November in Vienna

November isn’t as busy a month as October was, but there are some cool events to look forward to, particularly if you are fond of German or Austrian sopranos, including three great artists and one really crazy one (which of the above ladies do you think I mean?).

Our new opera productions number only two but they’re both doozies.  Alcina will be the Staatsoper’s first-ever Baroque opera, and for the first time a visiting orchestra will occupy the pit.  The group is Marc Minkowski’s historically informed Les Musiciens de Louvre, Adrian Noble will direct and the cast includes magnificent Anja Harteros (above second from left) in the title role.  The concept sounds complicated.  It’s about 18th-century socialite/Duchess of Devonshire Georgiana Cavendish.  ???, right? I will have more on this shortly.  The prima is on November 14.

The second production is the Theater an der Wien’s La finta giardiniera, directed by ever-surprising David Alden and conducted by Mozart master René Jacobs.  The orchestra is the (also HIP) Freiburger Barockorchester and the cast includes Alexandrina Pendatchanska, Sophie Karthäuser, and Topi Lehtipuu.  I don’t know what the concept is, but would be shocked if there weren’t one.   It premieres on November 12.  Sign me up for opening night of both of these, I can’t wait.

But wait, there’s more!

The Philharmoniker is on tour for most of this month, which makes the Staatsoper program rather thin and heavy on pedestrian rep staples, and their own concerts nearly non-existent.  Don’t be surprised if the pit in those non-Alcina performances sounds a little less glamorous than usual (though if you think you usually get pure Philharmoniker at the Staatsoper, you are deluded).  Potential repertory highlights include Zauberflöte with Genia Kühmeier (above left) and Kwangchul Youn, led by Ivor Bolton; Rigoletto with Hvorostovsky, Vargas, and Ciofi; and, at the very end of the month, the return of last season’s smash atonal hit Medea, starring Marlis Petersen. 

You can still get stranded on an Isola disabitata with the KammerOper, and the Volksoper promises 19th-century operettic preciousness with Zeller’s Der Vogelhändler.  Also, an eclectic group conducted by Andreas Stoehr will be performing Meyerbeer’s forgotten Emma di Resburgo in concert at the Konzerthaus and considering that the cast includes crazytown Simone Kermes (above second from right) I’m going to try to go.

Our symphonic highlight of the month is doubtlessly Christian Thielemann leading the Philharmoniker in Beethoven (Symphonies 4 and 5, November 20, Musikverein).  I say this partly because I have never seen Thielemann live and am excited to change this.  But on November 7 we also have the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra with a program of Beethoven, Janacek, and Tchaik, in theory led by ailing Mariss Jansons (November 7, Musikverein, keep your fingers crossed).  Also interesting: Robin Ticciati leads the Wiener Symphoniker in A Child of Our Time at the Konzerthaus (15, 17 November), and a rare appearance by the Glazunov Saxophone Concerto, also performed by the Symphoniker (Musikverein, 10-12 November, with the Symphonie fantastique).

Recitals include Elisabeth Leonskaja’s murderous program of the three last Schubert piano sonatas at the Konzerthaus (8 November), Mark Padmore and Till Fellner in Die schöne Müllerin (13 November, Theater an der Wien), and Paul Badura-Skoda in an all-Chopin program (18 November, Musikverein).  Rolando Villazón and Bryn Terfel have concerts at the Konzerthaus if you’re into that kind of thing (18 November).  Paul Lewis and the Leopold String Trio have an interesting program of Beethoven, Krása, and Dohanyí (9 November, Musikverein).  And finally, Juliane Banse (above right) will be giving a Liszt/Marx/Loewe/Britten Liederabend at the Konzerthaus, and I liked her far too much in Cardillac to miss it (November 26).

Wiener Staatsoper
Il Barbiere di Siviglia (2, 4 November) c: Spinosi, d: Rennert*. Bruns, Hulcup, Eröd.
Die Zauberflöte (3, 6 November) c: Bolton, d: Marelli.  Kühmeier, Vecchione, Ernst, Werba, Youn
Madama Butterfly (8, 11, 15 November) c: Lange, d: Gielen*.  Vassileva, Shicoff, Caria.
Tosca (12 November) c: Halász, d: Wallmann*. Crider, Berti, Struckmann.
NP Alcina (14, 17, 20, 23, 26 November)  c: Minkowski d: Noble.  Harteros, Kasarova, Cangemi, Hammarström)
Rigoletto (16, 19, 22, 25, 28 November) c: Güttler d: Sequi*. Vargas, Hvorostovsky, Ciofi
Manon Lescaut (27, 29 November, continues December) c: Auguin d: Carsen.  Guryakova, Cura
Medea (30 November, continues December) c: Boder d: Marelli.  Petersen, Kulman, Eröd, Houtzeel, Cencic
*R.O.P. (Really Old Production)

Staatsoper Ballet
Juwellen der Neuen Welt (Staatsoper, 5, 7, 10, 13, 18, 21 November)
NP Marie Antoinette (Volksoper, 20, 23 November, continues in December) choreography by Patrick de Bana after Jaime Millás

KammerOper
L’isola disabitata (2, 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 16 November)

Konzerthaus

Musikverein

Volksoper (see rotating casts here)
NP Rusalka (1, 9, 11, 16, 24 November) (already reviewed here)
Der Vogelhändler (2, 7, 13 November)
Lehár, Straus & Stolz concert (4, 19 November)
Die Entführung aus dem Serail (5, 10, 14, 18, 21, 26 November)
Hello, Dolly! (6, 12, 22 November)
Häuptling Abendwind (15, 17 November)
Das Land des Lächelns (25 November)
Die Fledermaus (27 November)
NP Children’s Opera Antonia und der Reißteufel (28 November)

Next up: I’m hoping to catch the Zauberflöte tomorrow.

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Verdi Requiem at the Musikverein: Halloween special

In a rare display of programming wit from the Musikverein, this year you can hear the Verdi Requiem on two fitting dates: Halloween and All Saints’ Day.  (Theologically speaking All Souls’ Day on Tuesday would probably have been most appropriate, but I guess the schedule didn’t allow for that.)  But Daniele Gatti’s unshakable control in last night’s performance didn’t allow for anything spooky.  It was an epic cathedral of a performance, but not a thrills and chills one.

This year for Halloween I went as a Catholic.

Verdi, Requiem.  Musikverein, 31/10/10.  Orchestre Nationale de France and Singverein der Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien conducted by Daniele Gatti with soloists Krassimira Stoyanova, Marie-Nicole Lemieux, Francesco Meli, and Tomasz Konieczny

Daniele Gatti is a micromanager of a conductor, beating subdivisions and keeping a very careful eye on solo sections.  This wasn’t a very spontaneous performance and sometimes lacked momentum and excitement, but it was majestic, monumental, and mmm… awe-inspiring.  It was an interpretation of extremes, beginning almost imperceptibly softly (thanks, Musikverein acoustics!), broken up with exaggerated Luftpausen, and exploding into the louder sections.  Sometimes Gatti’s precision seemed counterproductive, as in the hesitant and oddly shaky fanfare beginning the Tuba mirum.  Tempos were slow with a running time of almost an hour and 35 minutes.  The most exaggerated slowness came in the Dies irae, here not a roller coaster but a monumental block, the wind lines emerging with unusual clarity.  The Orchestre Nationale de France sounded excellent and followed Gatti though all of his precisely planned changes of scenery–much more so than the excellent but enormous and not as subtle Musikverein chorus, which sometimes drowned the orchestra out.

The soloists didn’t blend very well, but since only two of them were the originally scheduled people I suppose you can’t really blame them (why do I have to write something like this for EVERY SINGLE THING that I see?).  Krassimira Stoyanova in the soprano part was the best match for Gatti’s style, singing with elegant control and reserved passion.  She never pushed and sometimes was drowned out by the chorus in the Libera me, but nailed the pppp high B-flat on “Requiem” and sounded generally fabulous.  Marie-Nicole Lemieux gave a more extroverted reading of the mezzo/alto part with a big voice that sounds like a real alto.  She has great low notes, but a very large vibrato.  Francesco Meli, substituting in the tenor part, has a nice Italianate timbre and fine phrasing, but sounded too lyric for this piece with occasionally strained tone and some tremulous piano singing.  Tomasz Koncieczny in the bass part was a very late replacement and sounded solid but not terribly coordinated with the others.

This concert will be repeated tonight.

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