By REBECCA SCHMID
Shostakovich’s “The
Nose,” staged by Barrie Kosky, arrives in Australia after a run at the Royal
Opera House in London in 2016. Credit Robbie Jack/Corbis, via Getty Images
A look at coming performances of music, opera and ballet around the
world.
HELSINKI, FINLAND
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Helsinki Music Center
Dec. 6
The Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra celebrates its 90th
anniversary and a century of national independence with two world premieres by
native composers. Magnus Lindberg, a former artist-in-residence with the New
York Philharmonic, unveils the orchestral work “Tempus Fugit,” while Lotta
Wennakoski employs a male choir in “Uniin asti” (“Until Dreams”). Also included
is Sibelius’s “Kullervo,” a symphonic poem that established the composer as the
voice of National Romanticism in the late 19th century.
The Orchestre
Symphonique de Montréal owns an octobass, an approximately 11-foot instrument.
Only two others are known to exist. Credit Antoine Saito for the Orchestre
Symphonique de Montréal
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA
“The Nose,” Sydney Opera House
Select dates, Feb. 21-March 3
Shostakovich’s “The Nose,” staged by Barrie Kosky, arrives in
Australia for the first time. Based on Nikolai Gogol’s absurdist tale of the
nose of a civil servant that escapes and sends St. Petersburg into disarray,
the opera was dropped from repertory by Soviet authorities in 1930 and
rediscovered by the West in the 1960s. This production, first seen at London’s
Royal Opera in 2016, features an English translation by David Pountney. The
bass John Tomlinson, bass-baritone Martin Winkler and tenor Alexander Lewis
return from the original cast.
MONTREAL
Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal
Feb. 14-15
At the Maison Symphonique de Montréal, a modern concert hall
unveiled in 2011, the Iranian-born composer Behzad Ranjbaran’s Concerto for
Double Bass and Orchestra receives its first performance. If the program’s
inclusion of the overture to Wagner’s “Lohengrin” and Mahler’s First Symphony
seems conventional, there is a twist: The Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal
owns an octobass, an approximately 11-foot instrument of which only two others
are known to exist. Kent Nagano, the music director, conducts.
BEIJING
“Thaïs,” National Center for the Performing Arts
Feb. 2-6
Jules Massenet’s “Thaïs,” about a courtesan in ancient Egypt who
dies shortly after converting to Christianity, receives its Chinese premiere.
The opera is well known in the West but not performed as often as the
composer’s “Manon” or “Werther.” Ermonela Jaho stars in the title role
alongside Plácido Domingo as the monk Athanaël. The rising star tenor Antonio
Poli appears as the philosopher Nicias. The Massenet specialist Patrick
Fournillier conducts, while Hugo de Ana presides over staging.
A portrait of Bach
in a stained glass window at St. Thomas Church in Leipzig, Germany, where the
composer served as cantor for nearly three decades. Credit DeAgostini/Getty
Images
LEIPZIG, GERMANY
“Weihnachtsoratorium,” St. Thomas Church
Dec. 15
The holiday season in Germany would not be complete without a
performance of Bach’s “Weihnachtsoratorium” (Christmas Oratorio). In Leipzig,
the work returns to St. Thomas Church, where the composer served as cantor for
nearly three decades. The current Thomaskantor, Gotthold Schwarz, leads the
Gewandhausorchester and the church choir, which performed the score for the
first time in 1734. The program also includes the “Magnificat,” written shortly
after Bach began his tenure.
The Swedish
choreographer Alexander Ekman will make his company debut with “Play” at the
Palais Garnier. Credit Artyom Geodakyan/TASS, via Getty Images
PARIS
“Play,” Palais Garnier
Dec. 6-31
The Swedish choreographer Alexander Ekman, known for works that mix
theatricality with a vocabulary drawing on both classic and contemporary dance,
makes his company debut. The 33-year-old sets out to explore what it means to
play as an adult through a mix of individual movements and synchronized
gestures. “Let’s give ourselves permission to be crazy,” he says in a
statement, “to forget the everyday.” Mr. Ekman also designs sets and
collaborates on costumes. Music is provided by the Swedish composer Mikael
Karlsson.
MUNICH
“Il Trittico,” Bavarian State Opera
Select dates, Dec. 17-Jan. 1
Kirill Petrenko, the general music director, conducts his first
Puccini opera in a staging by the Dutch director Lotte de Beer. The production
is the first time that “Il Trittico” — a trilogy of one-act operas shadowing
the passage from hell to heaven — will be performed in the original Italian in
Munich. The celebrated baritone Ambrogio Maestri makes his debut as the title
character of “Gianni Schicchi,” the second installment, while the soprano
Ermonela Jaho returns to a signature role in “Suor Angelica.”
A rehearsal for
“Nureyev,” a new ballet, at the Bolshoi
HONG KONG
“Götterdämmerung,” Hong Kong Philharmonic
Jan. 18, 21
The Hong Kong Philharmonic performs the final installment of a
“Ring” cycle that began in 2015. Jaap van Zweden, the music director, leads a
cast including the tenor Daniel Brenna as the antihero Siegfried and the
soprano Gun-Brit Barkmin as Brünnhilde, daughter of the father of the gods. The
mezzo Michelle DeYoung, who sang in “Das Rheingold,” takes on the role of
Brünnhilde’s sister, Waltraute, while the bass Eric Halfvarson steps in to
replace Mikhail Petrenko as the evil Hagen.
ZURICH
“Idomeneo,” Opernhaus Zurich
Select dates, Feb. 4-March 2
The lakeside opera house presents Mozart’s Dramma per musica in
three acts. Set at the end of the Trojan War, the story tells of the romantic
triangle among two princesses and Idamante — son of Idomeneo, king of Crete —
and how he escapes being sacrificed to the gods. The soprano Hanna-Elisabeth
Müller makes her house debut as Princess Ilia, while the tenor Joseph Kaiser,
who played Tamino in Kenneth Branagh’s 2007 film version of “The Magic Flute,”
sings the title role. The early music specialist Giovanni Antonini conducts the
Orchestra La Scintilla.
MOSCOW
“Nureyev,” Bolshoi Theater
Dec. 9-10
A new ballet about the life of the Soviet-born dancer Rudolf
Khametovich Nureyev is scheduled to finally take the stage. “Nureyev” was
postponed at the last minute in July, and its librettist, director and
designer, Kirill Serebrennikov, remains under house arrest, accused of
embezzling state funds. The show’s exploration of Nureyev’s homosexuality also
stirred up controversy given Russian laws against “gay propaganda.” The young
Russian composer Ilya Demutsky provides music, while the San Francisco-based
Yuri Possokhov presides over choreography.
BERLIN
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Philharmonie
Jan. 10
The Japanese-born composer Dai Fujikura unveils his Cello Concerto,
described by The New York Times last year as “overtly seductive,” in a new
version for large orchestra. The international soloist Jan Vogler performs the
part originally conceived for Katinka Kleijn, while Manfred Honeck conducts.
The program also includes Debussy’s “Six Épigraphes Antiques,” a four-hand
piano suite posthumously scored for orchestra by the American composer Alan
Fletcher, and Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony.
LONDON
“Messiah,” Southbank Center
Dec. 15
In London, where the German-born Handel established himself as the
country’s leading composer in the early 18th century, the Southbank Center
evokes his most famous oratorio’s historic origins with period costumes and a
candlelit setting. The Mozart Festival Orchestra, which specializes in baroque
and classical repertoire, joins the City of London Choir under the baton of
Hilary Davan Wetton. The quartet of soloists includes the soprano Jennifer
France and the baritone George Humphreys.
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