United Kingdom Tesori, Blue: Soloists, Orchestra of English National Opera / Matthew Kofi Waldren (conductor). London Coliseum, 30.4.2023. (CC)
Production:
Director – Tinuke Craig
Set and Costume designer – Alex Lowde
Wig, Hair and Make-up designer – Kevin Fortune
Lighting designer – James Farncombe
Sound designer – Yvonne Gilbert
Video designer – Ravi Despres
Movement director – Ingrid Mackinnon
Cast:
The Mother – Nadine Benjamin
The Father – Kenneth Kellogg
The Son – Zwakele Tshabalala
The Reverend – Ronald Samm
Girlfriend 1 / Nurse – Chanáe Curtis
Girlfriend 2 / Congregant 2 – Sarah-Jane Lewis
Girlfriend 3 / Congregant 3 – Idunnu Münch
Police Officer 1 / Congregant 1 – John-Colyn Gyeantey
Police Officer 2 / Congregant 2 – Rheinaldt Tshepo Moagi
Police Officer 3 / Congregant 3 – Joshua Conyers
Young Son – Cale Cole / Kyron Allen
Policeman 2 / Congregant 2
It is a little bit of a blow for Jeanine Tesori’s opera Blue to run alongside Saariaho’s astonishingly highly effective, work-of-genius Innocence throughout the highway at Covent Garden. Both deal with modern points involving shootings: Saariaho, a college bloodbath; Tesori, the capturing of a younger male black activist. The distinction is realisation is staggering, nonetheless. Saariaho has produced an opera for the ages, a monument in sound to how the ability of up to date music can communicate to all; Tesori’s rating tends in the direction of musical doggerel, a mishmash of awkwardly juxtaposed kinds.
There is one other parallel, though right here extra optimistic: each productions make use of unused stage area, For Saariaho, the housing of motion inside packing containers provides the remaining, black area the impact of an emotional vacuum, itself emotionally highly effective. In the Tesori, the usage of packing containers for the motion (with positive video projections by Ravi Despres) as an alternative zooms in on the motion, like a magnifying glass. The externals are not empty, however the feelings inside the area appear particularly highly effective, and the tilting of views within the second act within the midst of the Mother’s bereavement course of is most telling.
The plot centres on the capturing of a younger activist, ‘The Son’. There are not any names right here, extra archetypes, as if to recommend this might occur repeatedly, a depersonalisation pointing in the direction of universality. The setting is Harlem, New York City, 2007, then 2013. The Father is a police officer. The first act finds The Mother telling her three Girlfriends she is anticipating; however when she reveals the kid is to be a boy, there’s dismay. The boy is not going to be welcomed within the USA; the response of the Father’s three associates, at an (American) soccer match is the polar reverse, that of pure, ribald celebration. A symmetry is about up, main protagonist plus three on both facet. Some 16 years later, the Son seems as a pupil artist and activist typically in hassle with the very legislation his Father upholds as a policeman. An ideological conflict between Father and Son is proven, by way of which the Father reminds the Son that he’ll at all times love him.
The Son’s rising up course of is successfully demonstrated by a succession of walkings throughout the stage, from child to boy to teenager.
The second act is summed up within the programme booklet pithily: ‘The family and their community grieve a great loss’. The act is, primarily, a prolongation of ache, with a ultimate flashback in time to another future that appears to operate as an epilogue.
Tesori’s opera was commissioned in 2015 and obtained its first efficiency at Glimmerglass Opera in 2019; in Europe, it was carried out final yr in Amsterdam. The current run at English National Opera is its UK premiere. The solid is headed by the astonishing Nadine Benjamin, a singer I’ve applauded a number of instances (together with for Seen and Heard International within the position of Ermyntrude in Mascagni’s Isabeau at Opera Holland Park in 2018). Her studying of Mimì in ENO’s La bohème in 2022 was one other excessive level. And certainly, Benjamin provides the position of The Mother her all. There are some lengthy, distinctly operatic strains in Act I that discover Benjamin’s voice free and open, hovering over the orchestra. It is Benjamin who actually offered the lifeblood of the efficiency, residing every line assigned to her, the heartbreak so poignant within the second act, her staunch perception in her child’s maleness within the first one was shot by way of with willpower. Benjamin’s voice has all of it: vary (beautiful decrease register, actually robust, energy up prime), expressivity and nuance. Complementing her is the robust bass of Kenneth Kellogg as The Father. Kellogg created this position at Glimmerglass and has carried out it in a minimum of six worldwide opera homes. He is a perfect mixture of excellent singer and character actor immersed in his position; this was his ENO debut. As at house within the soccer scene along with his mates as within the highly effective prolonged second act scene with The Reverend, Kellogg is clearly an operatic pressure to be reckoned with. Ronald Samm took the position of The Reverend, equally highly effective – the Trinidad and Tobago-born British tenor’s second position this season, after Uncle Billy in It’s a Wonderful Life. He is accorded a standard aria (‘May restoring waters …’), superbly sung, however as music, it begins promisingly however then loses its manner considerably.
Arguably strongest of all of the singers was The Son, Zwakeke Tschabalala, an ENO Harewood Artist and his second engagement on the London Coliseum (having beforehand sung the Tenor Angel in It’s a Wonderful Life); previous to this he sang Hot Biscuit Slim/Young Tree in Britten’s Paul Bunyan at Alexandra Palace in 2019 (my overview). As the teenage insurgent he excelled, utterly plausible in his position, his voice brilliantly positioned, but ferocious and fervent in his youthful perception system. The supporting ’groups’ (girlfriends and cops) have been nicely chosen, with Chanáe Curtis excelling in her double position as Girlfriend 1 and Nurse.
The ‘Greek Chorus’ of three girls is nicely managed (or Tesori’s equal of Norns, maybe, on condition that at one level they act as narrators), as is the trio of the Father’s males associates, The two teams mix right into a congregation within the second act.
I’ve loved Matthew Kofi Waldren’s conducting on plenty of events: in Puccini’s La rondine at Opera Holland Park in 2017, and once more at that venue in 2019 for Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera. He was simply as spectacular right here, attentive not solely to his singers however wringing all the things he may from Tesori’s rating; the ENO Orchestra responded in sort.
Amplification is used for the voices. Why, I don’t know, however it is rather hit or miss, at one level very apparent and, because of this, crass. But the key subject is Tesori’s rating; her librettist Tazewell Thompson, gives a strong canvas from which to work. But the music is neither Arthur nor Martha, neither opera nor music theatre nor Hollywood soundtrack (as to the latter, most gratingly on the filmic chords on the Reverend’s arrival and the phrase ‘God’). It is a collage of all of those, at instances well-orchestrated however missing in deep inspiration. Melodically, little if something is memorable, and the identical goes for the harmonies. The opera itself is a miss; however it’s served by top-flight singers and a conductor on the prime of his sport. They usually are not sufficient to rescue the piece, for certain – and there was the nagging feeling on the finish that the entire thing may have taken half as lengthy and had precisely the identical impact.
Director Tinuke Craig marshals the forces nicely; area, each inside and with out the confines of the circle, is nicely used. All credit score to James Farncombe for the efficient lighting, and particularly to video designer Ravi Despres.
Two performances stay of the run, May 2 and May 4.
Colin Clarke