FT on the Met’s Carmen: They sang and grappled, but there was no desire
OperaFollowing on from Zach Woolfe’s demolition in the New York Times, George Grella had a bad night for the Financial Times:
… The charismatic tenor Piotr Beczala is Don José for this production, but illness kept him out of opening night. His replacement was Rafael Davila, a romantic tenor with substantial experience in both the role and at the Met. His singing was strong and sophisticated, but with likely insufficient rehearsal there wasn’t much chemistry between him and Akhmetshina. They sang and grappled with each other, but there was no desire…
…. The performance had a slow start. Act one was flat overall. Conductor Daniele Rustioni led a full-bodied Prelude, but the playing that followed felt too polite. Akhmetshina’s “L’amour est un oiseau rebelle” was smooth and full of polished detail, pleasant when it should be enticing, and Carmen must be enticing.
There is a slightly more upbeat review in the Washington Post: On every other front, this was a “Carmen” marked (and, at times, marred) by its many tweaks. The resetting of the story in a contemporary context could as easily be seen as an obscene indulgence of American violence or an equally obscene reflection of an ongoing (and largely unseen) crisis of abusive conditions for migrant laborers. Cracknell appears to favor the latter.
Don’t all rush at once.
George Grella’s writing had a bad night/day too.
That happens sometimes with him.
All the coverage of the Met’s leaders, productions, artistic values (what values??! It’s just a worn-out behemoth best left to die a slow death, amirite?), is negative on this blog. I’ve been reading SD for about 12 years and have to see any positive coverage at all. I’m curious, what’s in it for you, Norman? Is it that the New York Times hired Tommassini instead of you as chief music critic back in the day?
I’m pretty indifferent to your comment, but kudos to NL for allowing your snarky final sentence through the net.
Wow he let your comment slip through. Bravo!
An alternative view here https://newyorkclassicalreview.com/
Horrible production.
Trash opera.
Whenever the curtain opens on a classic opera and you see a car or a truck, you know the production is going to be a director’s ego/mess.
Heidi Waleson’s Wall Street Journal review also mentions Aigul Akhmetshina’s “low energy, lacking the character’s magnetism and seeming more acted upon than acting”, pans the settings, and has few good words for the orchestra as well. https://www.wsj.com/arts-culture/theater/carmen-review-metropolitan-opera-bizet-carrie-cracknell-000779e2
Peter made the colossal mistake of not hiring the magnificent Rihab Chaieb in the title role. She would have set the stage on fire and made that horrible production look better than it deserved.