Benjamin Britten knew what it was like to live as an outsider, and his Suffolk roots meant he had an instinctual understanding of the rhythms and power of the sea. Both are brought to the fore in his first opera, ‘Peter Grimes’. Written just after the second world war in 1945 it is a brutal, at times desolate, and yet compelling tale of a loner fisherman finding his place in a judgemental community.
The curtain rises on his bloated corpse, washed up on the shore, half-clothed and tangled in fishing net. There is no orchestral overture. Instead, the audience sit in silence taking in the brutality of the scene before the music interrupts like a crashing wave. The chorus quickly assembly a courtroom made of driftwood, and we are taken back in time to watch Grimes give witness testimony at the inquest of his young apprentice, lost at sea.
This revival of director Phyllida Lloyd’s 2006 award-winning production has been co-directed by Karolina Sofulak and Tim Claydon, maintaining all the cinematic intensity of Lloyd’s original vision.
Visually there are some impressive elements, including rabble-rousing, flame-wielding crowds and an all-encompassing fishing net that fills Lowry’s lyric stage. However, on the whole Anthony Ward’s set is largely bare, with grey backdrops that appear to go on forever, evoking a sense of the deep vastness of the sea.
This sense of deep and at times violent movement is mirrored by Britten’s atmospheric score, and conductor Garry Walker leads the Opera North orchestra in a terrific upswell of music that leaves us feeling we are caught up in the ebbs and flows of the tide.
There is wonderful characterisation throughout by a talented team of principals, ensemble and chorus, led by tenor John Findon as Grimes. His performance draws us into the complexity of this character, almost a child in a huge man’s body who is obsessed with the sea and liable to uncontrolled outbursts of frustration. Even at his most violent Findon finds the humanity in this outsider who is both vulnerable and abusive. The tenderness of his vocals in the arias is spellbinding.
Grimes is a powerful, triumphant revival. The stunned silence of the audience before the eruption of applause is testament to the depth of emotions this production reaches.

