One of the
more unexpected tributes to Shakespeare on the 400th anniversary of his death is provided here by actor William Shatner, who
hams up Sonnet 129 before soprano Anna Prohaska trills the poem to a
nouveaux-classical accompaniment.
Canadian
musician Rufus Wainwright delivers an uneasy marriage of classical and pop.
Take All My Loves is an uneasy
marriage of classical and pop, on which the sonnets are often overwhelmed by
Wainwright’s extravagantly theatrical arrangements. It has come to something
when Florence Welch, who sings the waltz-time When in Disgrace With Fortune and
Men’s Eyes (Sonnet 29), is called upon to provide nuance and subtlety.
Wainwright’s many guest stars include his sister Martha, who pops up on
Unperfect Actor (Sonnet 23), while Shatner’s fellow thesps Siân Phillips,
Helena Bonham Carter, Carrie Fisher and Peter Eyre also provide spoken word
recitals. Bewilderingly, Sonnet 66 is translated into German (the genesis of
the project was Wainwright’s collaboration with the Berliner Ensemble) and
sounds like a Brecht/Weill composition.
http://www.theguardian.com/music/2016/apr/21/rufus-wainwright-take-all-my-loves-9-shakespeare-sonnets-review
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