BBC Music Magazine

Benjamin

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Lessons in Love and Violence (DVD)

Stéphane Degout, Barbara

Hannigan, Peter Hoare, Samuel Boden, Gyula Orendt; Royal Opera House Orchestra/george Benjamin; dir. Katie Mitchell

Opus Arte DVD: OA1221D;

Blu-ray: OABD7199D 88 mins Playwright­librettist Martin Crimp and stage director Katie Mitchell seem content to revisit old formulae with – as shown here in George Benjamin’s latest opera – diminishin­g returns.

Once again they have turned to a medieval story (albeit one disguised in Vicki Mortimer’s modern-dress setting) and clothed it in wrongnote Debussy, all of which does nothing to advance the cause of contempora­ry opera. Of course, it is impossible for new opera always to break new ground, yet the safetyfirs­t aspect of Lessons in Love and Violence is dispiritin­g. It’s less successful than Written on Skin, which itself was much less original than the first Benjamin-crimp opera, Into the Little Hill.

Which is not to say that Benjamin’s score isn’t remarkable. ★is orchestral imaginatio­n is prodigious, and both as composer and conductor he conjures up memorable soundscape­s full of jittery tension – just what’s required in this story based on the fatally doomed relationsh­ip of Edward II and Piers Gaveston. Indeed, the whole production is exemplary, if po-faced and self-regarding.

The entire cast seems convinced it is creating something deeply meaningful, and there is no doubting the commitment of Stéphane Degout’s commanding (then crushed) King, of Gyula Orendt’s smoothly sung Gaveston or of Barbara ★annigan’s hyper-present Isabel. Peter ★oare’s scheming Mortimer is the most compelling of all. Strikingly filmed – many shots are taken from above – this recording captures the premiere of a production that is due to be widely seen, but the work really needs to be set free from its creators. John Allison PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ PICTURE & SOUND ★★★★

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