With another chance to hear mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung -- after a volcanic Judith in the National Symphony Orchestra's performance of Bartók's Duke Bluebeard's Castle -- that shortcoming was easy to overlook. This was DeYoung's debut as Dalila, and she brought a luscious, seductive tone to the role, purring her way through the Act I aria "Printemps qui commence," and producing a soaring tone covering the full compass from high G down to low B♭ in the big cadenza moment of "Amour! viens aider ma faiblesse." The richness of sound made the slow pieces like "Mon cœur s'ouvre à ta voix" delightfully round, buttery, sultry, and the high B♭ near the end of the second act ("Lâche!) was like a lightning bolt. DeYoung was well matched by the High Priest of bass-baritone Greer Grimsley, last heard as the best part of a Santa Fe Salome in 2006. Grimsley sang with a rousing snarl, the tone slightly nasal but with an intense edge, making his duets with Dalila the most exciting moments of the evening. Tenor Frank Porretta, stepping in for an indisposed Brandon Jovanovich, sang honorably if without much to recommend the performance beyond having made it through it. As in his undistinguished appearances in recent productions at Washington National Opera -- Un Ballo in Maschera in 2010, Tosca last fall -- Porretta started off fairly strong, struggled audibly through the second act, and revived a bit, at least on the big notes like the final high B♭, of the third. The intonation was not always good, and a shouted kind of vocal production produced took quite a toll on his voice.
Anne Midgette, Opera review: ‘Samson et Dalila,’ by the Washington Concert Opera (Washington Post, May 15) |
The two operas on the next season of Washington Concert Opera will be Bellini's La Sonnambula (September 16, 2012) and Donizetti's Maria Stuarda (April 7, 2013), at George Washington University's Lisner Auditorium.
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