The Telegraph reports that 100 complaints have been received after the ROH apologised in advance for sex and violence in its forthcoming production of Lucia di Lammermoor.

Of these, 40 demanded their money back.

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This is starting to look like a self-inflicted wound, a new twist on Donizetti’s plot.

The Royal Opera House has broken out on blushes after its apology for sex in Lucia has been met with derision.

The latest howl comes from the normally restrained Fiona Maddocks:

Never apologise for art. Art entertains and delights. It also shocks us into awareness. It shows us aspects of life we may prefer to turn away from. If you are seriously sensitive, enquire ahead. Admittedly, that is not so easy: usually when you ring a theatre, you get an automated phone system or a “Sorry mate, haven’t the faintest”. But maybe live theatre is not for you. Test yourself with Sarah Kane’s Cleansed at the National.

The world of “If you have been affected by any of these issues … ” has gone mad. We’ve all been affected by some, most or all of them. A friend took an opera novice to Puccini’s Il Trittico. Halfway through, it struck her that two of the operas involve the loss of a child. Her companion had suffered that fate. My friend felt upset and appalled. Her friend took it in her stride. Life is made all the more bearable and comprehensible by art. It unites us. That’s why opera, or any art form, speaks to us so directly.

Read on here.

What next – a public petition for the ROH to withdraw its apology?

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H/t to the best orchestral PR team in America.

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Not sure about that middle coat button, Gustavo.

The young Polish bass Jacek Janiszewski, 47, has undergone surgery for a brain tumor. The operation was successful, but the convalescence is taking longer than expected and the costs are mounting.

The international mezzo-soprano Agnes Zwierko tells Slipped Disc:

Jacek Janiszewski

‘In 2014, Jacek began to have hearing problems.

‘A fast-growing brain tumour was discovered and he underwent surgery by the best possible surgeon in December 2014. He emerged with three nerves, responsible for the working of one of the vocal cords, weakened.

‘Jacek could not speak at all. We met in January and February in Berlin, during performances of Traviata with Kurzak. He was taken under the care by a renowned specialist with Polish roots. At first, he didn’t speak, he made noise. Jacek needed to have rehabilitation. We met again this January when he visited me in Warsaw. He speaks much better now and you can hear his beautiful voice now, but no way can he sing … and the financial burden is much higher than supposed.

‘If you can, please help! Every Euro counts.’

Account: Bank: BGŻ BNP IBAN: EUR 97 2030 0045 3110 0000 0034 6790 BIC/SWIFT: GOPZPLPW

We have received the following account from a busy European opera singer.

Last week, along with 100 or so other singers, I spent upwards of 800 euros to fly to Malta for an audition for The Rake’s Progress at Teatru Manuel.  Not a big house by any means but a nice festival to do and they attract some high level artists from all over Europe, which is astounding given the size of the place. This was the second time I have been out there to audition.

It became apparent this week that none of my colleagues had been cast. This was odd as several have performed the roles multiple times on A stages.

Today, we found out through a colleague close to the house that they have cancelled the production altogether due to “unforeseen circumstances”.  All WE received was an email saying “sorry not this time”.

There has been no explanation or apology.  Almost all the singers paid over 600 euros for nothing.

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In these dim days when no major conductor is label-exclusive, the new music director of the Helsinki Phil has landed a four-disc deal.

She’ll be the envy of many maestros.

Report here.

 

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A diehard Chelsea fan, Opera Holland Park’s director Michael Volpe has been trying to interest his old Shed mates in a night of Traviata.

‘Nah, that’s for mugs,’ says one of them.

So he sneaks them into rehearsal. Then they go for some bubbly in the Floral Hall.

Watch.

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Glyndebourne announcement:

Robin Ticciati has withdrawn from the 2016 Glyndebourne Festival revival of Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in order to recover from surgery for a herniated disc.

Ticcati, Glyndebourne’s Music Director since 2014, suffered a herniated disc in February and recently underwent successful surgery.

Robin Ticciati said: “I’m incredibly disappointed to have to withdraw from what would have been my first ever Wagner opera. I was so looking forward to being reunited with David McVicar for the production and would like to wish the company all the best as they start rehearsals. It is my great wish to continue with my second engagement at this summer’s Festival, Béatrice et Bénédict; I’ve been advised that this is a realistic prospect and my attention is focused on achieving a swift recovery to fulfil this.”

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The incoming music director of the London Symphony Orchestra has posted a tribute on its website to the composer, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, who died this week. Sir Simon premiered and recorded Max’s first symphony – his commercial record debut – and is passionately devoted to his tenth and last, which received its premiere from the LSO. He writes, inter alia:

 

 

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Personally he was a hero for me from childhood onwards; as a young teen my parents used to curse him, as I had read that he loved purple and I was therefore unwilling to wear any other colour. Some of the first music I conducted were his chamber pieces: Seven in Nomine and Antichrist. When the Philharmonia asked me to premiere his first symphony in 1978, I felt as though all my Christmases had arrived at once, and I will never forget the thrill of sitting down in his publisher’s office and reading through the score, feeling the visceral power leaping out of the page. His thank you present was typically thoughtful; ‘Simon’, he said, ‘I think your life will be improved by a taste for good wine. I will send you 24 half bottles, 12 pairs of my favourite wines, and you can see what appeals to you. Don’t forget what you are tasting!’  This desire to share pleasure and knowledge was also maybe the key to his music, so often written for friends, or with specific people in mind.  His political activity too was always designed to remind people that music was for everyone and could never be taken for granted – a view he promulgated with passion and sometimes acid wit. He kept his pixie sparkle to the end, and the unwavering intensity of his eyes will remain forever with all of us who knew and loved him.

 

The LSO have posted a further tribute here.

Peter Donohoe: Max was so extreme he made young Prokofiev seem mild.

A 45-year memoir by the pianist Peter Donohoe.

Peter Donohoe - English pianist, May 1993.

Sir Peter Maxwell Davies emerged from that great era that followed World War Two – albeit not immediately – when a new generation for around 40 years – up until circa 1979 – grew up to question everything, when fear of the future expressed by artists and musicians was even greater than it had been between the wars, and when the power to shock and rebel using the resources that became available at the time eventually extended to film, radio, TV, pop (later, ‘rock’) music, and the classical music avant-guard. Max represented that generation so well that he became almost the ‘classical music’ equivalent of the ‘shocking’ characters of Mick Jagger. 

I first encountered him when he brought The Pierrot Players to a venue situated next door to my school – Chetham’s in Manchester – circa 1970. How the concert came about I know not – perhaps part of an Arts Council Contemporary Music Network that included a booking at the Manchester Teacher Training College, situated immediately next to the school at that time.

Max’s own music, as far as I remember, comprised most, if not all, the program (memory somewhat fails me), and included Eight Songs for a Mad King and his ‘realisation’ of Purcell’s Fantasia and Two Pavans. The concert had a profound effect on me, as the dramatic effect of everything about the music and the persona he projected at that time was so extreme; it would have been shocking beyond words to the majority of a music school steeped in pre-WW1 classical music, had many others attended it – one member of the music staff and her future husband plus three pupils, myself included, went.

His personality at that time – perceived by me from afar as I was too shy to actually speak with him – was that of an extreme ‘enfant terrible’ – one so extreme that he made the young Prokofiev seem like nothing by comparison, with very disturbing intense, intimidating eyes and wild curly hair, a very angry anti-establishment point of view about many things outside the music world, and a determination to shake up and attack the complacency of the older generation regarding music itself. I identified with the persona he projected easily at the time, despite our age difference.

My next live experience of him was at the 1974 Dartington Summer School. The retired Controller of Music for The Proms, Sir William Glock, a great champion of Maxwell Davies amongst many others, was the then director of Dartington, and he was ultimately succeeded by PMD. [It was rumoured that he had insisted on bringing a coffin with him to sleep in, as a protest against the hard beds provided at Dartington, but this may have been a Chinese whisper – as tend to circulate around shocking characters.]

That year Max’s chamber group – by then renamed ‘The Fires of London’ – visited for one concert, whilst Max himself stayed for the whole period, lecturing in composition. I can remember a reference to Chopin’s Ballade No 4 that revealed open admiration during one of his lectures. I mention this because it has always been a pillar of my own approach to Twentieth Century music that its composers, almost without exception, realised the degree to which they stemmed from the past; although sometimes in their youth they posed as if to reject the universally accepted great composers, when they grew up they accepted and embraced the very music they had previously appeared to stand against. This was in my experience the first time a revolutionary composer of our time had stated it openly, breaking my impression of the then often maintained ghettoisation of all styles and periods, although I now realise that it had been obvious for decades regarding virtually all of them. [I do hope those of the Twenty-First Century will be seen to be so humble in retrospect….]

Apart from the stunningly shocking aspect of the performance – this time I believe including Miss Donnithorne’s Maggot – he delivered a pre-concert talk in which, amongst other things, he talked about his recent relocation to Orkney, where he told us that it was so quiet that he could hear the muscin his hand moving – ever the dramatist, the thought-provoker, and in his own way slightly naïve. His devotion to Orkney did not however define him as a recluse; he founded his own festival – the Festival of St Magnus – he became involved as resident composer and guest conductor in several places, and maintained two apartments; one in central Edinburgh and one in Kings Cross, London [perhaps my notion that he was naïve was naïve…..] He was heavily involved in an extraordinary variety of projects all over the world, too numerous to mention here, as well as continuing to write music prolifically.

Everything about him seemed provocative and extreme, and I so happily followed him from afar as I felt much the same at the time. His life in Orkney, along with growing older, changed him so much that he became a very approachable and likeable man, albeit with very strong political views and a very firm and genuine commitment to education and the value of music therein. He did in no way ever allow his angry views as a young man to become diluted by his own success and ‘maturity’; anyone who suggests that he did so by accepting a knighthood and the post of Master of the Queen’s Music is missing the point of those honours entirely.

His series of ‘Strathclyde Concertos’ – were dedicated to and first performed as he wrote them by the Scottish Chamber Orchestra conducted by the composer himself. Five of these first performances were coupled by a visionary SCO management, not only with a classical orchestral work also conducted by PMD, but also a Beethoven Piano Concerto played and directed by myself. This was a very good way of attracting an audience to new music, of making a very fine contemporary composer – who had made Scotland his home and the inspiration for so much of his music – very much part of the community, and associating that often still very extreme composer with universally accepted popular and traditional repertoire. The works’ connections were very apparent from hearing them side by side, and the programs were constructed with great integrity.

This series was not only performed in Edinburgh – the orchestra’s home – but also in Glasgow, Aberdeen and Dundee. Travelling by road to the dates outside Edinburgh gave me the opportunity to get to know Max a great deal better, and he was as charming a man as I had ever met.

During those conversations I was particularly intrigued by his attitude towards Thomas Pitfield, who had been landed with the ‘mission impossible’ job of teaching Maxwell Davies, Harry Birtwistle, Sandy Goehr (my former university music professor), Elgar Howarth, John Ogdon and David Ellis at the Royal Manchester College of Music in the late 1950s. My interest in this stemmed from a) what I had gathered in the interim that all of them had rather cruelly rejected Pitfield as old-fashioned and of the ‘Cow-Looking-Over-A-Farmyard-Gate’ school of British composition [very unfair, as, although Pitfield did owe a lot to Delius in his style – and his students listed above definitely did not – he also had an original voice of his own, was a very nice man with immense personal interest in his students, and had many talents as well as musical ones] b) that I, myself, had been a composition student of TP around 20 years later – not a good one – and c) [Here, I may be stepping over the boundary and into the firing line of several people who know a lot more about this than I do] some of PMD’s later music reflected to my ears many of the traits of Thomas B. Pitfield in a way that perhaps he never realised himself.

My own excursions into his music have not, sadly, been extensive; I do not pretend to be a huge fan of his piano music, although I did tour his post-Schönbergian Five Pieces Op 2 extensively in 1983. However, I always admired many of his orchestral and chamber works; conducting Eight Songs for a Mad King and A Mirror of Whitening Light with BCMG in 1989 was in the event an extraordinary learning curve with regard to how to rehearse with musicians who were under such consistent, relentless strain as they are for virtually the whole of both pieces. Maxwell Davies – like his wonderful older contemporary Sir Michael Tippett – never felt the need to make his musicians’ job comfortable.

The last time we met, Max conducted Ravel’s Left Hand Concerto in his own 60th Birthday celebration concert with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. It was chosen as it was said at the time that it was Max’s favourite piece of music from earlier times. [As it is deemed to reflect Ravel’s own dark feelings about the future during the post-WW1 years so intensely, it seems very appropriate when remembering those of Max’s earlier works of the post-WW2 era, but in addition it is also one of the most extraordinary works of the Twentieth Century on all levels – other than length.]

It was my own first ever performance of this work, and my memory failed me at one point – managing to come in one bar early at the beginning of the central section. How they did it I will never know, but Max and the orchestra simply jumped a bar unanimously, and the mistake was completely undetected by almost anyone who was not playing – something which has rendered it necessary for certain members to remind me of every time I go near the orchestra by singing a series of seven descending quavers in 6/8 time at me. Conducting was not really PMD’s forte, but the performances he gave of music by other composers as well as his works were still excellent as a result of musicians’ admiration for his music and liking for the man.

There were many stories about his life away from composing music, some of which – like the one regarding the coffin at Dartington – may have been exaggerated. There was something about his having put his relationship with the Royal Family at risk by supposedly eating swan and chips or swan terrine or some such [apparently eating swan is against British law.]

Some, however, were not funny at all, including a story of an alleged major swindle perpetrated by one of his administrators with regard to his royalties.

It was with horror that we learned of his leukaemia – the disease that has now finally killed him. The music world has lost a splendid visionary composer whose works absolutely reflect the ethos of the era that spawned him, musicians have lost a fascinating and thought-provoking colleague, and the world has lost a very fine man who really did make a difference.

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photo (c) Suzie Maeder/LebrechtMA

Every year before Easter, John Nelson conducts one of Bach’s big oratorios in Chicago.

Not this year.

John came down with pneumonia.

His assistant Delta David Gier bravely stepped in.

Sympathetic review here.

john nelson

We reported yesterday that the Canadian conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin had cancelled a high-profile festival date with the Berlin Philharmonic due to what was described as ‘a short-term condition’ that required medical treatment.

The Philadelphia Orchestra have now let it be known that Yannick was taken to hospital following Sunday’s performance of Mahler’s eighth symphony and underwent surgery on Monday for an epigastric hernia.

He will be out for 3-4 weeks.

We wish him better.

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