I correctly assumed the Metropolitan Opera’s world premiere production of "The Hours" would eventually make its way to PBS. What I didn’t anticipate is how difficult the opera would be to watch. The unflinching depiction of hopeless despair is unbearably grim. I repeatedly paused the three-hour broadcast lest I fall into a sympathetic depression. The three stars- Joyce DiDonato, Renée Fleming and Kelli O’Hara- portray the suicidal gloom devised by Kevin Puts and librettist Greg Pierce, based on a novel by Michael Cunningham and inspired by the work and life of Virginia Woolf, with upsetting fidelity. Everything about “The Hours” is outstanding- and that’s why it’s almost unendurable.
Joyce DiDonato: There Stands the Glass’ Artist of the Year
Friends and family remain mystified by my embrace of opera. The widespread assumption that the form is the exclusive domain of wealthy elitists is pervasive- and deservedly so. Yet until approximately 100 years ago, opera was a ubiquitous form of popular music. The music didn’t change. Instead, the ways in which the music was presented became cost-prohibitive and classist. Joyce DiDonato is aware of opera’s image problem. The celebrity soprano dedicated a significant portion of her energy in 2022 to audience outreach. Without compromising her artistry, DiDonato’s concerts in support of the glorious album Eden and her other projects rendered opera relevant and accessible. Harmonious with my own attitude, DiDonato’s initiatives make her There Stands the Glass’ Artist of the Year.
Honorable mention: Mary Halvorson, Moor Mother and Sault. The previous winners of the Artist of the Year designation are Pat Metheny (2021) and Bad Bunny (2020).
August 2021 Recap: A Monthly Exercise in Critical Transparency
Top Ten Albums (released in August, not including August 27 titles)
1. Jana Rush- Painful Enlightenment
The art of noise.
2. Abstract Mindstate- Dreams Still Inspire
3. Pink Siifu- Gumbo'!
Hey ya!
4. Shannon and the Clams- Year of the Spider
5. Tinashe- 333
Lucky numbers.
6. Max Richter- Exiles
Luminous.
7. Isaiah Rashad- The House Is Burning
Fire!
8. Bleachers- Take the Sadness Out of Saturday Night
9. Boldy James and The Alchemist- Bo Jackson
Another hit.
10. Angelika Niescier and Alexander Hawkins- Soul in Plain Sight
European birds of a feather.
Top Ten Songs (Released in August)
1. Injury Reserve- "Knees"
“A tough pill to swallow.”
2. Jungle- "No Rules"
Anarchy on the dance floor.
3. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss- "Can't Let Go"
Ooby dooby.
4. Connie Smith- "I'm Not Over You"
Going under.
5. Rachika Nayar- "Memory as Miniatures"
What if Pat Metheny signed to Windham Hill instead of ECM?
6. Benny the Butcher- "The Iron Curtain"
Imposing.
7. Irreversible Entanglements- "Open the Gates"
“It’s energy time.”
8. Blackstarkids- “Juno”
Summertime blues.
9. Christina Bell featuring Fred Hammond- "Still Faithful"
Conviction.
10. $uicideboy$- “If Self-Destruction Was an Olympic Event, I’d Be Tanya Harding”
Going for gold.
Top Ten Films (viewed for the first time in August)
1. あん/Sweet Bean (2015)
Deliciously transcendent.
2. Moonlight (2016)
Hello stranger.
3. Blue Jasmine (2013)
Family feud.
4. The Wild Bunch (1969)
Desperados waiting for a train.
5. Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot/Monsieur Hulot's Holiday (1953)
French slapstick.
6. Bye Bye Braverman (1968)
Funeral for a friend.
7. La Collectionneuse/The Collector (1967)
Attractive people do ugly things in beautiful places.
8. CODA (2021)
High school musical.
9. The Falcon in San Francisco (1945)
Conventional potboiler.
10. The Tomorrow War (2021)
Goofy sci-fi romp.
Live Music
I swore off electing to place myself amid crowds in Kansas City after a disheartening experience at the airport as August began. The abhorrent behavior of halfwits and lunatics temporarily eradicated any possibility of enjoying myself at musical performances.
July’s recap and links to previous monthly surveys are here.