BBC Music Magazine

This Offenbach ‘trip’ is a topsy-turvy spectacular

Offenbach

Le voyage dans la lune

Violette Polchi, Sheva Tehoval, Matthieu Lécroart, Pierre Derhet, Raphaël Brémard; Chœur et Orchestre National Montpellier Occitanie/Pierre Dumoussaud Bru Zane BZ1048 151:02 mins (2 discs)

If Offenbach’s fifth and final Fairy Opera has gathered dust it’s probably because it was overtaken by history. A passion for theatrical spectacle, with an exploding rocket cannon, an erupting volcano and a transparent glass palace, became more magical in the cinema – Georges Méliès’s masterpiece A Trip to the Moon screened a quarter of a century after the first night of Le voyage dans le lune. Offenbach’s

Yet Offenbach’s Opéra féerie is a delight as it makes its journey through a topsy-turvy world that inverts everyday social assumptions, which are mostly masculine. So when King V’lan and his son Caprice – a breeches role – arrive on the moon they learn from King Cosmos that here there is no love between the sexes and women are regularly bought and sold in the market. With earthly cunning Caprice will eventually win Fantasia, thanks to a handy supply of apples he had stowed on his space craft. The Old Adam lives as the women are liberated.

Opéra féerie is a delight and it’s his score that earns the biggest hand

Sheva Tehoval is a magnificent Fantasia, with sweet tone and a formidable coloratura. Violette Polchi’s Caprice is every inch her match when they fall in love at the end of Act II. The two kings – Matthieu Lécroart as V’lan and Thibaut Desplantes as Cosmos – are as capricious as all of Offenbach’s rulers; and who could resist Cosmos’s spurned wife Popotte sung by

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Bonang Goes Pythagoras’s Theory Of Numerical Harmony
Did Pythagoras get it wrong? In the 6th century BC, the great polymath showed that certain numerical ratios between sounds are what makes music sound pleasant to us – and dissonance occurs when there’s a deviation from such ratios. But scientists in
BBC Music Magazine2 min read
Three Other Great Recordings
There’s something immensely organic about the way René Jacobs unfolds the narrative’s ineluctable trajectory in his version recorded in 2000. And for a conductor so often associated with a certain operatic flamboyance, some of the ‘agitato’ moments p
BBC Music Magazine3 min read
Ibiza Spain
Headphones adjusted, the conductor raises his arms. Strings twist and turn, the sound swells; electronic vocals ride the crest of the wave. The beat drops. Then, as lights flash across the Royal Albert Hall, glockenspiels duet over a keyboard motif.

Related Books & Audiobooks