Palais Garnier
Hamm – Frode Olsen
Clov – Leigh Melrose
Nell – Hilary Summers
Nagg – Leonardo Cortelazzi
Pierre Audi (director)
Christof Hetzer (designs)
Urs Schönebaum (lighting)
Klaus Bertisch (dramaturgy)
Orchestra of the Opéra national de Paris
Markus Stenz (conductor)
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Images: Sébastien Mathé/OnP |
Modernism’s endgame, modernist
opera’s endgame, opera’s endgame: all have been proclaimed time and time again.
One might say the same for Romanticism, Classicism, sonata, symphony, and other
isms and genres. Whatever the truths of the matter—we can no longer justifiably
speak in the singular, if ever we could—this first opera by György Kurtág,
first heard in Milan in 2018 and now receiving its French premiere, suggests
that twilight, however prolonged, has once again proved as productive, as
challenging, as illuminating as first dawn or zenith. The owl of Minerva may or
may not be spreading its wings; Kurtág may or may not be almost the last modernist
standing; opera may or may not be stronger, more varied, more resistant than
ever before. These are inevitable and may even be important questions. What
matters above all, though, is that Kurtág’s Fin de partie/Endgame
emerges, even from a single hearing, a single experience in the theatre, as an
unqualified masterpiece.
Janus-faced, like most—all?—artworks
of stature, Fin de partie takes Beckett’s masterpiece, which Kurtág first
saw in Paris in 1957, and, in concluding a modernist chapter, perhaps even a
book, appears also to open several more. Although it feels very much a finished
work, it remains at least in theory a work-in-progress, to which Kurtág might
add further ‘scenes and monologues’ from Beckett’s play—or even conceivably
from elsewhere, given its second Prologue (the first being purely orchestral)
is a setting for Nell, startlingly in English rather than French, of the poem Roundelay.
This ‘dramatic version’ of the play, in most respects literal, with the
slightest addition here or somehow seems always to have been conceived for
music, indeed seems never to have existed without it. Libretto (if one may call
it that) instructions are as detailed musically—‘comme une mélodie de Debussy’—as
they are scenically, or both: ‘mouvement très lent d’interrogation avec la main
gauche esquisse le “et puis” de Gr. C. et Piatti … assez grand changement de
ton’. Many thanks are due to the Opéra national de Paris for reprinting it: an
invaluable resource for future study and reflection, as well, I hope, as for
subsequent preparation.
The ultimate synthetic
distillation, though, is musical—just as one often fancies Beckett’s words to
point not only to the limits, the endgame, of language, but to the beginning,
the necessity of music. (His Schopenhauerism extended way beyond mere ‘pessimism’,
to the truly aesthetic.) Words here are everything—one hears, and hears
measured every one—until they are not. That ancient operatic alchemy we trace
back at least as far as Monteverdi is once more at work, and Monteverdi—the Monteverdi
of the dramatic madrigals and the two surviving late operas in particular—comes
to mind among many ghosts of the opera-as-sung-play past. Mussorgsky, Debussy,
Berg, Janáček stand prominently among them, as well inevitably—if perhaps more
tangentially—as Wagner, Bach (‘not an opera composer, but’), and even Boulez (ditto?)
Are these affinities or similarities, or are they actual influences? Does it
really matter? It seems both to do so, as we reach the end of the game, but
also not. After all, what does matter when we reach the end of the game, that
any game, any game?
For, apart from his own voice—what
a strange provision!—that which comes most strongly to mind is another supreme writer
of vocal-dramatic music on the smaller scale, whom we yet imagine desiring,
wishing, ultimately aiming to bring forth an operatic synthesis. As it was in
the beginning, it still is now: Webern. Perhaps not even in Webern have I heard
such sustained, certainly not such dramatic, development of intervallic
relationships, in themselves and in relation to timbre (probably other
parameters too) so as to fulfil the tragic necessity of rebuilding a shattered
universe: the same task, yet always different. Every note counts, of course, yet
every note is heard and felt, and bears the ultimate weight of tragic and
tragicomic existence that we may know it counts. The affinity with Beckett’s
language and what some understandably, straining at the bounds, will term in
despair anti-literature is clear; but music is no representative mirror, any
more than it is in Monteverdi, Wagner, or Webern. Its autonomy, its pairings—here
as crucial as any in Bach or Bartók—and so much else continue: in hope, if you
like, yet only in the strange sense that Beckett does. Until, I think, the
close, when something strange happens, a musical synthesis taking wing and
building, such as can often happen almost irrespective of intention. Think, for
instance, of Wagner. This is less evidently redemptive, though stirrings of
sympathy for Hamm and Clov are not entirely denied. Fin de partie,
however, seems to speak or sing of something that might refashion redemptive
ideas through shattered glass, shattered lives, the fragmentary challenges of
modernity and modernism.
An orchestra used sparingly and
with very different balances from that of the Romantic past—a modern ‘ensemble’
writ large—tells us that throughout. Just five first violins and five seconds,
against eight violas, eight cellos, and six double basses, and indeed five
flutes, six percussionists, two bayans (Beckettian vaudeville movingly transmuted
via Sofia Gubaidulina), and so on have seeped into our consciousness, yet
rarely if ever together. Mahler haunts, but he cannot live. Conducting, as he
did earlier performances in Milan and Amsterdam, Markus Stenz understands or at
least appreciates—can anyone ‘understand’?—communicates, and lets that fragility
breathe and expire. We all listen, whether something can be said or sung, or
not. For what else is there to do? Not listen, of course, but which of us wishes
to assume Nagg’s fate? We know there will be no sugar-plum at the end, celesta
notwithstanding.
And yet, music endures, as does
theatre—as, perhaps, do literature and drama too. A wonderful quartet of
soloists ensures that, as does Pierre Audi’s careful direction, doubtless
treading a minefield of what the dread estate, as well as the dedicated
composer, would permit. Action/inaction takes place outside the house, but it
looks very much as we should expect, without ever feeling expected: post-drama,
we might think, of the post-absurd. Frode Olsen, struggling with illness, nonetheless
held the stage with a fiercely committed performance as Hamm, holding it all
together, in the tragicomic absence of any ‘it’ to hold. Leigh Melrose’s
protean Clov, wounded yet spirited, alert and alive, yet quite without hope,
struck me as definitive, however illusory the idea. An outstanding artist
whenever I have heard him, Melrose may have given his finest performance yet. Hilary
Summers offered a masterclass in extracting much from little, as Kurtág and
Beckett do themselves. Transformation of a vocal line, through pitch, dynamics,
shifting colour said, as with the rest of the cast, the rest of the work, both
something and nothing, often in chamber collaboration with an instrument or two
from the pit. Crucially, Nell’s death could neither have been more nor less heartbreaking.
Leonardo Cortelazzi’s made for a fine sidekick, his Nagg splendidly,
pointlessly excitable yet resigned. Steeped, like the others, both in the text
and in its twin possibilities and impossibilities, he closed and opened the
square that should have been a circle.
Here, then, is a masterpiece in
a way that seems, both modestly and defiantly, not of our age. Many composers
would now, quite understandably, tell us such is not their interest. They are
not attempting to write works such as Fin de partie and failing, ‘better’
or otherwise. Given the ideological issues at play, we can all understand that.
When, however, a work—and this is, emphatically, A Work—such as this comes
along, it brooks no dissent. To be there is akin to being there for Gawain (may
its composer now rest in peace), for Mittwoch (likewise, on Sirius), maybe
even for Wozzeck or for Tristan. Kurtág may or may not have been
writing for posterity. Until one of our politicians hastens the final endgame, perhaps
tomorrow, posterity will nonetheless hear and listen to Kurtág.