Leading the orchestra, Gianandrea Noseda brought out beautiful sound in nuanced phrasing, playing with dynamics and the nerves of the audience (well, mine, anyway.) The eerie horror in the score was chillingly evoked. Still, I did sometimes find myself wishing for violence, more reckless impulsion. This is a "what's done is done" sort of opera, and the orchestra could have been steeped a bit further in blood. The chorus--which Verdi identified as one of the most important ingredients in the success of the opera--contributed stellar work as witches, murderers, banquet guests, and refugees. The desolate "Patria oppressa" was a highlight of the evening. Richard Cox was a bright-toned and authoritative Malcolm. As Macduff, Dimitri Pittas sounded on much better form than the last time I heard him, and he contributed strong, incisive singing. The orchestra made me tearier than the tenor did in "Ah! la paterna mano," but maybe that's just me. Günther Groissböck was a new discovery to me; as Banquo, he was elegant and assured, restrained in manner but vocally charismatic.
The evening's Lady Macbeth, Nadja Michael, made her house debut to thunderous acclaim, and left me feeling (if you'll forgive the expression) bewitched, bothered, and bewildered. She lunged as fiercely at notes as at her husband. Her tone could go hollow, or come close to a shriek. And I found her strangely compelling. "Vieni, t'affretta"(staged, appropriately, in and around the Macbeths' bed) was sexy and exciting; I felt rather as though I needed a lie down after "La luce langue." I was expecting more sustained phrases in the sleepwalking scene, and Michael's delivery was curiously broken; I think the line itself would carry horror sufficiently, perhaps better, without so much "effect." Still, Michael's singing is the opposite of anodyne, and I'd far rather be bothered and bewildered than bored. I've long admired Thomas Hampson as an intelligent singer, but I confess that he brought richer sonority and more strength to the role of of Macbeth than I had anticipated. He contributed a great deal of beautiful singing, and also, fearlessly, ugly singing. The introspective, sweet-toned "Pietà, rispetto, amore" would have been enough alone to convince me that the growling or barking of Macbeth's madness and tyranny was intentional. The character of Macbeth may be anything but consistent, but Hampson made him sympathetic, suggesting that his truest self was to be found in the elegant legato singing of his opening and closing scenes, in the persona of a thoughtful man of generous impulses, forced into war. In (ahem) greeting his wife, he is already trying to push the disturbing prophecies of the weird sisters from his mind; it is her ambition which seizes them as the promise of political advancement. It was so clear that Hampson's Macbeth, in his lucid moments, wished it all undone, that I wished they'd left in "Mal per me che m'affidai." The chorus was triumphant (and Macduff, echoing The Cranes are Flying, adopts a refugee child) but I was far from sure that a similar cycle of violence wasn't just going to break out again without the baritone. And one cycle of violence was quite enough for the evening.
Curtain call photos:
Pittas (Macduff)
Groissböck (Banquo)
Michael (Lady Macbeth)
Hampson (Macbeth)
Cast and conductor