Wednesday, 24 December 2014
Tuesday, 23 December 2014
Paul Lewis and friends - Beethoven and Schubert, 22 December 2014
Wigmore Hall
Beethoven – String Trio in C
minor, op.9 no.3
Cello Sonata in C major,
op.102 no.1
Schubert – Piano Quintet in A
major, D 667, ‘The Trout’
This was a delightful pre-Christmas
concert, in which a group of very fine musicians came together and offered
something more than the sum of their parts and likewise more than the sum of
the already appealing programme’s parts. First we heard Beethoven’s op.9 no.3
String Trio in a splendidly alert account, the sense of responsiveness between
players at least as great as in a quartet performance. The first movement’s
violence registered fully, almost as if this were later Beethoven, but the
overall ‘Classical’ line remained intact. Its second subject sounded utterly
gorgeous. The development sounded unusually close to Mozart in C minor mode,
his piano sonata in that key in particular: perhaps a matter of motivic
working? Febrile intensity of playing reminded us that we were also not so very
far from Schoenberg – his own String Trio of course one of the very greatest
essays in the genre. In the Adagio con
espressione, notwithstanding the undoubtedly Beethovenian manner of the
melodic ‘surface’, the method rightly underlined the composer’s debt to Haydn.
The wonder of the trio texture was fully communicated in gloriously rich tone,
though never for its own sake. The third movement sounded as a true scherzo:
furious, but with none of that all-too-common sacrifice of harmony to rhythm.
(As if in a it were ever a matter of either/or!) The trio again offered
Haydnesque reminiscence – up to a point. A duly goal-oriented finale proved
anything but inflexible, showing how Beethoven had learned his tragic lessons
from Mozart. This was playing of an intensity that would not have shamed a
performance of the Fifth Symphony, the scale of Beethoven’s ambition fully
realised. Although it seems almost unnecessary to mention this, given the
excellence of the performance, Alexander Sitkovetsky was a very late substitute
for an indisposed Lisa Batiashvili; one would never have known.
Paul and Bjørg Lewis were the
artists for the C major Cello Sonata, op.102 no.1. Whatever the presentiments
in the Trio, there was no mistaking the real ‘late’ thing here, its distilled
simplicity and fathomless profundity already to the fore in the first movement’s
introduction. Drama, in whatever sense, asserted itself thereafter through
typical ‘late’, dialectical complexity. A concentration worthy of Webern was
the reward. The second movement struck uncommonly well that difficult balance,
or dialectic, between fragility and sublimity: difficult not least since it is
not necessarily the most overt of those relationships. Occasional intonational
slips were of minimal import. The concluding Allegro vivace section seemed on the verge of the late piano
sonatas and, in its most abrupt outbursts, again on the verge of Webern too. There
was of course Bachian counterpoint to be heard, but quite rightly, the
realisation of Beethoven’s tonal planning and drama retained, even
strengthened, its roots in Haydn and Mozart.
All players were on stage for
the Trout Quintet. The twin ambitions
of work and performance were announced in grand style in the first movement’s
opening bars. This was a gloriously big-boned performance, full of life and
chiaroscuro. The piano sounded quite different, brighter and avowedly
post-Mozartian: a matter of Schubert’s writing, of course, but also of Paul Lewis’s
performance. If anything, he sounded still more at home in Schubert than in
Beethoven. The performance of the Andante
was full of potentiality, offering a fine sense of where Brahms and even Schoenberg
might have come from, Brahms especially strongly anticipated in the relish
accorded to the movement’s harmonic and melodic richness. The motivic
insistence of Alois Posch’s double bass was not the least valued contributor to
its progress. Both difference and similarity with respect to Beethoven again
registered in the scherzo: this was certainly a more good-humoured note than
had been struck in the first half. A beautifully relaxed trio maintained rigour
and vigour. The celebrated variations were loved – how could they not be? – but
never sentimentalised; this remained a thoroughly vital performance. Unity was
the hallmark of the finale, its somewhat problematical form managing
nevertheless to bring together the work as a whole. This was decidedly superior
Hausmusik.
Monday, 22 December 2014
Gerhaher/Huber - Mahler, 19 December 2014
Wigmore Hall
Lieder
eines fahrenden Gesellen
Songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn
Kindertotenlieder
It has always proved a great
pleasure for me to hear Christian Gerhaher, and this Wigmore Hall recital
proved no exception. I worried a little during the opening Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen that it might, indeed worrying
more than slightly during the first song, ‘Wenn mein Schatz Hochzeit macht’.
One should of course bear in mind that there is rarely, if ever, one correct
tempo for a piece. As Wagner observed in his brilliant little book, Über das Dirigieren, quoted approvingly
more than once by that great Mahlerian, Pierre Boulez, the relationships
between different tempi are really the crucial matter. (Even that, I think, is
not a hard-and-fast rule, but it seems far closer to the truth.) That said, it
is not the case that just anything goes, and the weirdly distended tempo for
this song adopted by Gerhaher and his pianist, Gerold Huber, simply did not
work for these ears. Yes, it will be a ‘day of mourning’ (‘Hab ich meinen
traurigen Tag!’) when the wayfarer’s beloved has her wedding day, but the music
did not seem able to support such a reading, still less quite so abrupt a shift
in the second stanza. Given that the voice I most often hear in my head when
thinking of these songs is that of Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau – and what a wonderful
performer of them he was! – I was surprised also to hear Gerhaher occasionally
depart from the general beauty of his musical line to sound a little close to a
caricature of Fischer-Dieskau at his most hectoring. But there was much to admire
here, not just in Gerhaher’s tone, but in its alchemy with Mahler’s own words.
Huber generally provided good support, often more than that in formal terms,
structures emerging clearly and strongly. There were perhaps, though, a few
occasions on which he might have proved more flexible; if a good conductor can,
then a pianist should certainly be able to do so.
Ten songs from Des Knaben Wunderhorn ( ‘Wer hat dies
Liedlein erdacht?’, ‘Ablösung im Sommer’, ‘Ich ging mit Lust’, ‘Um schlimme
Kinder artig zu machen’, ‘Rheinlegendchen’, ‘Der Schildwache Nachtlied’, ‘Lied
des Verfolgten im Turm’, ‘Das irdische Leben’, ‘Zu Straßburg auf der Schanz’, and
‘Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen’) followed: the first six before the interval,
the final four after. Gerhaher does not – or at least here, did not – opt for
Mahler as proto-expressionist; his instrument and his temperament are quite
different from, say, Matthias Goerne. But that is not in any sense to say that
he is unresponsive to the different requirements of words and music. We heard a
similar range of human experience, veering, as it should do with Mahler, towards
the darker side, even when, indeed sometimes particularly when, it seems
relatively carefree. ‘Rheinlegendchen’ can express, after all, an almost
Mozartian, or at least Schubertian, sense of smiling through tears. And if
Goerne can harrow like few artists today in this repertoire, Gerhaher’s
ambiguity has its own stories to tell. I wondered whether the cuckooing of ‘Ablösung
im Sommer’ and ‘Um schlimme Kinder artig zu machen’ might have been ironised a
little more; Mahler’s Nature always expresses alienation. However, those folk
characters indelibly etched on to our consciousness always shone through, and
their particularly deeds and thoughts registered to any who would hear them.
For all his famed beauty of tone, Gerhaher also knew when to modify and to
withdraw it. But he also knew that the music expresses the most important story
of all; lose that, and you might as well give up.
Those observations apply more
or less equally to the closing Kindertotenlieder
too. Rückert’s world is a different one, of course, as in some respects is
Mahler’s by the time of writing. Moreover, the subject matter hardly permits,
to put it mildly, of levity. Gerhaher’s deeply serious artistry was perhaps at
its finest here. Words were certainly given their due, but the emphasis lay as
much upon the shifting perspectives
conjured up, as in the simpler ‘Wayfarer’ Songs, yet here more
successfully, by the relationship between words, music, and vocal colour.
Momentary withdrawal of vibrato made its point, without in any sense speaking
of dogma. The evocation of ‘childhood’ could only have come from an adult;
children themselves do not consider such matters. Gerhaher here seemed to speak
almost, but not quite, directly for Mahler, the knowledge that we are distant
from and yet remain so painfully close to the composer another matter for
reflection. Huber’s knowing reiteration of material from the first song in ‘In
diesem Wetter, in diesem Braus,’ permitted Gerhaher to point to what had
changed: a journey through these songs does not, or should not, leave one
unchanged. The encore, ‘Urlicht’ disarmed with a simplicity that was, again
rightly for Mahler, knowing: sentimental, in Schiller’s sense, rather than
naïve, for all its longing aspiration to the former.
Saturday, 20 December 2014
Elektra, Semperoper Dresden, 15 December 2014
Semperoper
Elektra
– Elena Pankratova
Chrysothemis
– Manuela Uhl
Klytämnestra
– Jane Henschel
Orest
– Markus Marquardt
Aegisth – Jürgen Müller
First
Maid – Constance Heller
Second
Maid – Stephanie Atanasov
Third
Maid – Christa Mayer
Fourth
Maid – Roxana Incontrera
Fifth
Maid – Nadja Mchantaf
Overseer
– Sabine Brohm
Young
Servant – Simeon Esper
Old
Servant – Tilmann Rönnebeck
Orest’s tutor – Matthias Henneberg
Confidante – Andrea Ihle
Trainbearer – Christiane Hossfeld
Barbara Frey (director)
Muriel Gerstner (set designs)
Bettina Walter (costumes)
Gérard Cleven (lighting)
Micaela von Marcard (dramaturgy)
Almost anything would have been an
anti-climax following the Semperoper’s Rosenkavalier
the previous day, but, odious comparisons aside, there was still something
disappointing to the experience of so routine an Elektra as my final instalment of Strauss Year. Barbara Frey’s production
was new earlier this year, but frankly it already looked far more old and tired
than Uwe Eric Laufenberg’s staging of the next Strauss-Hofmannsthal
collaboration, which had first been seen in 2000. There really did not seem to
be very much to it at all. Few set designs for Elektra have in my experience looked radically different. Here
there is less granite, whether literal or figurative, than often, but the
action still unfolds in what appears to be a royal palace and household that
have seen better days. An inscription referring to royal justice hangs
pregnantly, ironically, over proceedings, but alas little of what we see lives
up to our anticipations. Perhaps there was simply not enough rehearsal for a
repertory performance; there was definitely a sense of the performers being
left to fend for themselves. Odd touches, such as child actors appearing on
stage during the Recognition Scene, so as to remind us that Elektra and Orest
last saw each other when children, really add nothing. One would have to have
been taking very little notice at all not to have grasped that dramatic point
already.
Lothar Koenigs was apparently ill, and
had been replaced by the veteran replacement-conductor, Peter Schneider. Again,
there was a strong sense of lack of rehearsal. Schneider’s vague, listless
direction of the score suggested a run-through rather than a performance in any
emphatic sense. The Staatskapelle Dresden could doubtless not put on a bad
performance of Strauss if it tried, but by its standards, it was hardly on
form. There was a distinct lack of focus, too much of Pierre Monteux’s ‘indifference
of mezzo forte’; again, the contrast with the Rosenkavalier was glaring. When the full
force of the orchestra seemed finally to be unleashed, at the very close, it
seemed too little, too late.
Elena Pankratova was the best reason to
have heard this performance. She probably needed more help in terms of stage
direction, but her vocal performance was generally strong, speaking of a strong
musico-dramatic commitment throughout. This was indeed a musical performance,
not a house of horrors exhibition of screaming. Manuela Uhl’s Chrysothemis offered gleaming sound,
though her intonation wavered a little too often. Jane Henschel is a fantastic
singing-actress, but here she erred too much for me on the side of caricature.
Again, perhaps stronger direction, both stage and musical, would surely have
helped create something more. Markus
Marquardt proved a sadly wooden Orest, but Jürgen Müller
offered an uncommonly well-sung Aegisth. Not a vintage evening, then, not even
close; but I should forgive almost anything for that Rosenkavalier.
Friday, 19 December 2014
Der Rosenkavalier, Semperoper Dresden, 14 December 2014
Semperoper
Die Feldmarschallin, Fürstin Werdenberg
– Anja Harteros
Der Baron Ochs auf Lerchenau – Peter
RoseOctavian – Sophie Koch
Herr von Faninal – Adrian Erőd
Sophie – Christiane Karg
Jungfer Marianne Leitmetzerin – Christiane Kohl
Valzacchi – Thomas Ebenstein
Annina – Christa Mayer
Police Officer – Peter Lobert
The Marschallin’s Major-domo – Simeon Esper
Faninal’s Major-domo – Tom Martinsen
A Notary – Matthias Henneberg
A Landlord – Dan Karlström
A Singer – Yosep Kang
A Milliner – Nadja Mchantaf
A Vendor of Pets – Mert Süngü
Leopold – Dirk Wolter
Lackeys – Ingolf Stollberg, Andreas Keinze, Jun-Seok Bang, Matthias Beutlich
Waiters – Rafael Harnisch, Torsten Schäpan Norbert Klesse, Thomas Müller
Three noble orphans – Jennifer Porto, Emily Dorn, Christel Loetzsch
Lerchenauschen – Alexander Födisch, Michael Wettin, Thomas Müller, Mirko Tuma, Werner Harke, Holger Steinert
Mohammed (‘The little Moor’) – Amala Boashie
Uwe
Eric Laufenberg (director)
Christoph
Schubiger (set designs)
Jessica
Karge (costumes)
A
superlative evening! Above all on the musical side, Christian Thielemann’s
conducting having been the initial attraction for me in the first place, but
with an intelligent staging too, which quite belied its years. Uwe Eric
Laufenberg was announced as director of the new Bayreuth Parsifal after I had arranged to attend this performance, but since
I was unfamiliar with his work, this proved a subsequent attraction. What, if
anything, this 2000 staging might tell us about a 2015 Parsifal remains to be seen, but, quite in contrast to reports I
had heard (‘boring’, ‘conventional’, etc.), this proved, if not the equal of Harry
Kupfer’s Salzburg production this summer, then a more than acceptable
alternative. When one recalls in horror Munich’s perpetual ‘revival’, if only
in name, of an Otto
Schenk production long past its sell-by-date, now at long last set to be pensioned
off, Laufenberg offers almost the height of radicalism.
The
staging of the Prelude seems to me a miscalculation, and an embarrassing one at
that. Strauss makes it perfectly clear the sort of thing that is going on. We
have little need to see the Marschallin and Octavian gingerly undressing each
other (though not very far) and disappearing under the sheets. It certainly is
not raunchy; instead, we appear stranded in a no-man’s-land – literally, I suppose
– between ‘tastefulness’ and The Benny
Hill Show. Things improve thereafter, however. Perhaps the most impressive
developmental aspect is the way in which the sense of time, or better of times,
creeps upon us, becomes more complicated – just as in the work itself. The
Marschallin and Octavian might well be where they ‘should’ be, in Maria
Theresa’s Vienna, or rather in Hofmannsthal’s intricate construction thereof,
which is not to be confused, nor is it intended to be, with the ‘real thing’,
or Ranke’s wie es eigentlich gewesen.
As the first act progresses, however, it gradually becomes clearer that we are,
or have progressed, some time later than we had suspected. Is it the nineteenth
century, the period of those Johann Strauss waltzes Richard sublimated? It
seems as though it might be, and then, through costumes and actions, we realise
that we are actually a little later. The time of composition? Yes, perhaps. Ah
no, in the second act, in Faninal’s strenuously ‘beautiful’, up-to-date palace,
we realise that we are probably a little later still. The Marschallin, of
course, lives in a more well-worn establishment, with truer, or at least more
ancient, pedigree, still living, more or less, though perhaps not entirely, the
life she imagines, we imagine, her eighteenth-century self having lived. At
least when at home; the third act deepens historical understanding further.
Octavian seems to understand his life similarly when with her, but proves more
likely, aristocratic pride notwithstanding, to be influenced by his
surroundings; after all, he is young and easily swayed.
The
latest – that is, for the interwar years – ‘media’ techniques are employed in
Faninal’s Faustian bargain: cameramen record the event, but have to be
prevented, with limited success, by his Major-domo, the characterful Tom
Martinsen. It is not as if the years have actually passed; this is not Stefan
Herheim’s Parsifal. However, we
appreciate the construction of past and present, so long as we pay attention
both to the general and the specifically scenic. Moreover, we are certainly
made aware, without having the point unduly hammered home, that the media
attention paid to Sophie is very much an aspect of that heterosexual male gaze
which excites itself with the cavorting of three women in the first place. That
is not, of course, to say that others cannot find much to interest them too in
those relationships, but rather to remind ourselves of the ‘norm’ on which both
work and production seem predicated. The special prominence granted Mohammed,
listed in the programme as ‘der kleine Mohr’ seems odd, though. He is kept as
something akin to the Marschallin’s pet, and the racial overtones – especially
when all the other children were so clearly of ‘Germanic’ appearance – unsettle
without evident reason.
It
is an impressive but far from obtrusive frame, then, in which the specific
action unfolds. The success of that action is doubtless, especially at this
remove from the original production, to be attributed more to the efforts of
those on stage than to the production ‘itself’, but the latter does no harm.
Anja Harteros proved well-nigh perfect as the Marschallin. Her grace and
conviction were married to an alluring tone that yet did not preclude subtle
verbal nuance. One believed in her – and felt with her. Sophie Koch’s Octavian
is of course a very well-known quantity, but seemed reinvented for the
occasion, keenly responsive to others on stage, eminently plausible in his/her
various guises. Christiane Karg’s Sophie was a far more interesting character
than one generally encounters; normally, my reaction is likely to tend towards
irritation at least at her vacuity. Not so in Karg’s case; there was clearly ambition
here, on the part of both singer and character. There was also clearly instant
attraction – perhaps the production overdoes this? – between her and the
rose-bearing count. Adrian Erőd’s Faninal was dry-toned to start with, but gained in
vocal lustre thereafter, offering throughout a detailed portrayal, whether
musically, verbally, or on stage.
Peter Rose’s Ochs was simply
wonderful: a buffo portrayal, yes,
but a portrayal born of deep musico-dramatic intelligence, evidently gauging
and creating the moment as it presented itself. His way with Hofmannsthal’s
text lay beyond reproach. His impatience during the resumption of the Italian
Singer’s aria offered a masterclass in silent stage presence. No one
disappointed and most of the ‘minor’ roles strongly impressed, not least Yosep
Kang’s ardent Singer and Thomas Ebenstein and Christa Mayer as the other
‘Italians’, both more obviously characters than caricatures.
Thielemann’s
conducting was perhaps the finest I have ever heard in this work; so was the playing
of that great Strauss ensemble, the Staatskapelle Dresden. The openings to the
first two acts were perhaps surprisingly, though far from inappropriately,
vigorous, Octavian’s – and Sophie’s – youthful impetuosity to the fore. But the
flexibility with which Thielemann held and developed Strauss’s line was
something truly to savour. Likewise the colour, depth, and allure of the
orchestra, which Thielemann played with virtuosity and understanding that
respected the score and yet beyond it into the truest of performative
‘interpretation’. Caesuras that might on paper sound as if they would disrupt
instead increased our anticipation, the longer line somehow maintained. There
was doubtless an element of theatricality, even of showmanship, but born of a
deep knowledge of ‘what works’; to steal from Strauss’s operatic future, La
Roche himself might have approved. Strauss’s materialistic
development-cum-rejection of Wagner’s orchestral metaphysics was demonstrated,
experienced far better than words could ever hope to do. This was a Greek
Chorus that answered, perhaps after Goethe as much as Nietzsche, to no gods
above. Our life, as the opera and its performance made clear, was here on
earth, in the present – and yet it was also somewhere else and in the past that
had made that present, even if that past had never actually been present. Die Zeit, die ist ein sonderbar Ding…
Tuesday, 16 December 2014
From the House of the Dead, Berlin Staatsoper, 13 December 2014
Schillertheater
Images: Monika Rittershaus (from the original, 2011 staging)
|
Alexandr Petrovič Gorjančikov
– Tom Fox
Aljeja – Eric Stoklossa
Luka Kuzmič (or Filka
Morozov) – Štefan Margita
Skuratov – Ladislav Elgr
Siškov, Guard – Pavlo Hunka
Prison Governor – Jiří Sulženko
Big Prisoner – Peter Straka
Small Prisoner – Vladimír Chmelo
Elderly Prisoner – Heinz Zednik
Cook, Blacksmith – Maximilian
Krummen
Priest – Arttu Kataja
Cekunov – Ján Galla
Drunk Prisoner – Stephen Chambers
Sapkin – Peter Hoare
Kedril – Marian Pavlovič
Don Juan, The Brahmin – Ales
Jenis
Young Prisoner – Olivier Dumait
Prostitute – Eva Vogel
Cerevin, Guard – Stephan Rügamer
Patrice Chéreau (director)
Peter McClintock (revival
director)
Richard Peduzzi (set designs)
Caroline de Vivaise
(costumes)
Bertrand Couderc (lighting,
video)
Chorus of the Berlin State
Opera (chorus master: Martin Wright)
Staatskapelle Berlin
Sir Simon Rattle (conductor)
Let me find something to
complain about. The typing of such a review is a nightmare: all those
diacriticals, especially for someone who knows not a word of Czech. That would
be it, really. Two of my abiding musical regrets are not having seen the
production of Moses und Aron,
conducted by Pierre Boulez at my very first Salzburg Festival (I opted for The Marriage of Figaro instead) and not
having seen this production of From the House
of the Dead (Z mrtvého Domu) when
it was first staged, again conducted by Boulez. Neither of those omissions can
be put right, of course, but at least I have managed to see my first and –
again, alas – doubtless last opera production by Patrice Chéreau in the theatre.
(That is, unless I somehow manage to travel to New York to see his valedictory
offering, Elektra.)
Perhaps the ultimate joy –
should that not be an utterly misplaced word with respect to this opera – of this
production is to see something that is so well thought out, so well executed,
so clearly what it intends to be and what an operatic staging should be, that
one experiences almost anew the greatness of genre and work, in themselves and
also in performance. Any element of ‘opera house routine’ is banished, likewise
any idiotic directorial clichés and incoherences. (The contrast with Christof Loy’s self-regarding assault on Tristan
earlier this month could hardly be greater.) Chéreau trusts the work, and it
therefore trusts him, permitting re-creative freedom as opposed to mere
licence. Realism is both apparent and yet called into question or extended,
according to taste. By that, I mean that the prisoners are clearly prisoners,
as we should expect to see them; the prison is clearly a prison as we should expect
to see it, the behaviour and interaction of the prisoners is so clearly
plausible that we might actually be there, and yet there is no delimitation.
This could be anywhere, and even the period is unclear – without a hint of
post-modernist incongruity. There is plenty of action to watch, more doubtless than
one can take in from a single viewing, and yet none of it is gratuitous, none
of it distracts. We witness the faithful creation and development of a world we
can imagine, rightly or wrongly, as if that matters, Janáček himself creating
when sketching and developing his opera from Dostoevsky. Richard Peduzzi’s fine
set designs are likewise sufficiently realistic and sufficiently abstract, so
much part of the action that one cannot conceive of ‘production’ and ‘designs’
separately. (My mind inevitably went back to the triumph of the Centenary Ring, one of the few DVD opera stagings
I am happy to watch again and again.)
The coup de theatre, for Chéreau is nothing if not a man of the
theatre, comes at the end of the
first act, in which a collapse both physical, intellectual, and metaphysical
arises, rubbish falling from above – but is there even an Above in a sense
Dostoevsky would have understood? – to create pointless ‘work’ for the
prisoners thereafter. Is there a hint that this debris might relate to the
learning of books, and to the horror of their destruction in authoritarian societies?
I felt so, but perhaps that was just my
own reading; either way, Chéreau’s staging and its exemplary revival under
Peter McClintock allow us the openness of our own interpretations, again up to
a point and without the reactionary chaos of ‘anything goes’. From the House of the Dead has been
criticised as having little in the way of plot, even little in the way of ‘opera’.
It is surely the composer’s most radical work – which is saying something.
Chéreau’s production enables the musical performance to examine and to project
its dramatic dialectic between individual character and collectivity, and to
show not only its radicalism but also the deep humanity which ultimately places
it decisively in the tradition of his earlier works.
That relationship between
individual and choral collective was powerfully, indeed unforgettably, achieved
by the artists themselves on stage. It is, more than usual, not only invidious
but more or less impossible to single out members of the cast in such a work
and performance. However, the men to whom Janáček more or less briefly grants
prominence might usefully be mentioned. Tom Fox’s Alexandr Petrovič seemed just
as the composer might have thought of him: noble, ‘different’, compassionate. The role of Aljeja, the young Tatar, was taken
by the tenor, Eric Stoklossa, rather than the more usual mezzo. Stoklossa
nevertheless conveyed the character’s youth and vulnerability, without a hint
of sacrifice to the integrity of musical delivery. The brutality of the
third-act monologue and the horror of its outcome were conveyed powerfully,
again with just the right balance between the specific and the universal, by
Štefan Margita’s Filka and Pavlo Hunka’s Šiškov. Laidslav Elgr’s Skuratov offered
a subtle development of character the work’s detractors would have one believe
never present, again perfectly in keeping with Chéreau’s overall vision. Ales
Jinis made a strong impression indeed as the prisoner taking the roles of Don
Juan and the Brahmin in the second-act plays, his charisma hinting at a
homoeroticism which may or may not be ‘there’ in work and setting (irrespective
of intention?) The presentation of those two plays was exemplary throughout,
all concerned pulling off the trick of convincing portrayal of amateur
dramatics with knowledge of the darker forces at work. In that sense, the resentful
violence of Vladimír Chmelo Small Prisoner and the frail wisdom of Heinz Zednik’s
Elderly Prisoner framed the action and its parameters tellingly.
Sir Simon Rattle showed
himself at his curtain call deeply appreciative of the playing of the
Staatskapelle Berlin. Rightly so, for theirs was playing at a level one might
have expected them to reserve for Daniel Barenboim. Initially I wondered
whether the sound were a little too ‘Romantic’, almost Brahmsian (ironically,
given Rattle’s own rather odd way with
Brahms). But I rightly doubted my doubts and was quite won over; for one
thing, this ‘old German’ sound is arguably very close to what Janáček himself
would have heard and had in mind. One heard Wagner, Strauss, Debussy, even
perhaps the Second Viennese School; and yes, one heard Janáček. Rhythms were
tight and musically generative, but
this was a different, less overtly modernistic composer than one sometimes
hears. There is room for several Janáčeks, of course, or rather several
manifestations, each shedding light upon the other. Indeed, we may then hear
the intimate relationship between ‘late Romanticism’ – itself a deeply
problematical concept, which often obscures as much as it enlightens – and ‘modernism’,
‘German’ and ‘Czech’. The final march chilled as it told of a compassion
Janáček manages to imply as dialectically responsive to its Fatal inhumanity.
Last but certainly not least,
indeed arguably foremost, was the contribution of the chorus. Its delivery of
words and music, its portrayal of individual and collective, its situation as
background and foreground, its clear commitment to work and performance: all of
these and more were exemplary throughout. Janáček’s conception of this strange,
visionary work emerged in disconcerting triumph. The ultimate test was passed: however difficult the message, I wanted to see it again immediately.
Monday, 15 December 2014
Turandot, Deutsche Oper, 12 December 2014
Deutsche Oper, Berlin
Turandot – Catherine Foster
Altoum – Peter Maus
Calaf – Kamen Chanev
Liù – Heidi Stober
Timur – Simon Lim
Ping – Melih Tepretmez
Pang – Gideon Poppe
Pong – Matthew Newlin
Mandarin – Andrew Harris
Prince of Persia –
Aristoteles Chaitidis, Jan Müller
Two Girls – Elbenita Kajtaz,
Christina Sidak
Lorenzo Fioroni (director)
Claudia Gotta (revival
director)
Paul Zoller (set designs and
video)
Katharina Gault (costumes)
Chorus
of the Deutsche Oper (chorus master: William Spaulding) of the Deutsche Oper
Orchestra of the Deutsche Oper
Ivan Repušič (conductor)
Production shot from first staging: © Bettina Stöß, 2008 |
The Deutsche Oper has a very
fine production of Turandot on its
hands. Lorenzo Fioroni leaves us in no doubt what a magnificently vile opera it
is, homing in quite rightly upon Puccini’s sadism, drawing out its political
implications, and playing down, though far from entirely obscuring, the work’s
deeply problematical Orientalism, which otherwise has a tendency to impede appreciation
of what is still more repellent in the work. Put another way, this staging stands
as distant from Zeffirelli and mindless school thereof, that is, from what has
given opera in performance so bad a name, as Puccini does from Donizetti and
the other drivel that has given Italian opera so bad a name and which, sadly,
has in may houses relegated Puccini’s œuvre to the level of at-best-anodyne
productions, cynically relied upon to boost the accursed box office.
Fioroni sets the action in a reasonably
generic totalitarian state. There is enough of an imaginary ‘China’ hinted at,
should that be important, but it is not central to the production. An enfeebled
Emperor – or is he? is his present state partly a ruse de guerre? – presides, with the help of Turandot, a deeply
sinister junta or Politburo (according to taste), and thuggish security
services on the street, who mete out casual, or rather less-than-casual,
physical punishment to those who would step out of line. Turandot appears to be
calling the shots – almost literally, in some cases; for instance, when,
following the solution of the riddles, she hysterically reaches for and uses her
gun – but, as in all such cases, the dynamics of power and violence are not entirely
straightforward. The crowd seems submissive, largely cowed, relishing yet
fearing the brutality, but who knows? Ping, Pang, and Pong are now less an
offensive and/or irritating addition, but political opportunists. They, like
everyone else, do what they need to survive; they are not inhuman, but
necessity and the promise of reward ensure collaboration and perhaps more than
that.
Theatre is extremely
important here. What we see enacted
and re-enacted takes us to the heart
of the problem, as indeed it does in Gozzi’s original tale. Ritual is enforced
but also permits of certain criticism. Ping, Pong, and Pang, those crucial
ministers – more crucial, I think, than I have seen before – employ the
costumes and customs of theatre to show the people and us what the rules are
and what the outcomes will be. Their tableaux involve impersonation, most
notably in the case of a gender-subverting portrayal of Turandot herself, veiled
and later preparing for a wedding; they also, inevitably, remind us all of the
likely bloody outcome of any challenge to the system. And yet, they shift,
chameleon-like, when the new order comes: a new order brutally signalled by the
death of the Emperor and, most chillingly of all, Calaf’s stabbing of his
father immediately after. Regime change has come upon us – and the courtiers,
whatever their sly mocking when unseen, will adapt and most likely prosper.
The most shocking violence,
of course, whether in work or production, is that suffered by Liù. Her
enslavement, born of both social position and gender, is clear from the outset,
when Calaf briefly forces himself upon her, making a great deal more sense of
his actions in the third act. It is power in all senses that he wants; a moment
of regret is all that is therefore necessary. Yet her figure, hanging in front
of the action throughout the rest of the act, reminds us of the cost and the
barbarism. ‘Love’, whatever that means, may claim to have won, but we know that
it is merely a form of power, or rather that it is perhaps the most deadly form
of power at all. (Coincidentally or otherwise, Wagner’s discovery of that truth
during the writing of the Ring comes
to mind.) The cruelty of the score, of its ritualisation and exploitation, is
at one with what we see. For a view of the violence as not only instrumental
but concerned with degradation of the body for its own sake chimes very much
with Puccini’s fabled sadism. This, then, is a fidelity to the work that draws
out what is present in it, a fidelity greater than that which the cheerleaders
of a naïve Werktreue seem capable of
understanding.
It was a pity, then, that Ivan
Repušič’s conducting was not up to the same standard. There was nothing too
much to worry about, but this was competent and, sometimes, a little frayed
rather than clearly directed. The Orchestra of the Deutsche Oper played
magnificently, though, so the occasional blurring did not detract so very much
in practice. Nevertheless, a more incisive, indeed brazenly modernistic touch
would have heightened the disturbed and disturbing sensations further. Choral
singing lay almost beyond praise. William Spaulding’s training of the Deutsche
Oper Chorus is well known, but still deserving of the highest plaudits; so, of
course, is the contribution of the choral singers themselves. Keenly directed on
stage as they were here, the heft, clarity, and meaning of their musical
contribution was very much of a piece with their ambiguous yet threatening
dramatic role. This was a mass that more than stirred musically, hinting
perhaps at trouble to come for the new regime?
In the title role, Catherine
Foster offered a committed dramatic portrayal, sadistic yet clearly hinting at
great problems, personal and political, lying behind the sadism. If one could
hardly empathise, one could begin to understand – which is just about all one
can ask with this repellent character and her actions. Intonation was not
always all it might have been, but for the most part there was dramatic
compensation. Kamen Chanev’s Calaf was not dramatically subtle; such seems,
alas, to be the way with the role. But the production, for which revival director, Claudia Gotta, surely also deserves plaudits, offered depth to what, in
purely vocal terms, was an impressive performance. Simon Lim’s Timur was deeply
felt, however, attention to words and musical line impressing throughout.
Likewise, Heidi Stober’s Liù, which gained in resonance – in more than one
sense – as the evening progressed. As the ministerial trio, Melih Tepretmez, Gideon
Poppe, and Matthew Newlin all offered cleverly considered performances, alert
to the shifting circumstances on stage and responding accordingly. The company
and the performance as a whole proved more than the sum of its parts. A DVD
release would be invaluable, especially for those misled – often understandably
so – by more typical, inert presentations of Puccini.
Friday, 12 December 2014
Tenebrae/ECO/Short - Handel, Messiah, 10 December 2014
Cadogan
Hall
Time was, etc., etc. Now we
account ourselves fortunate to have the opportunity to hear any Handel, even
the Messiah, on modern instruments.
But of course, things are not quite so simple as that. Not just Baroque, not
just Classical, but even Romantic music and beyond have been increasingly
surrendered to the strange hybrid of allegedly ‘period style’ – in reality, as
Richard Taruskin has long argued, a thoroughly contemporary style – and a
mixture of instruments from any combination of periods that appears to suit
those performing. One London conductor has, for instance, recently, bizarrely
used ‘period’ trumpets alongside modern horns (and strings) in Haydn, in
performances whose principal purpose seems to have been to rush through the
music as quickly as possible, with occasional distending of tempo apparently just
‘because he can’. The meaningless of post-modernism – and this is where
Taruskin’s critique seems to me to have things quite the wrong way around – has
been the victor, not modernism.
There was nothing so extreme
here, thank goodness. But it was difficult not to suspect that the English
Chamber Orchestra’s string playing was somewhat hampered by instructions at
odds with their modern instruments. Modern, that is, save for the bizarre
appearance of ‘period’ kettledrums, which certainly made an impact but an
impact which seemed intended for another performance entirely. It was far from
clear, either to me or to the violinist friend who attended with me, that what
the violinists were doing with their right hands was compatible with the actions
of their left hands. Lower strings seemed better off in that respect. Playing
was generally reasonably cultivated, but surely would have been far more so,
had the players been encouraged to rejoice in the capabilities of their instruments.
It was notable that leader Stephanie Gonley’s violin solo in the penultimate ‘If
God be for us’ – not the happiest of choices in the version of the work offered
in performance – was far freer in style, greatly to its and our benefit.
Nigel Short’s tempi were
sometimes a little on the fast side, but there was nothing unduly objectionable
in that respect. For instance, if ‘Ev’ry valley shall be exalted’ was more
energetic than we are used to, a convincing enough case was made for the decision.
Although a small choir, twenty-strong, Tenebrae was perfectly capable of making
a full sound, not least in ‘Surely He hath borne our griefs,’ which emerged
furiously, and the (relatively) mighty conclusion to the final chorus. Alas,
the ‘Hallelujah!’ was largely disrupted for me by a man a couple of rows behind,
who insisted on jangling loose change in his pocket throughout its course, a
strange updating of the custom of a segment of the Viennese public to jangle
keys in order to disrupt Schoenberg’s concerts. The freshness of the choral
voices had been immediately apparent in ‘And the glory of the Lord,’ and
continued to give considerable pleasure and enlightenment.
Finest of the vocal soloists
was an outstanding Martha McLorinan, described in the programme as an ‘alto’,
although she sounded more of a mezzo. It was a pity that she was not given more
to sing. She edged closer to Handel’s operas in the B sections of ‘But who may
abide the day of his coming?’ and ‘He was despised and rejected,’ although never
too much. There was contrast and continuity, then, and Charles Jennens’s text
was ably communicated. Alas, the contrast between McLorinan and the strangely
pop-like – I said we were in post-modernist territory! – delivery of the soprano,
Grace Davidson, was especially glaring during their duet, ‘He shall feed His
flock.’ Davidson made little of the words there and elsewhere. Although her
light soprano might initially have sounded attractive enough, both it and her
performance lacked any greater depth. Her coloratura was correct but strangely
robotic. Tenor, David de Winter, opened promisingly. His first accompagnato, ‘Comfort
ye, my people’ was splendidly imploring, gaining in strength as it progressed,
the following aria nicely variegated. However, despite a gloriously lingering ‘Thy
rebuke hath broken His heart,’ the aria, ‘Thou shalt break them with a rod of
iron’ proved somewhat strained. There is a good oratorio voice there, though,
without doubt. So is there in the case of bass, William Gaunt, whose attention
to both words and music impressed throughout; moreover, he was not afraid to
employ fuller tone on occasion.
Sunday, 7 December 2014
Aimard/LPO/Jurowski - Stravinsky, Birtwistle, and Messiaen, 6 December 2014
Royal Festival Hall
Stravinsky – Symphonies of Wind Instruments
Birtwistle – Responses: Sweet disorder and the carefully
careless, for piano and orchestra (UK premiere)
Messiaen – Oiseaux exotiques
Stravinsky – Orpheus
The final event of
Birtwistle’s eightieth anniversary year, at least for me: the British premiere
of his new work for piano and orchestra, Responses,
first performed in Munich this October, by its dedicatee, Pierre-Laurent
Aimard. To grant the work its full, somewhat cumbersome title, replete with
subtitle after a collection of architectural essays by Robert Maxwell, Responses: Sweet disorder and the carefully,
careless, is certainly better understood as a work for piano and orchestra
rather than a piano concerto as such. The contrast with the (relatively) recent
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra is strong in that and many other respects. That
said, Birtwistle, in a programme interview with Jonathan Cross, does refer to this
work as ‘my new concerto’.
Later in that interview,
Birtwistle remarks: ‘When one thinks of a concerto, one usually expects the
orchestra to play some of the tune, then the soloist to play some of it. It’s
the same material. This is not the case in my work. Rather, it’s a dialogue:
the soloist is asking questions.’ Hence Responses,
and that is certainly how it sounded, from the opening pulsating E – as Cross
notes, that pitch a typical starting-point – onwards. Yes, there is
questioning, and yes, this is definitely a piece for piano and orchestra, no ‘mere’
ensemble here (eight double basses, three percussionists, two harps, and so
on). Piano chords sound, especially, I suspect, in Aimard’s hands, like ghosts
stranded between the nineteenth century and Birtwistle’s own modernism. The
orchestra glistens, machine-like: again highly characteristic. There seem to be
some intriguing echoes of Messiaen, presumably part of the reason for
programming the work with Oiseaux
exotiques. And there is dramatic insistence, especially from the brass,
sounding against longing, string-based melancholy, in what seemed to me very
much post-Minotaur fashion. There is
frenzy, with something of the Dionysian to it. (Although I suspect this merely
to be coincidence, I was a couple of times, especially with respect to the
percussion, put in mind of the Maenads’ Hunt from Henze’s opera, The Bassarids, albeit in a more
fractured, more ritualised fashion.) Less a cadenza, more a brief soliloquy,
one piano passage brings on a sense of momentary stillness, against which piano
and orchestra seem to wish to escape;
it is a more arduous task, however, than it initially might seem. The idea, or
perhaps better, practice of hocketing is clearly instantiated – and, of course,
dramatised. I had a sense of spatial games within the orchestra, without the
actual movement of, say, Theseus Game.
Gabrieli reimagined for a ‘conventional’ orchestra and soloist? Theseus Game reimagined in a world after
The Minotaur and the Violin Concerto?
Perhaps. Or maybe it is ‘just’ another exploration of particular material. In
truth, of course, there is no need for either/or here. Jurowski and the LPO
offered excellent performances, as of course did Aimard; it is always difficult
to judge, of course, from a first hearing, but I had the sense that this was
how the work ‘should’ sound.
Messiaen’s Oiseaux exotiques received a mesmerising
account, its hieratic opening recalling the Symphonies
of Wind Instruments, with which the concert had opened, though the language
is unmistakeably Messiaen’s own. The piano is more clearly a concertante
instrument here; indeed, much of its role is taken up with cadenzas.
Ironically, the dialogue here seemed more overtly, or at least more
straightforwardly, responsorial. Orchestral colours sounded as vivid as they
could to one who is not a synesthete. The naïve, elemental quality to so much
of Messiaen’s music registered just as powerfully as the complexity of his ‘enormous
counterpoint of birdsong’. Not least, this was a riotous and ecstatic
performance. Aimard played his part – superlatively – from memory.
On either side came works by
Stravinsky. Symphonies of Wind
Instruments has long held fascination for Birtwistle – and indeed for many
of the rest of us. In Jurowski’s performance, it opened just as it should:
angular, spiky, hieratic, aggressive. Echoes of the Rite of Spring were perhaps unusually apparent in the contrasting
material. Neo-Classicism seemed to shoot forth, yet also to withdraw; this, one
felt, was more than often being read as a ‘transitional’ work. Soldier’s Tale puppetry and Œdipus Rex gravity, life and
desiccation: it was in its very particular way, and whatever Adorno may have thought,
as dialectical as Beethoven. Moreover, it sounded very much as a curtain-raiser
to a drama.
Orpheus brought another different variety of
ensemble, this time a smaller, well-nigh ‘Classical’ orchestra. The grave
beauty of the opening truly sounded as the scenario has it: ‘Orpheus weeps for
Eurydice. He stands motionless…’. Already, there were to be heard in this work
(1946-7) intimations of The Rake’s
Progress, yet seemingly without its polemical aggression. Orpheus’s violin
solo inevitably rekindled memories of The
Soldier’s Tale (again) and indeed the Violin Concerto. Rather to my
surprise, I also fancied I heard a balletic kinship with Prokofiev. Perhaps it
was Jurowski’s ‘Russian’ conducting? I cannot help but feel that some of the
later music finds the composer a little on auto-pilot, but maybe it is more a
matter of the ultra-neo-Classical æsthetic still presenting problems for me. At
any rate, other of Stravinsky’s works from around this period seemed unusually
present: the Symphony in Three Movements,
Dumbarton Oaks, the Concerto in D.
The LPO offered frozen beauty in the final scene, those descending harp scales
ritually yet newly combined with lines from horns and trumpet. ‘Orpheus is
dead, the song is gone, but the accompaniment goes on.’ That comment from Stravinsky,
cited in Anthony Burton’s programme note, was perhaps not without relevance to
Birtwistle too.