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Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Akhnaten review: Philip Glass’s flight into Egypt is a slow, sensuous and glittering opera | London Evening Standard


https://www.standard.co.uk/go/london/arts/akhnaten-review-eno-coliseum-opera-philip-glass-a4064296.html

Akhnaten at the Coliseum, in pictures

Akhnaten at the          Coliseum, in pictures
Akhnaten at the Coliseum, in            pictures
Akhnaten at the Coliseum, in            pictures
Akhnaten at the Coliseum, in            pictures
Arts

Akhnaten review: Philip Glass's flight into Egypt is a slow, sensuous and glittering opera

  • Reviewed by Nick Kimberley
St Martin's Lane
WC2N 4ES

Akhnaten, an Egyptian pharaoh from the 14th century BC, made history by attempting to replace his people's multiple gods with a single deity: the experiment didn't succeed. 

His life doesn't immediately strike you as the stuff of opera, but when he wrote Akhnaten in the 1980s, the American composer Philip Glass didn't have much time for operatic convention. It was the alien nature of Akhnaten's life that appealed to him.

Glass's repetitive, slow-moving music doesn't really illustrate the story, much less explain it. Instead it provides an undulating orchestral surface, overlaid with sung lines of often sensuous beauty. 

When there are words, they're usually ancient Egyptian or Hebrew, while what little English we hear comes mostly in a mawkishly sonorous "May the force be with you" narration, spoken here by the towering figure of Zachary James.Glass assigned the title role to a counter tenor. In Phelim McDermott's staging, first seen at English National Opera in 2016, Anthony Roth Costanzo walks the stage with regal disdain. As Nefertiti, the pharaoh's wife, Katie Stevenson towers over him, her sonorous tones a telling counterpoint to Roth Costanzo's bright falsetto, which hints at Akhnaten's supposed androgyny.

Karen Kamensek, who conducted the production when it was new, returns with an equally sure control of pace and timing, while the ENO orchestra and chorus respond attentively to music that isn't exactly in their bloodstream. 

Meanwhile, the stage throngs with vast crowds bedecked in glittering costumes that are gaudy or gorgeous according to taste, and all bathed in spectacular lighting. 

This is not a show that will suit everyone. For some, it'll be no more than a farrago of meaningless signs and symbols, at best camp, at worst kitsch. But go with the slow flow and those very qualities are what make Akhnaten so seductive.

Until March 7

--   Sent from my Linux system.
Glenn Meyer at 8:15 PM
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Glenn Meyer
A NASA software engineer for 23 years (retired), Silicon Valley software engineer for 36+years, Egyptology hobbyist and ARCE-NC board of directors member for more than 25 years, reporter and copy editor for the Kansas City Star and Louisville Courier-Journal for 6 years. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Kappa Tau Alpha, Heritage Registry of Who's Who. I favor open source development, Linux, net neutrality, medical care as a right and not a privilege, the ACLU, freedom of religion, separation of church and state, freedom of speech.
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