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Last night I saw Monteverdi's opera, L'Orfeo (1607), at the Moore Theater with carl, Scott, and Scott's friend, Amy. It was performed by Ensemble La Venexiana, although I'm unclear if that's just the musicians or if it includes the singers too. Maybe it includes everybody but the guy who sang Orfeo, Mirko Cristiano Guadagnini. La Venexiana won a Gramaphone award for Best Baroque Vocal Performance for their recording of L'Orfeo last year.

The musical performances were terrific. It was a period instrument performance, with various interesting instruments such as theorbo, sackbut (trombone), regal (a type of keyboard instrument), and cornet, along with harpsichord, harp, recorder, violin, viola, cello, and double bass (called violone in the program notes). The singers were great too. The costuming and staging, however, were a bit suspect. It was modern dress, and the half-hearted attempts to do modern dance moves here and there looked just plain ridiculous. There was coat rack on wheels that served as a multi-purpose prop, but never made much sense in any guise. Singers moving around the stage kept almost running into the harp. Some of the costumes and make-up in the Hades sequence were more interesting, especially Hades/Pluto himself in all white clothes and make-up, but there was a character called Hope (who had to be abandoned at the gates of hell in a painfully obvious reference to Dante that seems to have been in the libretto) who was dressed in thigh high '60s go-go boots and a silver bob wig that, again ... well, words fail me. WTF OMG ETC.

Still, the music was beautiful. I was particularly fond of an aria that Orfeo sings to try to persuade Charon to take him across the river into Hades, where his lines were answered by echoing pairs of instruments, first violins, then cornetti, then the harpist. Just gorgeous and haunting. This is considered one of the first operas ever, and it was interesting from that point of view too. Lots of telling without showing (for example, Eurydice dies off-stage and we are told about it by a friend who was with her), lots of fairly static poetry in praise of nature or in lamentation of cruel fate. In fact, I think the most common word in the libretto was "crudele," or maybe that's just one of those opera words I've come to recognize.

All in all, a lot of fun, despite horrifically uncomfortable seating in the Moore's balcony. Another Monteverdi opera is upcoming, about Ulysses, but it's in the middle of March when I will be consumed by Corflu.

Date: 2009-02-07 06:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alces2.livejournal.com
I'd love to go to the opera but P has, I think, absolutely no interest in it. My only problem is the possible need to dress up beyond jeans and a t-shirt, well corduroys and a polo shirt? We do have tickets to see Cecilia Bartoli in Berkeley. I really want to see her but must investigate whether I will have to dress up for that.

Date: 2009-02-07 07:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] randy-byers.livejournal.com
In Seattle it's pretty much come as you are, although people do dress up too. Last night I was wearing black jeans, a button down shirt (which I'd worn to work), and a high-necked sweatshirt thingie. Others in my group were wearing jeans and t-shirts, as I recall. Other in the crowd were wearing fancy black dresses or suits. There were a couple of old gents near us who were looking quite natty with those old-fashioned hats with the small feathers in the band.

Cecilia Bartoli has a beautiful voice. I used to have a CD of her arias, or hm, maybe I just borrowed it from someone, because I don't have it anymore.

Date: 2009-02-07 09:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alces2.livejournal.com
Yes she has a lovely voice. Also she is supposed to be a very nice person. I have 6 CDs by her I believe. Kathleen Battle also has a nice voice but after a few years I started hearing that she wasn't being so nice.

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