Otello

Never has Giuseppe Verdi composed revenge, intrigue and jealousy fierier and more diabolical than in his late opera Otello. One of the greatest love stories in literature – Otello is the second of Verdi’s three Shakespeare operas – fails brutally, cruelly and senselessly. With the title role of Otello, Jonas Kaufmann takes on what is probably the most demanding part of his vocal register He is “in splendid form” (Kronen Zeitung) and “has sung his way into the Olympus as an interpreter of Otello” (klassik-begeistert.de) with this performance. Baritone Ludovic Tézier “is unrivalled as Lago” (Kurier). “This baritone’s attacks are like acts of tonal violence, his legato mischief clever manipulations. A devil on earth.” (Der Standard) Soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen is “a Desdemona to fall in love with” (Die Presse) with “a voice to kneel down to, with a timbre that captivates” (klassik-begeistert.de). Adrian Noble’s staging moves the action to circa 1900, stripping it of its historical context. Emphasizing the inner world of the main character and his emotional disintegration, his Otello becomes “a psychological thriller” (bachtrack.com).

Turandot

At the Vienna State Opera, Claus Guth stages Puccini’s last opera as a chamber drama of timeless topicality – far removed from all pseudo-Chinese clichés and with shooting star Asmik Grigorian and audience favourite Jonas Kaufmann in the two leading roles. For Asmik Grigorian, the role is a debut and she succeeds “brilliantly. […] Her singing reveals a woman’s soul” (Die Presse) and captivates with “glistening high notes, the coldest cantilenas and deeply felt emotions” (Süddeutsche Zeitung). In contrast, the foreign prince appears less as a swashbuckling conqueror than as a sensitive companion who reaches out his hand to a woman struggling with her demons. The role of Calaf is also a stage debut for Jonas Kaufmann. He sings the famous “Nessun dorma” “with the greatest sensitivity” (Salzburger Nachrichten), “he is in his element in the top notes, his velvety timbre is convincing in every register”. (Der Standard). The Russian soprano Kristina Mkhitaryan portrays a touching Liù as an “enchantingly beautiful soprano” (Kronen Zeitung). Conductor Marco Armiliato “delights with the unleashed splendour of Puccini’s sound” (Falter).

Adelaide di Borgogna

Rossini’s opera Adelaide di Borgogna was performed for the first time in Rome in December 1817, inaugurating the 1818 Carnival season. Since then, it has been revived only a few times in modern times, and the first performance in stage form was at the Rossini Opera Festival in 2011. For this new staging of the opera, French director Arnaud Bernard employs a play-within a-play device to portray the characters as singers rehearsing Adelaide di Borgogna for a performance at ROF. The drama outside of the Adelaide narrative in which the cast had their own stories became interwoven with the opera itself: “The evening was a resounding success” (bachtrack.com). “As Adelaide, Olga Peretyatko alternated between alluring vocal warmth and warrior-like grit in razor-sharp coloratura.” Financial Times

Norah Jones plays Baloise Session

Norah Jones has attained global celebrity status since 2002 when her very first album, Come Away with Me, was released. This record made her earning six Grammy Award, including album of the year and both record of the year and song of the year (“Don’t Know Why”). 2004’s Feels like Home was Jones’ second album, and it was an instant hit, debuting at number one on the Billboard album chart and selling over a million copies in the first week. In 2007 she dropped her third album, Not Too Late, and stepped into the acting world for the first time, appearing in Wong Kar-Wai’s My Blueberry Nights; the movie debuted at the Cannes film festival. Later, Jones explored a wider musical range with The Fall (2009) and Little Broken Hearts (2012), featuring sombre electric instrumentation with elements of rock and soul. She returned to the jazz-inflected sound of her debut album for Day Breaks (2016). Her later recordings included the EP Begin Again (2019) and her seventh studio album, Pick Me Up Off the Floor (2020). In addition to her songwriting, she was rewarded with two Grammy Awards for her collaboration with Ray Charles on “Here We Go Again” for his last album, Genius Loves Company (2004). The release …Featuring Norah Jones (2010) was a collection of that and other such collaborations.

Le nozze di Figaro

Barrie Kosky, one of the most innovative opera directors of our time, creates a new interpretation of Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro (which he believed should be renamed Susanna) at the Vienna State Opera with a very young ensemble: Andrè Schuen and Hanna-Elisabeth Müller in the roles of Count and Countess Almaviva, Peter Kellner as Figaro, Patricia Nolz as Cherubino and Ying Fang as well as Eva Nazarova as Susanna. Ying Fang is acting on stage with a perfect lip sync to Eva Nazarova singing from the orchestra pit, as she could not sing herself due to a vocal cord haemorrhage. Philippe Jordan conducts the Orchestra of the Wiener Staatsoper and together they “deliver an ideal mixture of elegant lyricism and concentrated expression – each and every one” (Wiener Zeitung). “Beauty and pointedness are combined in the noblest way.” (Der Standard)

Messiah

n the middle of the historic baroque garden in Ceský Krumlov, a UNESCO World Heritage Site located in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic, Messiah comes alive in a magical atmosphere of light and dark. The production, which subtly links the biblical story of Jesus Christ with the life of Josef Adam, born in 1722, Duke of Krumlov and Prince of Schwarzenberg, is effec-tively staged as a baroque feast, with top-class early music soloists and one hundred and fifty choristers performing in replicas of baroque costumes. The performances take place at a unique spot: The theatre with revolving auditorium in Ceský Krumlov is one of only two theatres of this type in Europe. Located in front of the

rococo Bellarie Palace in the Baroque garden of the chateau, it was first put into operation in 1958 and, after several reconstructions, currently holds almost 650 spectators. With 56,000 tickets sold, the performances are the most attended summer cultural event in the entire Czech Republic and are thus the focus of interest among domestic and foreign spectators.

Beyond the Music: Barenboim-Said Akademie

After the founding of the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra in 1999, another project of intercultural understanding is derived from the friendship between Barenboim and the Palestinian humanist Edward Said. The inauguration of the Barenboim-Said Akademie in Berlin marked a new phase within the political and educational engagement of musician and pedagogue Daniel Barenboim. After a successful world career as a pianist, conductor and musical teacher with political aspirations, the creation of this place is perhaps Barenboim’s most enduring work and at the same time a project of the heart. “Beyond the Music” portrays this innovative academy whose mission is committed to the humanistic ideals of its founders and ultimately a clear message of peace: music creates understanding.

The Mozart Requiem Project

Mozart’s legendary Requiem is certainly one of the composer’s most famous and frequently performed works. Raphaël Pichon and the ensemble “Pygmalion” – one of the leading music ensembles (a choir and orchestra) following historical criteria and playing on period instruments, now present the work in a unique version: divided into four blocks, it is interspersed with various vocal works, specially chosen to provide an overarching theme and sweeping vision within the context of the genius’ musical oeuvre. Performed in the Palau de la Música Catalana, UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most beautiful concert halls in the world, the performance becomes “an aesthetic experience full of sensitivity, a performance close to the sublime and a refreshing reading of one of the most performed and programmed works of the sacred repertoire” (Platea Magazine).