring opera to a wider audience and that means the prices need to be reasonable.
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