Tag: Opera

  • Massenet & Fauré Birthdays Celebrate French Music

    Massenet & Fauré Birthdays Celebrate French Music

    Today is the anniversary of the births of two outstanding French composers: Jules Massenet (1842-1912) and Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924).

    Massenet’s fluency and emotionally direct style made him the most successful French opera composer of his generation. Fauré was the more progressive of the two. He wrote meticulously-crafted music of great nuance, with a harmonic sense that seemed to yearn for the 20th century. As an administrator, he blew the dust off the Paris Conservatory and ushered in an era of unprecedented reform.

    Here are two absorbing interpretations of music by these very different French masters.

    Joan Sutherland sings a selection from Massenet’s medieval romance “Esclarmonde”:

    Germaine Thyssens-Valentin, a Fauré pupil, plays his Nocturne No. 6 in D-flat:

    Joyeux anniversaire, mes amis!


    PHOTOS: Fauré (left) and Massenet en plein air

  • Massenet & Fauré Anniversary Celebrating French Masters

    Massenet & Fauré Anniversary Celebrating French Masters

    Today is the anniversary of the births of two outstanding French composers: Jules Massenet (1842-1912) and Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924).

    Massenet’s fluency and emotionally direct style made him the most successful French opera composer of his generation. Fauré was the more progressive of the two. He wrote meticulously-crafted music of great nuance, with a harmonic sense that seemed to yearn for the 20th century. As an administrator, he blew the dust off the Paris Conservatory and ushered in an era of unprecedented reform.

    Here are two absorbing interpretations of music by these very different French masters.

    Joan Sutherland sings a selection from Massenet’s medieval romance “Esclarmonde”:

    Germaine Thyssens-Valentin, a Fauré pupil, plays his Nocturne No. 6 in D-flat:

    Joyeux anniversaire, mes amis!


    PHOTOS: Fauré (left) and Massenet en plein air

  • Massenet and Fauré Anniversary: Celebrate French Masters

    Massenet and Fauré Anniversary: Celebrate French Masters

    Today is the anniversary of the births of two outstanding French composers: Jules Massenet (1842-1912) and Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924).

    Massenet’s fluency and emotionally direct style made him the most successful French opera composer of his generation. Fauré was the more progressive of the two. He wrote meticulously-crafted music of great nuance, with a harmonic sense that seemed to yearn for the 20th century. As an administrator, he blew the dust off the Paris Conservatory and ushered in an era of unprecedented reform.

    Here are two absorbing interpretations of music by these very different French masters.

    Joan Sutherland sings a selection from Massenet’s medieval romance “Esclarmonde”:

    Germaine Thyssens-Valentin, a Fauré pupil, plays his Nocturne No. 6 in D-flat:

    Joyeux anniversaire, mes amis!


    PHOTOS: Fauré (left) and Massenet en plein air

  • Montsalvatge’s Puss in Boots Opera Highlights

    Montsalvatge’s Puss in Boots Opera Highlights

    You can tune an orchestra, but you can’t tun-a fish.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we put the “cat” in Catalan music with selections from Xavier Montsalvatge’s one-act opera “Puss in Boots.”

    “Puss in Boots,” Montsalvatge’s first opera, was composed in 1947. We all know the story. The tale, in its best-known guise, was published by Charles Perrault in 1695 as one of the “Tales of Mother Goose.”

    A poor miller laments his inheritance. Most of the family property – the mill and the mules – goes to his elder brothers, and all that’s left for him is an unprepossessing cat. He wonders of what use to him a cat could possibly be. He contemplates eating it, perhaps using the skin to make a hat. The cat, however, promptly endears himself, and offers to gain his master a fortune, a kingdom, and the hand of a beautiful princess. All he asks in exchange is a pair of boots, to spare his feet, a stylish hat with a plume, a cape, and a sword fashioned out of bone.

    Since the cat presents him with a ring from the hand of the princess, the Miller considers it a fair deal, and sets about getting, by hook or by crook, whatever the cat desires.

    Throughout the course of the story, with his cunning and superior wits, the cat is able to deliver on everything he promises.

    We’ll heard selections from a 2004 recording on the Columna Musica label, with Argentine mezzo-soprano Marisa Martins as Puss (an unusual take on the traditional “trouser role”) and tenor Antonio Comas as the Miller. The Symphony Orchestra of the Gran Teatre del Liceu is conducted by Antoni Ros Marba.

    Listen for charming cat-like touches in the strings and the use of piano throughout to emulate the decorative style of 18th century recitative.

    That’s “Fur Love and Valor” – highlights from Xavier Montsalvatge’s “Puss in Boots” – this Sunday night at 10:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Tavener’s Lost Opera to Premiere in 2024

    Tavener’s Lost Opera to Premiere in 2024

    “It quickly became clear this was a masterpiece that needed to be brought to life.”

    An unperformed opera by “holy minimalist” composer Sir John Tavener will receive its first performance, thanks in part to the advocacy of Prince Charles.

    Tavener, who rose to prominence with “The Whale,” released on The Beatles’ Apple Records label in 1970, converted to Russian Orthodoxy in 1977. Liturgical elements became increasingly important in his music, which frequently bears a mystical stamp. He achieved genuine popularity with meditative works like “The Protecting Veil,” for cello and orchestra.

    It was Benjamin Britten who convinced Covent Garden to commission Tavener’s first opera, “Thérèse,” which treats the story of Saint Thérèse de Lisieux. Tavener’s “Song for Athene” was performed at the funeral of Princess Diana. In 2000, he was awarded a knighthood for his services to music. Another one of his most frequently performed works – and most concise – is “The Lamb,” after the poem of William Blake.

    Later in life, Tavener sought to become more universalist and began to explore Hinduism and Islam. “Krishna” was completed in 2005. Plagued by ill health throughout his adulthood, he died in 2013 at the age of 69. His final opera is set for a 2024 premiere.

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/apr/08/john-taveners-magical-last-opera-to-be-staged-for-first-time-prince-charles-krishna


    Tavener’s “Song of the Angel”

    “The Lamb”

    “The Protecting Veil”

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