Siren song: this immediately opens up some Debussyean perspectives ...
Jonathan Dove is a contemporary British composer (born in 1959) of predominantly operatic works. Allegedly he has written more than 50 (!) of them, in a variety of formats, from the full-scale stage drama to television, chamber and community operas.
Dove appeared in one of my numerous search campaigns in the databases of Presto Classical or Amazon. Listening to the snippets online I liked what I heard and so I decided to acquaint myself with this composer's work via a shorter, single CD work. It has, by the way, been ages since I listened to opera.
Siren Song (an early work, written in 1994, when Dove was just 35) is a chamber opera developed around the reportedly true story of a sailor who became the victim of an elaborate hoax. Reacting to an add in a newspaper he struck up a correspondence with a British belle from Southampton. The girl, however, did not exist but happened to be a front for an impostor posing as her brother in order to obtain favours and money. This was in 1988, so before the advent of mobile telephony and internet. It's an intriguing story, full of deep resonances, that has been turned into a breezy libretto by the playwright Nick Dear. The work itself has a compact scale, requiring a cast of five singers (the sailor, the girl, the brother and two officials in cameo roles), and a band of only 10 players (flute/piccolo, oboe, clarinet, horn, piano/celesta, harp, percussion, violin, cello and double-bass). It plays in one continuous act, divided into seventeen quasi-cinematographic scenes, lasting about 75 minutes in total.
Clearly Dove has a very lively dramatic instinct and he makes the music subservient to the unfolding narrative. This must be one of the only operas where I found myself truly following the story (easy enough as the singers' diction is so clear) rather than just considering it as a piece of absolute music with voices tacked on. I would describe the style of the music as minimalist. A mix of Adams, Reich and Glass that, surprisingly, doesn't sound trite. There are no big tunes, nothing that musically really jumps out. Instead we have a light, transparent, constantly shifting musical tapestry that is remarkably successful in supporting the action and creating an atmosphere that is shot through with dread and yearning. The vocal writing is very attractive, humane and lyrical, and an ideal foil for the young voices that are featured in this production: Brad Cooper's marvelously youthful tenor, Mattijs van de Woerd's credibly charlatanesque baritone and Amaryllis Dieltiens who, despite a background that is heavily tilted towards the Baroque repertoire, puts down a suitably frivolous siren (Dieltiens is a Belgian soprano who started her musical education at the Leuven Lemmens Institute, here around the corner).
The recording has been made from live performances at the 2007 Grachtenfestival in Amsterdam. It is in all respects excellent. Voices and instruments are well placed and close enough to the microphones to make impact. There is minimal audience intrusion and stage noise. The instrumental ensemble, led by Henk Guittart (primarius of the Schoenberg Quartet until the ensemble's demise in 2009, amongst other achievements), works wonders. So altogether an excellent production that I will be happy to revisit. Meanwhile I have also ordered the Chandos recording of Dove's most notable success, a full-fledged airport comedy called Flight that has been commissioned by Glyndebourne Festival.
I want to briefly come back to those intriguing parallels between this work and Debussy's universe. A distinctive feature of the minimalist style is, of course, the recurring use of ostinatos (or ostinato networks). And this happens to be an important feature of Debussy's music as well. This may, in both instances, go back to the exotic influence of the Javanese gamelan (which Debussy famously heard at the Paris World Exhibition in 1889). Sirènes, the final part of his Nocturnes, is almost wholly built up as a composite ostinato, in which several ostinato-based strands unfold simultaneously. Only in the exact centre of the piece and in very few other isolated places they are absent (I have this from Richard Parks' essay 'Music's inner dance: form, pacing and complexity in Debussy's music' in the Cambridge Companion). Specifically in the context of Debussy's work Derrick Puffett has called this an 'ostinato machine': "a composite ostinato in which each of the separate strands pursues its own rhythmic/harmonic course, together creating a dense polyphonic structure. The 'machine' metaphor is apt as such structures tend to assume a kind of autonomy, unfolding alongside, or even in opposition to, whatever mode of organisation prevails for the piece as a whole." Also Dove's approach of spinning a differentiated, constantly changing musical fabric, without genuine climaxes or epiphanies, is very Debussy-like. (Late in his life, when working with a writer on a text for a cantata on Jeanne d'Arc, Debussy confessed that he 'was suspicious with respect to the exceptional').
Apart from this stylistic correspondence, there is also thematic overlap, it seems to me, with the world of Debussy. First of all, in Dove's opera as in Debussy's work, there is the dominant image (or context) of the sea. The more I listen to Debussy, the more it seems that all of his work is pervaded by a deep fascination for this most powerful manifestation of the undifferentiated, the Real. The sailor's yearning for human companionship and the trivial seductions of domestic life, and hence his willingness to be conned, can only be understood against the background of his life at the very edge of nothingness. I think this was an edge that interested Debussy to a very high degree.
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten