BBC Music Magazine

Robert O’dwyer

Eithne

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Orla Boylan, Robn Tritschler, Gavan Ring; Irish National Opera Chorus; RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra/ Fergus Shell

RTÉ Lyric CD158 107:34 mins (2 discs) Robert O’dwyer’s Eithne, the first full-scale opera to be written in Irish, was commission­ed for a festival in 1909 by the Gaelic League as part of efforts to stir a nationalis­t school of Irish classical music. Despite the work’s success and its subsequent revival the following year, Eithne was then neglected until 2017 when the newly formed Irish National Opera and RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra gave a special concert performanc­e at Dublin’s National Concert ★all, captured in this premiere recording.

O’dwyer used the local legend of ‘The bird of sweet music’ as the basis for Eithne (soprano Orla Boylan), inspired by Wagner’s success with teutonic mythology. The King of Ireland (baritone Gavan Ring), his heir Ceart (tenor Robin Tritschler) and sons Art and Neart find themselves in Tír na nóg (a land of eternal youth) in pursuit of a mysterious bird (exquisitel­y, if not uniquely, characteri­sed by the flute part). Their feathered friend is revealed to be Eithne, cursed daughter of the King of Tír na nóg, who will be released from her avian form when a giant is defeated.

The all-irish cast’s engagingly dramatic performanc­e does much to recommend the work. Claire Jackson PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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Varied Vivaldi: Cecilia Bartoli is revelatory again
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