New Year (opera)

1989 opera by Michael Tippett


title: "New Year (opera)" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["operas-by-michael-tippett", "english-language-operas", "1989-operas", "operas", "opera-world-premieres-at-houston-grand-opera", "science-fiction-operas"] description: "1989 opera by Michael Tippett" topic_path: "general/operas-by-michael-tippett" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Year_(opera)" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary 1989 opera by Michael Tippett ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox opera"]

FieldValue
nameNew Year
composerMichael Tippett
librettistTippett
languageEnglish
premiere_date
premiere_locationHouston Grand Opera
::

| name = New Year | composer = Michael Tippett | image = | image_upright = | caption = | librettist = Tippett | language = English | based_on = | premiere_date = | premiere_location = Houston Grand Opera New Year is a British opera in three acts with music and libretto by Sir Michael Tippett. As with Tippett's other operas, the text and music encompass a widely eclectic range of cultural references. Tippett has noted that the "primary metaphor" of the opera is dance. The choreographer of the original production was the noted American dancer Bill T. Jones.

Performance history

The opera received its world premiere at Houston Grand Opera on 27 October 1989, in a production by Sir Peter Hall. Hall subsequently directed the first UK production at Glyndebourne, which ran in the period of July-August 1990. Glyndebourne Touring Opera subsequently presented an adapted version of Peter Hall's production in October 1990 at Glyndebourne and at the Theatre Royal, Glasgow, and in November 1990 at the Apollo Theatre, Oxford.

The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra presented a semi-staged concert performance of New Year on 13 April 2024 at Glasgow City Halls, a performance recorded for commercial release in 2025 by NMC Recordings. The most recent full staging of the opera was in July 2024 by Birmingham Opera Company, directed by Keith Warner.

Roles

::data[format=table title="{{Sronly|Roles, voice type, premiere cast}}"] | Role | Voice type | Premiere cast, 27 October 1989 Houston Grand Opera Conductor: John DeMain | UK premiere cast, 1 July 1990 Glyndebourne Opera Conductor: Andrew Davis | |---|---|---|---| | Jo Ann, a trainee children's doctor | lyric soprano | Helen Field | Helen Field | | Donny, her young brother | light baritone | Krister St. Hill | Krister St. Hill | | Nan, their foster mother | dramatic mezzo-soprano | Jane Shaulis | Jane Shaulis | | Merlin, the computer wizard | dramatic baritone | James Maddalena | James Maddalena | | Pelegrin, the space pilot | lyric tenor | Peter Kazaras | Philip Langridge | | Regan, their boss | dramatic soprano | Richetta Manager | Richetta Manager | | The presenter | microphoned male singer | John Schiappa | Nigel Robson | ::

Synopsis

The story of the opera moves between two worlds, of "Somewhere and Today" and "Nowhere and Tomorrow".

Act 1

Jo Ann is a child psychologist who wants to work with young victims of the urban conflict going on in "Terror Town" outside of her domicile. However, she is so afraid of Terror Town that she does not venture out of the apartment. Her Rastafarian foster brother Donny is generally delinquent in his behaviour towards her and their mutual foster mother, Nan. Out of nowhere, a spaceship emerges, carrying Merlin, a "computer wizard", and the pilot Pelegrin, under the leadership of Regan. These are time travelers from the future, and the ship makes a connection with Jo Ann's apartment.

Act 2

It is centered at a New Year's festivity. A shaman, in a trance, induces the crowd of revellers to pummel Donny as part of the celebration. The space ship arrives and Merlin asserts his authority over the activities. Jo Ann and Pelegrin do meet, but they are separated when the spaceship leaves the scene. Jo Ann saves Donny from the beating crowd, and the act ends to the sounds of the traditional song "Auld Lang Syne".

Act 3

Pelegrin presents Jo Ann with a symbolic rose, as a symbol of their love. She loses the rose, but he recovers it. Jo Ann is finally cured of her fears and can go out again into the world outside of her home. The Presenter summarizes the final message as: "One humanity, one justice".

References

References

  1. Lewis, Geraint. (November 1989). "''New Year'' in the New World". The Musical Times.
  2. Clarke, David. (1990). "Reviews of Music: Tippett, Michael, ''New Year'': an Opera in Three Acts: vocal score". Music & Letters.
  3. Donal Henehan. (1989-10-30). "Reviews/Music; Time Traveling and Agoraphobia in Tippett Opera". The New York Times.
  4. Lewis, Geraint. (July 1990). "''New Year'' Is Here". The Musical Times.
  5. Allenby, David. (December 1990). "Tippett's ''New Year''". [[Tempo (journal).
  6. Ken Walton. (2024-04-15). "Music review: BBC SSO & Martin [sic] Brabbins, City Halls, Glasgow". The Scotsman.
  7. (7 February 2024). "NMC and BBCSSO announce first recording of Michael Tippett's opera ''New Year''". NMC Recordings.
  8. Richard Fairman. (2025-03-04). "''New Year'' album review — Tippett's otherworldly opera receives a fine first recording". Financial Times.
  9. Philip Harrison. (2025-03-19). "Review of Sir Michael Tippett: ''New Year'' (NMC D291)". MusicWeb International.
  10. Nicholas Kenyon. (2024-07-11). "''New Year'', Birmingham Opera Company, The Dream Tent: Fascinating revival of a bonkers but brilliant work". The Daily Telegraph.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

operas-by-michael-tippettenglish-language-operas1989-operasoperasopera-world-premieres-at-houston-grand-operascience-fiction-operas