Make text bigger  Make text smaller  Toggle background color  Bookmark/Share

The Tsarina’s Slippers | Opera review


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

Royal Opera House, London

Composers’ attitudes to their own works are often curious. Tchaikovsky believed The Tsarina’s Slippers (Cherevichki in Russian; more correctly “little boots” in English) was his finest opera. Posterity has questioned his judgment and will probably continue to do so in the wake of this expensive-looking production that combines the forces of the Royal Opera and the Royal Ballet. It doesn’t, by any means, make a case for the work as a lost masterpiece.

Tchaikovsky’s source was Nikolai Gogol’s story Christmas Eve, about Oxana, a wilful Ukrainian girl who agrees to marry her blacksmith boyfriend Vakula if he gets her some of Catherine the Great’s footwear. In order to do so, Vakula forces into his service a none-too-bright devil, who is one of the several would-be lovers of his witchy mother Solokha. Their phantasmagoric Christmas Eve journey allows Tchaikovsky to contrast folksy Ukrainean vigour with rarefied 18th-century St Petersburg, as well as painting a rather questionable portrait of a unified Russian empire, blithely preparing for the festive season.

The material is uneven, though. The dances are delightful, while Vakula’s moments of doubt permit Tchaikovsky to examine male vulnerability, where he is, of course, supreme. The rest of it, however, is charming if insubstantial. Tchaikovsky, who could turn against his own music if he considered it too self-revealing, probably adored Cherevichki because it is safe and a bit anonymous.

Francesca Zambello’s big, gaudy staging plays at times to the opera’s weaknesses by emphasising spectacle at the expense of character. There are dancing bears and whirling Cossacks. Catherine’s court spills across the stage from beneath the skirts of a huge gilded statue of the Empress. Choreographer Alastair Marriott serves up mock Petipa in St Petersburg and an elegant divertissement, reminiscent of Ashton’s Ondine, for the water nymphs who distract Vakula on his journey.

Musically, things could be tighter. The opera needs a stronger conductor than the rather routine Alexander Polianichko. Both Maxim Mikhailov’s devil and Larissa Diadkova’s lubricious Solokha were having problems with their high notes on opening night, while Olga Guryakova’s Oxana was unremittingly loud. On the other hand, Vsevolod Grivnov is a fabulous Vakula, convincing you that he has the soul of a poet in the body of a nerd. And the great Sergei Leiferkus makes a brief but show-stealing appearance as His Excellency, Catherine’s nameless lover.

Until 8 December. Box office: 020-7304 4000.

• This article was amended on Monday 23 November 2009. The original stated that the devil’s role was taken by Vladimir Matorin. This has been corrected.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Charlie Brooker: The life of Mariah Carey sounds terribly demanding


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

I can scarcely imagine the level of forelock-tugging servility Mariah Carey must have encountered during her lifetime

Last week Mariah Carey turned on the Christmas lights at the Westfield shopping centre in Shepherds Bush, west London. That might sound like a trivial event of interest only to cretins, but remember: hundreds of thousands of brave men and women died in combat so the current generation could enjoy such freedoms. The assembled masses weren’t simply taking mobile phone snapshots of a vastly overrated singer emptily promoting a commercially- appropriated religious festival celebrating the birth of a man who would have doubtless vomited up his own ribcage in disgust at the mere sight of the hollow, anaesthetising capitalist moonbase that is the Westfield Centre. No. They were honouring the fallen. Sort of. Vaguely. OK: not at all.

Anyway, any story featuring Carey has to at some point dwell on a list of outlandish arch-diva requests, and this one didn’t disappoint. According to early press reports, she demanded to be driven along a long pink carpet in a vintage Rolls-Royce before arriving at the podium (also pink) at which point she’d activate the lights by waving a magic wand, accompanied by 20 white kittens and 100 white doves. Pink, butterfly-shaped confetti would shower all around her at the end of the ceremony.

In the event, that turned to be bullshit. She arrived in a Merc, burbled a few inanities (“Wow, I’ve never been to a mall in London before!”), shook hands with some charity kids, and sodded off out of there. In fact the most startling thing about Carey’s turn was her outfit: a pair of jeans so tight she was virtually ingesting them. No kittens. No doves. Not even a pink podium. You could be forgiven for thinking the papers had just lazily printed a load of PR bibble cynically engineered to promote the event by playing on popular assumptions about Carey’s caprice, and had done so without bothering to check any of the facts.

Thing is, even if Carey had made a string of crazy demands, I wouldn’t blame her. I doubt many celebrities start out behaving like foot-stamping little Caligulas, but years of having their arses kissed left, right and centre – yes, even on that centre bit – steadily drives them insane.

I’ve seen it happen in my own life, in my own little way. About 10 years ago I was co-presenting a technology show on a niche digital channel with an audience of about six. This was my first time in front of the cameras. I had less screen presence than the Invisible Man and the sex appeal of a fatal headwound. Since the show was shot in the “zoo” format popular at the time, the camera often roved dangerously close to my face, which made the experience of watching me a bit like gazing through a security peephole to see John Merrick leering ominously on your doorstep. I was unfunny, uncomfortable and charmless. Things have changed since then, obviously. I’m fatter.

Anyway, during the first week of making the show, the runner would come over between takes to check whether I needed anything. A chair, perhaps? A glass of water? At first, this was embarrassing. I didn’t want anyone making a fuss of me. But one of the primary rules of television is to keep “the talent” happy, and consequently there was no let-up. So you accept the proffered chair, sup the glass of water. And after several weeks of pampering, something snaps in your brain. You grow accustomed to the attention; like wireless broadband, it’s an everyday miracle you simply take for granted. Before long, the moment you get thirsty, your first thought is no longer “I’ll go and pour myself a drink”, but something along the lines of “Where’s that runner gone?”, “Why haven’t I been watered already?”, or “Isn’t this a disgusting breach of my human rights?”

And that’s the treatment given to an ugly bloke on a cheap satellite show. I can scarcely imagine the level of forelock-tugging servility Carey must have encountered during her lifetime. Her record company probably employs someone to walk 10 paces in front of her, breathing on all the doorknobs in her mansion so they won’t feel cold to the touch. Not that she’ll have touched a doorknob in 15 years. She must think every door in the world opens by magic at the first sign of her approach.  

Under those circumstances, you’d rapidly lose all respect for “regular people” and start issuing lunatic demands for them to follow, partly to keep yourself amused, and partly out of sheer disgust. After all, if you’re going to bow each time I enter the room, I might as well make you kiss my feet a few times while you’re down there.

Come to think of it, maybe that’s why it’s hard to detect much in the way of palpable feeling in Carey’s music. Her singing voice wavers up and down through the octaves, like someone slowly tuning a shortwave radio in search of an authentic emotion. It’s technically amazing, but almost impossible to relate to on a human level – possibly because she no longer experiences anything akin to regular human life. She might not even experience proper emotions these days. She might have people who do that for her. Aides who rush in and hitch up the corners of her mouth each time she starts to smile, and mop down her cheeks with tiny hand-knitted towels when she cries.

But is it Mariah’s fault if she’s over-indulged? No. It’s yours. You specifically are to blame.

Oh OK: it’s society’s fault. If society insists on treating celebrities like royalty, there’s little point lambasting them for behaving like princesses. It’s nurture, not nature. And besides, the press is probably making it up anyway. Tales of the cosseted few whistling through an unreliable sphincter into the eyes and ears of the many: that’s entertainment news, that is. 

• To order a copy of Charlie Brooker’s latest book The Hell Of It All for £8.99 (RRP £12.99) call 0845 606 4232 or go to guardian.co.uk/bookshop


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Composer reinvents the piano


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

‘Fluid’ instrument allows pianists to alter sound before or while they play

For a non-pianist, the idea of a microtonally fluid piano might seem either no big deal or baffling. But this weekend a composer will reveal the result of a 10-year mission – nothing less than the reinvention of one of the most important instruments in western music.

Geoff Smith believes he has come up with the first multicultural acoustic piano – what he has trademarked as a fluid piano – which allows players to alter the tuning of notes either before or during a performance. Instead of a pianist having a fixed sound, 88 notes from 88 keys, Smith’s piano has sliders allowing them access to the different scales that you get in, for example, Indian and Iranian music. For good measure, Smith has included a horizontal harp.

The Guardian was last weekend given the first access to an instrument that is already generating considerable excitement – and it can be seen and heard on our website. It will be formally unveiled at the University of Surrey on Saturday and receive a London premiere at the Purcell Room in March.

Smith, a Brighton-based composer and performer, said: “The fluid piano is a western piano as we know it, similar to an early fortepiano, but because of the tuning mechanisms, suddenly, musicians can explore scales from the Middle East, from Iran.”

Smith’s instrument has been made by the Somerset-based Christopher Barlow and a light ash has been deliberately chosen as the wood – Smith said he did not want it to look like a dark coffin.

The fluid piano has generated much interest since it was first mentioned in the Guardian six years ago – when it was Smith with little more than a one-key mechanism and an ambition. Now he has the actual instrument he has been getting performers on board.

“I’ve said to musicians they might feel insecure about this piano, they might feel scared. But if they embrace it they will have this big feeling of liberation, a big high.”

At the premiere, three pianists will perform, including Pam Chowhan, the head of planning at the Royal Festival Hall. She admitted to being daunted when first confronted with the piano.

“It was really scary, it is even now. I’m mainly a classical pianist and you kind of know what you’re doing, you know how the piano is going to respond and you spend ages and ages on tone control andknowinghow it is going to sound. Suddenly I’ve got a piano which sounds like nothing I’ve heard before. It opens up so many choices that you become almost paralysed.”

There have been all sorts of challenges, including having to come up with her own way of writing music for the instrument.

Chowhan said the internet had helped open access to all sorts of music from around the world. “If you’re going to start delving into different cultures and bring those influences into your work you need to think about tuning and the traditional piano simply can’t cut it. The piano, for me, is absolutely useless in a non-western context because it can’t respond to the subtle and fluid tuning of other cultures.”

Also performing on Saturday will be London-based jazz pianist Nikki Yeoh and the Leeds-based improvisational pianist Matthew Bourne. He said playing the fluid piano was “like walking into a huge sweet shop. The possibilities are endless. Sometimes I do nothing, I just sit and stare at it”.

Smith said he had received much support – from Arts Council England for example– but had also encountered resistance. “Instruments of the western orchestra are locked in time, ringfenced. Why is that? It’s not for technical reasons, so it must be for political or cultural reasons. There’s a lot of talk in classical music about making orchestras more diverse. The only way you’re going to bring new people in is by changing the instruments. To some people that is a completely alien concept.

“We are one of the most multicultural societies in Europe. Some people need to put their money where their mouth is.”

Smith, who has written scores for silent films and is a highly regarded player of the hammered dulcimer, has been invited to take his piano to a Chopin festival in Poland. But the dream is to get his fluid piano manufactured. “It has become a fundamental part of my life, because it’s driven by a vision. It’s not just about money, although I haven’t got much money so of course I’d like to make some. Any money I have had has gone on this,” he said. “The thing was, I always knew it would work – I wasn’t like some crazy inventor.”


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Pass notes No 2,687: Lady Gaga


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

The outrageous pop singer has been booked for the Royal Variety Performance

Age: 23.

Appearance: Topshop sales assistant trying to convince a credulous police officer she’s an extraterrestrial being.

It’s a great look, and one adopted behind closed doors by a surprising variety of people – so why should I care about her? Because she’s been awarded the highest honour available to a pop singer.

The Victoria Cross? No, you dolt, a slot at the Royal Variety Performance.

Her Maj is a big fan, then? There has been no public statement from Buckingham Palace, though we suggest Prince Philip neck some beta-blockers before the show. Goodness only knows what she will do for his blood pressure.

Foreign is she? Italian-American, but it’s her racy stage act we’re worried about. The Daily Telegraph reported that at the MTV video awards she pretended to stab herself to death. Fake blood sprayed everywhere, and she ended up hanging from the ceiling. She’s outrageous, you know.

I can’t see how that would worry Prince Philip. Sounds suspiciously like the aftermath of a trip to the grouse moor, with her as the grouse. All right then, if you still don’t believe she’s a threat to the very fabric of society, you should read the Daily Mail. It reported that she’s become a bad influence on Beyoncé.

How? By convincing her to record fewer great pop songs and more tedious ballads? No, by getting her to wear an eye mask and a Perspex bra in a video. Lady Gaga likes her peculiar costumes.

Oh, for goodness sake. Is that the best you can do? Listen, google Lady+Gaga+Outrage and you get 190,000 hits. Google Prince+Philip+Outrage and you only get 40,900 hits. Given the number of outrages he’s been involved in, I’d say that’s pretty clear evidence of her outrageousness.

Do say: “I used to buy my lingerie from La Perla, but I find Perspex so much more comfortable.”

Don’t say: “I’m sure Prince Harry will lend you one of his costumes for the show.”


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Elision/Barrett | Classical review


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

Bates Mill, Huddersfield

Richard Barrett’s Opening of the Mouth was given its UK premiere at Bates Mill by the Australian ensemble Elision. This 75-minute sequence of overlapping movements is built around a series of poems by Paul Celan, set for soprano and mezzo, and intercut with electronic interludes and quasi-independent instrumental pieces. Everything is amplified and enhanced, if that’s the right word, by Barrett’s electronic improvisations, but the effect is to coarsen and homogenise the music.

The Huddersfield contemporary music festival continues until Sunday. Box office: 01484 430528.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Hilliard Ensemble/Arditti Quartet | Classical review


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

St Paul’s Hall, Huddersfield

After a couple of years when Britain’s leading new-music festival seemed to be losing its way in a welter of improvisation, installations and electro-acoustic environments, it’s more like business as usual in Huddersfield this November. Premieres abound, and the roster of visiting ensembles is impressive by any standards. As if to signal the change of tack, the festival opened with a UK premiere from one of Europe’s leading composers, Wolfgang Rihm, delivered by the Hilliard Ensemble and Arditti Quartet in St Paul’s Hall just five days after its first performance in Cologne.

Rihm’s hour-long –ET LUX– is a requiem of sorts. The fragmentary Latin text comes from the requiem mass, though it’s only decipherable when isolated words emerge from the dense four-part textures. The string quartet traces a series of etiolated, rather Nono-like ideas against the somewhat archaic-sounding vocal writing. There are few climaxes, or even moments when the voices and strings unite in anything like a common purpose, yet the result is quietly attractive.

The Huddersfield contemporary music festival continues until Sunday. Box office: 01484 430528.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Northern Sinfonia/Zehetmair | Classical review


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

Sage, Gateshead

Elliott Carter, who will be 101 next month, is the giant redwood of American composers; a force of nature who keeps acquiring annual rings and seems capable of going on forever. Carter has said that his harmonically restless, rhythmically complex compositions require at least 10 years for musicians to fully explore their depths. Heinz Holliger has spent twice that amount of time unpicking the enigma of Oboe Concerto, composed for him when Carter was a mere 80 years old. Holliger is without doubt one of the finest oboists on the planet and an authority on Carter’s music. Yet he still peered at the score as if its strange language were something he was only just beginning to understand.

The piece requires the soloist to produce a vast array of sounds, not all of them pretty. It would require another skilled oboist to tell you if some of the more extreme squeals and rasps are exactly as represented on the page. Yet during the incantatory slow section, Holliger’s astringent sound softened into a sublime singing tone.

Thomas Zehetmair brought a satisfying balance to the programme, bookending the Carter between one of Haydn’s most mournful symphonies and one of Schubert’s cheeriest. The lachrymose adagio of Haydn’s Symphony no. 99 is sometimes interpreted as a funerary tribute to Mozart; while the jocular woodwind arpeggios of Schubert’s “Little” Symphony in C sound like a tribute to Rossini. The Northern Sinfonia responded to the programme with a bipolar expression of light and shade.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Sir John Dankworth & Dame Cleo Laine at the London Jazz festival


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

Various venues

Sonny Rollins won a standing ovation for the storm of sound he unleashed on the London Jazz festival a week ago. In the event’s last days, Sir John Dankworth played just one tender tune on the alto saxophone, and the Royal Festival Hall, to a man, woman and child, rose to give the same accolade. Dankworth’s recent hospitalisation had threatened to rule him out of this long-planned concert with his wife Cleo Laine, daughter Jacqui and son Alec, plus a big band, choir and string quartet. When he emerged in a wheelchair, his family and a good many listeners looked to be holding their breath as he hesitantly brought the sax to his mouth. Then Dankworth’s long-honed alto tone, coolly romantic with a woody, clarinet-like edge, filled the hall with Duke Ellington’s Tonight I Shall Sleep.

But this was by no means a gig that hinged only on respect for the fortitude of what Laine called “two old codgers”, despite the pair’s immense contribution to music. It was an entertaining, varied and accomplished show celebrating traditional songwriting, notably Johnny Mercer’s. Laine, making a walking stick look like a natural accessory to an evening gown, was astonishing on the ethereal It Amazes Me and a stingingly propulsive It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing – as much in control of her organ-pipe low tones, piccolo upper range and actor’s timing as she ever was in almost 60 years on the road. But her daughter Jacqui’s mellow, soulful voice, and the craft of violinist Chris Garrick (improvising on a Bach medley), bassist Alec Dankworth and trombonist/MD Mark Nightingale kept her admirable company.

Elsewhere during the closing LJF weekend, Italian pianist Stefano Bollani proved how irresistibly improv, lyricism and knockabout comedy could combine at Kings Place, demonically grinning guitar virtuoso Charlie Hunter funked Ronnie Scott’s into a noisy trance, and the Scottish jazz scene further raised its high credit rating with a free South Bank showcase including a punchy trio featuring pianist Dave Milligan and drummer Tom Bancroft.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




Elisabeth Söderström obituary


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

Swedish soprano whose perceptive singing and vivid acting made her a great heroine in operas by Tchaikovsky, Richard Strauss and Janáček

One of the most perceptive and admired sopranos of the postwar era, Elisabeth Söderström, who has died aged 82, had a lengthy career that carried on into the 1990s, when she was well into her 60s. In everything she attempted, her vibrantly beautiful singing was enhanced by her good looks and vivid acting. With her sensitive demeanour she was particularly successful at portraying the troubled women who abound in opera, such as Leonore in Beethoven’s Fidelio, Tatyana in Tchaikovsky’s Evgeny Onegin and the Countess in Richard Strauss’s Capriccio, three of the roles with which she delighted audiences at Glyndebourne.

She was born in Stockholm, the daughter of a Swedish naval captain and a Russian mother, and studied at the Royal Academy and Opera School there. She made her debut as early as 1947, when she was just 20, as Mozart’s Bastienne, in the Drottningholm Court Theatre. Thereafter she joined the Swedish Royal Opera, of which she remained a member throughout the rest of her career. Her roles there stretched from Monteverdi’s Nero (Poppea) through Mozart’s Countess Almaviva (in Figaro, one of her most palpitating portrayals), Strauss’s Octavian and Marschallin (both in Der Rosenkavalier) to Janáček’s Jenůfa.

At the Royal Opera in London, she also loved playing the Governess in Britten’s The Turn of the Screw and Marie in Berg’s Wozzeck, two further distressed women. But she also revelled in lighter things, such as Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus and Saffi in the same composer’s Der Zigeunerbaron (The Gypsy Baron). She sang many of her roles both in Swedish and in the original.

ln 1955 she made her debut at the Salzburg Festival, as the boy Ighino in Pfitzner’s Palestrina. She first appeared at Glyndebourne in 1957, as the Composer in Strauss’s Ariadne auf Naxos, and in 1963-64 she was much admired there as Elisabeth Zimmer in Henze’s Elegy for Young Lovers. She made her debut at Covent Garden in 1960, with the Royal Swedish Opera as Daisy Doody in Blomdahl’s Aniara and as Morgana in Handel’s Alcina. She returned there, with the resident company, as Octavian and as an unforgettable Mélisande under Pierre Boulez (1969-70, a role that she recorded with him).

Her Metropolitan Opera debut was as Susanna (Figaro) in 1959, followed by Strauss’s Sophie, which meant she had undertaken all three of the women’s roles in Der Rosenkavalier, once joking that she would now have to undertake Baron Ochs. She continued to appear in New York for the following four seasons. One of her later roles, that of the 300-year-old Emilia Marty in Janáček’s The Makropulos Case, was undertaken with, among others, Welsh National Opera, an unforgettable experience, also seen in London. She wonderfully conveyed Marty’s emotional cynicism and boredom at having lived so long. She followed that with the old Countess in Tchaikovsky’s The Queen of Spades, showing that she could still command attention even with reduced resources.

Söderström often sang in concerts: she appeared at the Royal Festival Hall, London, and in the recording studio with Otto Klemperer in Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis. She was also an accomplished recitalist, singing a wide repertory, but particularly happy in the songs of Sibelius, which she recorded complete in the company of the pianist Vladimir Ashkenazy. She always delighted her audiences by introducing specific items with her particular fey charm, nowhere more successfully than with Mussorgsky’s Nursery cycle. She was also an engaging broadcaster, and often regaled Radio 3 and Radio 4 audiences with her anecdotes.

From 1993 to 1996 she was director of the Drottningholm Palace Theatre, where she had started her career. In retirement, she became an accomplished giver of masterclasses, leavening her lessons with a good deal of humour and general bonhomie.

Söderström was one of the most distinguished artists of her generation. The combination of a charming, yet elusive personality, very Swedish in character, with her vibrant voice and sincere acting enhanced all her portrayals, and while she was as happy deploying them on comedy as on drama, it is undoubtedly for her interpretations of the heroines in the operas of Tchaikovsky, Richard Strauss and Janáček that she will be longest remembered.

As a person, she was the soul of kindness, had a ready wit and was never more at home than when taking part in lively conversation. Colleagues and friends alike were treated generously. In the opera house, she could be demanding, wanting others to meet her own high standards, but she was always co-operative with directors she trusted, and with them she was willing to work as hard and as long as it took to create a result full of inner meaning.

In 1950 she married Sverker Olow, and he survives her, as do their three sons.

John Amis writes: When Elisabeth was invited to make her debut in New York at the Metropolitan Opera, she took all three of her sons with her for the season. When they got to school age, she gave up New York and returned to the Royal Opera in Stockholm. This was typical of her approach to a happy marriage, and to being both a wife and a mother. By that point being rather older than many of her colleagues, she developed the knack of being an elder sister to them and coaching them at rehearsals. She excelled in masterclasses, partly through her good nature, but also because she always sought to encourage her students to give their best; at the same time she delighted her audience without ever buttering her own ego (as many masterclass teachers do).

Elisabeth giggled and laughed a lot, but that only seemed to complement the seriousness of her devotion to her art. Sometimes she would point out to people who implied that a singer’s life was an easy one, how hard it could be. “Sweat, phlegm and dirty feet is often what it’s about,” she would say. “What do we do all day when not rehearsing? We memorise and that takes up a lot of time, all part of the job. And so is winding down after a performance.”

Coming from a country whose language is comparatively remote from most of the repertoire meant that Elisabeth would often sing in several languages. Some of the Janáček operas, for example, she sang not only in the original Czech, but also in German, English and Swedish. She was the least divaish diva that you could meet. She was a good person, a good friend, good wife, good mother, good humoured and an attractive woman.

Sometimes she had a hard time of it. In Jenůfa once her heel caught in a hole in a floorboard: broken knee. Another time in Offenbach’s La Périchole, she took a dive nearly into the orchestral pit: bad back. Deputising, she was manhandled in the last scene of an unfamiliar version of Gounod’s Faust in which Marguérite does not get wafted to heaven, but bundled down to hell: broken arm.

Elisabeth wrote an informative and readable little book, In My Own Key (1979), and in the photographs of her in various roles you can usually guess which role she was playing just by her facial expression, whether it was Tatyana, Leonore, The Governess, Mélisande, Kát’a Kabanová or the Marschallin or Octavian in Rosenkavalier. She was different in each part.

At Glyndebourne, we regulars idolised the singer Sena Jurinac, who left Sussex in 1956 when her marriage broke up, leaving her husband Sesto Bruscantini to sing there by himself. We heard that there was some unknown Swedish singer coming to sing Sena’s roles, and we all hated her in advance. But as soon as she sang the Composer in Strauss’s Ariadne, our hatred turned to love and adoration. The Swede was of course Elisabeth Söderström.

• Elisabeth Söderström, soprano, born May 7 1927; died 20 November 2009

• Alan Blyth died in 2007


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds




A peek at the diary of Morrissey | John Crace


HEADLINE FEED // [READ THE FULL ARTICLE HERE]

‘I’m too old for all that standing up and singing lark’

My manager rings. “I’ve got you a gig in Eastbourne tomorrow.”

“Not interested,” I say. “My back’s killing me and I’m too old for all that standing up and singing lark.”

“It’ll be fine. It’s at an old people’s home and there’ll be only 30 there. Or 29, if nice Mr Briggs doesn’t make it through the next 24 hours.”

“Sounds more like it. They won’t be all pissed and rowdy, will they?”

“Nah – they’re given their meds at 6.30pm, so they’ll be good as gold.”

“I still want a rider in the contract. Just in case. Anyone caught bringing Horlicks into the gig gets slung out. We don’t want them spilling it or throwing it at me, do we? And it’d be nice to start early: I’m good for nothing next day if I’m up after 10pm.”

The band arrives in Eastbourne in time for a bracing walk on the seafront and a cream tea on the pier, then we head for the Peace Haven Rest Home where I change into stretch cords and slippers before going on stage. “Hello-o-o-o, Eastbourne!”

“Could you speak a bit louder?” says Mrs Adamson in the front row. “My hearing aid isn’t working well.”

“I’d rather not,” I reply. “I can’t stand too much noise.”

We kick off with a quiet version of Everyday Is Like Sunday that gets the place rocking and I’m about to start the second number when Mrs Adamson interrupts again: “Can we stop now, dear? We don’t want to miss Corrie. Why don’t you join us?”

“What a great idea,” I say.

Today Eastbourne, tomorrow Torquay Crematorium. Blinding tour.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds