The official website of Soprano Karen Fitz-Gibbon
  • News
  • Biography
  • Sights and Sounds
  • Reviews
  • Repertoire
  • Contact

Wretched Lovers Having a Grand Old Time Really

31/7/2022

0 Comments

 
It is hard to capture my joy at finally returning to the operatic stage after five long years of infant-and-Covid-induced hiatus, and this production of Handel’s Acis and Galatea for Melbourne’s Genesis Baroque – two years in the making – could not have been a more perfect vehicle in absolutely all ways: the intimate scope I work best in (not to mention the compressed timeline, which I also seem to respond well to!? Nothing like a deadline lol), a brilliant director, incredible voices both solo and chorus and an absolutely crack band. I felt fully myself for the first time in years.

Just as importantly, and one of the benefits of working at this level, the company was carefully chosen to include not a single difficult ego despite the incredible array of talent in the room. And boy did it show in the atmosphere. In short, whatever nerves I may have had stepping straight back into a lead role full of coloratura and a hefty dramatic arc, the support and kindness in those rehearsal rooms just blew me away and lifted me up to do what is – as ever – a fairly unhinged job when it comes down to it. Cry on demand? Sure. Harassment by a psychopath? Pretty common. Imagine you’re dementiaed. OK. Scream enough to scare the elbow-joints out of the violins (sorry, guys) and then immediately sing another aria afterwards. U-huh. Also, inhale talcum powder before final aria and wander round in the audience.

Man, I LOVE this stuff. But it’s not normal. 
Also, did I mention it was all happening during a Covid peak? There was a lot of rehearsing in masks but eventually in opera you reach that point where you’re grabbing, kissing, sniffing (yes I know), hissing and singing all over each other… and you just have to hope. Due to careful management and luck, we lost only one member of our orchestra before the run of performances. Which is not to say that I wasn’t fighting off the remains of laryngitis for the first half of rehearsals, just to add drama!

(Look, it’s probably for the best as it meant I resisted socialising – hard to do when it was my first visit to Melbourne for several years and I have so many beloved people down there who needed a good post-lockdown hug attack.)
​
This was Genesis Baroque’s (a Melbourne-based period chamber orchestra) first foray into the operatic genre after their critically-acclaimed first studio album of Arcangelo Corelli’s Concerti Grossi Opus 6 via ABC Classic was released August 2020, debuting as the highest selling Australian album on the ARIA classical album charts, so it was an honour to perform with an ensemble of this calibre as they explored new terrain (again, apologies to the violins for the screaming). We were joined by the Consort of Melbourne, exquisite musicians who brought such meticulous beauty to the complicated chorus pieces whilst also (it seemed) having an absolute ball on stage portraying a rowdy classroom complete with harried teacher and a snooty class prefect (the stunning Milly Jones).
In my opinion, the trouble with baroque opera is that you most often find glorious music paired with pretty woeful character development and static – or abrupt - dramatic flow. This presents a challenge to some directors, but an opportunity to other, sharper minds. Robert Macfarlane, not only a wonderful tenor but in more recent years also proving his mettle in amazing projects such as More Guilty than the Poet in 2018 (Adelaide Festival Centre) and The Song Company’s recent tour of Arms of Love, is one such sharp mind.

Robert took a narrative based on ancient allegory (from Ovid’s Metamorphosis) and touched by the supernatural (nymphs and cyclops), and somehow gave it believable modern resonance by setting the romantic histrionics and violence within a high school, with Acis as the bookish and over-earnest student smitten with a feisty but warm-hearted school rebel Galatea (skipping class for School Strikes and trying to drag Acis along), and Polyphemus translating into a psychopathic school bully who terrorises the lovers and the classroom alike (played with such terrifying force by Nick Dinopoulous that I am sad to report he broke his finger during our final rehearsal, and then still performed like a boss). 
That the audiences and critics also loved it was almost icing on the cake, because my heart and artistic spirit were already full from spending time with – honestly – so many legends. Bottled lightning. Thank you Melbourne!

Photo credit: Darren Gill

www.genesisbaroque.com.au
0 Comments

    Author

    ____ In 2005 I found myself in London, broke, constantly sick, and working in a job I hated. I had dropped out of Uni and run away from Australia years earlier, and had had a mind-boggling succession of actually-I'm-not-going-to-share-them-on-a-professional website adventures. But I looked up one day and realised I really wasn't happy with my life. "So if you're going to change things," I asked myself, "what is the dearest dream you once had? What is it worth turning everything around for?"

    I had chronic pain from (unbeknownst to me) dislocated bones; both my lungs and my throat were compromised. I smoked a pack a day. I hadn't worn an evening gown since my Year 12 formal and couldn't really walk in heels. I didn't read music, and had never sung an aria, nor studied music at school. But I knew what I wanted: I wanted to serve the muse. Bit mad, really.

    Archives

    July 2022
    January 2020
    September 2019
    March 2018
    February 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    September 2017
    April 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    March 2014
    January 2014
    November 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    June 2013
    April 2013
    February 2013
    December 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012

    Categories

    All
    Abc Classic Fm
    Acis And Galatea
    Adelaide Fringe Festival
    Anu School Of Music
    Anzac Centenary
    Archibald Prize
    Arnold Schwarzenegger
    Art Song Canberra
    Australian Premiere
    Austria
    Ballarat
    Barbara Bonney
    Baroque
    Bel Canto Institute
    Ben Opie
    Berrima Smalls
    Black Water
    Brisbane
    Brisbane Baroque Players
    Buk Bilong Pikinini
    Canberra
    Canberra Choral Society
    Cancer Council
    Charity
    Classics At Picton
    Co-Opera
    Cyclops
    Darwin
    Darwin Symphony Orchestra
    Daughters Of Peter
    Dunluce Castle
    Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome
    Elena Kats-chernin
    Ella Luhtasaari
    Florence
    Germany
    Haighs Chocolate
    Handel
    Handwritten
    Harp Consort
    Heath Ledger Young Artist Oral History Project
    Helen Paulucci
    Hobart
    Howard Blake
    Italian Ambassador
    Italy
    Jeremy Beck
    Julie Sargeant
    Kenneth Weiss
    Kevin Rudd
    Kim Worley
    Kuala Lumpur
    Landi
    Lied Austria International
    Lieder
    Lisa Gasteen National Opera School
    Lyrebird Music Society
    Marilyn Jetty Swim
    Melaka
    Melbourne
    Mietta Song Competition
    Mornington Peninsula
    Mozart
    Mozarteum
    National Library Of Australia
    Penang
    Peninsula Summer Music Festival
    Saint Petersburg
    Salzburg
    Salzburg Festival
    Sappho Ensemble
    Saul
    Simon Crean
    Singapore
    Soundcloud
    Spongebob
    Stuart Greenbaum
    Switzerland
    Sydney
    Sydney Independent Opera
    Teachers
    The Dark Crystal
    The Marriage Of Figaro
    Tobias Cole
    Vca High School
    Villawood Immigration Detention Centre
    War
    William Blake
    Yodeling
    Zoe Wallace