Festival Focus Week 8

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YOUR WEEKLY CLASSICAL MUSIC GUIDE

Supplement to The Aspen Times

Don’t miss Fred Child and Performance Today! The country’s top classical radio show comes to the AMFS. Event starts at 8 pm. Monday, August 12 Harris Concert Hall (970) 925-9042 www.aspenmusicfestival.com

FESTIVAL FOCUS Monday, August 12, 2013

Vol 24, No 9

Final Sunday: Met Stars Sing Wagner, Verdi GRACE LYDEN

Festival Focus writer

German composer Richard Wagner (1813–1883) spent twenty-six years writing his monumental four-opera work, Der Ring des Nibelungen. He had a special theater constructed in Bayreuth, Germany, for the first complete production, and to this day, few singers are capable of performing the lead roles, which push the limits of the human voice. Most modern audiences know Wagner’s fifteen-hour musical saga as simply the Ring. The final concert of the Aspen Music Festival and School (AMFS) will celebrate the bicentennial of Wagner, as well as Italian opera composer Giuseppe Verdi (1813–1901), with excerpts from the Ring cycle and two celebrated Verdi operas, La forza del destino and Don Carlo. The concert starts at 4 pm this Sunday, August 18, in the Benedict Music Tent. AMFS Music Director Robert Spano, who will conduct the concert, says Wagner’s Ring cycle is one of the most important works in both orchestral and vocal repertoire. “The magnificence of Wagner’s music for the human voice is matched only by his kaleidoscopic and virtuosic writing for the orchestra,” Spano says. “Wagner’s contemporary, Giuseppe Verdi, is perhaps the only composer who could keep pace on this program, which promises to be a feast for the ear.” Asadour Santourian, AMFS vice president for artistic administration and artistic advisor, says the concert will present pivotal scenes from works by two of the most influential opera composers. “They helped evolve the nature of opera, Verdi from the Italian line and Wagner from the German line, and at the end of their lives, they had brought opera to a very interesting place, and a very similar place,” he says. “When the twentieth century began, composers picked up the leaf from them.” The Aspen Festival Orchestra will be joined by AMFS alumnus Eric Owens, bass-baritone, and Heidi Melton, soprano, who performed the roles of Alberich and Sieglinde to critical acclaim in the Metropolitan Opera’s most recent revival of the Ring. Owens studied conducting with the American Academy of Conducting at Aspen (AACA) and played oboe in the AACA Orchestra

PHOTO COURTESY OF PAUL SIROCHMAN

Aspen alumnus Eric Owens (above) will sing the role of Wotan in excerpts from Wagner’s Ring Cycle at the Festival’s final concert this Sunday, August 18.

the summer of 2010. Coincidentally, that same summer he learned the Ring role of Alberich, which catapulted him to his current fame. “The chief glory of this production is Eric Owens’s performance as Alberich,” wrote New Yorker critic Alex Ross after one of Owens’s performances at the Met. Anthony Tommasini, from the New York Times, wrote that Owens “proved an Alberich for the ages.” But when Owens comes to Aspen, he will be singing the role of Wotan—the King of the Gods. And Melton will not be singing Sieglinde, but Brünnhilde­—Wotan’s daughter. Both Alberich and Wotan are bass-baritone roles but Wotan has See FINAL SUNDAY, Festival Focus page 3

Monteverdi Opera to Close Season GRACE LYDEN

Festival Focus writer

Sometimes it’s just more fun to play the villain. In Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi’s (1567– 1643) groundbreaking opera, L’incoronazione di Poppea (The Coronation of Poppea), Poppea is an emperor’s mistress who uses sex, wit, and charm, as well as a Machiavellian disregard for anyone in her way, to become empress and rule alongside her lover, Nerone. The story, based on that of Roman Emperor Nero and his wife Poppaea, takes place in a twisted world where virtue is punished and immorality reigns victorious. “It’s one of the few operas where the immoral side wins,” says Edward Berkeley, director of the Aspen Opera Theater Center (AOTC). “Everyone in the opera is corrupt on some level. It’s about a very nasty, very political world, with Nero and Poppea as the centerpiece.” Rebecca Nathanson, an AOTC student who will play

the role of Poppea in the AOTC’s production of the opera later this week, says Poppea is “one of the coolest characters in the repertoire.” Despite the fact that Nathanson calls her character a “sociopath” (though she admits this might be a strong word), she says she is drawn to Poppea’s strong will and determination. “What I admire in her character is that she was extremely smart and extremely charming,” Nathanson says. “Maybe the way she achieved her ends in an absolute dimension seems amoral by our moral code, but she did what she had to do so that her voice could be heard.” The AOTC will present two productions of Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea this week, on August 15 and 17. Both performances will begin at 7 pm in the Wheeler Opera House, and Jane Glover, director of See POPPEA, Festival Focus page 3

PHOTO COURTESY OF REBECCA NATHANSON

Rebecca Nathanson (above) will play the title role in AOTC’s production of Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione di Poppea.

Final week of Music Festival! Have you been to the Tent yet? (970) 925-9042


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