Metropolitan Opera http://tpr.org en Wagner's Anniversary And The End Of The World In 'Gotterdammerung' http://tpr.org/post/wagners-anniversary-and-end-world-gotterdammerung <p>The 2012-13 opera season has come and almost gone. For whatever wonders summer may hold, the Met Opera season of broadcasts closes this weekend with the living end, Richard Wagner's <em>"G</em><i>ö</i><em>tterd</em><i>ä</i><em>mmerung</em><em>."</em></p><p>In a staggering marathon of recapitulations, developments, plot changes and reversals, and a grand procession of leitmotivs that ignite a conflagration that ends the opera, the gods and the world are reborn in the cleansing fires of the overflowing Rhine.</p><p>But how does it all happen?</p> Wed, 08 May 2013 19:23:53 +0000 Ron Moore 11032 at http://tpr.org Wagner's Anniversary And The End Of The World In 'Gotterdammerung' Rare Met Return For Poulenc's "Dialogues Des Carmelites" http://tpr.org/post/rare-met-return-poulencs-dialogues-des-carmelites <p>I have recently been reading about the post World War II international attempts to restore Europe, both materially and spiritually.</p><p>This struggle for renewal after suffering and oppression is given a musical shape in Francis Poulenc's, <em>"Dialogues des Carmélites</em>." Though premiered in 1956, its origins are in the period directly after the war in 1947-49.</p> Thu, 02 May 2013 17:08:21 +0000 Ron Moore 10700 at http://tpr.org Rare Met Return For Poulenc's "Dialogues Des Carmelites" 'Giulio Cesare' And The Return Of George Frederick Handel http://tpr.org/post/giulio-cesare-and-return-george-frederick-handel <p>If you're older than thirty you may know something of the unlikely and extremely rare probability of a baroque opera being performed at the Metropolitan Opera. This was sometime in the late eighties, but in musical terms seems a lifetime ago.</p><p>To quote Inspector Morse, the opera loving sleuth, "I was horrified to discover that the tickets I had received for Wagner were in fact for Handel!"</p><p>I can think of no opera composer of the first rank who has undergone so radical a transformation of fortune as Handel.</p> Thu, 25 Apr 2013 18:15:54 +0000 Ron Moore 10285 at http://tpr.org 'Giulio Cesare' And The Return Of George Frederick Handel Richard Wagner's "Siegfried," The World's Last Hope http://tpr.org/post/richard-wagners-siegfried-worlds-last-hope <p>In <em>"Siegfried"</em> we return to the origins of Wagner's conception of "The Ring." Before there was an explanation and an event, a plot before a back story.</p><p>These various sketches, fragments and early drafts were separated by a quarter of century from the opera's first performance (1851-1876).<br><br>We recreate the fairytale atmosphere of <em>"Das Rheingold"</em> with a dwarf, a dragon, giants, a singing bird and a boy so innocent he has "never" seen a girl.</p> Fri, 19 Apr 2013 19:42:37 +0000 Ron Moore 9943 at http://tpr.org Richard Wagner's "Siegfried," The World's Last Hope Video: The Most Famous Horse Ride In All Music In Wagner's 'Die Walkure' http://tpr.org/post/video-most-famous-horse-ride-all-music-wagners-die-walkure <p>The Norse god Wotan - like his counterparts in the south, Zeus and Jupiter - got around as they say. He wasn't named "all-father" for nothing. The second opera of Richard Wagner's Ring cycle is about three of his offspring.</p><p>First, the legitimate daughter Brünnhilde, who is a Valkyrie -a collector of the heroic dead slain in battle - and after whom this opera is named. Then there are the twins Siegmund and Sieglende, their mother is Erda - mother earth.</p> Fri, 12 Apr 2013 19:33:20 +0000 Ron Moore 9560 at http://tpr.org Video: The Most Famous Horse Ride In All Music In Wagner's 'Die Walkure' At Home With The Gods In The First Part Of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, "Das Rheingold" http://tpr.org/post/home-gods-first-part-wagner-s-ring-cycle-das-rheingold <p>After a decades-long struggle, the patience and slavish commitment of numberless friends, an inspiration that can truly be called superhuman, and a streak of luck that beggars the imagination, Richard Wagner finally finished his epic "Ring."</p><p>Despite the luminaries in attendance over the years - from Hugo Wolf and a who’s who of European royalty, to Tchaikovsky, Bernard Shaw and others - it could never pay its way.</p> Fri, 05 Apr 2013 19:21:44 +0000 Ron Moore 9169 at http://tpr.org At Home With The Gods In The First Part Of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, "Das Rheingold" Giuseppi Verdi's 'La Traviata,' The Opera Of Operas http://tpr.org/post/giuseppi-verdis-la-traviata-opera-operas <p>There are a handful of operas that define the genre; their time period irrelevant and their themes go to the very heart of the human condition.</p><p>We live with these creations daily without our knowing it and they are the very musical air we breath. They exist in the opera house, on the the concert stage (without scenery), in the recital hall (as excerpts, arranged for piano), in the elevator, on the radio, in the lightest cartoons and the darkest dramas - and yes, in the shower.</p> Thu, 28 Mar 2013 16:59:13 +0000 Ron Moore 8736 at http://tpr.org Giuseppi Verdi's 'La Traviata,' The Opera Of Operas The Joys Of Chaos With Giuseppe Verdi’s 'La Forza Del Destino' http://tpr.org/post/joys-chaos-giuseppe-verdi-s-la-forza-del-destino <p>Acting on a commission for <i>"La Forza del Destino</i>" from the Bolshoi Theatre in St. Petersburg, Verdi responded on a practical level by preparing for winter; it would premiere in late November.</p><p>He sent ahead Italian provisions - sausage, pasta and salami - acquired a very warm coat and commenced work.</p><p><strong>Masterpiece of chaos</strong></p> Thu, 21 Mar 2013 17:43:37 +0000 Ron Moore 8359 at http://tpr.org The Joys Of Chaos With Giuseppe Verdi’s 'La Forza Del Destino' Riccardo Zandonai’s 'Francesca da Rimini,' Live http://tpr.org/post/riccardo-zandonai-s-francesca-da-rimini-live <p>Few single cantos of poetry have ever given as much to the world as Dante’s Canto V from the Inferno and the brief telling at the close of the love, death and afterlife of Francesca da Rimini.</p><p>Beginning with Dante in 1308 among the painters, musicians, painters , playwrights inspired by the tale can be included: Mercadante, Leigh Hunt, Ingres, Rodin, Rossini, Rachmaninoff, Doré (whose illustrations are reprinted to this day), Foote and of course Tchaikovsky, whose tone poem has done much to popularize the theme .&nbsp;</p> Thu, 14 Mar 2013 17:03:26 +0000 Ron Moore 7978 at http://tpr.org Riccardo Zandonai’s 'Francesca da Rimini,' Live The Met Presents Verdi's Epic Masterpiece 'Don Carlo' http://tpr.org/post/met-presents-verdis-epic-masterpiece-don-carlo <p>Giuseppi Verdi's "Don Carlo" was a Behemoth, a lumbering monster. It featured variant openings, duets and trios and choruses to burn, ballet music that now only exists as a separate concert work, and most importantly, a great psychological/musical narrative frame -- the reason for all the elaboration and development.</p><p>What most of us know begins in a tomb in Spain and builds out an old and new subtext of European history, the battle of reactionary politics and the spirit of the Reformation. This background weaves this ideological struggle into a love story of great power.</p> Thu, 07 Mar 2013 15:25:57 +0000 Ron Moore 7591 at http://tpr.org The Met Presents Verdi's Epic Masterpiece 'Don Carlo'