Showing posts with label Yusif Eyvazov. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yusif Eyvazov. Show all posts

Friday, April 24, 2026

Barcelona - Aida - Anna Netrebko - Opening Night Gala - Friday , 25th Sep 2026






















Aida – Anna Netrebko – Opening Night – September 25, 2026

From the moment the new season of the Gran Teatre del Liceu was announced, something shifted within me. It was immediate, almost instinctive. My imagination ignited, my thoughts began to race ahead in time, and without even realizing it, I was already living in the future—already standing on that night. September 25, 2026. A Friday. 

And what a Friday it will be.

I have always loved Fridays. There is something inherently full of promise in them—the quiet anticipation of something about to begin, the sense that the ordinary is giving way to something more luminous. But this particular Friday transcends all others. It is not just the end of a week. It is the beginning of a memory.

Because on that night, everything aligns.

The opening of the Liceu season.
My favorite opera by Giuseppe Verdi.
My favorite tenor and mezzo-soprano roles.
And above all—the Aida I have dreamed of.

Anna Netrebko.

To write her name is already to feel the weight of expectation. But this is something beyond admiration. It is a kind of artistic inevitability. There are singers one admires, others one follows, and then there are those rare artists who define an era—who become, almost without effort, the reference point against which everything else is measured.

Netrebko belongs to that last category.

And in Aida, she becomes something even greater.

Giuseppe Verdi 

There are roles that are beautiful, and there are roles that are essential. Aida is essential. It demands not only vocal mastery but emotional truth, inner conflict, and a profound connection to Verdi’s world—a world of love, sacrifice, identity, and destiny. It is not enough to sing Aida. One must become her.

And that is precisely what I imagine will happen that night.

As the orchestra of the Liceu begins the prelude—soft, almost suspended in time—the theatre will hold its breath. And then, slowly, inevitably, she will appear.

Not just as a soprano.

But as Aida.

Her voice—dark velvet illuminated from within—will carry both fragility and grandeur. It will not impose itself; it will unfold. Phrase by phrase, emotion by emotion, she will draw us into a world where everything feels heightened, intensified, almost sacred.

And yet, she will not be alone.

At her side, Yusif Eyvazov

The definitive Radamès for our time, possessing a voice of striking metallic brilliance and unwavering resilience. His portrayal is marked by a rare combination of heroic power and Italianate 'squillo' that cuts through Verdi’s massive orchestrations with ease.Yet, it is his onstage alchemy with Anna Netrebko that elevates the performance to a legendary status. Their partnership transcends mere technical precision; it is a profound artistic symbiosis built over years of shared stagecraft. There is an instinctive trust in their phrasing and a visceral intensity in their gaze that cannot be rehearsed. When they share the stage, the boundaries between theatre and reality blur, creating a magnetic tension that only a duo with such a deep, long-standing creative bond could achieve.

There is a reason their pairing feels so inevitable.

His voice—metallic, direct, cutting through the orchestra with precision—forms the perfect counterbalance to her darker, more velvety timbre. Where she envelops, he penetrates. Where she shades, he projects. Together, they create a sonic architecture that fills the theatre completely.

But beyond technique, there is something deeper.

Trust.

Requiem - La Scala on 25 May 1874, with Verdi conducting. The soloists depicted are (left to right) Ormondo Maini , Giuseppe Capponi, Maria Waldmann, and Teresa Stolz

Verdi’s Requiem: A Historic Resonance at the Liceu""In a direct echo of Verdi’s legendary 1874 La Scala performance, the Gran Teatre del Liceu presents a new 'quartet of titans.' Under the masterful baton of Nicola Luisotti, the world-class voices of Lise Davidsen, Aigul Akhmetshina, Freddie De Tommaso, and Christian Van Horn unite for a seismic musical event. This rare convergence of talent ensures a performance of Verdi’s masterpiece that will be remembered for generations.


In the great duets of Aida, where emotion reaches its peak and the vocal writing becomes almost perilous, Eyvazov provides something invaluable: certainty. His secure upper register, his unwavering projection—these become the foundation upon which Netrebko can build her most nuanced, most daring interpretations.

He is, in many ways, the anchor that allows her to fly.

Completing this extraordinary triangle is Ekaterina Semenchuk as Amneris. 

If Netrebko is the soul and Eyvazov the force, Semenchuk is the fire. Her Amneris is not merely a rival—it is a storm.Having witnessed her monumental triumph in La Gioconda earlier this year, it is clear that Ekaterina is at the absolute zenith of her powers. Much like the legendary years of Tebaldi and Callas, both she and Anna have reached a 'golden maturity' in 2026. Their voices are now more secure, more expressive, and more resonant than ever before, offering a beauty that only comes with artistic seasoned wisdom.Semenchuk possesses a rare, chameleonic instrument capable of navigating the treacherous waters of both Gioconda and Turandot, making her duets with Netrebko a once-in-a-century event. The earth-shaking power of their confrontation will undoubtedly be matched by Ekaterina’s 'Judgment Scene,' where her dramatic authority and vocal opulence promise to leave the audience in a state of collective awe.

Her current momentum is truly unstoppable. Just a few days ago, on April 30th, Ekaterina achieved a monumental triumph in St. Petersburg. She performed in a historic production of La Forza del Destino at the very theatre where the opera was born. Most incredibly, she sang within the original 1862 stage setting—the exact same production that Verdi himself attended and supervised during the world premiere. To witness her command the stage in such a hallowed, historical context only confirms that she is the definitive Verdi voice of our era. Her success there is the perfect prelude to the historic duets we anticipate with Anna; it is as if the spirit of Verdi’s original vision is alive in her voice

Together, with Anna Netrebko and Yusif Eyvazov , they form what can only be described as a perfect Verdian triad.

A “triangle of steel.”

















Three voices capable of riding Verdi’s vast orchestral waves without losing clarity. Three artists who do not simply perform drama, but inhabit it with a visceral intensity. Three timbres shaped by that unmistakable Eastern European depth—dark, burnished, and profoundly expressive.

Elevating this musical feast is the divine vision of Iranian director Shirin Neshat. Moving away from literal interpretations, Neshat embraces a world of symbolic beauty and overwhelming visual elegance.

Her production is a masterpiece of light and shadow, where the night belongs to the passion ignited by a Radamès who loves only Aida, and an Amneris obsessed with claiming a heart that is not hers.

The aesthetic is breathtaking: exquisite jewel-dresses inspired by the Golden Age of Persian craftsmanship clothe the rivals in fire and earth tones. This sophisticated interplay of lights and colors creates a magical atmosphere that will be equally captivating from every tier of the Liceu. It is a show where the brilliance of the staging meets the most definitive voices of our era—a poetic, melancholic, and fiery journey that is destined to become the 'Aida of the Century.

What makes Shirin Neshat’s direction truly divine is her ability to transform the operatic stage into a sanctuary of high art. For those who cherish elegance and formal beauty, her production of Aida is a masterpiece of restraint and impact. She does not rely on the literal or the cluttered; instead, she masters the art of captivating contrasts.Her vision is a sophisticated play of light and shadow, where the starkness of the architectural spaces meets the intricate richness of the costumes. The way she uses light is almost architectural itself—carving out the emotions of the characters and highlighting the 'jewel-dresses' that evoke the lost majesty of the Golden Age of Persia. It is an overwhelming visual elegance that treats every scene like a gallery-worthy photograph.The impact of Neshat’s work lies in its silence and its fire. She understands that true drama is found in the stillness of a gaze or the way a deep earth-tone silk catches the light. For a lover of refined productions, her work is a dream realized: a world where the spirit of ancient Egypt is reimagined through a Persian lens of exquisite beauty. Neshat does not just direct an opera; she sculpts a visual experience that is as hauntingly melancholic as it is fiercely passionate. It is, quite simply, fascinating.



As the final notes of Verdi’s score fade into the silence of the theater, one can already envision the thunderous 'Bravos' echoing from the gallery to the stalls. It is a production where history, fashion, and vocal genius collide—a visual and emotional masterpiece that will forever be remembered as the night the spirits of Persia and Egypt met on the stage of the Liceu.

In a theatre like the Liceu, this combination is not just effective.

It is explosive. And this is why that night feels so inevitable.

Because everything about it suggests not just excellence, but alignment.

Outside, Barcelona will glow with that late-summer warmth, the city alive with movement and anticipation. Inside, the theatre will gather a world of listeners—each carrying their own expectations, their own memories, their own reasons for being there.

But when the curtain rises, all of that will dissolve.

There will be only Verdi. Only Aida. Only that voice.

And perhaps that is what moves me most—the awareness that this night will not come again. That it exists only once, suspended in time, waiting to be lived fully, intensely, without distraction.

The summer before it… will feel endless.

And yet, in a strange way, that is part of the beauty.

Because every day of that summer will carry a quiet, luminous thought:

This is coming. This night exists. And I will be there. Waiting for the first note.













From the moment the season was announced, everything began to orbit around that night. Not simply because it is the opening, but because it carries the unmistakable aura of inevitability—the sense that something extraordinary will occur, something that will be spoken of long after the final applause has dissolved into memory.

The season itself unfolds like a dream carefully composed. Verdi, Bellini, Mozart, Wagner — pillars of the repertoire brought to life by some of the most extraordinary voices of our time. One reads the names of such great stars and feels a quiet astonishment: Anna Netrebko, Ekaterina Semenchuk, Fiorenza Cedolins, Ksenia Dudnikova, Anna Pirozzi, Olga Maslova, Ewa Plonka, Yusif Eyvazov, Piotr Beczala, Artur Rucinski, Ariun Ganbaatar, Lisette Oropesa, Marina Monzó, Caterina Piva , Raffaella Lupinacci, Karine Deshayes, Jack Swanson, Marianne Crebassa, Lina Johnson, Freddie De Tommaso, Pene Pati, Roberto Alagna, Kang Wang, Artur Rucinski, Andrzej Filonczyk, Pretty Yende, Ermonela Jaho, Carolina López Moreno, Serena Sanz, Sara Blanch, Stefano Palatchi, Bo Skovhus, Nicholas Brownlee, Tanja Ariane Baumgartner, Okka von der Damerau, Nicky Spence, Mikeldi Atxalandabaso, Sondra Radvanovsky, Angelo Villari, Àngel Òdena, Hilary Summers, Claudia Boyle, Christine Rice, Ilanah Lobel-Torres, Nicky Spence, Askim Grigorian, Marta Infante, Nina Stemme, Elsa Benoit, Florian Sempey, Josep Bros, Laura del Río, Aigul Akhmetshina.

Each of them could anchor a season. Here, they form a galaxy of wonderful voices.

And yet—even among such brilliance—there is one star whose gravity is absolute.

Anna Netrebko.

To speak of anticipation is almost insufficient. What surrounds her appearance as Aida is something closer to a collective emotional crescendo, building month after month, fed by memory, admiration, and the simple, undeniable truth that we are witnessing one of the defining artists of our era in a role that seems destined for her.

Aida.

There are roles that singers perform, and there are roles that reveal them. Aida belongs to the latter. It demands not only vocal grandeur but also vulnerability, introspection, and an almost spiritual connection to Verdi’s musical language. In the hands of Netrebko, one senses that this role will not merely be sung—it will be lived, inhabited, transformed into something intensely personal and, at the same time, universally resonant.

But before a single note is heard, before the orchestra breathes its first phrase, there is the city.

Barcelona on that evening will not simply host an event; it will become an atmosphere.

As the sun lowers itself into the Mediterranean, the light over the city takes on that golden softness that feels almost cinematic. Along the coast, in Port Vell and beyond, the silhouettes of yachts gather like quiet witnesses to what is about to unfold. These are not incidental presences—they are part of the ritual. Their passengers, having crossed seas or continents, arrive not merely as spectators but as participants in a global pilgrimage of culture.

At Barcelona–El Prat Airport, private jets touch down with quiet precision, releasing into the Catalan air figures whose lives are usually defined by distance and exclusivity. And yet, on this night, all distances collapse into a single destination: the Liceu.

By the time the first guests approach La Rambla, the transformation is complete.













The theatre stands illuminated, its façade both welcoming and majestic, as if aware of its own role in the evening’s narrative. The red carpet extends outward like an invitation—and a statement. It is not merely a path; it is a threshold between the everyday and the exceptional.

And what a gathering it becomes.

The elegance is immediate, but it is also layered. There are the great figures of Catalan cultural life, dignified and rooted, sharing space with international collectors of experience—individuals for whom opera is not simply entertainment but a form of emotional truth. One glimpses guests from Latin America, from Europe, from Asia—voices in different languages, united by a single expectation.

Fashion moves like a living gallery: couture that reflects not only wealth but intention, taste, and the desire to honor the occasion. There is a rhythm to the arrivals, a choreography of presence and perception. Cameras flash, but even the photographers seem aware that they are documenting a prelude, not the main act.

Because the true center of gravity is not outside.

It is behind the curtain.

Inside the theatre, beyond the golden proscenium, beyond the murmurs and the chandeliers, Anna Netrebko is already there. Preparing. Focusing. Entering that sacred space where the artist withdraws from the world in order to give it something greater.

There is something profoundly moving in this contrast. Outside, movement, light, voices. Inside, stillness. Concentration. The quiet forging of what will soon become sound, emotion, revelation.

Meanwhile, in the Saló dels Miralls, conversations unfold in a dozen languages. Glasses meet in soft toasts. Names are exchanged, recognitions spark, and yet—beneath it all—there is a shared awareness that everything leads to the same moment.

When the lights dim.

When the orchestra begins.

When Verdi’s music rises like a breath drawn collectively by everyone in the room.

And then—Aida.

The opening night cast itself reads like a declaration:

Yusif Eyvazov as Radamès, bringing a voice of heroic intensity and ardent expression. His timbre, unmistakable and direct, carries the kind of emotional immediacy that makes Verdi’s lines feel urgent, alive.

Ekaterina Semenchuk as Amneris, a role she inhabits with formidable authority. Hers is not merely a voice—it is an instrument of dramatic truth, capable of both regal command and devastating vulnerability.

And at the center, Netrebko’s Aida—fragile and immense, intimate and monumental. A voice that can whisper and fill a theatre in the same breath. A presence that transforms the stage into something almost sacred.

That night will not be just a performance. It will be a convergence of artistry at its highest level—a moment in which everything aligns: the music, the voices, the audience, the city.

And yet, the richness of this Aida extends far beyond its opening.

The multiple casts offer a panorama of interpretations, each bringing new color and perspective. Anna Pirozzi’s Aida, for instance, promises a different but equally compelling journey—her voice, generous and luminous, infused with that unmistakable Verdian amplitude that speaks directly to the heart. Olga Maslova and Ewa Plonka add further depth, ensuring that each performance carries its own identity, its own emotional architecture.

The same multiplicity enriches the roles of Amneris and Radamès, with artists such as Ksenia Dudnikova, Fiorenza Cedolins, Piotr Beczała, and Arsen Soghomonyan contributing their distinct vocal and dramatic signatures. It is this abundance that transforms Aida from a single highlight into a sustained celebration.

Beyond Verdi, the season continues to unfold with equal elegance.

Bellini returns in I Capuleti e i Montecchi, where Lisette Oropesa takes on Giulietta—a role that seems written for her sensibility. There is a purity in her singing, a line so refined that it feels almost suspended in air. Her artistry does not impose; it reveals. And in Bellini, that quality becomes transcendent.

Mozart’s La clemenza di Tito offers a different emotional landscape—one of introspection, moral complexity, and luminous balance. Under refined musical direction, it becomes not just an opera, but a meditation on power, forgiveness, and humanity.

And then, like a summit awaiting ascent, the presence of Lise Davidsen. To hear her in Verdi is to encounter a voice that seems almost elemental—vast, radiant, unyielding. She represents something rare: not only excellence, but expansion. The sense that the art form itself grows through her.To follow her journey beyond Barcelona—to Berlin, to La forza del destino—is to trace the arc of a truly exceptional career, one that defines an era.

And so, the season unfolds.

But always, the mind returns to that first night.

To the anticipation that builds not only in the weeks before, but in the imagination itself. To the knowledge that, in a world so often fragmented and fleeting, there are still moments that gather us together—across languages, across cultures, across lives—for a shared experience of beauty.

Teresa Stolz - Aida - 1872

The True Premiere: Verdi, Stolz, and the Birth of Aida" "The genesis of Aida is a story of artistic obsession and uncompromising standards. Although the opera saw its world premiere in Cairo in 1871 to celebrate the opening of the Suez Canal, Giuseppe Verdi was famously absent. He had no desire to undertake the long journey to Egypt, but more importantly, he felt that a premiere in front of an invited audience of dignitaries and aristocrats was not a 'true' musical event.For Verdi, the official premiere took place months later, in 1872, at Teatro alla Scala in Milan. This was the performance he personally supervised, and it was here that he introduced the world to his ideal protagonist: Teresa Stolz .Stolz was the 'Stravadaria' of sopranos, possessing a voice of bronze-like power and ethereal silk. Verdi wrote the role with her specific timbre in mind—a voice that could cut through a massive orchestra yet float the most delicate pianissimos. In Milan, under Verdi’s direct guidance, Stolz defined the role of the Ethiopian princess for eternity.The composer’s refusal to go to Cairo was a statement of intent: he believed that music belonged to the public and the sanctuary of the opera house, not to political spectacles. By choosing Milan and Stolz, Verdi ensured that Aida would not be remembered as a mere commission for the Khedive, but as a masterpiece of human emotion and vocal supremacy.























The journey of Aida across the world is not simply the history of an opera—it is the story of how a work of art becomes universal, transcending borders, languages, and generations. From its very conception, Giuseppe Verdi created something that would not remain confined to a single stage or audience, but would instead travel, evolve, and embed itself deeply into the cultural fabric of the world.
Origins: Cairo and the Birth of a Global Masterpiece

Aida was born under extraordinary circumstances. Commissioned for the Khedivial Opera House in Cairo, its premiere on December 24, 1871, was already an event of international significance. The opera was conceived as a celebration of Egypt’s cultural prestige, and its staging reflected an unprecedented level of historical and visual ambition. The renowned Egyptologist Auguste Mariette designed the costumes and supervised the scenic concept, ensuring an exotic authenticity that fascinated European audiences.

Despite Giuseppe Verdi not attending the premiere, the reception was overwhelmingly enthusiastic. Contemporary accounts describe a captivated audience, interrupting the performance repeatedly with applause, reacting not just to arias but to phrases—an indication of how immediately the music resonated.

Yet, for Verdi, this was not the true test.

Milan 1872: The Definitive Artistic Triumph

The composer considered the European premiere at Teatro alla Scala on February 8, 1872, to be the real validation of Aida. Here, everything aligned under his closer supervision.

The role of Aida had been written specifically for Teresa Stolz, whose voice embodied the dramatic and lyrical qualities Verdi envisioned. Alongside her, Maria Waldmann as Amneris became the composer’s favored interpreter of the role, shaping its performance tradition for years to come.

The Milan premiere was a triumph. Critics and audiences alike recognized that Aida was not merely another success—it was a turning point in Verdi’s career, combining the grandeur of French grand opera with the emotional intimacy of Italian lyricism.

Interestingly, Verdi had composed an alternative overture to replace the original prelude but ultimately rejected it, calling it “pretentious insipidity.” This unused symphonic piece would later attract interest, performed by conductors such as Arturo Toscanini in 1940 and, more recently, by Riccardo Chailly and John Eliot Gardiner.

Expansion Across Italy and Europe

Following Milan, Aida spread rapidly throughout Italy, appearing in major theatres such as:


Teatro Regio di Parma (1872)


Teatro di San Carlo (1873)


La Fenice (1873)


Teatro Regio di Torino (1874)


Teatro Costanzi (1881)


In many of these productions, Verdi himself was directly involved, refining details and ensuring interpretative fidelity. This hands-on approach helped establish a performance tradition that would influence generations.

A Global Phenomenon: Late 19th Century

What followed was nothing short of extraordinary. Within just a few years, Aida had become a global phenomenon, performed across continents:


Mexico City (1877) at the Gran Teatro Nacional


Lisbon (1878) at the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos


Paris (1880) at the Palais Garnier


New York (1886) at the Metropolitan Opera


One particularly legendary moment occurred in Rio de Janeiro in 1886. During rehearsals, internal conflicts within the company led to a crisis. A young cellist, only 19 years old—Arturo Toscanini—was asked to conduct. He led the entire opera from memory, launching what would become one of the most illustrious conducting careers in history.

By the late 19th century, Aida had reached:


Teatro Real (1874)


Vienna State Opera (1874)


Hungarian State Opera House (1875)


Mariinsky Theatre (1875)


Royal Opera House (1876)


Its rapid dissemination reflects not only its popularity but its adaptability—Aida could be performed in Italian, French, or translated versions, always retaining its dramatic power.
The 20th Century: Recording, Broadcasting, and Legends
In the 20th century, Aida entered a new phase—one defined by technology and iconic interpretations.
A landmark moment came in 1949, when a complete performance conducted by Arturo Toscanini was broadcast on NBC television from New York, featuring Herva Nelli and Richard Tucker. This brought Aida into homes, expanding its reach beyond the opera house.
Other legendary performances include:


1955: Maria Callas under Tullio Serafin


1959: Renata Tebaldi under Herbert von Karajan


Each of these interpretations redefined the role, highlighting different aspects of Aida’s character—from Callas’s dramatic intensity to Tebaldi’s vocal opulence.

Aida Today: A Living Tradition

Today, Aida remains one of the most performed operas in the world. Its appeal lies in its unique balance: spectacle and intimacy, grandeur and humanity. It can fill vast arenas like the Arena di Verona, yet remain deeply moving in more intimate theatres.

Modern productions continue to reinterpret its themes—identity, exile, love, and sacrifice—while maintaining the musical integrity that has made it timeless.

From Cairo to Milan, from New York to Tokyo, from the 19th century to the present day, Aida has never ceased to evolve.

And that is perhaps its greatest achievement.
It is not a relic of the past.
It is a living work—one that continues to find new voices, new audiences, and new meanings.
Each performance adds another layer to its history.
Each generation rediscovers it.
And each time the curtain rises, somewhere in the world, Verdi’s music reminds us why Aida endures—not only as an opera, but as a universal human experience.


Saturday, December 13, 2025

Zurich - La forza del destino - Nov / Dec 2025

🌟 UN TRIOMPHE DU DESTIN À ZURICH 🌟

Anna Netrebko revient dans le rôle de la rayonnante Leonora de La forza del destino de Verdi.

Zurich se prépare à un événement lyrique d'une grandeur inoubliable : Anna Netrebko, l'une des sopranos les plus célèbres au monde, reprend le rôle bouleversant de Donna Leonora. Après ses triomphes retentissants au Teatro alla Scala de Milan et ses prestations acclamées au Royal Opera House de Londres, Netrebko apporte désormais son art unique à l'Opéra de Zurich. Sa voix d'une rare beauté, d'une richesse incomparable et d'une profondeur émotionnelle exceptionnelle fait d'elle l'interprète idéale de l'héroïne tourmentée de Verdi.

Sa Leonora n'est pas seulement chantée, elle est vécue. À chaque pianissimo à couper le souffle, à chaque envolée mélodique, Netrebko transporte le public au cœur même du drame verdien, capturant la fragilité, la passion et la force spirituelle qui définissent ce personnage remarquable. Zurich vivra des soirées inoubliables, des soirées qui s'inscriront dans l'histoire de l'opéra.

Après le succès retentissant d'Anna Netrebko, dont la dernière représentation a lieu aujourd'hui, 18 novembre, la soprano russe Elena Guseva prend la relève. Née à Kourgan, dans le sud-ouest de la Sibérie, et diplômée du Conservatoire de Moscou, ses nombreux succès dans des rôles comme Aida et bien d'autres font d'elle la soprano verdienne idéale pour La forza del destino. Nous avons beaucoup apprécié Anna Netrebko, mais les représentations suivantes promettent d'être fabuleuses avec cette voix impressionnante. Elena Guseva chantera les 21, 26 et 29 novembre, et reprendra le rôle principal les 17 et 21 décembre. Voici une occasion unique d'apprécier cette voix russe fabuleuse qui a conquis le public du monde entier, à l'instar de sa compatriote, la superstar Anna Netrebko.

Mais le triomphe ne se limite pas à une seule étoile. Cette production brille par une distribution exceptionnelle, où chacun apporte intensité, précision et présence au vaste univers verdien du destin, de la vengeance et de la rédemption :

Yusif Eyvazov (2, 7, 12, 15, 18 nov.) et le ténor italien Riccardo Massi (21, 26, 29 nov. / 17, 21 déc.) se partagent le rôle de Don Alvaro, insufflant à ce personnage une fougue vocale héroïque et une puissance émotionnelle intense, tandis que l'amant tragique oscille entre passion et persécution. Deux interprétations du malheureux Don Alvaro qui nous briseront le cœur et nous feront vibrer au rythme de leurs voix fabuleuses, dans l'un des rôles les plus difficiles pour ténor, si ce n'est le plus difficile.

George Petean impose une autorité et une profondeur dramatique exceptionnelles dans le rôle de Don Carlo di Vargas, capturant la force implacable de la vengeance qui anime l'opéra.

✨ Michele Pertusi confère sa profonde noblesse et son exceptionnelle gravité vocale au Padre Guardiano, pilier spirituel dans ce monde chaotique.

✨ Annalisa Stroppa embrase la scène dans le rôle de Preziosilla, insufflant aux scènes de guerre et de prophétie de Verdi une énergie et un éclat irrésistibles.

Stanislav Vorobyov offre une intensité digne dans le rôle du Marquis de Calatrava, mettant en branle le destin tragique de l'opéra.

Le tout est soutenu avec une excellence saisissante par le Chœur de l'Opéra de Zurich, les Choristes Extra, le Chœur d'Enfants, l'Orchestre de l'Opéra de Zurich et le Statistenverein, sous la direction musicale inspirée de Gianandrea Noseda, dont la maîtrise de Verdi illumine chaque page de la partition.

La metteuse en scène Valentina Carrasco et son équipe créative visionnaire — Carles Berga (décors), Mariangela Mazzeo (scénographe associée), Silvia Aymonino (costumes), Massimiliano Volpini (vidéo), Fabrice Kébour (lumières) et le dramaturge Fabio Dietsche — proposent une mise en scène dramatique qui confronte le destin et la guerre à une résonance contemporaine saisissante.

Il ne s'agit pas d'une simple production. C'est un événement marquant.

Une réunion exceptionnelle de voix de renommée mondiale, d'un art visionnaire et de la musique magistrale de Verdi — sublimée par la présence incomparable d'Anna Netrebko, une superstar dont la voix continue de captiver, d'inspirer et de marquer une époque.

Zurich se souviendra longtemps de ces représentations.

Le destin n'a jamais paru aussi puissant.

🌟 EIN TRIUMPH DES SCHICKSALS IN ZÜRICH 🌟

Anna Netrebko kehrt als strahlende Leonora in Verdis monumentaler Oper „La forza del destino“ zurück

Zürich bereitet sich auf ein Opernereignis von unvergesslicher Größe vor: Anna Netrebko, eine der gefeiertsten Sopranistinnen der Welt, schlüpft erneut in die ergreifende Rolle der Donna Leonora. Nach ihren umjubelten Auftritten an der Mailänder Scala und ihren gefeierten Darbietungen am Royal Opera House in London bringt Netrebko nun ihre einzigartige Kunst an das Opernhaus Zürich – eine Stimme von seltener Schönheit, unverwechselbarem Reichtum und emotionaler Tiefe, die sie zur idealen Interpretin von Verdis gequälter Heldin macht.

Ihre Leonora wird nicht nur gesungen – sie wird gelebt. Mit jedem atemberaubenden Pianissimo, jedem himmelwärts schwingenden Melodiebogen entführt Netrebko das Publikum in das pulsierende Herz von Verdis Drama und fängt die Zerbrechlichkeit, die Leidenschaft und die spirituelle Stärke ein, die diese bemerkenswerte Figur auszeichnen. Zürich wird Abende erleben, die noch lange nach dem Fall des Vorhangs nachhallen – Abende, die in die Geschichte des Opernhauses eingehen werden.

Nach Anna Netrebkos überwältigendem Erfolg, der mit ihrer letzten Vorstellung heute, am 18. November, seinen Höhepunkt findet, übernimmt die große russische Sopranistin Elena Guseva. Geboren in Kurgan, Südwest-Sibirien, und Absolventin des Moskauer Konservatoriums, ist sie mit ihren großen Erfolgen in Rollen wie Aida und vielen anderen die ideale Verdi-Sopranistin für „La forza del destiny“. Wir haben Anna Netrebko sehr genossen, aber die folgenden Vorstellungen versprechen mit dieser beeindruckenden Stimme ein fabelhaftes Erlebnis zu werden. Elena Guseva singt am 21., 26. und 29. November und kehrt am 17. und 21. Dezember als Protagonistin der Oper zurück. Dies ist eine großartige Gelegenheit, diese fabelhafte russische Stimme zu genießen, die das Publikum weltweit verzaubert hat, genau wie ihre Landsfrau, Superstar Anna Netrebko.

Doch der Triumph reicht weit über einen einzelnen Star hinaus. Diese Produktion glänzt mit einer herausragenden Besetzung, die Verdis gewaltiger Welt voller Schicksal, Rache und Erlösung mit Intensität, Präzision und Präsenz zum Leben erweckt:

Yusif Eyvazov (2., 7., 12., 15., 18. November) und der italienische Tenor Riccardo Massi (21., 26., 29. November / 17., 21. Dezember) teilen sich die Rolle des Don Alvaro und liefern sowohl heroische stimmliche Feuerkraft als auch emotionale Wucht, während der vom Schicksal geplagte Liebende zwischen Leidenschaft und Verfolgung hin- und hergerissen ist. Zwei Interpretationen des tragischen Don Alvaro, die uns das Herz brechen und uns mit ihren fabelhaften Stimmen in einer der schwierigsten, wenn nicht gar der schwierigsten Tenorpartien überhaupt, erzittern lassen werden.

✨ George Petean verkörpert Don Carlo di Vargas mit beeindruckender Autorität und dramatischer Wucht und fängt die unerbittliche Kraft der Rache ein, die die Oper vorantreibt.

✨ Michele Pertusi verleiht Padre Guardiano, dem spirituellen Anker in dieser chaotischen Welt, seine tiefe Würde und außergewöhnliche stimmliche Gravitas.

✨ Annalisa Stroppa entfacht als Preziosilla ein Feuerwerk auf der Bühne und erfüllt Verdis Kriegs- und Prophezeiungsszenen mit unwiderstehlicher Energie und Brillanz.

✨ Stanislav Vorobyov verkörpert den Marchese di Calatrava mit würdevoller Intensität und setzt so das tragische Schicksal der Oper in Gang.

Unterstützt wird das Ganze von der mitreißenden Exzellenz des Chors der Oper Zürich, der Extra Choristers, des Kinderchors, des Orchesters des Opernhauses Zürich und des Statistenvereins unter der inspirierten musikalischen Leitung von Gianandrea Noseda, dessen Verdi-Kenntnisse jede Seite der Partitur erhellen.

Regisseurin Valentina Carrasco und ihr visionäres Kreativteam – Carles Berga (Bühnenbild), Mariangela Mazzeo (Assistenz-Bühnenbild), Silvia Aymonino (Kostüme), Massimiliano Volpini (Video), Fabrice Kébour (Licht) und der Dramatiker Fabio Dietsche – präsentieren eine dramatische Inszenierung, die Schicksal und Krieg mit eindringlicher, moderner Relevanz thematisiert.

Dies ist nicht einfach nur eine Produktion. Es ist ein Meilenstein. Eine seltene Zusammenkunft von Weltklasse-Stimmen, visionärer Kunst und Verdis erhabener Musik – gekrönt von der unvergleichlichen Präsenz von Anna Netrebko, einem Superstar, dessen Stimme bis heute fesselt, inspiriert und eine Ära prägt. Zürich wird diese Auftritte noch lange in Erinnerung behalten. Nie zuvor klang das Schicksal so kraftvoll.

🌟 A TRIUMPH OF DESTINY IN ZURICH 🌟

Anna Netrebko returns as the radiant Leonora in Verdi’s monumental La forza del destino

Zurich is preparing for an operatic event of unforgettable grandeur as Anna Netrebko, one of the world’s most celebrated sopranos, steps once again into the soul-shattering role of Donna Leonora. After her resounding triumphs at Teatro alla Scala in Milan  and her acclaimed performances in The Royal Opera House in London, Netrebko now brings her unique artistry to the Zurich Opera House — a voice of rare beauty, unmistakable richness, and emotional depth that makes her the ideal interpreter of Verdi’s tormented heroine.

Her Leonora is not merely sung — it is lived. With every breathtaking pianissimo, every soaring arc of melody, Netrebko transports audiences into the beating heart of Verdi’s drama, capturing the fragility, passion, and spiritual endurance that define this remarkable character. Zurich will experience evenings that linger long after the curtain falls — evenings that become part of the opera house’s history.

After Anna Netrebko's resounding success, which concludes with her final performance today, November 18th, the great Russian soprano Elena Guseva takes over. Born in Kurgan, southwest Siberia, and a graduate of the Moscow Conservatory, her great successes in roles like Aida and many others make her the ideal Verdi soprano for La forza del destino. We have thoroughly enjoyed Anna Netrebko, but the following performances promise to be fabulous with this impressive voice. Elena Guseva will sing on November 21st, 26th, and 29th, and will return as the opera's protagonist on December 17th and 21st. This is a great opportunity to enjoy this fabulous Russian voice that has captivated audiences worldwide, just like her compatriot, the superstar Anna Netrebko.

But the triumph extends beyond a single star. This production shines with a stellar cast, each bringing intensity, precision, and presence to Verdi’s vast world of destiny, vengeance, and redemption:

Yusif Eyvazov (2, 7, 12, 15, 18 Nov) and the italian tenor Riccardo Massi (21, 26, 29 Nov / 17, 21 Dec) share the role of Don Alvaro, delivering both heroic vocal fire and emotional power as the fated lover torn between passion and persecution.Two interpretations of the unfortunate Don Alvaro that will break our hearts but make us vibrate with their fabulous voices in one of the most difficult roles for tenor, if not the most difficult.

George Petean brings commanding authority and dramatic weight as Don Carlo di Vargas, capturing the relentless force of vengeance that propels the opera forward.

Michele Pertusi lends his profound nobility and exceptional vocal gravitas to Padre Guardiano, the spiritual anchor in this world of chaos.

Annalisa Stroppa ignites the stage as Preziosilla, infusing Verdi’s scenes of war and prophecy with irresistible energy and brilliance.

Stanislav Vorobyov offers dignified intensity as Il Marchese di Calatrava, setting the opera’s tragic destiny in motion.

All supported with stirring excellence by the Chorus of the Zurich Opera, the Extra Choristers, the Children’s Choir, the Orchestra of the Zurich Opera House, and the Statistenverein, under the inspired musical direction of Gianandrea Noseda, whose mastery of Verdi illuminates every page of the score.

Director Valentina Carrasco and her visionary creative team — Carles Berga (stage design), Mariangela Mazzeo (associate set designer), Silvia Aymonino (costumes), Massimiliano Volpini (video), Fabrice Kébour (lighting), and dramaturg Fabio Dietsche — bring a dramatic staging that confronts fate and war with striking modern resonance.


This is not merely a production. It is a milestone.
A rare gathering of world-class voices, visionary artistry, and Verdi’s towering music — crowned by the incomparable presence of Anna Netrebko, a superstar whose voice continues to captivate, inspire, and define an era.

Zurich will remember these performances for a very long time.
Destiny has never sounded so powerful.

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