Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
There is a squeeze on stage for Will Gregory's new opera. Besides the BBC Concert orchestra and conductor Charles Hazelwood, there are a half-dozen Moog synthesisers and a chorus of lab technicians. The first thing you notice, however, is a nervous-looking chap describing his condition. In unaccented speech he tells us who he is (Paul Kipfer, laboratory technician to the scientist Auguste Piccard) and what he's doing (dreaming, specifically about tomorrow's attempt to enter the stratosphere by hot-air balloon). As the emotional content rises, the vowels stretch into song ? "why oh why", "no air, no ground". But immediately he checks himself and apologises: "Sometimes I sing. I don't know why."
This, in a nutshell, is what is good and bad about the Gregory's opera. The movement to song is skilfully handled, but the immediate resort to irony, though ubiquitous in today's art-making, suggests a loss of faith in the materials and a tendency to exploit them as effect. Gregory's classical background and electronic-rock present combine in a score that is versatile, varied and full of wit and energy, but there's little holding it together. The vocal lines are given life by parody ? but are elsewhere lacklustre, and the production's continuous resort to comic-strip irony undercuts the intrinsic drama of the tale.
This is a shame, because there are distinguished forces at work. Andrew Shore is excellent in the title role, as is Leigh Melrose's rakish Einstein and Mary Plazas as Kipfer's plaintive wife. Jude Kelly's semi-staging is slick, and Kathy Hinde's video is brilliant and often beautiful, such as in the crystal formations that dance on the balloon capsule's porthole as the temperature dives. There is food for thought, and moments of great excitement, but artistically the experience is some way short of stratospheric.
Avril Lavigne Bridget Moynahan Noureen DeWulf Nicollette Sheridan Amber Heard
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