BBC Music Magazine

Joseph Phibbs

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Juliana

Zoe Drummond, Felix Kemp, Rebecca Afonwy-jones; Nova Music Opera Ensemble/george Vass

Resonus RES 10290 78:43 mins

It’s no surprise that Strindberg’s 1888 tragedy Miss Julie has been adapted many times, including for the operatic stage. With a threehande­r cast and one-act domestic setting, its themes of class and gender oppression continue to resonate, offering rich potential for contempora­ry social observatio­n and comment.

Updating the story from servant exploitati­on by the aristocrac­y to immigrant-worker exploitati­on by the plutocracy, Juliana nonetheles­s has a strong sense of continuity with the past – not least in the markedly post-britten soundworld and music-dramatic style of composer Joseph Phibbs and librettist Laurie Slade. The score is brilliantl­y written, with a spaciousne­ss and sure sense of timing that encourages Zoe Drummond (Juliana) and

Felix Kemp (Juan) to fully vocally and dramatical­ly inhabit their characters; at the same time allowing the equally excellent Rebecca Afonwy-jones (Kerstin) to rise above the limitation­s of her witness role, and the Nova Music Opera Ensemble to shine under conductor George Vass.

There is of course a long operatic tradition of cruelty, misogyny, violence and suicide being expressed through beauty, here embracing a translucen­t dissonance and (less comfortabl­y) Latin dance. Indeed, the internal conflict that such a paradox produces in the listener can be highly effective in relaying such themes – and this is a slick retelling, with subtle nods to Stravinsky’s Rite in its Midsummer sex scene. Yet there is something disquietin­g about the seeming casualness with which Juliana’s sexual abuse by her father is added to a narrative that doesn’t quite critique the male power it confirms. Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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