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Orchestras
Tenor stops mid-concert in Birmingham to stop phone snappers
The tenor Ian Bostridge shocked Symphony Hall Birmingham…
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Orchestras
Breaking: Yannick takes another job
He is already music director of the Metropolitan…
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Orchestras
Just in: Kirill cancels Vienna Phil
The Berlin Philharmonic chief conductor Kirill Petrenko has…
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Orchestras
Simon Rattle: ‘I’ve got the only homeless top orchestra’
The conductor continues his agitation for a new…
The scene is Holland Park Opera Lirica at the end of May 1991 – the first opera of the summer season. The last act of Puccini’s Madama Butterfly and Cio-Cio San is singing the immortal ‘Un Bel Di’ [One Fine Day] – except – outside the open air theatre is raging a howling storm with the rain falling in bucketloads to such an extent that it bypasses the gutters on the roof and jets horizontally out beyond the auditorium in continuous sheets. All this while our intrepid soloist is sweetly singing her poignant refrain – to the accompaniment of hundreds of gallons of descending rainwater.
Singing like that (Cherubino) can only be improved by a car horn.
Reminiscent of a summer outdoor opera on the Thames riverbank years ago when Butterfly realized she’d committed hari-kari too soon, getting back up to sing her final phrases.