Friday, April 25, 2008

Janacek's Intimate Vixen

Last evening I saw a performance of Leos Janacek's "The Cunning Little Vixen" at the University of Colorado. It was surprisingly good with a large cast and an interesting staging. In preparation for the performance, I'd been listening to it in it's original Czech -- but I didn't understand a word sung. The CU Music school used super-titles and had it sung in English. That was good choice. Clearly it's best to understand what an opera is all about.

This is the second performance of a Janacek piece in a week for me. Last Friday night I heard the Tasman Quartet play his "Intimate Letters", the second string quartet. The Tasman Quartet from New Zealand are the ensemble-in-residence at the University of Colorado School of Music. They will be studying for 2 years with the famous Takacs Quartet. The Takacs did "Intimate Letters" in the fall of 2007, so I wasn't surprised that the Tasman tackled this difficult piece, too. They played it very, very well.

Do we hear Janacek on the radio? Some. It appears that the "Lachian Dances" and "Sinfonietta" are actually played with some frequency on most of the stations I monitor. A suite from "The Cunning Little Vixen" is also performed occasionally, though looking it looks like the full hour and a half opera was only broadcast once in 5 years, over KUSC in Los Angeles. "Intimate Letters" has been broadcast, but it must be too long and too complicated for the KVOD team, who have chosen not to broadcast at all in the last 5 years. What a pity!

One final note about the CU opera performance. First, clearly the students at CU must have smallish bladders. OVer the last 10 or 15 minutes of the performance, small groups of them had to get up and disturb the audience and run off to piddle (or whatever). We read in the paper about the CU students drinking a lot, but come on, guys! If we older audience members can hold it, why can't you?

Lastly there is William Gustafson, the stage director. He always sits in the back and laughs too loudly or breaks out clapping as loud as he can. I feel he is trying to indicate to us, the audience, that now is the time to show our appreciation. Please, the show deserves applause, but let us choose when and how much.

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