The Europadisc Review
Barber: Vanessa
Gianandrea Noseda, Nicole Heaston (soprano), J’Nai Bridges (mezzo-soprano), Susan G...
£14.95
Despite the resounding success of its premiere at New York’s Metropolitan Opera on 15 January 1958 (hailed at the time as a sign that ‘American opera is growing up’), Samuel Barber’s Vanessa has not had the smoothest of rides into the core operatic repertoire. The outstanding cast for that first production under the baton of Dmitri Mitropoulos was largely unchanged for the work’s European premiere at the Salzburg Festival seven months later, but the European critics gave the work a markedly frostier reception than had their ecstatic American co... read more
Despite the resounding success of its premiere at New York’s Metropolitan Opera on 15 January 1958 (hailed at the time as a sign that ‘American opera is growing up’), Samuel Barber’s Vanessa has not h... read more
Barber: Vanessa
Gianandrea Noseda, Nicole Heaston (soprano), J’Nai Bridges (mezzo-soprano), Susan Graham (mezzo-soprano), Matthew Polenzani (tenor), Thomas Hampson (baritone), University of Maryland Concert Choir (chorus), National Symphony Orchestra, Kennedy Center (orchestra)
The Spin Doctor Europadisc's Weekly Column
Music of the Iberian Peninsula, Part 2: ‘O quam gloriosum’ – The Spanish and Portuguese Golden Age 2nd June 2026
2nd June 2026
Over the past fortnight, I’ve been bathed in the most glorious, radiant, transformative light. Not the UK’s recent unseasonable heatwave, but the extraordinary vocal polyphony of the Siglo de Oro: the Spanish (and Portuguese) ‘Golden Century’. Extending from the late 15th to the early 17th century, this was a time of remarkable artistic flowering on the Iberian Peninsula, coinciding with the emergence of Spain and Portugal as global imperial powers with extensive colonial territories in the Americas, Africa and Asia. The steady progress of the Reconquista from the late 11th to the late 15th century saw the prevailing Mozarabic liturgical rite replaced by the Roman liturgy; the union of Spain through the 1469 marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castille, and the subsequent marriage of their daughter Joanna ('the Mad') to the Habsburg Philip the Fair (son of the Holy... read more
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