A Visit to Friends/The Gildas Quartet review – Colin Matthews’s luminous new opera opens Aldeburgh in fine style

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"Colin Matthews Premieres New Opera 'A Visit to Friends' at Aldeburgh Festival"

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The Aldeburgh festival, established almost 80 years ago by Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears, continues to resonate with the legacies of its founders, particularly through the works of contemporary composers like Colin Matthews. At 79 years old, Matthews premiered his first opera, 'A Visit to Friends,' at this year's festival, which took place on the same stage where Britten's 'Death in Venice' premiered 52 years earlier. This opera is inspired by a libretto from William Boyd that draws on themes from Chekhov. The narrative structure cleverly intertwines the rehearsal of an opera within the opera, showcasing a fictional piece with a libretto by Chekhov and a score by an unnamed composer, while also depicting the real-world dynamics of the rehearsal process. This dual narrative serves to explore the complexities of artistic creation and collaboration, encapsulated in the phrase, "a very complicated visit to friends."

The production, directed by Rachael Hewer and featuring a small but talented cast, received praise for its engaging performance and the effective use of Leanne Vandenbussche’s innovative set design. The music, conducted by Jessica Cottis and performed by the Aurora Orchestra, blends Matthews' late-Romantic influences with more incisive elements, creating a soundscape that reflects both the internal opera and the rehearsal's realism. Following the opera's premiere, the festival showcased Matthews' 'Quartet No 6' performed by the Gildas Quartet, which was noted for its vivid characterization and stylistic excellence. The quartet's performance, alongside pieces by Frank Bridge and Beethoven, demonstrated a high level of musical synergy and artistry, contributing to an exhilarating experience for the audience. The Aldeburgh festival is set to continue until June 29, promising more exceptional performances and compositions that honor its rich musical heritage.

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Few events feel as haunted as theAldeburgh festival. Nearly 80 years since it wasestablished by Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears– and decades since their deaths – the couple still loom large in its Suffolk environs, their project continued by younger friends and collaborators.

None are more eminent than the composerColin Matthews, whoassisted Brittenin the final years of his life. Now 79, Matthews has produced his own first opera, on a Chekhov-inspired libretto byWilliam Boyd: the world premiere of A Visit to Friends opened this year’s festival, on the same stage where Britten’s Death in Venice made its debut 52 years ago.

A Visit to Friends features an opera within the opera: scenes of a work with a libretto by Chekhov and a score by an unknown composer that Matthews models onScriabinare interrupted by the “real world” of rehearsals. Life imitates art imitating life; it’s “a very complicated visit to friends”, as one character says. We hop between stages of the rehearsal process, while the internal opera’s plot pushes on.

InLeanne Vandenbussche’s ingeniously simple set, the wall of a modern rehearsal room revolves to reveal the disintegrating veranda of a once-grand Russian house. Harsh lighting flicks up as run-throughs are halted. The rehearsal pianist slides on and off (upright and all). Colours play constantly across a video backdrop, as if taking the temperature of the action. Matthews’ score moves between the charged, late-Romantic meandering of the internal opera and something a little more incisive for the rehearsals. But much of the music is slow and delicately loose-limbed, its stagiest moment (a freeze-frame-like trio and quartet) in “real life”, not the fictional opera. Gesturally, though, the opera’s thespiness – hand-clasping, studied pointing, walking with an extravagant turning-circle – is a world away from the rehearsal’s naturalism.

That the self-conscious cleverness of the framing device didn’t pall says much about both the quality of performance and the lucidity ofRachael Hewer’s production. The small cast was uniformly excellent:Marcus Farnsworthwas smoothly unpleasant as Misha/Marcus,Susanna Hurrella bright, brittle Nadia/Natalie andEdward Hawkinsa pitch-perfect parody of a certain brand of director.Lotte Betts-Dean’s Varia/Vanessa dominated, her mezzo so effusively rounded it was as if she kept finding the resonant frequency of the auditorium. Conducted byJessica Cottis,Aurora Orchestrarevelled in Matthews’ suavely luminous score.

More Matthews followed the next morning: the world premiere by theGildas Quartetof his Quartet No 6, between the Three Idylls byBritten’s teacher Frank Bridgeand Beethoven’s String Quartet No 9 in C, Op 59 No 3. The eight movements of Matthews’ quartet were vividly characterised: there were impish cascades of pizzicato, melodic lines that wandered, unhurried, and a slow-motion elegy that lingered like the perfume of a loved one. Bridge’s Three Idylls showcased the Gildas’s fine-grained, mellow tone and total musical symbiosis. Their Beethoven was exquisitely stylish, from the cool, vibrato-free introduction to its final intoxicating rush. It was an utterly compelling performance: exhilarating playing that urged us to listen anew.

The Aldeburgh festivalcontinues until 29 June.

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Source: The Guardian