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SEEN
AND HEARD FESTIVAL PREVIEW
Aix en Provence 2008 : Mar
Berry looks forward to this year's festival (MB)
The Festival d’Aix en Provence runs from 27 June to 23 July. Full
details may be found at:
http://www.festival-aix.com.
2008 marks the sixtieth anniversary of the first Aix-en-Provence
Festival. Then, as now, Cosí fan tutte was performed: then
in the courtyard of the archbishop’s palace, under no less a
conductor than Hans Rosbaud, now in the
Théâtre de l'Archevêché on that spot. A new production, from
Iranian film director
Abbas Kiarostami,
of Mozart’s most ravishing opera will be mounted this year, a
co-production with the English National Opera. Christophe Rousset
conducts the Camerata Salzburg. Mozart and the ‘Year of European
Intercultural Dialogue’ are also represented by the Wiener
Festwochen’s production of the unfinished Singspiel,
Zaide. Once again the Camerata Salzburg performs, this time
under the baton of Louis Langrée. Director Peter Sellars has
commented: ‘In
Zaide, Mozart was attempting to construct a musical and
dramatic bridge between Europe and the Muslim world, replacing the
“menace” perceived on both sides with mercy and compassion.’
Sir Simon Rattle’s and Stéphane Braunschweig’s Ring cycle
now reaches Siegfried. The Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra
will be in the pit and the cast includes Ben Heppner – perhaps at
last a Siegfried who can sing the role? – Sir Willard White, Anna
Larsson, and Katarina Dalayman. The other operas being staged are
Haydn’s L’infedeltà delusa, Handel’s Belshazzar
(strictly speaking, an oratorio), and a new work by Pascal Dusapin.
His electro-acoustical Passion, a dialogue with Monteverdi
commissioned by the Festival, will be directed by Giuseppe Frigeni.
Franck Ollu conducts the Ensemble Modern Frankfurt and the cast
includes the excellent Barbara Hannigan.
There will also be a numerous concerts. Highlights include the
Berlin Philharmonic under Rattle in two programmes (Brahms, Dvořák,
and Bartók; and three Haydn symphonies), the same orchestra in
Smetana’s Má vlast, conducted by
Jiří Bělohlávek, the SWR Symphony Orchestra under Sylvain
Cambreling in Messiaen’s vast Turangalîla-Symphonie (it
received its first European performance at Aix in 1950), Olivier
Latry performing more Messiaen in the centenary of his birth on
the organ of the Cathédrale Saint Sauveur, chamber concerts
from ensembles drawn from the Berlin Philharmonic, and a recital
by Karita Mattila. Three of Dusapin’s string quartets will be
performed by the Quatuor Duodima. ‘Early music’ will be
represented by William Christie conducting The Fairy Queen
and French Baroque music from Christophe Rousset. The
‘intercultural dialogue’ proceeds with Arabic and Sephardic songs,
a night of flamenco, and music from mediæval Spain.
Mark Berry
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