Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Boris Goudenow, Boston Early Music Festival

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Boris Goudenow, Boston Early Music Festival

    Boris Goudenow, Boston Early Music Festival
    By George Loomis

    FT
    June 17 2005 09:47

    Opera-goers often encounter familiar subjects in diverse operatic
    settings, but who would have thought a German composer would seize
    on the saga of Boris Godunov 160 years before Mussorgsky? This shows
    the resourcefulness of composers for Hamburg's Goosemarket theatre,
    a public opera house for which Johann Mattheson in around 1710 wrote
    his Boris Goudenow, an opera that was never performed.

    Long thought lost in the allied bombing of Hamburg, the score of
    Mattheson's Boris had in fact been relocated "for safe keeping". As
    with many musical treasures, however, the Red Army got there first. The
    score resurfaced in the 1990s in Yerevan, Armenia, and now the biennial
    Boston Early Music Festival gives its world premiere.

    The subject does offer an appealing twist, but Mattheson's Boris is
    largely a run-of-the mill baroque opera driven by scheming lovers and
    political intrigue. The most memorable scene comes when a chorus of
    old men and children implore Boris to accept the throne, repeating
    their entreaties to amusing effect each time the comic servant Bogda
    tries to silence them. You could almost think Mattheson was satirising
    Mussorgsky. But these Hamburg operas are curious works - throwbacks
    to older Venetian operas in their blatant audience appeal, with many
    short musical numbers in sound-bites and heavy, off-colour humour.

    Mattheson, better known as a theorist than a composer, wrote
    much engaging music for Boris, but composers such as Telemann and
    Reinhard Keiser managed Hamburg's peculiar requirements better. Lucy
    Graham and Nils Niemann mastermind the lively stage action and David
    Cockayne's sets have a hint of old-style Bolshoi opulence. The young
    Russian bass Vadim Kravers is impressive as Boris, though not yet
    ready for Mussorgsky's tsar. The other singers have the pleasant but
    lightish voices early music attracts; among the lovers, the soprano
    Nell Snaidas and the tenor Colin Balzer are especially good. Paul
    O'Dette and Stephen Stubbs oversee the musical direction with verve
    and scrupulous attention to detail.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X