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Showing posts with label Glyndebourne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glyndebourne. Show all posts

Anthony Negus leads Wagner's heros in the English countryside. First Hans Sachs at Glyndebourne now Siegfried at Longborough

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 16 July 2011 | 3:14:00 am

From today's Guardian. Follow the link to continue reading.

Anthony Negus: with Siegfried at last
Anthony Negus is looking forward to conducting Wagner's Siegfried at Longborough Festival Opera

Nicholas Wroe

Anthony Negus at Longborough
Anthony Negus ... 'We really are creating something remarkable with this Wagner pilgrimage.

While there is rarely a shortage of Wagner's operas being staged in the UK, the increased pace of productions emerging from national, regional and festival opera companies in recent years represents a discernible uptick in activity. Two of the most significant productions of this summer have been Glyndebourne's Meistersinger – streamed to wide acclaim on the Guardian website a couple of weeks ago – and the continuation of the Longborough festival Ring cycle which, next week, will follow up its triumphant 2010 Die Walküre with Siegfried. The two productions have a common link in the conductor Anthony Negus, who has emerged as a slightly unlikely figure to be at the heart of this Wagnerian intensity.

Negus has been on the music staff of Welsh National Opera for more than 35 years and has worked on many dozens of productions in Wales and around the world. But most often his role has been in assisting the lead conductor in preparing the production; he has conducted relatively few performances himself. But a closer look at this apparently modest CV reveals that not only has Negus worked closely with a long list of eminent names – Mackerras, Boulez, Reginald Goodall and, more recently, Vladimir Jurowski – he has also enjoyed a lifelong engagement with Wagner's music. It is therefore fitting that that, as he celebrates his 65th birthday, this engagement appears to be coming to remarkable fruition. "It's true that there is a lot of Wagner activity all over the world," Negus explains. "And it will speed up in the next couple of years in the runup to the bicentenary of his birth in 2013. For those of us closely involved, it feels like our version of preparing for the Olympics."

Walkure at LFO: 2010
For Negus the highlight of 2013 will be conducting, in a single season, the complete Ring cycle at Longborough, the Gloucestershire opera festival best known for being held in what was, originally, a converted barn. Longborough's involvement with Wagner began with a reduced-size Ring, for an orchestra of just 18 players, adapted by the composer Jonathan Dove, in the late 1990s. Negus took over conducting duties on the project halfway through and managed the impressive feats of slightly enlarging the orchestra and bringing in Bayreuth's Wotan, Sir Donald McIntyre, for the final performances.

Longborough's owner, Martin Graham, had long held the ambition, apparently ludicrously unrealistic, of staging a full-size Ring cycle. Every winter he made additions to the theatre – the red velvet seats came from Covent Garden when it was refurbished; the pit has been enlarged to accommodate 60-plus musicians. The Longborough Ring eventually commenced, under Negus's baton and directed by Alan Privett, with Das Rheingold in 2008. A concert version of the first act of Die Walküre was included in the 2009 season – "to get the orchestra acquainted with the very long journey we were about to take" – and last summer the full version was performed.

"The fact that people still talk about chicken sheds and so on in relation to Longborough does wear a bit thin," Negus says. "We really are creating something remarkable with this Wagner pilgrimage. The small Ring worked very well and the full-scale Das Rheingold went better than we could have hoped. But last year's Die Walküre was the best thing we have done and a significant step forward. I can't wait for Siegfried."

The critics agreed about Die Walküre. Michael Tanner claimed the ongoing cycle could stand comparison "in terms of musical interpretation and commitment, to any Ring one might see in the world". The Sunday Times identified Negus as a "British Wagner conductor second to none". Though he may have had comparatively limited experience of conducting full-scale operatic productions, when the opportunity came to take on the Longborough Ring, Negus was nothing if not prepared.

As a child of musical parents he saw his first Ring in his early teens and a Rudolf Kempe-conducted Rheingold in 1960 at Covent Garden when he was 14. The following year the family attended a Bayreuth festival Ring cycle and the year after that, Negus, on a student exchange visit to Germany, found himself actually in the Bayreuth pit for a Karl Böhm performance of Tristan.

"Of course the stage door man shouted at me, but some instinct told me I'd be OK if I stayed put and didn't leave for the whole evening, even to go to the loo. The players were completely unfazed. The pit was covered and they wore civvies, so there were even a few rather fat men in lederhosen." The young Negus found a way to return to the pit repeatedly and observed at the closest quarters conductors such as Kempe – "conducting in a T-shirt", Knappertsbusch – "very crumpled summer jacket" and Sawallisch. "I was there the first time boos were heard at Bayreuth in 1963 for a Wieland Wagner production. I also bought tickets and remember queuing in 1966 for Boulez's Parsifal. The whole period was very formative."

In the early 70s Negus returned to work at Bayreuth and became friends with Wagner's grandson, the director Gottfried Wagner. He worked as an assistant on a new production of Tannhäuser directed by Götz Friedrich and on some Ring rehearsals. He remembers marital tensions among the Wagner clan and political anxieties about Friedrich being the first East German to work at Bayreuth. He was also becoming increasingly aware of the cultural difficulties surrounding Wagner's work, not least the accusations of antisemitism.

"While it is never possible to be entirely free of politics, when I first went to Bayreuth it was a comparatively apolitical period. In the years since I've observed how we apply our increased psychological knowledge and understanding of Wagner's period to the way we approach the pieces. And I find my understanding of the dramatic aspect of the pieces has grown naturally with all this. And being a Wagnerian allows one to hate him as well as to admire him at times. I've read things he did and said, even aside from the Jewish issue – the way he treated friends, for instance – that provoke abhorrence. But I've also read about compassionate aspects of his character that moved me deeply."
Walkure at LFO: 2010

Working most recently on Meistersinger and Siegfried, Negus acknowledges that in the characters of Beckmesser and Mime there are quite clearly Jewish parodic elements. "These things can blacken the overall picture. David McVicar directing at Glyndebourne was all too aware of the shadow that can hang over the last scene of Meistersinger. We all have to deal with it in our own way, but when you penetrate below the surface of what Wagner is writing, then it goes much deeper than the nationalistic elements that were grabbed by Hitler and the Third Reich."

Negus admits there have been periods of his career when he has needed "to get away from the whole Wagner thing". He says the period from 1974, when he returned from Germany, to 1979 was "almost a Wagner-free zone" until Goodall was invited to conduct Tristan for the WNO. "It was a major moment in my life when I heard Goodall's Mastersingers at Sadler's Wells in 1968. I hadn't realised that Wagner could sound like that. Solti was the main Covent Garden conductor of Wagner at that time, and while he could be thrilling, this had a far more gentle quality of attack: there was a rich undertone and measured, unhurried tread, which was quite amazing."

Continue reading
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Ticciati to take over at Glyndebourne - with no Wagner in his repertoire, how fares the future?

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 1 July 2011 | 6:33:00 pm

What "the future of classical music" did next

Declared as "..the future of classical music" by the Scotsman two years ago, Robin Ticciati will take over from Jurowski at Glyndebourne in 2014 - an interesting decision. He has a lot in his repertoire so far: including Mozart, Verdi, Humperdinck, Janacek and Johann Strauss. But, as far as I am aware, no Wagner . Is this a hint of Glyndebourne productions post 2013, or simply that he will get a chance to extend his already wide repertoire (he is only 28) even further? Time will tell I am sure but given the success of this years Meistersinger it would surely make little sense to not continue with Wagner now. Ticciati seems ambitious, and his leadership of  Don Giovanni at this years Glyndebourne was well received. One feels that Wagner lies easily within his capabilities and we should note he is already  to conduct his first Rosenkavalier at Glyndebourne and Peter Grimes at Le Scala. And yet, no Wagner?

Ticciati is of course no stranger to Glyndebourne conducting the Flute in rehearsal there at only 21. 

According to the Guardian, the  normally media shy Ticcati said today:
"...Glyndebourne is a very special place to me. When I took that first rehearsal, it was not only the first time I'd conducted a big orchestra, it was the first time I'd ever been in an orchestra pit – and it felt like the one place in the world I wanted to be.
 "Glyndebourne is doing amazing things in making opera more accessible, incredible things like the Guardian's live streaming of Meistersinger which got tweets from all over the world
He went on to say, and I think something we all agree with - especially when one looks around a normal opera audience:
"If there's one thing I want to do in my time there, it's to find more ways of bringing opera to people under 30. It changed my whole life, and I want to share it".

Still, it will be a shame to see the end of Jurowski's time at Glyndebourne - especially given this years magnificent Meistersinger

This from the BBC:

The 28-year-old will take over from Vladimir Jurowski, who in 2001, aged 29, became the festival's youngest musical director.

Ticciati, who makes his debut at New York's Metropolitan Opera this year, will be the the seventh director in the festival's 77-year history.

He said Glyndebourne offered "unrivalled opportunities".

"Creating opera with such talented artistic teams and world class musicians in an organisation that places great emphasis on detailed musical preparation is a genuine privilege," he added.

Ticciati, who will be 31 when he takes over, is principal conductor of the Scottish Chamber Orchestra and balances orchestral and operatic performances.

This year he will be conducting The Marriage of Figaro at the Salzburg Festival and Don Giovanni in Glyndebourne.

Glyndebourne general director David Pickard said Ticciati would continue Glyndebourne's "long tradition of artistic excellence and innovation".

"None of us will forget the excitement when, as a 21-year-old assistant conductor on Die Zauberflote in 2004, Robin Ticciati stood in the pit at Glyndebourne for the first time and conducted the overture."

Those present at that rehearsal "were in no doubt of his exceptional talent", Mr Pickard added.

The Glyndebourne festival of opera, founded in 1934, presents six productions each year.

This year's festival, which runs from 21 May to 26 August, includes new productions of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg and Handel's Rinaldo.

Glyndebourne on Tour, which Ticciati directed from 2007 to 2009, takes three productions around the UK each autumn.
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Meistersinger for the perpetually perplexed

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 24 June 2011 | 6:00:00 pm

From today's Guardian and for Meistersinger "newbies" only. Click the link at the end for the rest of the opera and some Meistersinger miscellanea  

Denis Forman
guardian.co.uk,



Meistersinger (Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg), Wagner

The one with a disagreeable town clerk, a noble cobbler, a street brawl and a prize song.

CAST


Veit Pogner, goldsmith and Mastersinger - Bass

Eva, his daughter - Soprano

Magdalene, her maid - Mezzo

Hans Sachs, cobbler and Mastersinger - Bass

David, his apprentice - Tenor

Sixtus Bechmesser, Town Clerk and Mastersinger - Bass

Walter von Stolzing, a knight - Tenor

Mastersingers (nine), a night watchman



Act I Sc I: Inside the church of St Katherine's Nüremberg

In which our hero declares his love for a lady but fails to sing his way into the club of Mastersingers whose members will be allowed to compete for the lady's hand.

We are in Nuremberg medieval city of song and there is a church service in progress. Handsome knight Walter sidles up to pretty young woman Eva and says excuse me but are you spoken for? Eva recognizes Walter as overnight house guest. Well no not exactly says her maid Magdalene not actually engaged but father Pogner has booked her as the prize for an upcoming song contest. Whoever wins gets her as wife. I see I see says Walter to Eva let me escort you home. No stay here says Magdalene, here's Mastersinger's apprentice David (sure enough David is fussing about resetting the church as venue for a song contest) he'll teach you the tricks of the Mastersinging trade: you stay and get your Master's certificate and then you can compete for her. Eva I love you says Walter [a bit sudden? Ed] see you tonight. OK says Eva. Exits.


Act I Sc 2: A makeshift arena

So you think you can get your certificate at first try? says David. Ho ho. How much do you know about the Meister method? Zero says Walter. OK listen to this says David. He launches into a farrago of rules regulations admonitions prohibitions. Meanwhile the apprentices set up the singers'dais all wrong. David sorts them out: they take the mickey out of him.

Pogner and Beckmesser enter. You are odds-on favourite to win my girl Eva says Pogner to Beckmesser: such a good singer you are. But if I win and she won't have me will you push it? asks Beckmesser. No I will not push it says Pogner. Excuse me says Walter would the Masters accept me as a late entry? I must propose you for the Masters' club first old friend says Pogner . The Masters assemble: roll call: Pogner makes the opening address. In my travels he says I found Nuremberg's image very poor. We are generally perceived as stuffy starchy stingy also philistine so I dreamt up this song contest to improve the image of this great city of ours and I offer my daughter as wife to the winner. Nice one Pog! shout the Masters. Viva Veit! cry the apprentices. But just one thing says Pogner if she doesn't like the winner she has power of refusal.

Why not allow the people to exercise their democratic right and judge the contest? asks Social Democrat Sachs. Subversive left-wing talk say the Masters. Order! back to the agenda says Pogner: we have this late entry my friend Sir Stolzing. I propose him as candidate for the Masters' Guild. Excellent C.V. noble parents property owner Name at Lloyds member of the Athenaeum banks at Coutts. Vocal education? asks the baker Kothner. I studied these classic LPs of Caruso Gigli Chaliapin says Walter (All dead says Beckmesser). But what actual educational establishment? asks Kothner. School of Nature says Walter (He learnt from the birds says Beckmesser. Are you prepared to submit a trial song? asks Kothner. Yes says Walter (poetically and at some length). Right! Into your marker's box Beckmesser says Kothner and remember Sir Stolzing seven faults and you're out. Take a look at the conditions of contest (apprentices show a video to Walter whilst Kothner sings the soundtrack).

Cue! shouts Beckmesser. Walter takes off into a romantic rhapsody. Beckmesser jumps out. Seven faults already he cries gleefully: do you want any more of this rubbish?It's funny sort of stuff say the Masters. Is this what they call minimalist? asks one. More atonal I would think says another. Perhaps it's tone rows says a third. Can't stand this modern stuff says a fourth. I liked it says Sachs: the marker is clearly biased jealous and emotionally upset. His intervention is unfair. I say go on Sir Stolzing to hell with the marker. Walter sings. Sachs and Beckmesser slag each other off: the Masters argue. Pogner tries to cool it: the apprentices dance: chaos. Beckmesser yells let's take a vote. Big majority against Walter's admission. Curtain.

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Listen Now: Vladimir Jurowski discusses Die Meistersinger

In preparation for live internet broadcast in association with the Guardian nodoubt

Stephen Moss discusses Glyndebourne's production of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg with its conductor, Vladimir Jurowski. From its historical context and its notorious association with Hitler and the Nazi ideology, to how their current production sets out to liberate the opera's humane intentions and more emotional themes.

You can watch the production live on Sunday at guardian.co.uk/liveoperafromglyndebourne, or, if you miss it then, it will be available for the following week.

Click to launch MP3 audio player.

Alternatively go to the Guardian and listen there by clicking here

Source: Guardian Newspaper
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The Countdown Continues: Glyndebourne 2011: The history of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - video

Written By The Wagnerian on Thursday, 23 June 2011 | 3:03:00 am

On Sunday 26 June from 2.45pm, guardian.co.uk will be live-streaming Glyndebourne Opera's new production of Wagner's masterpiece. Here director David McVicar and conductor Vladimir Jurowski discuss the work and its history at the festival

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Nearly Time: Glyndebourne 2011: Staging Wagner's Die Meistersinger - video

From The Guardian:

In a second video previewing guardian.co.uk.music's live stream of Glyndebourne's sold-out staging of Die Meistersinger, we go behind the scenes to see preparations for the biggest production in the company's history.

Watch Die Meistersinger live, here, on Sunday 26 June from 2.45pm

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Die Meistersinger Von Nürnberg: ROH 2011 - You wait around all day and then three come along together.

Written By The Wagnerian on Sunday, 22 May 2011 | 11:00:00 am

Meistersinger, Royal Opera House, Graham Vick Revival 2011

So, there you are, it's raining, you haven't brought a brolly, there's no shelter and you have been waiting for what seems like ages on your bus when it eventually pulls up - followed by two more directly behind it. It feels a little like that at the moment with Meistersinger in the UK. First, WNO, then Glyndebourne and now we find the ROH is producing (or at least reviving) another - in little more that twelve months of each other. And we are still two years away from Wagner's bicentennial. Typical!

Overview


Another revival of Graham Vick's award wining - and highly regarded - production first seen in 1993


Cast:

Hans Sachs                Wolfgang Koch (An excellent Alberich under Simone Young -  here)
Walther von Stolzing   Simon O'Neill
Eva                            Emma Bell,
Magdalena                 Heather Shipp
David                         Toby Spence
Pogner                       John Tomlinson
Sixtus                        Peter Coleman-Wright                 

Credits:
Antonio Pappano    Conductor
Graham Vick           Director

Dates:

19 | 22 | 27 December (2011)
1 mat | 4 | 8 mat January (2012)
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Glyndebourne Meistersinger - BBC "In Tune" with Vladimir Jurowski and Gerald Finley

Written By The Wagnerian on Saturday, 21 May 2011 | 4:30:00 pm

Glyndebourne
Yes, it's that time of year again: lambs are skipping across the British countryside (well big lambs by now); hikers have put on their best shorts, hitched a knapsack over their shoulder and traverse, what they hope, are public walkways over golden fields; young lovers take to the countryside oblivious to all but each other; lone romantics take to their bicycles, a well worn copy of some Wordsworth poems in their pocket, looking for a shady tree to read under; copies of Cider With Rosie are... Or at least that would be the case if they were not all competing for space with oddly dinner suited individuals dragging  picnic baskets behind them, accompanied to the sound of clinking bottles of Moet (well the tickets were just so expensive  - nothing left for luxuries)

Yes, the ever magnificent, Glyndebourne  opens its doors today and Britain's Country House Opera Festival season is truly underway. And this years festival sees something special for us Wagnerians: at long last their first staging of Meistersinger .

To ready himself,  BBC Radio 3's Peter Trelawny, spoke to the conductor Vladimir Jurowski and the productions Hans Sachs - Gerald Finley -  during Fridays "In tune". You missed it? Never-mind, it will remain available to listen to online for the next six  days.

 Listen here: In Tune, BBC Radio 3
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Gerald Finley, " Wagner actually makes you sing to the best of your ability": Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg - Glyndebourne 2011

Written By The Wagnerian on Friday, 20 May 2011 | 2:13:00 am

Glyndebourne's first Meistersinger (and only their second ever Wagner production -  as discussed here) will soon be upon us. Over at musicalcriticism.com,  Mike Reynolds interviews Gerald Finley about Wagner, Glyndebourne, Jurowski,  David McVicar and his first  appearance in a Wagner Opera



'It's like going to a vocal spa...I am working at the role from the inside of the music. '


In a few days time, on Saturday 21 May, the 2011 Glyndebourne season gets under way with an historic first: the biggest production it has ever mounted, Wagner's very own festival opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg.   And leading the cast, in his own first Wagnerian role in costume onstage, is Canadian bass baritone Gerald Finley.   With orchestral rehearsals in full swing, and with the enormity of the undertaking becoming daily more apparent, we caught up with Finley during a break in his crowded day on the Sussex Downs. 

If he was feeling the pressure, he certainly did not show it: relaxed, articulate, he talked enthusiastically about the role of Hans Sachs, the challenges in singing the character, the Glyndebourne production and his very special affinity with the opera house that will be his spiritual home for the next couple of months.

I started by asking about Finley's approach to tackling a major Wagnerian role for the very first time.   What were the difficulties and how was he going about them?   "The thing I am learning from this incredible immersion in the score, and the role of Hans Sachs, is that Wagner actually makes you sing to the best of your ability.   I have in fact sung Wolfram [in Tannhäuser] before but only in the recording studio.   So this is my first theatrical assumption of a major Wagnerian role – in at the deep end, as you might say.   But when the part was offered to me, I accepted to do it at Glyndebourne, mainly because I knew that the long rehearsal period would allow me to get to know every aspect of the opera and the chance to do myself justice in the role.   And it is so rewarding – it is a very human story, worth looking at time and time again, full of incredible musical detail to which you have to pay scrupulous attention.  I am finding it a wonderful experience".

Without giving too much away, what sort of production has David McVicar come up with?   Any similarities with the deconstructionists like Katharina Wagner?   "No, not at all!   What I can tell you is that it is not set in its original period (the mid sixteenth century) but it is set in a time of social change and the look of the piece is Romantic, which is great for the costumes.   McVicar has approached his Meistersinger from the score, and from what it says about the people in the opera and their relationships with each other.   These after all are real relationships: they say things about the characters onstage and they say things about people and society today.   The production is not out to surprise, nor to offend, nor to provoke.   It is full of what I would call nice humanist touches.   I find it intelligent and engaging".

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