Out West Arts has reviewed Simon Keenlyside’s recent Santa Monica recital (without mentioning Malcolm Martineau, who I believe was the pianist).
October 30, 2011
October 28, 2011
October 28, 2011
Anthony Tommasini reviews the Metropolitan Opera's Siegfried for the New York Times.
—
Simon Keenlyside’s recital in San Francisco is reviewed at The Opera Tattler.
—
“Bernard Haitink and the CSO conjure up a heavenly 'Creation'”–Chicago Sun-Times
October 27, 2011
October 27, 2011
Vancouver Sun review of Vancouver, British Columbia, recital by Simon Keenlyside, baritone, and Malcolm Martineau, piano
—
“If I never hear another concert I will die a contented music lover,
having heard the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus perform
Beethoven’s Missa solemnis under Colin Davis and Britten’s
War Requiem under Gianandrea Noseda last weekend,” writes Sedgwick Clark
for Musical America .
—
Anthony Tommasini, New York Times, on Mariusz Kwiecien in Met’s Don Giovanni
—
October 24, 2011
War Requiem
Excellent performance of Britten’s War Requiem on Sunday afternoon (yesterday) at Avery Fisher Hall in New York: London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus conducted by Gianandrea Noseda, with soloists Sabina Cvilak, Ian Bostridge, and Simon Keenlyside.
October 12, 2011
Songs of War
Singer: Simon Keenlyside
Songs of War
The compact disc of Songs of War is scheduled for release at amazon.co.uk on 7 November 2011.
—
—
1. John Ireland: Sea Fever
2. Athur Somervell: Into my heart an air that kills
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel
3. Youth and Love (No 4)
4. The Infinite shining heavens (No 6)
George Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad
5. Loveliest of Trees
6. When I was one-and-Twenty
7. Look not in my Eyes
8. Think no more, Lad
9. The Lads in their hundreds
10. Is my Team ploughing?
11. Arthur Somervell: There pass the careless people
12. Peter Warlock: The night
13. Arthur Somervell: White in the Moon
George Butterworth: Brendon Hill and other songs
14. On Bredon Hill
15. O fair enough are sky and plain
16. When the lad for longing sighs
17. On the idle hill of summer
18. With rue my heart is laden
19. John Ireland: The Vagabond
20. Anonymous/Ireland: The Three Ravens
21. Finzi: Fear no more the heat o' the sun
22. Frank Bridge: Thy Hand in mine
Ralph Vaughan Williams: Songs of Travel
23. The Vagabond (No 1)
24. Ned Rorem: An Incident
Ivor Gurney:
25. When death to either shall come
26. In Flanders
27. Arthur Somervell: The street sounds to the soldiers' tread
Kurt Weill:
28. Beat! Beat! Drums!
29. Dirge for two veterans
—
October 10, 2011
Britten War Requiem, London Symphony Orchestra, Noseda, Barbican Hall
Britten War Requiem, London Symphony Orchestra, Noseda, Barbican Hall
Singers: Sabina Cvilak, Ian Bostridge, and Simon Keenlyside
Review, Alexandra Coghlan, theartsdesk.coom
Review, Planet Hugill
“This performance, in tandem with the second performance, will be preserved by LSO Live, and it is difficult to imagine an account that would better deliver in terms of emotional heft and musical quality.”–classicalsource.com
October 9, 2011
Gramophone Award to Don Carlo DVD
Baritone Simon Keenlyside, who sings the role of Posa, receives the DVD Performance Award for the EMI recording of Verdi’s Don Carlo, directed by Nicholas Hytner and with Antonio Pappano conducting forces of the Royal Opera, Covent Garden. Gramophone’s editor James Inverne champions the recording.
June 14, 2011
Royal Opera Macbeth broadcast to movie theatres
I went to Newport, Rhode Island, yesterday to see the broadcast to movie theatres of the Royal Opera’s performance of Verdi’s Macbeth. I thought it was OK, but not a must-see performance. I liked Simon Keenlyside in the title role and Liudmyla Monastyrska as Lady
Macbeth, but the rest of the cast was so-so, below the level of what one would
normally hear in New York or even Montreal. Monastyrska’s sound is pleasant but with no great dramatic nuance.
The witches' costumes with red turbans were interesting. The rest of the costumes were an acceptable but boring mishmash, many of the men’s tops inspired by karate outfits. On the whole I didn’t like the sets
and props, to the extent that there were any. A water faucet, at the right of the stage, was an annoying gimmick that got tired really soon. A sort of gilded cage, a little stage with gold lattice work on three sides, was used in some scenes. It looked like something one might see in a sordid barroom that offers amateur striptease one night a week. The Macbeths have the sort of bedspreads one can buy in a department store. One can find a lot of fault with the stage direction. Imaginary children of the Macbeths, not called for by the libretto, were a distraction that added nothing.
Simon Keenlyside was wearing the arm bands that he has been wearing in recent weeks. His singing seemed to get better as the opera
progressed. I’m not sure whether his singing was improving or whether the sound
engineers were learning as they were going along. I think it may be the latter, since at first the orchestra seemed much louder than the singers, except for Monastyska who managed to sound loud even though the chorus and the other soloists often sounded muffled, more so toward the beginning than as the opera progressed. Have the sound engineers never done this sort of thing before, that they have to learn while doing?
May 28, 2011
May 28, 2011
Andrew Clarke writes for ft.com about a visit with Ian Bostridge.
—
Article about Simon Keenlyside at Wales Online. “Right now, I'm working at getting a better understanding of how to make wildflower meadows.”
—
Best wishes for a good Memorial Day weekend!

Memorial Day Greetings, Eagle with Banner
Buy This Allposters.com
May 25, 2011
Links to reviews of Royal Opera’s Macbeth
“Lady Loudmyla begins her reign,” Intermezzo
Barry Millington, thisislondon.co.uk, 3 stars
“This revival is worth catching . . . for Pappano’s conducting and Monastyrska’s Lady Macbeth alone, and Keenlyside brings all the qualities one expects to the title role. Musically there are some excellent things; as theatre, however, it’s hardly satisfying.”–Hugo Shirley, MusicalCriticism.com, 3.5 stars
George Hall, thestage.co.uk
David Karlin, Bachtrack
Stephen Jay-Taylor, Opera Britannia, 3.5 stars
“Despite high expectations for his debut, Simon Keenlyside, in the plum role in Verdi’s Macbeth . . . was a slight disappointment at the Royal Opera House last night. Opera-goers who disseminated their thoughts after the play said he wasn't as evoking as he should've been.”–Danny Lee, PinkPaper

