Hanover State Opera has mounted a rare production of Hartmann's Simplicius Simplicissimus, reviewed by Shirley Apthorp (Financial Times, January 23): "Director Frank Hilbrich reads the developing depredations literally and lets us see their effects on the traumatised Simplicius. The boy is clad in a knitted baby suit, like an undressed doll, neutered and removed from the modern-dress world of scruffy and depraved adults. Yet Hilbrich lets this Pinocchio suffer emotions at all that he sees, turning his distanced pronouncements into personal utterances of pain."
J. S. Bach, Well-Tempered Clavier, Angela Hewitt, piano (re-released September 11, 2007) |
Young Canadian conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin will have a guest appearance with the National Symphony Orchestra this spring (April 10 to 12). Rian Evans assesses a recent appearance with the Birmingham Symphony (The Guardian, January 21): "It implied a struggle if not of faith then of conscience, and, while the adagio is usually seen as the composer's farewell to life, the effect was to challenge any overly simplistic perception of Bruckner's spiritual certainty. Nézet-Séguin's ability to inspire his players was evident enough - conducting without a score ensured unbroken eye-contact - and he rightly acknowledged the contribution of the CBSO's blazing brass section." Which young conductor will the National Symphony hire?
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