March 2, 2026
Athens, GR 14 C
Expand search form
Blog

London Times beats NY Times to Moby Dick review

London Times beats NY Times to Moby Dick review

The opening of Jake Heggie’s opera Moby Dick at the Metropolitan Opera was sufficiently newsworthy for the London Times to commission a first-night review from Kevin Ng. The article went on line at lunchtime, London time, today.

Four whole hours passed before the NY Times caught up with a Zachary Woolfe review at noon NY time.

It’s dog-bites-dog as ever on legacy media. The two critics agree on the limitations of Heggie’s score.

Ng writes: Despite the constantly shifting sets, there remain long stretches that remain dramatically and musically inert. Melville’s other great nautical work was Billy Budd, and Heggie at times matches the orchestral ferocity of Britten’s opera. Elsewhere the score evokes Debussy and Sibelius, as well as Philip Glass-esque undulations that become tiresome.

Woolfe writes: A piece, in other words, much along the lines of “Billy Budd,” Benjamin Britten’s opera based on another seafaring Melville tragedy in which a ship becomes a petri dish for archetypal struggles.

This is where the ambitions of Heggie’s “Moby-Dick” adaptation run up against his limitations as a composer. “Billy Budd” fascinates because of the haunting complexities of Britten’s music, but the meditations in this “Moby-Dick” end up feeling dully one-note, as shallow as a tide pool.

The post London Times beats NY Times to Moby Dick review appeared first on Slippedisc.

Previous Article

Liverpool Philharmonic and Help Musicians launch physio toolkit supporting musicians’ health and wellbeing

Next Article

Ruth Leon recommends… Sergei Prokofiev – The Unruly Child of Russia

You might be interested in …

Edinburgh hires baby deps

Edinburgh hires baby deps

The Edinburgh International Festival has appointed two new heads of artistic management and music programming. Paul Sharp and Nick Zekulin will cover for director Nicola Benedetti, who is on maternity leave. Zekulin (pic) is general […]

My violin stops me falling over

My violin stops me falling over

Latest publicity pics from French violinist Esther Abrami suggest she is using her 1700 Carlo Giuseppe Testore instrument as a prop to keep her upright. Surely not what she intended. Ms Abrami, 28, lives in […]

Muti’s daughter rising

Muti’s daughter rising

Stefana Atlas at Arabella Arts has taken on general management for the stage director Chiara Muti, daughter of the Italian conductor. Chiara was previously on the books of the secretive Swiss firm, Ariosi. Chiara, who […]