Tuesday, 30 July 2024

Mark Padmore and Morgan Szymanski launch the 2024/25 season at St Martin in the Fields with Alec Roth's song cycle, A Road Less Travelled

Andrew Earis and St Martin's Voices at church of St Martin in the Fields
Andrew Earis and St Martin's Voices at church of St Martin in the Fields

The 2024/25 season at St Martin in the Fields opens with a more intimate recital in the crypt when tenor Mark Padmore is joined for by guitarist Morgan Szymanski for a programme that includes songs by John Dowland and Schubert, plus folksong arrangements and the London premiere of Alec Roth's song cycle A Road Less Travelled, which takes its name from the poem by Robert Frost, The Road Not Taken. Frost wrote the the poem about Edward Thomas and Roth composed his song cycle to commemorate the centenary of Thomas’ death at the Battle of Arras in 1917, and was commissioned by the Autumn in Malvern Festival for its premiere in September 2017.

The season continues with the London Mozart Players in Vivaldi and Roxanna Panufnik, both exploring the four seasons, and further ahead, the orchestra is joined by conductor Jonathan Bloxham and pianist Louis Schwizgebel for music by both Schumanns and their friend Mendelssohn, then Angela Hewitt joins the orchestra as soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No.9 in E flat major, ‘Jeunehomme’ in an all-Mozart programme conducted by Jonathan Bloxham. 

I Fagionlini and Robert Hollingworth continue their exploration of the music of Benevoli with his Missa Maria Prodigio Celeste (for four choirs) alongside Carissimi's Jephthe, whilst Nicel Short and Tenebrae's programme Music and Meditation, mixes music with mindfulness. Kristian Bezuidenhout directs the English Concert in an all-Bach programme including Cantatas No. 54, 150, 161 and Brandenburg Concerto No. 6. Andrew Earis conducts St Martin's Voices in a Remembrance Day programme featuring the English premiere of Cecilia McDowall's Angel of the Battlefield, plus John Rutter, Barry Mills and Lucy Walker. David Bates and La Nuova Music present Haydn's Creation (in English) with soprano Nardus Williams, tenor Andy Staples and bass James Platt. The BBC Singers and Sofie Jeanin will be exploring music by John Tavener alongside that of Kristina Arakelyan

Qanum player Maya Yousseff [whom I interviewed last year] is joined by Zoe Rahman piano and Elizabeth Nott percussion. We return to the crypt for another intimate recital from Plínio Fernandes guitar and Hadewych Van Gent cello. Santoor player Eeshar Singh and tabla player Shahbaz Hussain will be presenting Indian Music by Candlelight in the crypt.

Full details from the St Martin in the Fields website.

From Baroque ensemble & string quartet to composer & collaborative pianists: The City Music Foundation introduces its 2024 CMF Artists

The City Music Foundation's 2024 CMF Artists (Photo: Benjamin Ealovega)
The City Music Foundation's 2024 CMF Artists (Photo: Benjamin Ealovega)

The City Music Foundation (CMF) has announced its latest cohort of artists, its 11th intake. The 2024 CMF Artists are Aleksandra Myslek (collaborative piano), Duo Melus (flute & piano), Edward Picton-Turbervill (collaborative piano/composer), Ensemble Augelletti (Baroque ensemble), Florian Störtz (bass- baritone), Geirþrúður Anna Guðmundsdóttir (cello), George Robarts (baritone), Gus & Eleanor (guitar & voice/double bass), Joanna Harries (mezzo-soprano), Kyan Quartet (string quartet), Nikita Lukinov (piano), Sofia Sacco (piano) and Theano Papadaki (soprano).

For the first time this year, the artists applied to the scheme with a particular project in mind. The artists are chosen regardless of instrument or genre, and as 2024 CMF Artists, they each receive financial and advisory support for their project alongside the coaching, performance opportunities and other numerous short and long-term benefits that CMF continues to offer.

Current and previous CMF artists include Connaught Brass, cellist Margarita Balanas, mezzo-soprano Helen Charlston, pianist Samson Tsoy, violin & piano duo Foyle-Stsura, Ligeti Quartet, mezzo-soprano Lotte Betts- Dean and jazz double-bassist Misha Mullov-Abbado. 

Further information from the CMF website, and check their What's On pages for information about forthcoming recitals.

Monday, 29 July 2024

Confidence, style and engagement: Victoria Newlyn's new production of Rossini's The Barber of Seville at West Green House Opera is a complete delight

Rossini: The Barber of Seville - Dominic Sedgwick - West Green House Opera
Rossini: The Barber of Seville - Dominic Sedgwick - West Green House Opera

Rossini: The Barber of Seville; Dominic Sedgwick, Nico Darmanin, Katie Bray, Grant Doyle, Trevor Eliot Bowes, director: Victoria Newlyn, conductor: Matthew Kofi Waldren; West Green House Opera
Reviewed 28 July 2024

Performing the piece with real engagement yet never losing sight of the importance of Rossini's music, the cast gelled as an ensemble, with confidence and style

Spanish barbers seem to be cropping up regularly this Summer, with a new production of Rossini's The Barber of Seville opened at Opera Holland Park last month, and Waterperry Opera will be presenting their new production next month. On 28 July 2024 we caught Rossini's The Barber of Seville at West Green House Opera. Victoria Newlyn directed and Matthew Kofi Waldren conducted, with designs by Laura Jane Stanfield. Dominic Sedgwick was Figaro (making his role debut), with Nico Darmanin as the Count, Katie Bray as Rosina, Grant Doyle as Doctor Bartolo, Trevor Eliot Bowes as Basilio, Jeni Bern as Berta and Hector Bloggs as Fiorello.

After three years performing in the open air theatre on the lake, with its glorious setting balanced out by the need to use amplification, this year the festival returned to its original venue in a temporary structure in the garden. On Sunday evening, the setting was vindicated as the favourable weather meant that the venue's rear wall was open, thus giving a magical view of West Green House behind the stage. This setting was leveraged in the production, so that Dominic Sedgwick's Figaro made his entrance from the garden, and during the storm scene in Act Two the garden's lighting responded to the musical storms happening in the orchestra.

Rossini: The Barber of Seville - West Green House Opera
Rossini: The Barber of Seville - Trevor Eliot Bowes, Jeni Bern, Grant Doyle, Katie Bray, Dominic Sedgwick, Nico Darmanin - West Green House Opera

Victoria Newlyn and Matthew Kofi Waldren are old favourites at West Green, and the pair were responsible for Rossini's
La Cenerentola in 2019 [see my review] and Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore in 2022 [see my review]. A return to the smaller theatre, with the cast in close contact with the audience, really benefitted Rossini's comedy and a key to to the production was the sheer vividness of communication. This was about the characters on the stage rather than spectacle.

Sunday, 28 July 2024

An eclectic mix: Brixton Chamber Orchestra at Clapham Park Cube

Matthew O'Keeffe and Brixton Chamber Orchestra in action at Love Clapham Park Fun Day
Matthew O'Keeffe and Brixton Chamber Orchestra in action at Love Clapham Park Fun Day

Brixton Chamber Orchestra, musical director Matthew O'Keeffe is coming to the end of its 2024 Summer Estates tour, appearing in community venues around the borough. On Saturday 27 July 2024 they popped up in the afternoon at the Love Clapham Park Fun Day at Clapham Park Cube, where people took a break from browsing the stalls, sampling the amazing food and watching the carnival to listen to an eclectic set from O'Keeffe and the 30-piece orchestra which managed to get everyone dancing and ended with an open mic session. 

Love Clapham Park Fun Day
Love Clapham Park Fun Day

The music moved easily between classical and contemporary, including jazz, dance and rap (performing styles such as rap and grime with orchestral backing is one of the orchestra's specialities). The sound system was pretty impressive too, and there was no sense of loss of quality because we were out of doors, whilst the carnival attendees made a keen audience.

The set mixed Respighi, Lully, Beethoven, Walton, the overture to Rossini's The Barber of Seville and Offenbach's can can from Orpheus in the Underworld, with Donald Grant's The Way Home, jazz standards, rap, The Special's Ghost Town, a dance medley and Abba's Dancing Queen. The vocals were share between two guest vocalists and rapper, Samson, whilst music director Matthew O'Keeffe helped out as well. For The Killers' Mr Brightside, the audience had to get singing. At the end there was an open mic session with a couple pretty impressive soloists.

The Mayor of Lambeth, John Paul, at Love Clapham Park Fun Day
The Mayor of Lambeth, John-Paul Ennis, at Love Clapham Park Fun Day

The orchestra's tour finishes this weekend with a gig tonight at St Matthew's Church, but they'll be back.


Saturday, 27 July 2024

Prom 10: Ryan Wigglesworth, Laura van der Heijden & BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra in Britten, Cheryl Frances Hoad & Elgar

Cheryl Frances Hoad: Cello Concerto 'Earth, Sea, Air' - Laura van der Heijden, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth - Prom 10 (Photo: BBC / Andy Paradise)
Cheryl Frances Hoad: Cello Concerto 'Earth, Sea, Air' - Laura van der Heijden, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth - Prom 10 (Photo: BBC / Andy Paradise)

Britten: Gloriana - symphonic suite, Cheryl Frances Hoad: Cello Concerto 'Earth, Sea, Air', Elgar: Symphony No. 2; Laura van der Heijden, BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth; BBC Proms at the Royal Albert Hall
Reviewed 26 July 2024

The vivid colours and drama of Cheryl Frances Hoad's new cello concerto at the centre of a programme moving from the vividness of Britten's Gloriana to the thoughtful poetry of Elgar's second symphony

Ryan Wigglesworth and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra's first BBC Prom at the Royal Albert Hall this year was a programme of German late-Romanticism, with Brahms, Schoenberg and Mahler. For their second visit, on Friday 26 July 2024, Wigglesworth and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra turned to 20th-century English music. The centrepiece of the concert was the first performance at the BBC Proms of Cheryl Frances Hoad's Cello Concerto 'Earth, Sea, Air' with soloist Laura van der Heijden, a work Wigglesworth commissioned and the same performers premiered in 2022. Around this was assembled a pair of complementary, contrasting works, Britten's Gloriana - symphonic suite and Elgar's Symphony No. 2 in E flat major.

Britten's Gloriana, despite the great success of modern productions, remains haunted by the muted reaction to the premiere. It is not a perfect work, and suffers from Britten's decision to put it on one side rather than revise it, but the symphonic suite rescues four of the major moments in the work. The Tournament opened things with vivid brilliance and strong rhythms, plus a strong sense of expectation yet it ended on a questioning, intimate note with solo violin. The Lute Song recycles Essex's lovely solo, a melody that is important throughout the opera. Here the solo is on the oboe and what we had was hushed magic, the strings setting of the clear beauty of the oboe solo, far more aetherial than the operatic original. The third movement features the Courtly Dances that are from the third act, six short, highly coloured moments, with engagingly crisp rhythms, nicely delineated characters. The movement brilliantly encapsulated a certain 20th-century style of writing 'ancient' music. The final movement, Gloriana moritura is adapted from the opera's ending and is far less of a number than the others, much more symphonic in style. Beginning with same brilliant style as the earlier movements, it became more complex before gradually unwinding.

Prom 10 - BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth (Photo: BBC / Andy Paradise)
Prom 10 - BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth (Photo: BBC / Andy Paradise)

She played and sang: Gillian Dooley's new book is the fruit of 15 years research on the music collections of Jane Austen and her family

One of Jane Austen's manuscripts
One of Jane Austen's manuscripts

Gillian Dooley's book, She played and sang: Jane Austen and music, was published by Manchester University Press in March 2024. The book looks at the central role that music played in Austen's life, and how she made brilliant use of it in her books, exploring a recently recovered treasure trove of evidence, including her music books alongside letters and family records, bringing out a previously unregarded aspect of Austen’s world.

Gillian Dooley (Photo: IASH-The University of Edinburgh)
Gillian Dooley (Photo: IASH-The University of Edinburgh)

Gillian is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow in English at Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia and was previously a librarian there. She has been working on the topic of music in Jane Austen's novels for over 25 years, and for the last 15 has been working on the collection of music owned by Austen and her family. These academic interests ran alongside Gillian's life as a librarian. She describes the library as a good place to be if you were also doing literature research, but also Gillian helped put on concerts in the library.

There have been a few books dealing with music in Jane Austen's world, but Gillian comments that Austen's personal life and her possible love affairs are far more sensational subjects. Also, people don't think of the music in her music books as particularly significant, but Gillian's attitude changed as she got to know it. She points out that earlier writings have often been patronising about the music, that it wasn't Mozart or Beethoven, the idea that Austen's England was the land without music. 

Whilst literature is Gillian's home discipline, music is rather more than just a hobby. She has always been interested in Jane Austen and inevitably the music crept in. Music in Austen's novels has a meaning that she attributes or implies, perhaps different to her own regard for music in the home. Gillian points out that what you do as a writer can involve pulling what you know but using this in rather different ways. The music in Austen's life must have undoubtedly influenced her, but this is not a simple relationship.

Friday, 26 July 2024

Pianist Stephen Osborne launches JW3's 2024/25 classical season

Steven Osborne (Photo: Ben Ealovega)
Steven Osborne (Photo: Ben Ealovega)
JW3, the Jewish Community Centre London, is celebrating ten years and its classical season is returning for 2024/25 with six concerts beginning with pianist Steven Osborne in evocations of childhood from Debussy and Schumann plus Schubert's Piano Sonata in A major, D.959.

Tenor Ian Bostridge and pianist Mishka Rushdie Momen join forces for Schubert's Schwanengesang, divided into two groups, with the poems by Rellstab and Heine, interleaved with songs by Fauré. Momen returns with Anthony Marwood (violin), Garfield Jackson (viola), David Waterman (cello) for a chamber music recital featuring Fauré's Piano Quartet No. 2 and Brahms' Piano Quartet no.3 in C minor.

In the New Year, the Doric String Quartet performs Haydn, Britten and Beethoven, then Sini Simonen (violin), Alasdair Beatson (piano). We return to piano chamber music as Garfield Jackson (viola), David Waterman (cello) perform Schubert, Schumann and Dvorak's Piano Quartet no.2 in E flat major, and there are piano quartets by Fauré and Brahms in the final concert of the series, featuring Irène Duval (violin), Asbjørn Nørgaard (viola), David Waterman (cello) and Connie Shih (piano).

Full details from the JW3 website.

Igor Levit, Joyce DiDonato, Thomas Adès: Southbank Centre's Opening Weekend launches its 2024/25 season

Igor Levit (Photo: Felix Broede)
Igor Levit (Photo: Felix Broede)

The Southbank Centre's 2024/25 season [see my preview] starts with a bang featuring a five-day Opening Weekend (25 to 29 September 2024) when Resident Orchestras and Resident Artists join with other guests for a dozen events across the site. Highlights include Joyce DiDonato in Berlioz, a recital from Igor Levit, Rachmaninoff's The Bells and Lawrence Power and Thomas Adès exploring fairy tales.

Things kick off with Edward Gardner conducting the London Philharmonic Orchestra in Berlioz' La mort de Cléopâtre, plus music by Barber and Beethoven, then the following day Santtu-Matias Rouvali launches the Philharmonia Orchestra's Nordic Soundscapes [see my preview] with Sibelius, Grieg and María Huld Markan Sigfúsdóttir. Both orchestras and conductors return further into the weekend, with Gardner and the LPO in Rachmaninoff including The Bells, and Santtu and the Philharmonia in Sibelius and Nielsen.

Igor Levit's recital puts together Bach's Chromatic fantasia and fugue in D minor, BWV.903, Brahms' Ballades, Op. 10 and Liszt's transcription of Beethoven's Symphony No.7. There is chamber music with a difference in ;Fairytale Dances when violist Lawrence Power joins composer/pianist Thomas Adès, a percussionist and a dancer for fairytale music that moves from Purcell and Dowland to Britten, Tippett, Berio and Stravinsky, plus of course Adès himself. Cellist Matthew Barley's Light Stories is altogether more personal as he uses music and image to tell the story of his teenage journey from trauma and recovery into the light.

The Multi-Storey Orchestra's Verified is about search for authenticity and acceptance among the growing pressures of social media and living in a digital age, whilst Charles Hazlewood conducts the ParaOrchestra in Górecki’s Symphony of Sorrowful Songs, his an astonishing meditation on loss and transcendence.

Scottish Ensemble (Photo: Hugh Carswell)
Scottish Ensemble (Photo: Hugh Carswell)

Things end with the Scottish Ensemble in a programme culminating in Philip Glass' Symphony No. 3. Except, of course, that is not the end and there is an action packed season ahead.

Full details from the Southbank Centre's website.


Wednesday, 24 July 2024

Taking elements of Western culture and seeing it through the lens of other classical traditions: four new music theatre works at the Barbican this Autumn

Countertenor Kangmin Justin Kim as Song Liling and baritone Mark Stone as René Gallimard in rehearsal for 'M. Butterfly' at the Santa Fe Opera.(Photo: Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera)
Kangmin Justin Kim (Song Liling) and Mark Stone (René Gallimard) in rehearsal for the premiere of Huang Ruo's M. Butterfly at the Santa Fe Opera in 2022
(Photo: Curtis Brown for the Santa Fe Opera)

Four music theatre works at the Barbican this Autumn show an intriguing interest in the cross-fertilisation between cultures, each taking elements of Western culture and seeing it through the lens of other classical traditions, variously combining Sufi, Ghanaian, Chinese, Indian, Korean and Western classical traditions with Rolf Hind's Sky in a Small Cage, Lear, Gorges Ocloo’s The Golden Stool, or the story of Nana Yaa Asantewaa, and Huang Ruo's M. Butterfly.

Mahogany Opera is presenting the UK premiere of composer Rolf Hind and librettist Dante Micheaux's Sky in a Small Cage, directed by Frederic Wake-Walker. The work reflects on the extraordinary life and works of the 13th-century Sufi poet, Rumi and Hind's score draws on his life-long fascination with musical instruments and tonalities from central Europe, Java and India as well as influences from Arabic and Turkish music.

Sky in a Small Cage is in the Barbican Hall on 8 September, with Elaine Mitchener as the Narrator, Loré Lixenberg (Shaman of the Birds and Kerra, Rumi’s wife), countertenor James Hall and baritone/dancer Yannis François, with six ensemble singers and onstage musicians from Riot Ensemble conducted by Aaron Holloway-Nahum

National Changgeuk Company of Korea have restaged Shakespeare's King Lear as a traditional Korean opera. The production debuted at Korea's National Theatre in 2022 to some acclaim. Lear retells a familiar story in the form of Changgeuk, the culturally significant and artistically rich theatrical form in Korea that blends music, dance, and drama to create immersive storytelling experiences rooted in Korean tradition and heritage combined with creative contemporary influences. 

Lear is at the Barbican Theatre from 3 to 6 October, with Pai Sam-shik (Trojan Women), direction and choreography by Jung Young-doo, Pansori (traditional Korean folk opera) score by Han Seung-seok, with additional music by K-Pop producer Jung Jae-il (Parasite, Squid Game), set design by Lee Tae-sup.

 LOD muziektheater & Toneelhuis is presenting the UK premiere of Belgian/Ghanaian composer and director Gorges Ocloo’s Ghanaian ‘Afropera’ project, The Golden Stool, or the story of Nana Yaa Asantewaa, which pays homage to the heroic woman who confronted colonial injustice in Ghana. To celebrate Asantewaa’s legacy through music, Ocloo deconstructs and reconstructs pieces from the all-white canon of Western classical music. Works by Handel, Bizet, Shostakovich, Verdi, Vivaldi, Beethoven, and Orff are reimagined through a Ghanaian lens with additional voices, drums and percussion, and performed by a cast of women designed to echo the heroic brigade.

The Golden Stool, or the story of Nana Yaa Asantewaa is at the Barbican Hall on 14 October, with Nobulumko Mngxekeza-Nziramasanga (soprano), Nonkululeko Nkwinti (mezzo-soprano), Doris Bokongo Nkumu, Nathalie Bokongo Nkumu, Abena Biney Gloria, Titilayo Oliha, Saar-Niragire De Groof, Briana Stuart, Maïmouna Badjie and Somalia Williamson, 

The BBC Symphony Orchestra in collaboration with the Barbican is presenting the UK premiere of Huang Ruo’s opera of David Henry Hwang’s play M. Butterfly. Based on a true story of a French diplomat in China, the roles of Madame Butterfly and Pinkerton in Puccini's opera are here inverted. A diplomat at the French embassy in Beijing, falls in love with a beautiful Chinese opera singer who two shocking secrets - the singer is, of course a man (all female role in Chinese opera are played by men), and is spying for the Chinese government. In the opera the role is taken by a countertenor.

M. Butterfly premiered at the Santa Fe Opera in 2022 with Kangmin Justin Kim and Mark Stone, conducted by Carolyn Kuan, see the contrasting reviews in the Dallas Morning News and Opera Today.

Huan Ruo's M. Butterfly is at the Barbican Hall on 25 October. Carolyn Kuan conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra with Kangmin Justin Kim (Song Liling), Mark Stone (René Gallimard), Fleur Barron (Comrade Chin/Shu Fung), Kevin Burdette Manuel (Toulon/Judge) and the BBC Singers.

Full details from the Barbican website.

A world away from the Bibilical oratorio: Stanford's Walt Whitman setting is the focus for this disc from Wales of two of his large-scale choral works

Charles Villiers Stanford: Te Deum, Elegiac Ode; Rhian Lois, Samantha Price, Alessandro Fisher, Morgan Pearse, BBC National Orchestra & Chorus of Wales, Adrian Partington; LYRITA
Charles Villiers Stanford: Te Deum, Elegiac Ode; Rhian Lois, Samantha Price, Alessandro Fisher, Morgan Pearse, BBC National Orchestra & Chorus of Wales, Adrian Partington; LYRITA
Reviewed 23 July 2024

Written 35 years before his pupil Holst's Ode to Death, Stanford's Whitman setting of the same text shows a young composer willing and eager to explore different avenues

The list of British composers who set the verse of Walt Whitman is fairly well known, Delius, Holst, Vaughan Williams, Hamilton Harty and Bliss. The poetry's combination of transcendentalism, realism, a religious mysticism unconstrained by the western focus of Christianity, and its free prose offered composers an alternative to the standard canon of English verse. This list covers the years 1899 (for Holst's earlier essay) to the 1930s (for Bliss' Morning Heros and RVW's Dona Nobis Pacem) but there were others too. Charles Wood set Whitman in songs during the 1890s and even more fascinatingly, Charles Villiers Stanford set a whole chunk of Whitman in his Elegiac Ode of 1884.

This new disc from Lyrita features Stanford's Elegiac Ode, Op. 21 and Te Deum, Op. 66 performed by the BBC National Orchestra & Chorus of Wales, conductor Adrian Partington with soloists Rhian Lois, Samantha Price, Alessandro Fisher and Morgan Pearse.

Tuesday, 23 July 2024

Seeking professional Global Majority musicians and composers based in the North of England and the Midlands: Opera North's Resonance residency programme 2024/25

Jasdeep Singh Degun performing Arya: concerto for sitar and orchestra with Orchestra of Opera North (Photo Justin Slee)
Jasdeep Singh Degun performing Arya: concerto for sitar and orchestra with Orchestra of Opera North (Photo Justin Slee)

Opera North's Resonance residency programme was launched in 2017 to offer funding, space, time and technical support to professional Global Majority musicians and composers based in the North of England and the Midlands. Now the company is seeking applications from music creators from the Global Majority working in any genre for the next iteration of the programme. In 2024-25, six successful artists will be invited into Opera North’s home in Leeds to develop new ideas, collaborate with performers from other disciplines, and take their work in new directions. Each artist will receive up to a week of free rehearsal space in central Leeds between November 2024 and March 2025, a grant of up to £4,000 to cover fees for those involved and other costs, and support and advice from technicians, producers and other specialists. There are also options for a work in progress performance and a short film to document the project.

Many Resonance alumni have continued to work with Opera North. Music Director on the inaugural Resonance residency, Jasdeep Singh Degun, became the company’s first Artist-in Residence in 2022. His work with Opera North has included composing Arya, a sitar concerto for the Orchestra of Opera North, and being the composer and co-Music Director on the award-winning opera Orpheus. [see my 2023 interview with Jasdeep]. 2019 Resonance artist Nishla Smith is now the Programmer for the Howard Assembly Room and, earlier this year, Ladies of Midnight Blue performed A Love Revolution, the family-friendly show they had devised during their 2022 residency, on the Howard Assembly Room stage.

To apply, see the form on the Opera North website.

Flower of Cities: a new festival celebrates the City of London with a distinctly Italian flavour

City Festival of Music, Invention & Knowledge

A new festival will be enlivening the City of London in October. The rather awkwardly named City Festival of Music, Invention & Knowledge runs from 10 to 24 October 2024 with a series of evening events from classical and jazz musicians plus free, Before They Are Famous lunchtime recitals. Taking its inspiration from the current Lord Mayor of London, Michael Mainelli's Ligurian heritage, the festival has an Italian theme with a link-up with the Municipality of Genoa (Comune di Genoa) to bring the music of Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840) into the City.

The festival's opening concert, at the Mansion House, features British jazz pianist Julian Joseph and band in a programme mixing new pieces with improvised versions of scores by Bach and Paganini. There is another take on Paganini at Milton Court when Elisa Tomellini and Alberto Casadei – AKA Eklectric Duo – present Electric Paganini with versions of Paganini's music alongside Vivaldi, Daft Punk and Coldplay.

Guitarist Josè Spanu will play an historic 19th Century instrument at St James Garlickhythe with sonatas by Paganini plus arrangements of Verdi and Rossini. Still with the guitar, but moving to the 21st century, Max Baillie (violin), Francisco Correa (guitar) and friends will present a programme focusing on the music of Stephen Goss including The Flower of Cities inspired by London landmarks.

The final day of the festival includes Nigel Short conducting Vivaldi's Gloria with a collective of workplace choirs at St Lawrence Jewry, and in the evening there is music performed by Tenebrae, conductor Nigel Short, and violinist Benjamin Marquise Gilmore (leader of the London Symphony Orchestra) in Bach, Paganini and Dufay.

Alongside these events there complementary talks and workshops exploring music and the City itself. 

The festival is curated by Ian Ritchie, who was director of the City of London Festival from 2005 until its demise in 2013, and  produced by Tessa Marchington of Music in Offices. Full details from the festival website.

A vividly realised recording which does full justice to the complexity and vivid imagination of this music: rediscovering music by Latvian-American composer Gundaris Pone

Gundaris Pone: La Serenissima, seven Venetian portraits for orchestra, American Portraits, Avanti!; Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, Guntis Kuzma, Normunds Šnē; SKANI

Gundaris Pone: La Serenissima, seven Venetian portraits for orchestra, American Portraits, Avanti!; Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, Guntis Kuzma, Normunds Šnē; SKANI
Reviewed 22 July 2024

The first studio recordings of three of Gundaris Pone's large-scale orchestral works reveal a mid-20th century composer of great imagination writing European music yet with his roots in Latvia

Latvian-American composer Gundaris Pone wrote music that transcended his country of birth. Born in Riga, his family emigrated to America in 1950, fleeing the advancing Soviet troops, and it was here that Pone trained and lived. Latvian music up until the second half of the 20th century largely reflected a mood of national romanticism, so Pone’s music seemed to many like the avantgarde of its time, yet Pone himself believed that Latvia was the true place for his scores. 

Of his style, Pone would say in an interview that though he was labelled an avantgardist, he had never considered himself so, that he thought "music should be written for the broadest masses of people, including those who haven’t been specially educated in music."

This album from the Latvian Music Information Centre's SKANI label features world premiere studio recordings of works for large orchestra La Serenissima, American Portraits and Avanti! All written between 1971 and 1984. The performers are the Liepāja Symphony Orchestra, conductors Guntis Kuzma and Normunds Šnē.

We begin with La Serenissima, seven Venetian portraits for orchestra, a work that won competitions in Trieste in 1981 and in Louisville in 1983 as well as the Witney prize. Venice held a special place in the composer's heart and in later life he divided his time between the city and the USA. The work's material revolves around five notes, A – E flat – E – D – B, evidently spelling out LA S(es)-E-RE-nisSIma. The language is richly evocative and lush, even though the style is definitely modernism. But I kept getting hints of Britten's intelligent use of 20th century modernism too, here is a composer viewing European music through distinctly individualistic glasses. The work is in seven parts, each with an Italian title though for convenience I refer to the English translations.

Monday, 22 July 2024

New work, young artists, established favourites: University of Birmingham's Barber Concerts

The University of Birmingham's Elgar Concert Hall
The University of Birmingham's Elgar Concert Hall

The University of Birmingham has announced its programme of lunchtime and evening concerts for 2024/24, the Barber Concerts taking place in the Elgar Concert Hall in the university's in the Bramall Music Building, and the Dome studio space.

The evening concert series includes the BBC Singers joining forces with Britten Sinfonia, conductor Bob Chilcott, for the premiere of Michael Zev Gordon’s A Kind of Haunting . There are concerts from the brass ensemble, Septura, a recital from soprano Masabane Cecilia Rangwanasha and pianist Joseph Middleton, the James Ehnes Piano Quartet in Fauré and the Brautigam/Hoppe/ Poltéra Trio.

The free lunchtime concert series includes Ariel Lanyi, piano, Timothy Ridout, viola and Jonathan Ware, piano, Marie-Christine Zupancic, flute and Daniel Browell, piano, BBC New Generation Artist, James Atkinson, baritone and Hamish Brown, piano. Kenneth Hamilton, piano, gives a lecture recital, Songs of Love and Dances of Death, whilst Caroline Ritchie and Henrik Persson perform on two spectacular and historically important viols, and there is a special concert in celebration of the exhibition Scent and the Art of the Pre-Raphaelites at the Barber Institute, with settings of poetry by Dante Gabriel Rossetti .

Other highlights for Autumn include Groove onto the Moon, a concert experience especially created for children aged 3 to 7 and their adventurous grown-ups; Rosie Tee, a Birmingham-based multi-instrumentalist, composer, and performer in her brand of technicolour, retro-futuristic pop; BEAST and turntablist Mariam Rezaei; Odd Priest, a multi-disciplined artist from Birmingham.

Full details from the university website.

Forty Years of Inspiring Musicians: Carol Main MBE FRC will step back from her role as Director of Live Music Now Scotland – a post she has held since the founding of this organisation in 1984

Twogether Duo and Carol Main
Twogether Duo and Carol Main

Live Music Now was the brainchild of Lord Menuhin, and has provided talented musicians at the outset of their careers with professional performance and training opportunities, making live music accessible to all members of society, regardless of their circumstances. 

In March 2025, Carol Main MBE FRC will step back from her role as Director of Live Music Now Scotland (LMNS) – a post she has held since the founding of this organisation in 1984. In Carol Main's first year at , working half a day a week, LMNS put on 60 concerts, with a handful of classical ensembles; today, that figure has increased more than tenfold, with at least 750 performances being delivered by a current pool of around 145 musicians.

The LMNS Board has requested that Carol remain in a part-time consultancy role after March 2025, with a specific focus on fundraising and to continue her work with Live Music Now International. 

Amanda Forsyth, Chair of LMNS, said "The debt of gratitude that the whole Live Music Now family owes to Carol is impossible to quantify. Over the forty years of her Directorship, LMNS has grown and thrived, despite many challenges along the way – a living tribute to Carol’s energy, skill and dedication to sharing the joy of music as widely as possible. Our task now, as a Board of Trustees, is to find the very special person who is going to be able to pick up the baton, and conduct LMNS through the years to come."

The role of Chief Executive has been advertised, with applications to be received by 31st July 2024. 

Full details from the LMNS website.

Saturday, 20 July 2024

Returning to Northern Ireland Opera for his third role, British-Ukrainian baritone Yuriy Yurchuk talks about his continuing exploration of Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin

Yuriy Yurchuk
Yuriy Yurchuk

Baritone Yuriy Yurchuk sings the title role in Northern Ireland Opera's new production of Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin which opens on 14 September 2024 at the Grand Opera House, Belfast, directed by Cameron Menzies and conducted by Dominic Limburg, with a cast including Mary McCabe, Carolyn Dobbin, Sarah Richmond, Jenny Bourke and Norman Reinhardt. Yuri performed in the company’s productions of La Boheme in 2021 and La Traviata in 2022, whilst his performances of Eugene Onegin have included the New National Theatre in Tokyo earlier this year, the Royal Danish Opera in Copenhagen and La Monnaie, Brussels in 2023

Yuriy Yurchuk at Royal Danish Opera
Yuriy Yurchuk at Royal Danish Opera

When Yuri and I spoke, he was in Savolinna in Finland, where he was about to make his role debut in the title role of Mozart's Don Giovanni. He comments that with the performances taking place in the Medieval castle, entrances and exits involve a lot of running about and negotiating old staircases and uneven dark places. He adds that the quality of the productions at Savolinna is astonishing, and he had nothing but admiration for this year's new production of Verdi's Nabucco, directed by Rodula Gaitanou. Don Giovanni is a revival, and Yuriy comments on the way productions can take on lives of their own, within what is a beautiful set the cast can play with the drama, and they have a lot of freedom. This year, Don Giovanni has two casts and the original intention was for them to do the same thing, but each cast has migrated towards doing what the singers feel. He was finding the process exciting, with the Don being a very interesting role.

Yuriy has a far longer acquaintance with Eugene Onegin, having first sung the role in Kyiv in 2016, with subsequent appearances including Tokyo, Copenhagen and Brussels, alongside a Royal Opera House Covent Garden young artists performance. Inevitably, his first performance of the role was very exciting, and he had to work a lot on forming the character and he talks about bridging the gap between you and the character, layering on the acting makeup. With performances in different productions, he finds his work becoming more nuanced. In each new production, he can try different things and feels that his interpretation gets better. He describes opera as an onion, peeling back layers, and adding more detail in the language and the acting.

Relentlessly entertaining: Louise Bakker's new production of Handel's Acis and Galatea at Opera Holland Park rather over-eggs things but features finely engaging soloists

Handel: Acis and Galatea - chorus -  Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)
Handel: Acis and Galatea - chorus - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)

Handel: Acis and Galatea; Elizabeth Karani, Anthony Gregory, Chuma Sijeqa, Ruari Bowen, director: Louise Bakker, City of London Sinfonia, conductor: Michael Papadopoulos; Opera Holland Park
Reviewed 19 July 2024

For the company's first Handel work, a group of stylishly appealing soloists feature in a production which does not quite understand that less is more and which tends to over-egg things

For such a simple-seeming work, Handel's Acis and Galatea has a somewhat complex history. Written in 1718 whilst Handel was under the patronage of the Duke of Chandos, the work was premiered at the Duke's mansion Cannons with a tradition that it took place in the gardens (which were in the process of being 'improved'), then going on to have a strange after-life as Handel expanded it to suit his Italian opera company. 

We don't know much about that first performance and the surviving music is from slightly later and was published in 1722. It would have been a tiny performance, just five singers providing soloists and chorus, and a similar number of instrumentalists. Whether it was staged is anybody's guess, but Handel's complex writing for the chorus suggests that they, at least, would have been stationary.

For Opera Holland Park's first production of a Handel work, the choice fell rather aptly on Acis and Galatea in the 1718 version (albeit without the character of Coridon who was in the very first performance but dropped subsequently). We caught the opening night on 19 July 2024, directed by Louise Bakker with Michael Papadopoulos conducting the City of London Sinfonia. Elizabeth Karani was Galatea and Anthony Gregory was Acis, with Chuma Sijeqa as Polyphemus and Ruari Bowen as Damon, plus a chorus of eight.

Handel: Acis and Galatea - Elizabeth Karani, Anthony Gregory -  Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)
Handel: Acis and Galatea - Elizabeth Karani, Anthony Gregory - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)

Alyson Cummins' set spread across the whole of the Opera Holland Park stage, creating a series of pastoral-inspired areas - a temple, a swing in a bower, a mound - with neo-classical architecture and verdant greenery and flowers. And yet, the effect had a deliberate artificiality to it, there was no attempt at realism. This was not an evocation of pastoral Ancient Greece, but a highly theatrical Arcadia. This was emphasised when, during the overture, the chorus arrived. They were dressed in what suggested a group of 18th century aristocrats playing at being English nature spirits. One of the men was Herne the Hunter, another something like the Green Man.

Friday, 19 July 2024

The Waves: Louis Mander and Tamsin Treverton Jones' operatic adaptation of Virginia Woolf's novel to premiere in Oslo

Virginia Woolf: The Waves - cover of the first edition, designed by Vanessa Bell
Virginia Woolf: The Waves
cover of the first edition, designed by Vanessa Bell
Virginia Woolf's 1931 novel, The Waves, is regarded as her most experimental, consisting of ambiguous and cryptic soliloquies spoken mainly by six characters. It is her attempt to evoke the unconscious aspect of being and the innate essence of existence, and so far the work does not seem to have been adapted as an opera, though director Katie Mitchell adapted the work for the stage, at the National Theatre, in 2006 [see Mitchell's article in The Guardian].

Now librettist Tamsin Treverton Jones and composer Louis Mander have taken the plunge. Treverton Jones is a writer and poet, and has worked on opera librettos before including Thea for composer Amanda Johnson. Mander is an experience stage composer, having written more than a dozen music theatre works (opera, operetta and musicals) plus two ballets.

Their new operatic version of The Waves will premiere at the Oslo Opera Festival in September 2024 in a production directed by Einar Bjørge and conducted by Mander. The production will feature six young singers, William Stevens, William Diggle, Daniel Gray Bell, Hannah Edmunds, Mae Heydorn and Pauline Aase.

Before then, there will be the chance for UK audiences to get a taste of the work as on 24 July, these singers and repetiteur Stefan Ibsen Zlatanos will be sharing the music from the opera at an event at Hawkwood College in Stroud.

From familiar works to brand-new pieces: Autumn at Snape Maltings

Barbara Hepworth: Family of Man - Snape Maltings, winter 2021 (Photo: Shoel Stadlen, courtesy Britten Pears Arts)
Barbara Hepworth: Family of Man - Snape Maltings, winter 2021 (Photo: Shoel Stadlen, courtesy Britten Pears Arts)

The Autumn season at Snape Maltings Concert Hall sees Britten Pears Arts presenting a wide and varied range of activity from familiar works to brand-new pieces with leading performers, orchestras and ensembles beating a path to coastal Suffolk.

Undoubtedly, a major event in the Snape Maltings Concert Hall calendar is the Britten Weekend (2nd/3rd November) which this year features brother-and-sister duo, Sheku and Isata Kanneh-Mason, seen as both soloists and chamber musicians. Their programme comprises Britten's Cello Sonata in C major paired with the Sonata in D minor by Shostakovich, a composer very close to Britten while the Britten Pears Chamber Choir (formerly Aldeburgh Voices) will sing three lovely contrasting choral mass settings by Britten, Kodály and Tavener from across five centuries in Orford Church thereby reimagining a choral concert from the Aldeburgh Festival’s early days.

Each year, too, the Viola Tunnard Artist award supports a talented collaborative pianist to develop their craft and skills and this year the accolade falls to French-born pianist, Juliette Journaux, who is addicted to Schubert, Beethoven, Mahler and the like. She will be joined by French-born mezzo-soprano, Mathilde Ortscheidt, performing a delectable programme of Mahler, Britten and Elgar while the Britten Weekend moves over to the Red House for a tour of the archive strongrooms (3rd November) while there will also be a celebration across the site of the people who had deep connections to the Red House, namely Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears, who founded the Aldeburgh Festival in partnership with librettist/producer Eric Crozier in 1948.

Thursday, 18 July 2024

Contemporary contrasts: Wolf-Ferrari's Il segreto di Susanna and Leoncavallo's Pagliacci make highly satisfying double bill at Opera Holland Park

Wolf-Ferrari: Il segreto di Susanna - John Savournin - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)
Wolf-Ferrari: Il segreto di Susanna - John Savournin - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)

Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari: Il segreto di Susanna; Clare Presland, Richard Burkhard, John Savournin, director: John Wilkie, conductor: John Andrews
Ruggiero Leoncavallo: Pagliacci; David Butt Philip, Alison Langer, Robert Hayward, Zwakele Tshabalala, Harry Thatcher, director: Martin Lloyd-Evans, conductor: Francesco Cilluffo
Opera Holland Park, reviewed 17 July 2024

Two Italian operas, both dealing with jeopardy make a contrasting double bill in performances that bring both comedy and tragedy to life

Planning operatic double bills is always something of a challenge, but having paired early Puccini with Delius in 2022 [see my review], Opera Holland Park has returned with another intriguing pairing. Taking the imaginative decision to consider Leoncavallo's Pagliacci on its own rather than in tandem with Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana, the company paired it with a revival of their 2019 production of Wolf-Ferrari's Il segreto di Susanna, putting together two operas both by Italians, composed within less than 20 years of each other and both dealing with matrimonial jealousy, the one comic and the other tragic. 

Leoncavallo: Pagliacci - David Butt Philip, Alison Langer - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)
Leoncavallo: Pagliacci - David Butt Philip, Alison Langer - Opera Holland Park (Photo: Ali Wright)

We began with Wolf-Ferrari's Il segreto di Susanna, written in 1909 and one of the composer's few operas to retain anything like its place in the repertoire. Wolf-Ferrari applies a light yet imaginative touch to the music, the style is full of sly references yet sparkles along. John Wilkie directed, with John Andrews conducting the City of London Sinfonia with Richard Burkhard as the Count, Clare Presland as the Countess, and John Savournin in the silent role of Sante. Designs were by takis.

Wednesday, 17 July 2024

Belgian ensemble, Ayres Extemporae, winners of the 2024 York International Young Artists Competition at the National Centre for Early Music

Ayres Extemporae
Ayres Extemporae, winners of the 2024 York International Young Artists Competition

The 2024 York International Young Artists Competition took place on Saturday 13 July 2024 at the National Centre for Early Music in York, as the climax to this year's York Early Music Festival. Eight ensembles took place in the final, during the two days before the final each ensemble gave an informal recital at the National Centre for Early Music in York with the aim of giving the musicians the opportunity to adapt to the performance space and to get to know the festival audience members in advance of the final.

Ayres Extemporae, based in Belgium, were awarded the first prize, receiving a professional recording contract from Linn Records, a £1,000 cash prize, a future paid engagement with the York Early Music Festival, and recording opportunities with BBC Radio 3. 

UK based Apollo’s Cabinet took the Friends of York Early Music Festival award, a cash prize of £1,000, Ensemble Bastion won a cash prize of £1,000 endowed by the EUBO Development Trust, for the Most Promising Young Artist(s) specialising in the Baroque repertoire and  [hanse] Pfeyfferey (from Germany) took the Cambridge Early Music Prize, which includes a paid performance in Cambridge.

Ayres Extemporae are Moldovan-Spanish violinist Xenia Gogu, Spanish cellist Víctor García García, playing on a five-string cello piccolo. and Portuguese cellist Teresa Madeira and their programme consisted of Biber's Sonata for violin and continuo in E Minor, C. 142, Bach's Erbarme dich from Ich armer Mensch ich Sündenknecht, BWV 55 for tenor, flute and continuo (arr. for violoncello piccolo, violin and continuo)  and Bach's Sonata for Viola da Gamba and Harpsichord in G major, BWV1027  (arr. for violoncello piccolo, violin and continuo).

The final is available to watch on the NCEM website.

Full details from the NCEM website.

A sound world that is at once distinctive, appealing and engaging: Maria Faust's Mass of Mary on Estonian Record Productions

Maria Faust: Mass of Mary; Collegium Musicale, Helina Kuljus, Lili Kirikal, Oliver Povel, Maria Faust, Kirstjan Kungla, Indrek Vau, Andres Kontus, conductor: Endrik Üksvärav; Estonian Record Productions Reviewed 16 July 2024

Maria Faust: Mass of Mary; Collegium Musicale, Helina Kuljus, Lili Kirikal, Oliver Povel, Maria Faust, Kirstjan Kungla, Indrek Vau, Andres Kontus, conductor: Endrik Üksvärav; Estonian Record Productions
Reviewed 16 July 2024

Jazz, chant and polyphony side-by-side in a remarkable Estonian mass dedicated to all victims of domestic violence

Maria Faust is an Estonian jazz artist and composer, and her work as a jazz saxophonist alongside that of conducting ensembles such as the Copenhagen Estonian Choir, and teaching composition and improvisation has all fed into her Mass of Mary. Written in 20202 the work is for chamber choir, vocal soloists and instrumental quartet, with choral music inspired by chant and polyphony alongside more jazz-influenced instrumental contributions.

On this recording from Estonian Record Productions (ERP), Maria Faust's Mass of Mary is performed by the Estonian chamber choir Collegium Musicale with soloists Helina Kuljus (soprano), Lili Kirikal (soprano) and Oliver Povel (tenor), with Maria Faust (alto saxophone), Kirstjan Kungla (bassoon), Indrek Vau (trumpet) and Andres Kontus (trombone) conducted by Endrik Üksvärav.

The work uses the liturgical mass text - Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Benedictus, Agnus Dei - interspersed with poetic texts compiled by Estonian playwright Eero Epner (born 1978) from works by Karl Ristikivi (1912-1977) and other poets. These movements - Mother, Child, Holy Spirit - explore the fragility of familial relationships in cases of victims of domestic violence, and the work is dedicated to all victims of domestic violence. Maria Faust says of her intentions for the piece, 'This work does not blame or teach and does not propose solutions. Rather, it is a consolation, and is the least that I, as a composer and a human being, can do and give to society'.

An intergenerational community: Garsington Opera brings its Youth and Adult community companies together for Andrew Norman's A Trip to the Moon

Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Youth Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)
Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Youth Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)

American composer Andrew Norman is perhaps best known for his orchestral works from Sacred Geometry (2003) to Play (2013) to Sustain (2018), which have won various awards including the 2017 Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition and finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Music, whilst the Los Angeles Philharmonic won the Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance for their 2019 recording of Sustain.

Norman has, so far, only written one opera, A Trip to the Moon from 2017 which is subtitled 'a melodrama for children'. The work was commissioned by Simon Rattle and premiered in Berlin with the Berlin Philharmonic, 200 volunteer singers and an orchestra made up of school children alongside members of the Philharmonic. Norman says of the piece that it was 'conceived as an experience as much for the wide variety of people making it as for the audience watching it.' But that it is 'first and foremost a children’s opera, to be performed by and for children'. Simon Rattle and the London Symphony Orchestra gave the work its first UK performance in a semi-staging at the Barbican Hall. 

Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Adult Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)
Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Adult Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)

Andrew Norman's A Trip to the Moon is now receiving a full staging at Garsington Opera on 30 and 31 July 2024, directed by Karen Gillingham, (Gasington's Creative Director of Learning & Participation), and conducted by Douglas Boyd with the Philharmonia Orchestra, professional soloists including Robert Murray and Jennifer France, and the Garsington Opera Youth and Adult community companies, plus children from two local primary schools making some 150 local people in all. 

This is a community performance, and as with Garsington's other community ventures, the event is inter-generational, with local people of different generations working shoulder-to-shoulder with professional singers and creative teams.

For many members of the Youth and Adult companies, the performance brings the experience of working alongside professionals as well as the chance to make friends with other company members. As one members of the Adult company put it, 'I have been involved in Garsington Opera Adult Company for over 13 years and I love it. Singing brings me joy and I relish the challenge of pushing myself outside my comfort zone. Learning about the intricate tapestry of an opera’s creation alongside top-tier professionals is something truly wonderful.

As Karen Gillingham explains, 'the infant group (5-7yr olds) came up with moon games - crater hop scotch and meteoroid football. They are bursting with ideas and super cute. One of the children is suffering from severe trauma and is selective mute. He loves the rehearsals and sings during them. It is an act of bravery for him to do this.

Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Adult Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)
Andrew Norman: A Trip to the Moon - Adult Company rehearsal, Garsington Opera 2024 (Photo: Julian Guidera)

The opera takes its theme from Georges Méliès' seminal 1902 silent film [see it on YouTube], and the fantastical opera explores how linguistic barriers must be broken down so that Earth people can communicate with Moon people, who have their own lyrical lunar language, and eventually they all learn to rise above their mutual mistrust and come together to overcome a mysterious threat.

The images in this article were taken at recent rehearsals for A Trip to the Moon with the Garsington Opera Youth and Adult community companies at the new Garsington Studios.

Full details from Garsington Opera's website.

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