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    <title><![CDATA[Ara in English - Falstaff]]></title>
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      <title><![CDATA[Verdi's last laughs and Josep Pons at the Liceu]]></title>
      <link><![CDATA[https://en.ara.cat/culture/verdi-s-last-laughs-and-josep-pons-at-the-liceu_1_5798310.html]]></link>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://static1.ara.cat/clip/e790a07a-7e81-445a-a342-907fc13a63ce_16-9-aspect-ratio_default_0_x1746y690.jpg" /></p><p>Josep Pons bids an operatic farewell to the Gran Teatre del Liceu (the highlight of Mahler's <em>Eighth Symphony</em> on Friday, July 24, still awaits) with the same title with which Verdi said goodbye to the world of theatre: <a href="https://en.ara.cat/culture/we-have-together-the-two-best-falstaffs-in-history_1_5787906.html" target="_blank"><em>Falstaff</em></a><a href="https://en.ara.cat/culture/we-have-together-the-two-best-falstaffs-in-history_1_5787906.html" target="_blank">, a lyrical comedy with text by Arrigo Boito based on William Shakespeare's </a><a href="https://en.ara.cat/culture/we-have-together-the-two-best-falstaffs-in-history_1_5787906.html" target="_blank"><em>The Merry Wives</em></a><a href="https://en.ara.cat/culture/we-have-together-the-two-best-falstaffs-in-history_1_5787906.html" target="_blank"><em>of Windsor</em></a><a href="https://en.ara.cat/culture/we-have-together-the-two-best-falstaffs-in-history_1_5787906.html" target="_blank"> by William Shakespeare</a>. A real declaration of principles in the hands of the almost octogenarian Italian composer, who in 1893 lowered the curtain on his brilliant career at Milan's La Scala with a comedy full of sarcasm and two basic principles: 1) life is a joke and we must know how to play it and accept its punchlines; 2) we must look back to progress (“<em>Torniamo all’antico e sarà progresso</em>”, Verdi had written in 1871 in a letter to Francesco Florimo). Hence the final fugue with which the third and last act of <em>Falstaff</em> concludes, a true ethical and aesthetic manifesto against the “modernity” of the composers of the Giovane Scuola, advocating for the masters of the past, just as Wagner had done in <em>Meistersinger</em>.Over fourteen years, Josep Pons has worked diligently with an orchestra that has been renewed in substance and form. And which has yielded excellent results, especially in Mozart and in German, Slavic, and 20th-century titles. However, is <em>Falstaff</em> the most suitable work for the director from Puig-Reig? These performances have once again revealed the work on the detailism of the sections and the generous sonority. But the theatrical verve has been missed, apart from occasional imprecisions in the coordination with the singers. Nevertheless, and setting aside entirely subjective stylistic issues, it must be acknowledged that Pons does not forget the precious background (Mozartian?) of episodes like the one in Windsor Park, where the baton shone brightly given the excellent performance of the musicians in the pit, in addition to the good work of the choir.In the second cast of the two scheduled for the end of the Liceu season, Ambrogio Maestri's indisputable authority has once again provided a lesson with a textbook Falstaff from the Italian <em>singer-actor</em>: he knows it all and knows how to bring water to his mill when his vocal conditions are no longer what they were ten or fifteen years ago (Maestri sang this title at the Liceu in 2010). Maestro Maestri masters the character, whom he humanizes with great theatrical intuition and musical wisdom. A lesson in style, in short.</p>]]></description>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Jaume Radigales]]></dc:creator>
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      <pubDate><![CDATA[Tue, 14 Jul 2026 08:49:31 +0000]]></pubDate>
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      <media:title><![CDATA[Ambrogio Maestri, John Falstaff in the opera 'Falstaff' at the Gran Teatre del Liceu.]]></media:title>
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      <subtitle><![CDATA[Ambrogio Maestri returns to give a lesson with a textbook Falstaff]]></subtitle>
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