
Goldschmidt: Beatrice Cenci / James, Pohl, Debus, Vienna Symphony
World Premiere recording on Video! Church corruption, human violence and a daughter who plots revenge on her abusive father â Goldschmidtâs Beatrice Cenci has every ingredient for a gripping opera. At Bregenz, Johannes Erath brought Beatrice Cenci on stage for the first time. Although written 70 years ago, âone musically quickly associates Puccini or other Romanticsâ (Neue Zurcher Zeitung), underlined by GoldschmidtÂŽs own words, saying it became a real âBelcanto-Operaâ. âJohannes Debus conducts the Wiener Symphoniker with true feeling for the scoreâ. âIn the title role, Gal James is movingâ and âthe baritone Christoph Pohl has all the vocal charisma.â (The Telegraph). A âbrilliantly focused staging of a neglected workâ (The Telegraph), a âgreat, wonderful eveningâ (Deutschlandfunk Kultur).
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REVIEW:
Goldschmidt set out to write a latterday bel canto work, and his vocal lines are certainly always singable, over orchestral writing that references Mahler, Busoni and Schreker as well as standard 19th-century operatic models. The Bregenz cast, led by Gal James as Beatrice, with Dshamilja Kaiser as her stepmother Lucrezia and Christoph Pohl as the swaggering, monstrous Francisco Cenci, complete with diamante codpiece, is a very decent one, and Johannes Debus makes sure that Goldschmidtâs whirling, churning orchestral writing gets the attention it deserves.
â Guardian
World Premiere recording on Video! Church corruption, human violence and a daughter who plots revenge on her abusive father â Goldschmidtâs Beatrice Cenci has every ingredient for a gripping opera. At Bregenz, Johannes Erath brought Beatrice Cenci on stage for the first time. Although written 70 years ago, âone musically quickly associates Puccini or other Romanticsâ (Neue Zurcher Zeitung), underlined by GoldschmidtÂŽs own words, saying it became a real âBelcanto-Operaâ. âJohannes Debus conducts the Wiener Symphoniker with true feeling for the scoreâ. âIn the title role, Gal James is movingâ and âthe baritone Christoph Pohl has all the vocal charisma.â (The Telegraph). A âbrilliantly focused staging of a neglected workâ (The Telegraph), a âgreat, wonderful eveningâ (Deutschlandfunk Kultur).
-----
REVIEW:
Goldschmidt set out to write a latterday bel canto work, and his vocal lines are certainly always singable, over orchestral writing that references Mahler, Busoni and Schreker as well as standard 19th-century operatic models. The Bregenz cast, led by Gal James as Beatrice, with Dshamilja Kaiser as her stepmother Lucrezia and Christoph Pohl as the swaggering, monstrous Francisco Cenci, complete with diamante codpiece, is a very decent one, and Johannes Debus makes sure that Goldschmidtâs whirling, churning orchestral writing gets the attention it deserves.
â Guardian
Description
World Premiere recording on Video! Church corruption, human violence and a daughter who plots revenge on her abusive father â Goldschmidtâs Beatrice Cenci has every ingredient for a gripping opera. At Bregenz, Johannes Erath brought Beatrice Cenci on stage for the first time. Although written 70 years ago, âone musically quickly associates Puccini or other Romanticsâ (Neue Zurcher Zeitung), underlined by GoldschmidtÂŽs own words, saying it became a real âBelcanto-Operaâ. âJohannes Debus conducts the Wiener Symphoniker with true feeling for the scoreâ. âIn the title role, Gal James is movingâ and âthe baritone Christoph Pohl has all the vocal charisma.â (The Telegraph). A âbrilliantly focused staging of a neglected workâ (The Telegraph), a âgreat, wonderful eveningâ (Deutschlandfunk Kultur).
-----
REVIEW:
Goldschmidt set out to write a latterday bel canto work, and his vocal lines are certainly always singable, over orchestral writing that references Mahler, Busoni and Schreker as well as standard 19th-century operatic models. The Bregenz cast, led by Gal James as Beatrice, with Dshamilja Kaiser as her stepmother Lucrezia and Christoph Pohl as the swaggering, monstrous Francisco Cenci, complete with diamante codpiece, is a very decent one, and Johannes Debus makes sure that Goldschmidtâs whirling, churning orchestral writing gets the attention it deserves.
â Guardian



















