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St John Passion, ENO
Metro Rick Jones
April 2000

propelled along by the excellent Stephen
Layton

Opera and Lent oppose each other. Opera is frivolous, extravagant, indulgent,
irreverent; Lent is austere, abstinent, modest, devout. An awkward moment
arose at the opening night of Deborah Warner's production for English
National Opera of Bach's Lenten masterpiece, the St John Passion, when
a lamb, which had been brought on for the final scene, began to bleat
more loudly than the chorus could sing. This pathetic innocent was supposed
to enhance the solemnity of the moment but while the cast maintained sombre
faces, the audience just laughed. It takes more than a dose of religion
to move an opera crowd.

The cast are in dowdy modern dress. The bare stage is strewn at the curtain
with bouquets, some unwrapped, as if Christ were the victim not of crucifixion
but of a road accident. The backdrop screen shows close-ups of baritone
Paul Whelan's darkly authoritative Jesus bleeding, hanging on the cross,
or looking worried that he might have gone too far. Evangelist Mark Padmore
has the perfect light, powerful tenor for his role. He picks off the top
As with effortless brilliance but sadly overacts. His narrator breaks
down in tears to be comforted warmly by the aria tenor Barry Banks who
sings with fine clarity. Alto Catherine Wyn-Rogers is a little unfocused,
bass Michael George is a rough disciple and soprano Natalie Christie's
love for Jesus is more of a girlie crush. The chorus sound as big and
bosomy as the Huddersfield Choral Society.

The period instrument orchestra is propelled along vibrantly by the excellent
Stephen Layton. Members of the audience who joined in the chorales did
so bashfully.

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