Are the walls of tradition that enclose Grand Opera tumbling down?
The Metropolitan Opera opened its season with a spare, avant-garde Tosca that was roundly booed by the fuddy-duddiest of New Yorks music lovers. Now, the
Florentine Opera unveils its own bare-bones Tosca, which is inciting murmured discussion around town even though there were no boos evident on Friday nights opening ovations.
Musically, this Tosca was top-notch. The three principals delivered their parts and the emotions behind them with great spirit and musicianship. The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, under Joseph Rescigni, sounded terrific.
But what of the story, the drama of Tosca, her lover Cavaradossi, and the evil Scarpia? How does it create suspense, emotion, pity, terror and all that stuff that great drama is supposed to deliver. And how does Noel Stollmacks set contribute to the drama?
Tosca perhaps isnt on the same scale as Aida or Turandot, but it carries with it an expectation of spectacle. The cathedral interiors of Act One. The darkly sumptuous surroundings of Scarpias apartment in Act Two. And the wind-swept parapet of Act Three.
But there are different ways of handling spectacle. Compare these two European productions from last year.

Stollmacks designs for the Florentine were more in the category of anti-spectacle. To be sure, they reflected the lean times facing arts groups todayand reflect, I think, a wise way to allocate available money to a production. But they also served the spirit of Tosca well. In Act One, for example, theres a large projected painting, a shadow suggesting a statue of the Madonna, and a cross of candles stretching across the racked stage, suggesting the cruciform shape of a cathedral. Rather than overwhelm the setting with the baroque details of a church, Stollmacks set evokes its shadowy emptiness. Instead of Scarpia standing out as a dark figure against the opulent backdrop of religious ritual, this
world is one already transformed by his lust for power.
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You dont hear the term Grand Opera too much these days. Perhaps the opulence that it implies is old hat. But the Florentine showed that a production can rely on artistry rather than the grandiose. Puccinis melodrama was grand in many senses of the word.
Tosca photo by Richard Brodzeller for the Florentine Opera Company © 2009 Space was important to the
Present Music annual Thanksgiving concert, as well. Under the resonant vaulted ceilings of The Cathedral of St. John, Kevin Stalheim led an inspired program, including a spiritual medley of sorts that linked cultures and styles with an eye toward polyglot transcendence. It began with the primal, earth-spirit song of the Bucks Native American group. Then quieted with two pieces by the meditative Estonian Arvo Part, who uses repetitive figures and open harmonies that evoke Renaissance polyphony (Milwaukee Choral Artists joined the PM ensemble here).
Frode Fjellheims Psalm, evoked a childlike simplicity, buoyed by Les Thimmigs soprano saxophone, and Parts Estonian Lullabya lovely round sung by mother and child (Indra Brusabardis and Larissa Clopton) carried on in the same spirit. Taking advantage of the venue, Stalheim concluded with the finale to Philip Glasss Satyagraha played by organist Karen Beaumont. Here, the almost imperceptible shifts between time signatures suggested a dialectic which leads to a powerful spiritual unity.
After the charged, metallic series of string quartet pieces by Osvaldo Golijov, the featured event, the world premiere of Alexandra du Bois In Beauty, May I Walk, captured the spirit of much of the music that had come before. Built on a lilting, almost ceremonial chant (a simple, descending fifth), it evokes nature with Messiaen-like birdsong, and spirit with marvelous overlapping sonoritiesa kind of music of the spheres for our own time. True to its participatory heritage, the concert ended with song and dance in which everyone was invited to join.
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