BBC Music Magazine

Jeanine Tesori

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Blue

Kenneth Kellogg, Briana Hunter, Aaron Crouch, Gordon Hawkins; Washington National Opera Orchestra/roderick Cox Pentatone PTC 5186 967 (CD/SACD) 121:45 mins (2 discs)

Blue was premiered in Washington DC in 2019 – a year before George Floyd’s murder spotlit the ongoing scourge of police brutality towards young Black men across America. The timing lends an appalling prescience to the story of this opera, and its outrage that Black communitie­s ‘have been here before’.

A young Black couple against the odds raise a teenage Son until their worst nightmare is realised at his fatal shooting by a police officer. The twist is that the Father is himself a cop, running the daily gauntlet of life as a Black man who dares to don the ‘blue’. Shaped as a series of dialogues, Tazewell Thompson’s libretto is eviscerati­ng in its fury and grief, and the agonising conflicts experience­d by people torn apart by racist violence. Yet it’s equally, painfully full of tenderness, love and humour. The contrasts are beautifull­y matched in Jeanine Tesori’s score, which moves from lush warmth to splintered dissonance in a heartbeat, straddling art and vernacular styles with subtlety and verve.

The cast’s performanc­es are both moving and cogent in their refusal to accept the toxicity thrust upon them. Kenneth Kellogg, Briana Hunter and Aaron Crouch are eloquent as Father, Mother and

Son, a trinity supported by three Girlfriend­s and three Policemen who morph into a church congregati­on led by Gordon Hawkins’s dignified Reverend. Conductor Roderick

Cox brings luminosity to a finely honed Washington National Opera Orchestra. Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ?? ?? Feeling Blue: Kenneth Kellogg is an eloquent leading man
Feeling Blue: Kenneth Kellogg is an eloquent leading man
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