Simon Holt’s one-act opera The Nightingale’s to Blame was written between 1996 and 1998 and given its first performance at the Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival the same year. For this first excursion into the realm of theatre Holt returned to the work of Federico García Lorca. He used David Johnston’s translation of the source play, preserving its basic structure: a Prologue and three scenes. Holt’s attraction to the dark, sensuous imagery of Lorca’s poetry had resulted, over the previous fourteen years, in four works using words or images from the poems. The opera’s title makes direct reference to the bird which the poet used as a symbol for illusion. Lorca’s original title for the play was (in translation) The Love of Don Perlimpl...