It sounds wonderful! Thank you very much for your descriptions, and I'm glad to hear that the hall was more or less full. There'll be a few Britten converts (and no doubt a few puzzled people wondering what on earth it was all about).
Prom 55 (24.8.12): Britten – Peter Grimes
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Originally posted by Mary Chambers View PostIt sounds wonderful! Thank you very much for your descriptions, and I'm glad to hear that the hall was more or less full. There'll be a few Britten converts (nad no doubt a few puzzled people wondering what on earth it was all about).
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Maclintick, thank you for your review of the Prom, which i thought the samew as you did.I am not an ?amanda Roocroft fan, i'm afraid.there are not many sopranos I like anyway. Bu all in all, not a bad performance of Grimes. Liked you said the chorus and organist did rather spioil AR's voice a bit.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Maclintick View Postand the Living National Treasure that is Dame Felicity.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostMaclintick, thank you for your review of the Prom, which i thought the samew as you did.I am not an ?amanda Roocroft fan, i'm afraid.there are not many sopranos I like anyway. Bu all in all, not a bad performance of Grimes. Liked you said the chorus and organist did rather spioil AR's voice a bit.
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Just finished hearing it on iPlayer, and I can imagine the impact this performance must have made live and in person, based on what came through my computer speakers. The biggest debit was the iffy diction of Amanda Roocroft at times, but balancing it was her dramatic involvement, so par for the course overall. I can sort of see where some see Stuart Skelton as managing to inhabit the middle ground between the poles of Peter Pears and Jon Vickers in the role, even just by hearing without seeing anything. That must have been some sight for the Arena Prommers to make way for SS as Grimes went to his final fate. It would have been worth the whole evening just to see that moment, I expect. I would think that the Arena Prommers didn't know that this moment was coming, which of course would have made their action all the more effective. Likewise, Iain Paterson made a strong Balstrode, sounding a bit younger that what one might expect from someone like Norman Bailey or Thomas Allen.
I hadn't heard Peter Grimes in years, so hearing this performance was a jolting reminder of how dark the work is. It also had not really sunk in how much the Moot Hall scene is reminiscent of the tavern scene in Wozzeck, for one. Hearing Bob Boles' bigoted ravings (and hypocrisy in Act I at Auntie's when he's drunk), not to mention the Borough inhabitants working themselves up into a frenzied mob in Act III, is scarily close to the current hate-soaked rhetoric of the US Republican Party, in particular the Religious Right and the Tea Party wings. It's a reminder of how scary the work is to hear a vicious lynch mob singing in one's own language, as opposed to the distancing effect of hearing an Italian or German work, i.e. opera in another language, something like the Auto-da-Fe scene in Don Carlo, which is in its way a lynch mob scene also.
Not that Grimes is a saint, far from it. I once spoke with someone about PG and the whole issue of his treatment/abuse of his apprentices, and the whole question of how far the abuse went. He said, in effect (not the exact words):
"Oh, he was guilty as hell. Of course he was."
"Everyone did it then."
I remember an article from The Guardian years ago where James Fenton took shots at what he sees as the opera's "immorality":
To me, Fenton is unduly harsh in his judgment of Ellen Orford at the end of his article. Also, when he says that:
"Neither Britten nor Peter Pears (who sang the part) seems to have seen the difficulty."
Originally posted by Richard J. View PostOn the subject of premature applause, while I find that concert audiences have become better at allowing a silence after a work ends quietly, my impression is that opera audiences haven't yet learnt this, and will applaud even though the conductor's baton is still raised. Some of them have come to listen to the singing, so feel they can applaud as soon as the singing stops. Or is that unfair?
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I enjoyed reading your comments, BSP (as I usually do), & will look at the article. On the matter of premature applause at the end of an opera (act), it's not somethinh that's too bad here, but, as you say, particularly noticable on MET broadcasts. I do wonder why, if the curtain coming down is the trigger, the management insist on starting it before the music's finished? Usually the Scottish Opera productions plunge the stage into darkness when the music ends, & bring the lights back up when the applause starts. Bows are taken on stage rather than in front of the curtain.
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Originally posted by bluestateprommer View PostI would think that the Arena Prommers didn't know that this moment was coming ...
I am sorry to have missed it all, but my feet gave out at the end of Act 2 and I had to leave early.
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I have, but am none the wiser - most hits seemed to be for twitter. There was an Independent article which started with this sentence -
How did a nice Australian boy with a penchant for Rugby and Formula One gain entry into that most exclusive of clubs - the rarefied world of Opera?
which suggests that the writer has missed a number of leading tenors, including, of course, Bryn Terfel.
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P the RP travels the world with his master and tweets on his progress. But isn't that Julian Assange in the Arena for Peter Grimes? http://twitter.com/Pigmund_bin_ich/s...147330/photo/1
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