Monteverdi, Claudio (1567-1643) | L'Orfeo, SV 318 (reimagined with South Asian and western artists) |
Opera North | ||
Laurence Cummings | Dirigent | |
Anna Himali Howard | Regisseur | |
Leslie Travers | Bühnenbild, Kostüme | |
Jackie Shemesh | Licht | |
Nicholas Watts | Tenor | Orfeo (Orpheus) |
Ashnaa Sasikaran | Sänger | Euridice (Eurydice) |
Chandra Chakraborty | Sänger | Proserpina (Proserpine) |
Yarlinie Thanabalasingam | Mezzosopran | La speranza (Hope) |
Dean Robinson | Bass | Plutone (Pluto) |
Kezia Bienek | Mezzosopran | La messaggiera (Messenger) |
Amy Freston | Sopran | La musica (Music) |
Deepa Nair Rasiya | Sänger | La musica (Music) |
Chiranjeeb Chakraborty | Sänger | Pastore 1 (Shepherd 1) |
Sanchita Pal | Sänger | Ninfa (Nymph) |
Simon Grange | Bass | Pastore 3 (Shepherd 3) |
Kirpal Singh Panesar | Sänger | Apollo |
Xavier Hetherington | Tenor | Pastore 2 (Shepherd 2) |
Claire Lees | Sopran | Spirito 2 |
Frances Gregory | Mezzosopran | Spirito 1 |
Kaviraj Singh | Sänger | Caronte (Charon) |
The wedding of the year is here as Orpheus, the musician of mythical power, marries graceful Eurydice. When the newlyweds’ joy is shattered by the sudden death of Eurydice, our heartbroken hero sets off on a mission to the underworld to rescue his bride, certain that his love will overcome adversity. Can Orpheus conquer fate, or will his heart be broken for a second time?
Opera North’s adventurous new production of an ancient tragedy is told through a meeting of the worlds of Indian and western baroque classical music. The bowed strings of the violin and the tar shehnai, the hammered strings of the santoor, the plucked strings of the harpsichord and sitar, and the rhythms of the tabla shape a unique musical encounter. Laurence Cummings, who also conducted Garsington’s Orfeo, is here joined by Jasdeep Singh Degun as co-music director to weave together their respective traditions of Indian classical and western early music. An onstage orchestra of 19 players includes a baroque ensemble of violin, viola, cello, bass, trumpet, percussion, harp, harpsichord, lirone and theorbo, as well as Indian classical instruments including sitar, tabla, santoor, esraj and bansuri. The cast includes performers trained in western and Indian classical traditions, with tenor Nicholas Watts singing Orpheus and British-Tamil Carnatic singer Ashnaa Sasikaran singing Eurydice. In this meeting of East and West, OperaVision closes a month dedicated to opera’s ongoing fascination with the myth of Orpheus.
Recorded on 20.10.2022