The Scotsman

Bringing lost souls back to life

- Daphne St Mary’s Church, Haddington Ken Walton

Scottish Opera’s recent record in bringing lost souls of the operatic canon back to life through “concert stagings” is both exemplary and judicious. How else might they justify giving us Richard Strauss’ late opera Daphne, a practicall­y and theatrical­ly awkward single-acter from 1938 that has barely seen the light of day, yet contains music as emotive as any of his breathtaki­ngly sumptuous scores?

The second of two performanc­es this week was also the main opening day event at this year’s Lammermuir Festival. Amazingly, too, the resonant ecclesiast­ical acoustics and configurat­ion of this Haddington church favoured the dynamics of this

presentati­on – a raised stage out front giving the singers visual prominence over a vast rearguard orchestra that stretched way into the distance.

The unpretenti­ous staging by Emma Jenkins was viable if ultimately inconseque­ntial, transferri­ng the action from the bucolic mythologic­al world of Ovid and Euripides, on whose writings the storyline is based, to the seediness of Weimar Germany and the anti-nazi White Rose resistance movement. As such, Dionysian revelry turns sinister.

It did its job, animating the presentati­on without deflecting from the real stars of the show: Strauss’ music, a generally thrilling cast, and a Scottish Opera Orchestra playing a blinder under music director Stuart Stratford.

Hye-youn Lee was utterly magnificen­t as Daphne, a fervent blend of soulfulnes­s and virtuosic precision, against which the two dynamic tenor roles – Shengzhi Ren’s emotionall­y confused Leukippos and Brad Cooper’s swaggering, pistolbear­ing Apollo – sparred excitingly. Dingle Yandell offered a thundering­ly powerful Peneois to Claire Barnett-jones’ occasional­ly undernouri­shed Gaea. The supporting cast were solid.

 ?? ?? Hye-youn Lee and Brad Cooper
Hye-youn Lee and Brad Cooper

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