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1876 – Mansions, Cadogan Square, Chelsea, London Architect: William Young Designed for Viscount Bury, William Young’s brand of picturesque and eclectic Queen Anne style was popular with the lan...

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A thrilling Lady, compelling Macbeth & powerful last-minute stand-in: Chelsea Opera Group celebrates its 75th anniversary with Verdi's Macbeth in the full Paris version --- Verdi: _Macbeth_ - Alexey Gusev, Mari Wyn Williams - Chelsea Opera Group (Photo: Matthew Johnson) Verdi:_Macbeth_ (1865); Alexey Gusev, Mari Wyn Williams, Simon Wilding, José de Eça, Jay Broadhurst, Grant Llewellyn, Chelsea Opera Group; Cadogan Hall Reviewed 30 November 2025 **Verdi's revised _Macbeth_ given in all completeness by a finely theatrical group of soloists, ably supported by chorus and orchestra, celebrating COG's 75th anniversary.** Having first performed Verdi's _Macbeth_ in 1984 (in the revised version), and then given Verdi's original 1847 version in 2008, Chelsea Opera Group celebrated their 75th anniversary on Sunday 30 November 2025 with a performance of the Verdi's revised 1865 version of _Macbeth_ , for once complete with the ballet music. Grant Llewellyn conducted with Alexey Gusev as Macbeth, Mari Wyn Williams as Lady Macbeth, Simon Wilding as Banquo, José de Eça as MacDuff and Jay Broadhurst as Malcolm. Or at least, that was the planned casting but on the night José de Eça was somewhat unwell and though he sang the part of MacDuff, the big Act Four aria was sung by Jay Broadhurst (who was otherwise singing Malcolm). Despite the work's popularity, _Macbeth_ retains hints of being one of Verdi's 'problem' operas. For a start, the jaunty music for the Witches does not sit with our current view of Shakespeare's play. Yet when I spoke to director Elijah Moshinsky in advance of his production of the 1847 version of the opera at the Buxton Festival in 2017, he had strong words to say about understanding the cultural background to the original [see my interview]. Add to this, Verdi's reworking of the piece for Paris in 1865 has provided it with some superb later Verdi, yet left the opera as something of a hybrid. --- Verdi: _Macbeth_ - Chelsea Opera Group (Photo: Matthew Johnson) I certainly retain a strong fondness for the 1847, but choosing the 1865 revision certainly provided a showcase for Chelsea Opera Group's orchestra and chorus, along with a fine group of soloists. Russian-British baritone Alexey Gusev sang the title role in Verdi's _Rigoletto_ with IF Opera this summer, having sung Enrico in Donizetti's _Lucia di Lammermoor_ with them last year. Welsh soprano Mari Wyn Williams sang Lady Macbeth this summer with West Green House Opera, having sung the role also with Mid Wales Opera. And we last caught Simon Wilding as Hunding in the London Opera Company's performance of Wagner's _Die Walküre_ at St John's Smith Square (as it was called then). Mari Wyn Williams's stage experience as Lady Macbeth really showed throughout the performance. Williams gave a fully three-dimensional picture of the Lady. There was an element of Bette Davis to her demeanour in the first two acts, combining glamour with relish for evil and a charisma that drew Alexey Gusev's Macbeth along with her. Williams has the power and the stamina for the role, and her account of Lady Macbeth's Act Two aria, 'La luce langue', Verdi's powerful 1867 replacement, showed this in spades. But, unlike many in this role, Williams also managed to bring power and accuracy to the passage-work in the role's other 1847-origin sections. The result was chilling and thrilling. Williams created a Lady Macbeth that we loved to hate. What made the first two acts in particular rather special was the way that Williams drew Gusev's Macbeth into her orbit so that the two formed a vivid couple of co-conspirators. Gusev has a flexible and wide-ranging baritone voice. It is, perhaps, somewhat too lovely an instrument for him to be an ideal Macbeth, lacking that extra edge needed. But Gusev's stage projection was compelling and despite being in a dinner suit standing on a strip of stage, he carried you away. In fact, both performers did so that the first two acts were gripping indeed. There was perhaps something slightly old-fashioned about Gusev's performance in the dramatic passages at the end of Act Two when Macbeth sees Banquo's ghost (with Simon Wilding actually on stage), but it still made for a vivid evening particularly when compared to William's steel-sharp coloratura in her drinking aria. The second two acts, in this version, are more varied. Williams gave a vividly theatrical account of the sleepwalking scene, seemingly off the book, as was much of her performance. And she had the range and control to give us a fine on-stage high note at the end. Gusev was less fortunate in that this version of the opera lacks his powerful, 1847 death aria. But Gusev brought fine intensity to what he did have. As Banquo (whether dead or alive), Simon Wilding loomed wonderfully, creating a strong impression that went beyond music. His voice, it has to be admitted, took a while to settle down and achieve focus, but this hardly mattered because this was such a strongly theatrical account of the role. One Wilding played with complete relish. José de Eça made a dutiful Macduff, but then shorn of the aria the part is rather a nonentity and I look forward to hearing de Eça back on form soon (he will be in Opera Holland Park's new production of Puccini's _La fanciulla del West_). Jay Broadhurst is studying at the Royal Northern College of Music and is supported by the Drapers' de Turckheim Scholarship. As far as singing Macduff's Act Four aria, Broadhurst simply erupted onto the stage, giving the recitative with thrilling gusto and then singing the aria with long phrases and compelling intensity. The music seemed to fit his dark-toned voice and it was unsurprising that the aria was in his repertoire. He brought the same sort of swagger to Macduff, particularly in the final scenes. Another Drapers' de Turckheim scholar is Robin Gruffudd Hughes, who recently completed his Master's Degree at Trinity Laban. Hughes made his cameo of the assassin suitably creepy and was a fine doctor, and I look forward to hearing him more. Another well-cast small role was Charlotte Richardson, a recent graduate from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, as the lady in waiting. Richardson proved to have a strong stage presence, even though her air-time was limited. Various solos were admirably taken by members of the chorus. Kevin Hollands was a servant and a clarion-voiced herald. Duncan Wilson, Derilyn Frusher and Stella Guardi were the convincing apparitions, all singing from the balcony. The soprano and altos of the chorus sang the Witches with great relish and not a little elan. They seemed to be enjoying themselves a little too much; however, and there was plenty of engaging bounce in their delivery, which made these witches sound like fun. The men were similarly strong in their solo moments, and all came together in the powerful 'Patria oppressa' chorus for the exiles at the opening of Act Four. --- Verdi: _Macbeth_ - Grant Llewellyn - Chelsea Opera Group (Photo: Matthew Johnson) The orchestra took time to find its form, and there were a few uncertainties in the prelude. But this version of the opera has plenty of orchestral interest, and the players clearly relished some of Verdi's acoustic effects for the eerie scenes, yet they also brought some suave moments to the extended ballet sequence that Verdi wrote for Paris. **Never miss out** on future posts by following us **The blog is free,** but I'd be delighted if you were to show your appreciation by buying me a coffee. _**Elsewhere on this**_**blog** * **Faster, higher, stronger:** composer Andrea Farri on Orchestrating Harmony for the Olympic Games Milano Cortina 2026 **-**guest posting**** * **Judith Weir, a new carol by Errollyn Wallen & music by younger composers: ** _The Advent Carol Service_ at St John's College - review * **Putting choral music at the centre of contemporary culture:** conductor George Parris on the Carice Singers' _An Ode to Our Planet_ - interview * **Style, engagement & joy: **Handel's _Partenope_ returns to ENO with a terrific young cast**-**opera review * **Delizie, contente:** The Bellot Ensemble explores love in all its forms in 17th century Italy for _Cupid's Ground Bass_ on FHR **-**record review * **This lively, engaging production drew us:** Opera North revives Phyllida Lloyd's 1993 production of Puccini's _La Bohème_**_-_**opera review * **From oratorio to dance drama:** Handel's _Susanna_ from Opera North & Phoenix Dance Theatre with Anna Dennis & James Hall - opera review * **Upstairs at Ronnie’s:** I chat to James Pearson & Lizzie Ball about the new regular classical nights at Ronnie Scott's new venue **-**interview**** * **Letter from Florida:** Let us take a stand together hand in hand, Hans Krasa's _Brundibar_ from Sarasota Opera - opera review * **Home**

A thrilling Lady, compelling Macbeth & powerful last-minute stand-in: Chelsea Opera Group celebrates its 75th anniversary with Verdi's Macbeth in the full Paris version Verdi: Macbeth - Ale...

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Style, enthusiasm & scholarship: Ian Page and The Mozartists explore Opera in 1775 --- Haydn: _L'incontro improvviso_ - Ava Dodd, Stephanie Hershaw, Chelsea Zurflüh, The Mozartists - _Opera in 1775 -_ Cadogan Hall _Opera in 1775_ : Tozzi, Fischietti, Mozart, Myslivecek, J.C. Bach, Haydn, Sacchini; Ava Dodd, Stephanie Hershaw, Chelsea Zurflüh, Hugo Brady, Sebastian Hill, The Mozartists, Ian Page; Cadogan Hall Reviewed 17 September 2025 **Opera by the 19-year-old Mozart alongside works that he heard and works by composers he admired in an engaging evening of young talent and learning worn lightly** It is 1775, and Mozart is turning 19. He is largely marooned in Salzburg where he works as a court musician for the Archbishop. His salary is low and opportunities for composing opera are limited, especially as the court theatre closed that year. But he and his father make one visit, to Munich, where Mozart fails, again, to get any sort of court appointment but his opera _La finta giardiniera_ is premiered, alongside Antonio Tozzi's _Orfeo ed Euridice_. However, the visit of Archduke Maximilian Franz to Salzburg engenders a flurry of activity, some of it musical, some of it even opera. Mozart's _Il re pastore_ results from this, along with _Gli orti esperidi_ by the Salzburg court kapellmeister, Domenico Fischietti. This is the background to Ian Page and The Mozartists' _Opera in 1775_ at Cadogan Hall on 17 September 2025. The latest instalment in their _Mozart 250_ project. They were joined by sopranos Ava Dodd, Stephanie Hershaw and Chelsea Zurflüh, and tenors Hugo Brady and Sebastian Hill for an evening of operatic excerpts from operas premiered in 1775 including works by Tozzi, Fischietti, Mozart, Mysliveček, J.C. Bach, Haydn and Sacchini. The same season as Mozart's _La finta giardiniera_ premiered in Munich, Antonio Tozzi's _L'Orfeo ed Euridice_ premiered also. In fact, delays to Mozart's opera meant that Tozzi's went first and Mozart would have heard it. Gluck's _L'Orfeo ed Euridice_ had been performed in Munich in 1772, to conspicuous lack of success. Tozzi who was Hofkapellmeister in Munich, was commissioned to set a revised and 'improved' version of Calzabigi's libretto, which added extra characters and lengthened the work. Tozzi clearly followed Gluck's example in many ways, but the intriguing things is that the overture to _L'Orfeo ed Euridice_ which has many Gluckian aspects also has distinct pre-echoes of the overture of Mozart's _Il re pastore_ giving the impression that the younger composer listened and decided he could do it better! --- _Opera in 1775_ - Sebastian Hill, The Mozartists - Cadogan Hall Ian Page and The Mozartists began with the overture to Tozzi's _L'Orfeo ed Euridice,_ which was notable for its use of strong unison to striking effect and the general air of lively excitement, leading to a graceful minuet. The role of Eagro in the opera was a new one, Orfeo's father. Sebastian Hill sang Eagro's aria 'Che orribile aspetto'. A substantial piece which made quite a strong effect via Tozzi's use of a rather straight, direct vocal line surrounded by a web of orchestral sound. Fischietti's _Gli orti esperidi_ is another work that we know Mozart heard. Venus' aria 'Senza temer d'inganni' from the opera was sung by Ava Dodd. The aria featured a substantial oboe solo along with the oboe duetting the soprano. Dodd sang with vibrant tone, bringing out the bravura of the first section and the more dance-like element of the second. We then turned to Mozart's _Il re pastore_ , where Mozart set a Metastasio libretto originally written for composer Giuseppe Bonno in 1751 for Empress Maria Theresa's birthday and performed by her five eldest children. We heard Tamiri's aria 'Di tante sue procelle' from the opera. It began with a substantial and passionate recitative. Soprano Stephanie Hershaw sang with open-hearted warmth, giving the aria with passion and bravura. It was a substantial piece and throughout she conveyed a sense of joy. Bohemian composer Josef Mysliveček was much admired by Mozart. Mysliveček's _Demofoonte_ was one of seven operas that he wrote for the Teatro di San Carlo in Naples. It was a notable success. We heard the title role's final aria, 'Odo il suono de' queruli accenti' sung by Hugo Brady. The aria began with significant excitement in the orchestra, but though Mysliveček created a rich texture there was lightness too which contrasted with Brady's quite direct vocal line which, at times, felt closer to arioso. Another composer admired by Mozart was Johann Christian Bach. His opera _Lucio Silla_ was written for Mannheim in 1775, though Bach completed it in London and the score was sent via the ambassador, who managed to lose a large part of it! This would, in fact, be the last Italian opera seria presented in Mannheim before the court moved to Munich (when the Elector of Bavaria inherited the Electorate of the Palatinate and the two were combined). Mozart never heard the opera but was able to see the score in Mannheim, and in fact Bach set a revised version of the libretto written for Mozart in Milan in 1772. Chelsea Zurflüh sang 'Ah, se a morir mi chiama' from _Lucio Silla_. A complex web of orchestral lines supported Zurflüh's highly expressive solo line with a contrasting middle section that was vivid and strong. There was a cadenza at the end and the whole work was striking, a piece of significant music making. --- _Opera in 1775_ - Hugo Brady, The Mozartists - Cadogan Hall The first half ended with a return to Mysliveček with his second opera for Naples in 1775, _Ezio_. Ava Dodd sang 'Ah! non son' io che parlo' with the aria preceded by a vary dramatic accompanied recitative where the soprano's line was punctuated by eager excitement from the orchestra. This led to a surprisingly urgent yet perkily bravura aria, though the drama seemed to made Dodd's voice a trifle wild at times. Part two opened with a terzetto from Haydn's _L'incontro improvviso_ , his sixth opera (of 12) but only the second to survive. A comedy set in Cairo it was known as a Turkish opera (worth bearing in mind that the Ottoman Turks ruled Egypt at the time). We heard a graceful and imaginative trio, 'Mi sembra un sogno' when Rezia (Chelsea Zurflüh) tells her maids (Ava Dodd and Stephanie Hershaw) that her beloved has come to rescue her. It was a lyrical piece with the three voices largely moving together, yet it very distinctive, rather pointed way with the final word of each line. We also encountered Rezia's beloved, Ali, in the form of Hugo Brady singing 'Deh! se in ciel pietade avete _'_ preceded by a substantial accompanied recitative with quite a significant orchestral contribution which allowed Brady to really take us on an emotional journey, leading to the aria with its expressive vocal lines and graceful orchestration suggesting it was more conventional than the accompanied recitative might have suggested. Antonio Sacchini is partially remembered for being as favourite of Queen Marie Antoinette. _Motezuma_ was written for London where Sacchini was based from 1772 to 1781. The score does not survive but luckily a selection of 'Favourite songs' was published. Chelsea Zurflüh sang 'Mi scordo lo scempio d'un padre infelice'. There was an attractive vigour to the aria with Zurflüh bringing passion and vibrancy to the bravura writing, yet all the time presenting an engaging charm too. We returned to Mysliveček's _Ezio_ for 'Tergi l'inguiste lagrime' sung by Sebastian Hill and Chelsea Zurflüh though she only sang in the recitative and flounced off, her character in a rage. Hill brought an attractive graceful quality to the aria. Then Ava Dodd sang Aminta's 'L'amero, saro costante' from Mozart's _Il re pastore_ , where a lovely web of orchestral texture contrasted with Dodd's vibrant, floated soprano line. The whole throbbing with passion. Stephanie Hershaw then sang 'Che fiero momento' from Tozzi's _Orfeo ed Euridice_ which saw the composer traversing the same ground as Gluck. Hershaw brought vibrant emotion to bear on the accompanied recitative, and then the aria was intense and vivid with moments when the tension relaxed. It was an effective piece, if more conventional than Gluck's setting of the words! We ended with Mozart, the final quintet from _Il re pastore_ sung by all five of the evening's young singers. The result was brightly imaginative, with Mozart creating a sophisticated ensemble from what was dramatically simply a jolly occasion. We were treated to an encore too. Chelsea Zurflüh sang an aria from a comic opera by Salieri. --- Mozaart: _Il re pastore_ - Chelsea Zurflüh, Stephanie Hershaw, Ava Dodd, Ian Page, Sebastian Hill, Hugo Brady, The Mozartists - Cadogan Hall A lot of research went into the programme and the young singers had significant numbers of unfamiliar notes to learn. Yet the learning was worn lightly, and all five singers gave strongly characterised and highly musical performances, impressive with their command of idiom and sense of bravura. As ever, Ian Page and his ensemble accompanied with style and enthusiasm. **Never miss out** on future posts by following us **The blog is free,** but I'd be delighted if you were to show your appreciation by buying me a coffee. _**Elsewhere on this**_**blog** * **And there was dancing:** Wild Arts immersive performance of Tchaikovsky's _Eugene Onegin_ at Charterhouse, full of emotional truth - opera review * **Colour and movement:** Clarinet concertos from Peter Cigleris and Györ Symphonic Band - record review * **Johann Joseph Abert:** A musical portrait - record review * **Profound, contemplative & meditative aethereal beauties:** Vox Clamantis & Jaan-Eik Tulve's birthday present for Arvo Pärt on ECM**-**record review * **Sung poetry:** soprano Véronique Gens in subtle & supple form with pianist James Baillieu in French song at Wigmore Hall - concert review * **Two of the greatest concertos of the 21st century:** Julian Bliss on recording Clarinet Concertos by Magnus Lindberg & Kalevi Aho - interview * **A restless soul:** Matthias Goerne & David Fray in late Schubert - review * **Making restitution:** Sir Arthur Bliss' _The Beatitudes_ returns to BBC Proms after a gap of 60 years - concert review * **Home**

Style, enthusiasm & scholarship: Ian Page and The Mozartists explore Opera in 1775 Haydn: L'incontro improvviso - Ava Dodd, Stephanie Hershaw, Chelsea Zurflüh, The Mozartists - Opera in 17...

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With Helena Dix in top form, bel canto fireworks illuminate La straniera, a Bellini rarity given a welcome outing by Chelsea Opera Group --- Bellini: _La straniera_ - Helena Dix acknowledging applause at Chelsea Opera Group performance Cadogan Hall (Photo: c/o Helena Dix) Bellini: _La straniera_ ; Helena Dix, Thomas Elwin, Georgia Mae Bishop, Dan D'Souza, Chelsea Opera Group, Stephen Barlow; Cadogan Hall Reviewed 1 June 2025 **Bellini's second big hit; a rather strange story brought alive by the bel canto ardency of Helena Dix finely supported by a terrific line up of talent** _La straniera_ was Bellini's fourth opera, coming after the success of _Il Pirata_ at La Scala in Milan moved Bellini from a local celebrity in Naples to a national celebrity. For _La Straniera_ , Bellini was working again with the librettist of _Il Pirata,_ Felice Romani. Bellini and Romani would go on to collaborate on all of Bellini's subsequent operas except for his final one, _I Puritani_. Romani is regarded as the best Italian librettist between Metastasio and Boito, he wrote for everyone but was incredibly busy. The partnership with Bellini was not without problems, and following _Il Pirata_ you sense Bellini taking time to hit his stride. After _La straniera_ , Bellini and Romani would revise Bellini's second opera as _Bianca e Fernando_ to mixed results. Their next collaboration, _Zaira_ was a failure and much of the music ended up in _I Capuleti e i Montecchi_ which was an unqualified success. After this came _La sonnambula_ and _Norma_ and the rest, as they say, is history. As for _La straniera_ , it premiered in 1829 at La Scala, Milan going on to be performed all over Italy as well as in London, Vienna, Paris, New York and Lisbon. The last known performance seems to have been in 1875, and the opera was only revived at La Scala in 1935. 20th century performances remained rare, often linked to a particular soprano. Stagings seem to be even rarer and Christoph Loy's 2013 production for Zurich Opera has had a couple of revivals. In London, Opera Rara presented the work in concert in 2007 in association with their recording with David Parry conducting and Patrizia Ciofi in the title role. On Sunday 1 June 2025, Chelsea Opera Group gave Bellini's _La straniera_ a most welcome concert performance at London's Cadogan Hall. Stephen Barlow conducted, with Helena Dix as Alaide, known as la straniera, Thomas Elwin as Arturo, Dan D'Souza as Valdeburgo, Georgia Mae Bishop as Isoletta, Will Diggle as Osburgo, Thomas D Hopkinson as the Prior and Kevin Hollands as Count Montolino. Romani and Bellini based their plot on based on the novel _L'Étrangère_ by popular French novelist Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt. The novel is centred around the complex marital history of the French king, Philippe Auguste (1165-1223) but Romani and Bellini introduced a few extra twists to an already unlikely scenario. The result is a drama which requires more than the usual suspension of disbelief, but in the title role creates a prototype for some of Bellini's other heroines, lone women struggling. In _La straniera_ , Alaide loves Arturo but she is living in disguise being the rejected wife of the king. Unknown to her, her brother, also in disguise as Valdeburgo, is watching over her but he is also friends with Arturo. The resulting plot includes Alaide and Valdeburgo's meeting, Arturo's jealousy because he thinks they are lovers, Valdeburgo's apparent death, Alaide's trial and collapse into mental instability. Oh, and Arturo's off-again on-again wedding with Isoletta. The result however, provides Bellini with a powerful final scene for Alaide where the composer experiments with a technique he perfected in _Norma_. Instead of the final grand set piece, typically a rondo in tragic operas, he uses a series of apparently disconnected lyric pieces, creating a powerful depiction of the collapse of Alaide's reason. Helena Dix has sung a whole series of roles for Chelsea Opera Group including recently the title role in Bellini's _Norma_ in 2018 [see my review], Elisabetta in Donizetti's _Roberto Devereux_ in 2021 [see my review] and Vitellia in Mozart's _La Clemenza di Tito_ in 2023 [see my review]. Having been based in London she is now moving back to her native Australia so we must assume her London appearances will, alas, be fewer. Initially, we saw Alaide only in the context of other people. Her first entry was a duet with Thomas Elwin's Arturo, where Dix successfully suggested the conflicted nature of the character, committed to another but in love with Arturo. The duet was powerful stuff and we sensed Bellini experimenting with what was possible as he interrupted the musical flow with dramatic recitative. Tension continued and when Dix returned to the stage it was for a taut trio with Elwin and Dan D'Souza's Valdeburgo, where Alaide and Valdeburgo have recognised each other but not told Arturo of their true relationship. Go figure. Act One ends with Valdeburgo's apparent death. As Alaide collapses there was a powerful moment, with Dix giving it her all but this was only tiny. Act Two opened with Alaide's trial and Dix every inch the wronged queen. In the subsequent scene we are told that she has mentally collapsed but we do not see this and the role only properly came alive in the final scene when Alaide is finally allowed her own voice. Her Dix successfully brought out the part's echoes of _Norma_ and made the evening worthwhile. As the man in love with Alaide, Thomas Elwin was really on a hiding to nothing. Essentially a two timing shit and a monomaniac, and a bit dim to boot, Elwin successfully brought a sense of heroic tone and nobility to the role. He sang Gennaro in Donizetti's _Lucrezia Borgia_ with English Touring Opera in 2023 [see my review] and has the requisite ability to combined powerful line with expressive complexity. His tone gave Arturo a welcome heroic edge, though perhaps his Arturo lacked an element of desperation. But it did mean that in the Act One trio, with Dix and D'Souza, Elwin brought out the emotions rather than making you think Arturo was just dim. In Act Two, he and Dix had a terrific duet where they half-reconcile (it rather made me think of the Wolf's Crag scene in Donizetti's _Lucia di Lammermoor_). At the end, Arturo cannot take it and Elwin made a fine, conflicted bridegroom being urged to marry another by the woman he loves. But though Arturo kills himself, by now Bellini is interested in his heroine, and Elwin had to make the most of a musically thin end. But overall, a fine heroic performance. As the woman Arturo is supposed to marry, Isoletta, Georgia Mae Bishop had the advantage that Bellini and Romani gave her a surprising amount to do. Apart from the finale scene, Isoletta and Alaide do not meet, and Bellini keeps them separate musically, as Isoletta receives purely traditional music. Bsihop opened the opera with duet with D'Souza and an ensemble exploring Isoletta's unhappiness. The music more conventionally ornamental yet Bishop successfully brought out the character's sadness. Isoletta then disappeared till the penultimate scene where she had a cavatina and cabaletta, the first lamenting and the second rejoicing as she learns the wedding will go ahead. Foolish woman. But Bishop really leaned into the music and gave us a joyous conclusion. In the final scene, Isoletta got little more than recitative but here she turned surprisingly feisty and Bishop gave as good as she got. Valdeburgo is hardly the most admirable of characters, lurking around near his sister but not telling her, lying to his friend Arturo. Dan D'Souza sang with admirable firmness and flexibility, displaying a nice feel for the style. Musically he provided a thread running through the opera, always virile and strong, admirable even when being two faced, and all sung with a terrific sense of style. His aria at the end of the trial scene, attempting to persuade Alaide to come away with him, was profoundly moving, whilst his subsequent duet with Elwin where they reconcile was surprisingly complex. The other roles were smaller but well taken. Will Diggle was Osburgo, Count Montolino's henchman and a rather conniving character. Diggle made the most of his small opportunities. As the Prior of the Knights Hospitaller, responsible for trying Alaide for the death of her brother, Thomas D Hopkinson brought a fine sense of authority and the suggestion that character could be something more, whilst Kevin Hollands had the small but important role of Count Montolino. An important element in the setting is the local people's distrust of Alaide, notably her habit of floating on the lake in her boat wearing a veil. and they think her a witch. The Chelsea Opera Group chorus really leaned into this, creating some vividly angry scenes. But this leads us to one of the serious problems with this performance. Bellini's score (with its horns, and full brass section) has its noisy elements. Conductor Stephen Barlow led an admirably non-invasive account of the music, giving the singers plenty of scope for shaping and rubato. But he also allowed the chorus and orchestra their head, which meant this was a very loud performance. In full ensembles, soloists could not always be heard and in the accompanied recitative the orchestral contribution was so strong that the soloists sang rather more fully than was ideal. Orchestrally the score offered only a few moments to challenge the orchestra, its role was mainly to provide colour and support to the singers. Bellini's _La straniera_ is never going to be a repertoire piece and it is of interest mainly for the light it sheds on Bellini's later operas, but in Helena Dix it had an ardent champion of the leading role, admirably supported by a strong cast led by Stephen Barlow. **Never miss out** on future posts by following us **The blog is free,** but I'd be delighted if you were to show your appreciation by buying me a coffee. _**Elsewhere on this**_**blog** * **A terrific sense of collaboration:** composer Colin Matthews and writer William Boyd on their first opera, _A Visit to Friends_ - interview * **Something memorable:** Jacqueline Stucker, David Bates & La Nuova Musica in Handel's _Alcina_ & _Rodelinda_ at Wigmore Hall - concert review * **Impressive debuts** : Opera Holland Park's first Wagner opera, _Der fliegende Holländer_ is something of a triumph - opera review * The final concerts in this year’s Norfolk & Norwich Festival fell to the BBC Singers and the Britten Sinfonia - welcome visitors and, indeed, no strangers to the city - concert review * **Powerful stuff:** Opera North's concert staging of Verdi's _Simon Boccanegra_ , an evening filling the Royal Festival Hall with drama - opera review * **Something juicy that you can get your teeth into:** composer Libby Croad chats about _The Brontë Suite_ which gets its UK premiere in June - interview ** ** * **Colour & imagination: **Rameau's _Pigmalion_ plus music from _Les Boréades_ , Early Opera Company at Temple Music - opera review** ** * **A near-perfect triptych:** in Paris, Christof Loy conjures atmosphere inspired by film for Puccini's _Il Trittico_ conducted by Carlo Rizzi - opera review * **A carefully curated programme rather than a disc to dip into:** Christopher Gray on his first disc with the Choir of St John's College, Cambridge - interview * **A Hoffmann to remember:** Angela Denoke's production of Offenbach's final masterpiece at Oldenburg Staatstheater with Jason Kim - opera review * **Home**

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With Helena Dix in top form, bel canto fireworks illuminate La straniera, a Bellini rarity given a welcome outing by Chelsea Opera Group --- Bellini: _La straniera_ - Helena Dix acknowledging applause at Chelsea Opera Group performance Cadogan Hall (Photo: c/o Helena Dix) Bellini: _La straniera_ ; Helena Dix, Thomas Elwin, Georgia Mae Bishop, Dan D'Souza, Chelsea Opera Group, Stephen Barlow; Cadogan Hall Reviewed 1 June 2025 **Bellini's second big hit; a rather strange story brought alive by the bel canto ardency of Helena Dix finely supported by a terrific line up of talent** _La straniera_ was Bellini's fourth opera, coming after the success of _Il Pirata_ at La Scala in Milan moved Bellini from a local celebrity in Naples to a national celebrity. For _La Straniera_ , Bellini was working again with the librettist of _Il Pirata,_ Felice Romani. Bellini and Romani would go on to collaborate on all of Bellini's subsequent operas except for his final one, _I Puritani_. Romani is regarded as the best Italian librettist between Metastasio and Boito, he wrote for everyone but was incredibly busy. The partnership with Bellini was not without problems, and following _Il Pirata_ you sense Bellini taking time to hit his stride. After _La straniera_ , Bellini and Romani would revise Bellini's second opera as _Bianca e Fernando_ to mixed results. Their next collaboration, _Zaira_ was a failure and much of the music ended up in _I Capuleti e i Montecchi_ which was an unqualified success. After this came _La sonnambula_ and _Norma_ and the rest, as they say, is history. As for _La straniera_ , it premiered in 1829 at La Scala, Milan going on to be performed all over Italy as well as in London, Vienna, Paris, New York and Lisbon. The last known performance seems to have been in 1875, and the opera was only revived at La Scala in 1935. 20th century performances remained rare, often linked to a particular soprano. Stagings seem to be even rarer and Christoph Loy's 2013 production for Zurich Opera has had a couple of revivals. In London, Opera Rara presented the work in concert in 2007 in association with their recording with David Parry conducting and Patrizia Ciofi in the title role. On Sunday 1 June 2025, Chelsea Opera Group gave Bellini's _La straniera_ a most welcome concert performance at London's Cadogan Hall. Stephen Barlow conducted, with Helena Dix as Alaide, known as la straniera, Thomas Elwin as Arturo, Dan D'Souza as Valdeburgo, Georgia Mae Bishop as Isoletta, Will Diggle as Osburgo, Thomas D Hopkinson as the Prior and Kevin Hollands as Count Montolino. Romani and Bellini based their plot on based on the novel _L'Étrangère_ by popular French novelist Charles-Victor Prévot, vicomte d'Arlincourt. The novel is centred around the complex marital history of the French king, Philippe Auguste (1165-1223) but Romani and Bellini introduced a few extra twists to an already unlikely scenario. The result is a drama which requires more than the usual suspension of disbelief, but in the title role creates a prototype for some of Bellini's other heroines, lone women struggling. In _La straniera_ , Alaide loves Arturo but she is living in disguise being the rejected wife of the king. Unknown to her, her brother, also in disguise as Valdeburgo, is watching over her but he is also friends with Arturo. The resulting plot includes Alaide and Valdeburgo's meeting, Arturo's jealousy because he thinks they are lovers, Valdeburgo's apparent death, Alaide's trial and collapse into mental instability. Oh, and Arturo's off-again on-again wedding with Isoletta. The result however, provides Bellini with a powerful final scene for Alaide where the composer experiments with a technique he perfected in _Norma_. Instead of the final grand set piece, typically a rondo in tragic operas, he uses a series of apparently disconnected lyric pieces, creating a powerful depiction of the collapse of Alaide's reason. Helena Dix has sung a whole series of roles for Chelsea Opera Group including recently the title role in Bellini's _Norma_ in 2018 [see my review], Elisabetta in Donizetti's _Roberto Devereux_ in 2021 [see my review] and Vitellia in Mozart's _La Clemenza di Tito_ in 2023 [see my review]. Having been based in London she is now moving back to her native Australia so we must assume her London appearances will, alas, be fewer. Initially, we saw Alaide only in the context of other people. Her first entry was a duet with Thomas Elwin's Arturo, where Dix successfully suggested the conflicted nature of the character, committed to another but in love with Arturo. The duet was powerful stuff and we sensed Bellini experimenting with what was possible as he interrupted the musical flow with dramatic recitative. Tension continued and when Dix returned to the stage it was for a taut trio with Elwin and Dan D'Souza's Valdeburgo, where Alaide and Valdeburgo have recognised each other but not told Arturo of their true relationship. Go figure. Act One ends with Valdeburgo's apparent death. As Alaide collapses there was a powerful moment, with Dix giving it her all but this was only tiny. Act Two opened with Alaide's trial and Dix every inch the wronged queen. In the subsequent scene we are told that she has mentally collapsed but we do not see this and the role only properly came alive in the final scene when Alaide is finally allowed her own voice. Her Dix successfully brought out the part's echoes of _Norma_ and made the evening worthwhile. As the man in love with Alaide, Thomas Elwin was really on a hiding to nothing. Essentially a two timing shit and a monomaniac, and a bit dim to boot, Elwin successfully brought a sense of heroic tone and nobility to the role. He sang Gennaro in Donizetti's _Lucrezia Borgia_ with English Touring Opera in 2023 [see my review] and has the requisite ability to combined powerful line with expressive complexity. His tone gave Arturo a welcome heroic edge, though perhaps his Arturo lacked an element of desperation. But it did mean that in the Act One trio, with Dix and D'Souza, Elwin brought out the emotions rather than making you think Arturo was just dim. In Act Two, he and Dix had a terrific duet where they half-reconcile (it rather made me think of the Wolf's Crag scene in Donizetti's _Lucia di Lammermoor_). At the end, Arturo cannot take it and Elwin made a fine, conflicted bridegroom being urged to marry another by the woman he loves. But though Arturo kills himself, by now Bellini is interested in his heroine, and Elwin had to make the most of a musically thin end. But overall, a fine heroic performance. As the woman Arturo is supposed to marry, Isoletta, Georgia Mae Bishop had the advantage that Bellini and Romani gave her a surprising amount to do. Apart from the finale scene, Isoletta and Alaide do not meet, and Bellini keeps them separate musically, as Isoletta receives purely traditional music. Bsihop opened the opera with duet with D'Souza and an ensemble exploring Isoletta's unhappiness. The music more conventionally ornamental yet Bishop successfully brought out the character's sadness. Isoletta then disappeared till the penultimate scene where she had a cavatina and cabaletta, the first lamenting and the second rejoicing as she learns the wedding will go ahead. Foolish woman. But Bishop really leaned into the music and gave us a joyous conclusion. In the final scene, Isoletta got little more than recitative but here she turned surprisingly feisty and Bishop gave as good as she got. Valdeburgo is hardly the most admirable of characters, lurking around near his sister but not telling her, lying to his friend Arturo. Dan D'Souza sang with admirable firmness and flexibility, displaying a nice feel for the style. Musically he provided a thread running through the opera, always virile and strong, admirable even when being two faced, and all sung with a terrific sense of style. His aria at the end of the trial scene, attempting to persuade Alaide to come away with him, was profoundly moving, whilst his subsequent duet with Elwin where they reconcile was surprisingly complex. The other roles were smaller but well taken. Will Diggle was Osburgo, Count Montolino's henchman and a rather conniving character. Diggle made the most of his small opportunities. As the Prior of the Knights Hospitaller, responsible for trying Alaide for the death of her brother, Thomas D Hopkinson brought a fine sense of authority and the suggestion that character could be something more, whilst Kevin Hollands had the small but important role of Count Montolino. An important element in the setting is the local people's distrust of Alaide, notably her habit of floating on the lake in her boat wearing a veil. and they think her a witch. The Chelsea Opera Group chorus really leaned into this, creating some vividly angry scenes. But this leads us to one of the serious problems with this performance. Bellini's score (with its horns, and full brass section) has its noisy elements. Conductor Stephen Barlow led an admirably non-invasive account of the music, giving the singers plenty of scope for shaping and rubato. But he also allowed the chorus and orchestra their head, which meant this was a very loud performance. In full ensembles, soloists could not always be heard and in the accompanied recitative the orchestral contribution was so strong that the soloists sang rather more fully than was ideal. Orchestrally the score offered only a few moments to challenge the orchestra, its role was mainly to provide colour and support to the singers. Bellini's _La straniera_ is never going to be a repertoire piece and it is of interest mainly for the light it sheds on Bellini's later operas, but in Helena Dix it had an ardent champion of the leading role, admirably supported by a strong cast led by Stephen Barlow. **Never miss out** on future posts by following us **The blog is free,** but I'd be delighted if you were to show your appreciation by buying me a coffee. _**Elsewhere on this**_**blog** * **A terrific sense of collaboration:** composer Colin Matthews and writer William Boyd on their first opera, _A Visit to Friends_ - interview * **Something memorable:** Jacqueline Stucker, David Bates & La Nuova Musica in Handel's _Alcina_ & _Rodelinda_ at Wigmore Hall - concert review * **Impressive debuts** : Opera Holland Park's first Wagner opera, _Der fliegende Holländer_ is something of a triumph - opera review * The final concerts in this year’s Norfolk & Norwich Festival fell to the BBC Singers and the Britten Sinfonia - welcome visitors and, indeed, no strangers to the city - concert review * **Powerful stuff:** Opera North's concert staging of Verdi's _Simon Boccanegra_ , an evening filling the Royal Festival Hall with drama - opera review * **Something juicy that you can get your teeth into:** composer Libby Croad chats about _The Brontë Suite_ which gets its UK premiere in June - interview ** ** * **Colour & imagination: **Rameau's _Pigmalion_ plus music from _Les Boréades_ , Early Opera Company at Temple Music - opera review** ** * **A near-perfect triptych:** in Paris, Christof Loy conjures atmosphere inspired by film for Puccini's _Il Trittico_ conducted by Carlo Rizzi - opera review * **A carefully curated programme rather than a disc to dip into:** Christopher Gray on his first disc with the Choir of St John's College, Cambridge - interview * **A Hoffmann to remember:** Angela Denoke's production of Offenbach's final masterpiece at Oldenburg Staatstheater with Jason Kim - opera review * **Home**

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Chelsea In Bloom 2025: Flowers In Fashion Chelsea’s annual floral art show and London’s largest free-to-attend festival of flowers, Chelsea in Bloom, returns for its 20th anniversary to the theme of

Chelsea’s annual floral art show and London’s largest free-to-attend festival of flowers, Chelsea in Bloom, returns for its 20th anniversary to the theme of ‘Flowers in Fashion’....read more on thedirt.news #Cadogan #Chelsea #ChelseainBloom #FlowersinFashion #London
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Chelsea In Bloom 2025: Flowers In Fashion Chelsea’s annual floral art show and London’s largest free-to-attend festival of flowers, Chelsea in Bloom, returns for its 20th anniversary to the theme of

Chelsea’s annual floral art show and London’s largest free-to-attend festival of flowers, Chelsea in Bloom, returns for its 20th anniversary to the theme of ‘Flowers in Fashion’....read more on thedirt.news #Cadogan #Chelsea #ChelseainBloom #FlowersinFashion #London #RHS
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HBO's Harry Potter TV Series Is Still Filling Out Its Hogwarts Staff Amid Controversy We still have no idea who will play the lightning bolt-tattooed titular character in HBO’s Harry Potter series, but we do know who will be teaching him and his crew of wizards. After months of speculation, HBO has confirmed the casting of key characters for the upcoming series. Read more...
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Celebrating 250 years of Mozart's early comedy: The Mozartists perform La finta giardiniera <p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi43yX9JFQa5f5ESRdv9YACsDbP8uekIF68r6fV4TEiYp_bNxHfhqgheTFzUCxs5qxWEvHIWNQOscQ-Uei8zGI9vk77KRSNLSb4l6WhHeitRnes3BMgMDTV9-I1Gf70-ucgU0JkTh8B57wmRcfhEVNN0IAzUVe0UQLaPGTnzzBCXh8tdnkjyv0PJQ/s640/avatar.jpg" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img alt="La finta giardiniera" border="0" data-original-height="480" data-original-width="640" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi43yX9JFQa5f5ESRdv9YACsDbP8uekIF68r6fV4TEiYp_bNxHfhqgheTFzUCxs5qxWEvHIWNQOscQ-Uei8zGI9vk77KRSNLSb4l6WhHeitRnes3BMgMDTV9-I1Gf70-ucgU0JkTh8B57wmRcfhEVNN0IAzUVe0UQLaPGTnzzBCXh8tdnkjyv0PJQ/w400-h300/avatar.jpg" title="La finta giardiniera" width="400"/></a></div><span style="font-family: verdana;"><p>Aged 18, Mozart wrote his comedy <i>La finta giardiniera</i> for Munich in 1775. After the premiere of <i>La finta giardiniera,</i> Mozart wrote home to his mother: "My opera turned out so well that it is impossible for me to describe… After every aria there was the most frightening clamour, with clapping and shouts of Viva Maestro!".</p><p>He was not really able to capitalise on this success. This was the period when Mozart's wish to write operas was stymied by the fact that his employer, the Archbishop of Salzburg, wanted Mozart on hand, in his employ, whilst the court theatre in Salzburg had closed. Mozart would return to Munich, but not until 1781 for <i>Idomeneo</i><span style="font-family: verdana;">, his first mature opera. </span></p></span><p>The author of the work's libretto is still uncertain, and in 1790 Mozart would return to the piece and convert it into a German singspiel as <i>Die Gärtnerin aus Liebe</i>, adding some new music. </p><p>Despite being a sparking comedy, it remains one of Mozart's lesser-known gems. Perhaps because until a copy of the complete Italian version was found in the 1970s, the German translation was the only known complete score. </p><p>Ian Page and the Mozartists have never performed the opera and so they are giving a concert performance on Tuesday 25 March 2025 at Cadogan Hall, to celebrate the 250th anniversary of its premiere.</p><p>The cast is headed by the two most recent additions to The Mozartists’ impressive rostrum of Associate Artists – soprano Ava Dodd [whom we recently saw as Barbarina in ENO's <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, see <a href="https://www.planethugill.com/2025/02/another-crazy-day-joe-hill-gibbins.html">my review</a>] and tenor Hugo Brady; this concert will mark The Mozartists first designated Young Artist opera since before the pandemic. The remaining cast members, all making their debuts with The Mozartists, are Camilla Harris, Milly Forrest, Laura Fleur, Michael Bell and Jerome Knox.</p><p>Full details from The Mozartists' <a href="https://mozartists.com/la-finta-giardiniera/" target="_blank">website</a>.</p> <div style="clear: both;"></div>

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Celebrating 250 years of Mozart's early comedy: The Mozartists perform La finta giardiniera <p></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi43yX9JFQa5f5ESRdv9YACsDbP8uekIF68r6fV4TEiYp_bNxHfhqgheTFzUCxs5qxWEvHIWNQOscQ-Uei8zGI9vk77KRSNLSb4l6WhHeitRnes3BMgMDTV9-I1Gf70-ucgU0JkTh8B57wmRcfhEVNN0IAzUVe0UQLaPGTnzzBCXh8tdnkjyv0PJQ/s640/avatar.jpg" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img alt="La finta giardiniera" border="0" data-original-height="480" data-original-width="640" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi43yX9JFQa5f5ESRdv9YACsDbP8uekIF68r6fV4TEiYp_bNxHfhqgheTFzUCxs5qxWEvHIWNQOscQ-Uei8zGI9vk77KRSNLSb4l6WhHeitRnes3BMgMDTV9-I1Gf70-ucgU0JkTh8B57wmRcfhEVNN0IAzUVe0UQLaPGTnzzBCXh8tdnkjyv0PJQ/w400-h300/avatar.jpg" title="La finta giardiniera" width="400"/></a></div><span style="font-family: verdana;"><p>Aged 18, Mozart wrote his comedy <i>La finta giardiniera</i> for Munich in 1775. After the premiere of <i>La finta giardiniera,</i> Mozart wrote home to his mother: "My opera turned out so well that it is impossible for me to describe… After every aria there was the most frightening clamour, with clapping and shouts of Viva Maestro!".</p><p>He was not really able to capitalise on this success. This was the period when Mozart's wish to write operas was stymied by the fact that his employer, the Archbishop of Salzburg, wanted Mozart on hand, in his employ, whilst the court theatre in Salzburg had closed. Mozart would return to Munich, but not until 1781 for <i>Idomeneo</i><span style="font-family: verdana;">, his first mature opera. </span></p></span><p>The author of the work's libretto is still uncertain, and in 1790 Mozart would return to the piece and convert it into a German singspiel as <i>Die Gärtnerin aus Liebe</i>, adding some new music. </p><p>Despite being a sparking comedy, it remains one of Mozart's lesser-known gems. Perhaps because until a copy of the complete Italian version was found in the 1970s, the German translation was the only known complete score. </p><p>Ian Page and the Mozartists have never performed the opera and so they are giving a concert performance on Tuesday 25 March 2025 at Cadogan Hall, to celebrate the 250th anniversary of its premiere.</p><p>The cast is headed by the two most recent additions to The Mozartists’ impressive rostrum of Associate Artists – soprano Ava Dodd [whom we recently saw as Barbarina in ENO's <i>The Marriage of Figaro</i>, see <a href="https://www.planethugill.com/2025/02/another-crazy-day-joe-hill-gibbins.html">my review</a>] and tenor Hugo Brady; this concert will mark The Mozartists first designated Young Artist opera since before the pandemic. The remaining cast members, all making their debuts with The Mozartists, are Camilla Harris, Milly Forrest, Laura Fleur, Michael Bell and Jerome Knox.</p><p>Full details from The Mozartists' <a href="https://mozartists.com/la-finta-giardiniera/" target="_blank">website</a>.</p> <div style="clear: both;"></div>

Celebrating 250 years of Mozart's early comedy: The Mozartists perform La finta giardiniera A...

www.planethugill.com/2025/02/celebrating-250-...

#Cadogan #Hall #preview

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