Strauss’s Year at Bard

Since 2003, when the Fisher Center opened at Bard College, the Bard SummerScape festival has had a special role in bringing little-known works to light. This year’s winner is Richard Strauss’s rarely performed, next to his last, opera “Die Liebe der Danae” (“The Love of Danae”). Strauss was a contemporary of the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius, whose works will be explored at the Bard Music Festival later this summer. Both composers are best known for their musical conservatism and, if not their active collaboration, at least their lack of public resistance to the Nazis. (Both, in all likelihood, were mainly intent on furthering their careers.) The interwar period saw the ascendance of 12-tone and atonal music, prompting Sibelius and Strauss to dig in their heels, although Strauss had earlier flirted with atonality in his electrifying mythical operas “Salome” and “Electra.” Along with Sibelius, Strauss is also celebrated as a superb orchestrator, and more than the former, he is a master of writing for the voice. His melodic lines are gorgeous, thrilling and complex. (For a great introduction to Strauss’s work, listen to Kiri Te Kanawa’s recording of his “Four Last Songs.”) “Danae,” which may have been neglected, in part, because it was completed in 1940, at the height of the Nazis’ power, is a wonderful example of Strauss’s rich, mature style. In the words of Strauss biographer Michael Kennedy, “ ‘Die Liebe der Danae’ does not deserve its neglect. Its third act alone lifts it into the category of first-rank Strauss.” The story is a deft combination of mythical tales, interweaving the story of King Midas with that of Princess Danae, who gave birth to Perseus after Zeus visited her in the form of a golden rain. It also can be read as a wry commentary on the German situation at the time. The opera’s five performances (July 29 and 31; Aug. 3, 5 and 7) will be sung in the original German with English supertitles. Leon Botstein will conduct the American Symphony Orchestra, with soprano Meagan Miller in the title role, Kevin Newbury directings with the set design by Rafael Viñoly and Mimi Lien. Ticket prices range from $30 to $90. For information and tickets, go to fishercenter.bard.edu, or call 845-758-7900.

Latest News

The artist called ransome

‘Migration Collage' by ransome

Alexander Wilburn

If you claim a single sobriquet as your artistic moniker, you’re already in a club with some big names, from Zendaya to Beyoncé to the mysterious Banksy. At Geary, the contemporary art gallery in Millerton founded by New Yorkers Jack Geary and Dolly Bross Geary, a new installation and painting exhibition titled “The Bitter and the Sweet” showcases the work of the artist known only as ransome — all lowercase, like the nom de plume of the late Black American social critic bell hooks.

Currently based in Rhinebeck, N.Y., ransome’s work looks farther South and farther back — to The Great Migration, when Jim Crow laws, racial segregation, and the public violence of lynching paved the way for over six million Black Americans to seek haven in northern cities, particularly New York urban areas, like Brooklyn and Baltimore. The Great Migration took place from the turn of the 20th century up through the 1970s, and ransome’s own life is a reflection of the final wave — born in North Carolina, he found a new home in his youth in New Jersey.

Keep ReadingShow less
Four Brothers ready for summer season

Hospitality, ease of living and just plain fun are rolled into one for those who are intrigued by the leisure-time Caravana experience at the family-owned Four Brothers Drive-in in Amenia. Tom Stefanopoulos, pictured above, highlights fun possibilities offered by Hotel Caravana.

Leila Hawken

The month-long process of unwrapping and preparing the various features at the Four Brothers Drive-In is nearing completion, and the imaginative recreational destination will be ready to open for the season on Friday, May 10.

The drive-in theater is already open, as is the Snack Shack, and the rest of the recreational features are activating one by one, soon to be offering maximum fun for the whole family.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sun all day, Rain all night. A short guide to happiness and saving money, and something to eat, too.
Pamela Osborne

If you’ve been thinking that you have a constitutional right to happiness, you would be wrong about that. All the Constitution says is that if you are alive and free (and that is apparently enough for many, or no one would be crossing our borders), you do also have a right to take a shot at finding happiness. The actual pursuit of that is up to you, though.

But how do you get there? On a less elevated platform than that provided by the founding fathers I read, years ago, an interview with Mary Kay Ash, the founder of Mary Kay Cosmetics. Her company, based on Avon and Tupperware models, was very successful. But to be happy, she offered,, you need three things: 1) someone to love; 2) work you enjoy; and 3) something to look forward to.

Keep ReadingShow less