I cannot believe our premiere Wagner production launches next weekend! We believe Wagner will nod approval from whatever realm his own ghost happens to be wandering...
Here's what his statue looks like in Venice, the city where "the master" died.
My faithful companion, Mini-Richard accompanied me to another screening of the classic film version of The Flying Dutchman at the Taubman Museum. Like his operatic nephew, Billy Budd he's playing the part of a proud foretopman atop our newly arrived TFD t-shirts (designed my stepdaughter, Jessica Davis).
In a case of Opera Roanoke trivia and / or "meaningful coincidence," Billy Budd is Britten's opus 50. Our principal guest conductor, Steven White celebrates his 50th birthday next Sunday, the day of our matinee (and final) performance of The Flying Dutchman. Billy Budd was Steven's most recent conducting assignment at the Metropolitan Opera (I wrote about a performance of it I attended with Steven backstage last May as he and I continued our work on OR's Wagner production. Inquiring minds can see the posts below from a wonderful week in NYC at the Met as their 2011-12 season came to a grand conclusion).
Here is one of the Taubman museum's great landscape paintings in its American Galleries permanent collection. This is William Bradford's 1875 nautical canvas, The Voyage of the Polaris. The arctic setting makes it a perfect companion for the Northern European sea setting of the ships in The Flying Dutchman.
Our set is being loaded into Shaftman Performance Hall at the Jefferson Center as I write this. Here is a sketch of the main deck of our Norwegian schooner, courtesy of our design team, Jimmy Ray and Laurie Powell Ward.
Our first rehearsal on stage is tomorrow evening, September 16. I'm slated to be a guest on the WDBJ7 Morning Show Monday (from 5 - 7 am) where we'll unveil the set as a teaser before next Friday's opening night. Don't miss this fabulous operatic ship before it sails away!
Welcome to my Opera blog. I'll be writing about what Opera Roanoke is up to, and about some of the connections between and across opera and the arts.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Ships ahoy at the Taubman!
Over the course of its two-hour screening, over 60 visitors to the Taubman Museum of Art stopped in to catch some of The Flying Dutchman. As many children attended as adults, but many more of the Kinder danced to Wagner's exciting score than did their Ältern.
We did have assistance from an impromptu "Tanzmeister" (Dance master) who led some of the kids in some wavy moves in the auditorium while the sailors sang on screen.
Along with the viewing of the expressive and beautifully stylized 1975 film of Wagner's opera, the Roanoke Library led craft making events in the Taubman's Art Venture space. Here several of my new friends proudly display their Dutchman-inspired art.
Always a child at heart, I joined in the fun, with a little help from Mini Wagner.
And when no one else was looking, Mini Richard cheered his first great masterpiece.
Though I didn't snap a picture of it, the image of two young boys, ages 4 & 7, watching in rapt silence as the Dutchman bid farewell to Senta is emblazoned in my memory. It made for a memorable final scene, in which several children were fixed to the screen as their parents watched them being enchanted by the special magic of opera. If Mastercard were around to shoot one of its commercials, the script might read:
"Cost of materials to make Art Venture crafts: $50;
Cost of the DVD of Wagner's The Flying Dutchman: $30;
The sight of your children completely entranced by their first opera:
Priceless..."
Come hear the drama and see the music and believe Opera Roanoke is the place to experience it. And come to the Taubman Museum next Saturday, Sept 15, at 11:30 to see the film and make your own Flying Dutchman art.
We did have assistance from an impromptu "Tanzmeister" (Dance master) who led some of the kids in some wavy moves in the auditorium while the sailors sang on screen.
Along with the viewing of the expressive and beautifully stylized 1975 film of Wagner's opera, the Roanoke Library led craft making events in the Taubman's Art Venture space. Here several of my new friends proudly display their Dutchman-inspired art.
Always a child at heart, I joined in the fun, with a little help from Mini Wagner.
And when no one else was looking, Mini Richard cheered his first great masterpiece.
Though I didn't snap a picture of it, the image of two young boys, ages 4 & 7, watching in rapt silence as the Dutchman bid farewell to Senta is emblazoned in my memory. It made for a memorable final scene, in which several children were fixed to the screen as their parents watched them being enchanted by the special magic of opera. If Mastercard were around to shoot one of its commercials, the script might read:
"Cost of materials to make Art Venture crafts: $50;
Cost of the DVD of Wagner's The Flying Dutchman: $30;
The sight of your children completely entranced by their first opera:
Priceless..."
Come hear the drama and see the music and believe Opera Roanoke is the place to experience it. And come to the Taubman Museum next Saturday, Sept 15, at 11:30 to see the film and make your own Flying Dutchman art.
Friday, September 7, 2012
Opera at the Taubman Museum: The Magic of Mythology
Tomorrow (Saturday, Sept 8 at 11:30 am) I will be introducing the first film version of Wagner's romantic opera, The Flying Dutchman. More information on this free "Spectacular Saturday" event at the Taubman Museum of Art is in the flyer below.
A variety of posts below this one discuss Opera Roanoke's upcoming premiere production of Wagner's exciting musical drama. As early as last May I began to write about the origins of the Flying Dutchman legend and Wagner's interest in mythology and the "gothic craze" that accompanied the 19th century tide of literary and artistic romanticism across Europe and the US.
The opera takes place on and around a pair of ships, one of which is the infamous Ghost Ship captained by the Flying Dutchman himself. Below are a couple of photos from our first staging rehearsal with our sailors' chorus. Here they are at work on deck (in the rehearsal hall of the Jefferson Center, using a combination of real props and some stand-ins).
And here we have the Norwegian captain Daland's Helmsman (yours truly) steering an unwieldy music stand (we'll have quite a nice wheel on our imposing set, which I will preview in an upcoming entry).
In addition to the screening of the Flying Dutchman film tomorrow at 11:30 at the Taubman, our new group of friends Bravo!
(Blue Ridge Advocates for the Valley's Opera)
will be hosting a cocktail party at the Penny Deux lounge in the Patrick Henry Hotel in Downtown Roanoke tomorrow evening starting at 6 pm.
A variety of posts below this one discuss Opera Roanoke's upcoming premiere production of Wagner's exciting musical drama. As early as last May I began to write about the origins of the Flying Dutchman legend and Wagner's interest in mythology and the "gothic craze" that accompanied the 19th century tide of literary and artistic romanticism across Europe and the US.
The opera takes place on and around a pair of ships, one of which is the infamous Ghost Ship captained by the Flying Dutchman himself. Below are a couple of photos from our first staging rehearsal with our sailors' chorus. Here they are at work on deck (in the rehearsal hall of the Jefferson Center, using a combination of real props and some stand-ins).
And here we have the Norwegian captain Daland's Helmsman (yours truly) steering an unwieldy music stand (we'll have quite a nice wheel on our imposing set, which I will preview in an upcoming entry).
In addition to the screening of the Flying Dutchman film tomorrow at 11:30 at the Taubman, our new group of friends Bravo!
(Blue Ridge Advocates for the Valley's Opera)
will be hosting a cocktail party at the Penny Deux lounge in the Patrick Henry Hotel in Downtown Roanoke tomorrow evening starting at 6 pm.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Production notebook: launching Dutchman rehearsals
There is a palpable energy present whenever creative artists share the same space and collaborate. It is the energy that makes a concerto such an exciting form of concert music. It is present in the intimate varieties of chamber music. It is the essence of what a "dynamic duo" is and it's there whenever two great actors, singers or performers share a duet or a scene.
When you have an entire ensemble generating this creative energy it is thrilling. We experience this literal buzz anew every time we assemble an opera cast and kick off rehearsals with a musical "read" of the score.
Here's a picture of that first music rehearsal for The Flying Dutchman 48 hours ago at Steven White's house in Copper Hill. Matthew Curran, Ryan Kinsella and Julia Rolwing (Daland, the Norwegian captain; The Dutchman; and Senta, Daland's daughter, respectively) are singing through a scene, while Taylor Baldwin plays a piano that formerly belonged to the Metropolitan opera. Our stage director, Crystal Manich is seated on the couch, with score and notebook open as she hears her cast sing through this wonderful score for the first time.
Steven joked that the music read is where we "audition for one another" and "prove to each other that we know what we're doing." It is an excellent opportunity to dive right into the work that is the lifeblood of the performer's life. As much as we all love the stage and the performances, a poll of almost any group of performing artists would find the rehearsal process is as beloved as any aspect of the art.
I feel a literal volt of electricity at the start of each rehearsal process, whether I'm singing, conducting or simply observing from the sidelines. The amazing depth of what musicians produce with sound never ceases to be astonishing. This is especially true when one's body is one's instrument. Opera singers - the true "American Idols" who "got talent" in spades - embody this dynamic of musical energy in an individual way. I feel privileged to work alongside such incredibly talented colleagues.
I can't wait for our audience to hear this fantastic cast of young singers - all singing their respective Wagner roles for the very first time (and a couple of our singers are debuting not only their roles but are singing Wagner's one-of-a-kind music for the first time). This makes for an even more vibrant and electric energy.
Here is a photo from our first staging rehearsal in the Jefferson Center yesterday afternoon. Rebecca from the Roanoke Times is shooting our title character, played by Ryan Kinsella, as he and Crystal and Steven discuss his Shakespearean monologue of an opening aria, Die Frist ist um.
I'll return with more production images and thoughts both on The Flying Dutchman in general and our exciting new production as we literally bring it to life over the next couple of weeks.
There are plenty of opportunities to connect with Opera Roanoke between now and opening night, September 21st. We hope to see you at the Opera soon!
When you have an entire ensemble generating this creative energy it is thrilling. We experience this literal buzz anew every time we assemble an opera cast and kick off rehearsals with a musical "read" of the score.
Here's a picture of that first music rehearsal for The Flying Dutchman 48 hours ago at Steven White's house in Copper Hill. Matthew Curran, Ryan Kinsella and Julia Rolwing (Daland, the Norwegian captain; The Dutchman; and Senta, Daland's daughter, respectively) are singing through a scene, while Taylor Baldwin plays a piano that formerly belonged to the Metropolitan opera. Our stage director, Crystal Manich is seated on the couch, with score and notebook open as she hears her cast sing through this wonderful score for the first time.
Steven joked that the music read is where we "audition for one another" and "prove to each other that we know what we're doing." It is an excellent opportunity to dive right into the work that is the lifeblood of the performer's life. As much as we all love the stage and the performances, a poll of almost any group of performing artists would find the rehearsal process is as beloved as any aspect of the art.
I feel a literal volt of electricity at the start of each rehearsal process, whether I'm singing, conducting or simply observing from the sidelines. The amazing depth of what musicians produce with sound never ceases to be astonishing. This is especially true when one's body is one's instrument. Opera singers - the true "American Idols" who "got talent" in spades - embody this dynamic of musical energy in an individual way. I feel privileged to work alongside such incredibly talented colleagues.
I can't wait for our audience to hear this fantastic cast of young singers - all singing their respective Wagner roles for the very first time (and a couple of our singers are debuting not only their roles but are singing Wagner's one-of-a-kind music for the first time). This makes for an even more vibrant and electric energy.
Here is a photo from our first staging rehearsal in the Jefferson Center yesterday afternoon. Rebecca from the Roanoke Times is shooting our title character, played by Ryan Kinsella, as he and Crystal and Steven discuss his Shakespearean monologue of an opening aria, Die Frist ist um.
I'll return with more production images and thoughts both on The Flying Dutchman in general and our exciting new production as we literally bring it to life over the next couple of weeks.
There are plenty of opportunities to connect with Opera Roanoke between now and opening night, September 21st. We hope to see you at the Opera soon!
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Dutchman reading list: We, The Drowned
We, The Drowned | by Carsten Jensen | Mariner Books | 2012
During our summer trip to Maine this past June, we picked up a handful of sea-faring books to help us "get into character" for our upcoming production of Wagner's ghost-ship drama, The Flying Dutchman. The Danish author Carsten Jensen's acclaimed new novel, We, The Drowned was just the ticket. Below are quotes from the Mariner paperback edition that either connect to our nautical opera directly or pique our imagination to make the relevant associative leaps.
"How often have we sat in the fo’c’sle, listening to tales of the klabautermann, the grim reaper who hangs in the mizzen shroud, with his white face and his dripping oilskins? Or of the Flying Dutchman, or the ship’s dog that howls in the night, searching for its lost ship?" (p. 240)
See posts below this one for the origins of the Flying Dutchman legend. The following quote is one of many highly musical examples in Jensen's lyrical prose.
"Over a hundred ships were docked in Marstal, and a howling concerto rose over the town from the many riggings raked by the northeasterly wind. There was the slapping and slamming of ropes against wood, and the sound of hulls bashing against each other and the wharf as they waited to be remoored by the crews. The water level continued to rise and the ships rose higher and higher, their menacing twilight shadows looming in the snowfall, like a fleet of Flying Dutchman come to announce the destruction of the town." (245)
This epic novel is full of passages that remind us shore-bound citizens how mysterious is the proverbial call of the sea...
"It was as if the sea had turned itself inside out and was disgorging all the thousands of people it had swallowed across the centuries. Crossing it, they felt a fellowship with them." (665)
"The noise was deafening. Two oil tanks on the north side of the Thames had caught fire, and a frustrated roar sounded from the sea of flames, like the great mythic wolf of Ragnarök staining on its chain at the end of time, howling to be unleashed on the whole world." (568)
The mythical references and the novel's severe northern geography connect directly to Wagner's world and the Flying Dutchman.
"Probably the [battle]ship’s greatest value lay in simply being a symbol… she lay chained there like the great wolf of myth, threatening a Ragnarök that never came. But now that Ragnarök was imminent: the wolf at the end of the world was going to snap its chain at last and grab the bait." (605)
Having recently seen the Met's outstanding production of Britten's Melville-inspired nautical opera, Billy Budd (for which our friend Steven White was the associate conductor), the sea chanteys and the ritualistic aspects of singing on board echo...
"They sang, as generations had done before them, the old hymn dedicated to the sailing profession…a hymn about their own fragility, and that of a ship’s timbers, and the strength of God:
The cruel sea shall be our grave | Be thou not by our side.
Mid raging wind and crashing wave | And lightning’s flashing sword,
Your word can calm the surging tide. | Be with us now on board!" (468)
"Somewhere in the sea of people, a sailor started up a chantey. The others joined in, and soon they were all singing, swaying rhythmically to the old working song that had rung across the sea for centuries… It made no difference what language it was sung in; the message was in the rhythm, not the words. It didn’t preach; it traveled to men’s hearts via their muscles, reminding them what they were capable of, so that forgetting their exhaustion, they’d toil in unison." (231-2)
"One started singing, and others joined him until soon they were all singing a song that seemed to use the Pacific as a metronome rising and falling with the slow dignity that matched the immense swelling rhythm of the waves." (139)
The book's main port is Marstal, one of the maritime centers of Northern Europe. Jensen's novel is the result of careful research and if not a work of "historical fact," it is still invaluably informative for its portraits of sea-faring life in dangerous waters...
"… but he’d overlooked one essential thing about the art of steering a ship. You don’t just keep your eye on the compass; you also check the rigging, you read the clouds, you observe the direction of the wind and the color of the current and the sea, and you look out for the sudden surf that warns of a rock ahead…that’s how it is on a sailing ship, and in this respect its journey parallels that of life: simply knowing where you want to go isn’t enough, because life is a windblown voyage, consisting mainly of the detours imposed by alternating calm and storm." (429)
"When one of us was once asked why, when his ship was floundering in a storm, he’d refused to give up even though death seemed like a certainty, he’d given an answer that would seem strange to anyone but a Marstaller…”What made you keep going?” we asked… he gave us something completely different: an intelligent answer to a stupid question. 'I kept going because I wanted to be buried in the new cemetery.'
…On a ship, one man’s negligence could have fatal consequences for everyone. A sailor was quick to see that. The minister called it morality. Albert called it honor. In the church you were accountable to God. On a ship you were accountable to everyone. That made a ship a better place to learn...
Life had taught him about something far more complicated than justice. Its name was balance." (222-228)
The Italian poet and director Pasolini, who cast Maria Callas as Medea in one of her most striking non-operatic roles, called myth "a thriller of intelligibility." The "shadow of a menace" Jensen's describes applies to Wagner, The Flying Dutchman and tragedies from ancient Greece and Shakespeare to grand opera and epic war films.
"He felt the shadow of a menace that went beyond the fury of the wind and the pounding of the waves: a foreboding of looming disasters from which even the unyielding boulders of the breakwater couldn’t protect Marstal. The sensation was so vague and dreamlike that he thought he must have briefly nodded off…" (229)
"Every sailor knows the bitter feeling: the coast is near, but you’ll never reach it. Is there anything more heartbreaking than drowning in sight of land? Is there a single one of us who hasn’t at least once felt haunted by the fear of slipping away with sight of a safe haven?" (174)
We never cease to be fascinated and amazed by natural landscapes. And the severe landscapes of desert and polar regions are especially enthralling. Experiencing them vicariously - and vividly - through art may be the closest thing to living the danger and risk the explorers themselves took...
"Winter arrived, and with it the frost. The boats were laid up in the harbor, the harbor froze over, and an ice pack formed on the beach. Island and sea became one; we inhabited a white continent whose infinity both beckoned and terrified us…It looked so wild, windswept and deserted...
This new landscape even forced its way into our streets, where a blizzard of snowflakes whirled and danced on the heavy drifts, then leapt back into the air to obliterate the world once more." (75)
"Just then, the church bells started tolling a long-drawn-out farewell; a funeral procession was coming down… Death was a certainty for all of us, but whether the bells of Marstal would ever toll for us, there was no knowing. If we drowned at sea, there’d be only silence." (58)
During our summer trip to Maine this past June, we picked up a handful of sea-faring books to help us "get into character" for our upcoming production of Wagner's ghost-ship drama, The Flying Dutchman. The Danish author Carsten Jensen's acclaimed new novel, We, The Drowned was just the ticket. Below are quotes from the Mariner paperback edition that either connect to our nautical opera directly or pique our imagination to make the relevant associative leaps.
"How often have we sat in the fo’c’sle, listening to tales of the klabautermann, the grim reaper who hangs in the mizzen shroud, with his white face and his dripping oilskins? Or of the Flying Dutchman, or the ship’s dog that howls in the night, searching for its lost ship?" (p. 240)
See posts below this one for the origins of the Flying Dutchman legend. The following quote is one of many highly musical examples in Jensen's lyrical prose.
"Over a hundred ships were docked in Marstal, and a howling concerto rose over the town from the many riggings raked by the northeasterly wind. There was the slapping and slamming of ropes against wood, and the sound of hulls bashing against each other and the wharf as they waited to be remoored by the crews. The water level continued to rise and the ships rose higher and higher, their menacing twilight shadows looming in the snowfall, like a fleet of Flying Dutchman come to announce the destruction of the town." (245)
This epic novel is full of passages that remind us shore-bound citizens how mysterious is the proverbial call of the sea...
"It was as if the sea had turned itself inside out and was disgorging all the thousands of people it had swallowed across the centuries. Crossing it, they felt a fellowship with them." (665)
"The noise was deafening. Two oil tanks on the north side of the Thames had caught fire, and a frustrated roar sounded from the sea of flames, like the great mythic wolf of Ragnarök staining on its chain at the end of time, howling to be unleashed on the whole world." (568)
The mythical references and the novel's severe northern geography connect directly to Wagner's world and the Flying Dutchman.
"Probably the [battle]ship’s greatest value lay in simply being a symbol… she lay chained there like the great wolf of myth, threatening a Ragnarök that never came. But now that Ragnarök was imminent: the wolf at the end of the world was going to snap its chain at last and grab the bait." (605)
Having recently seen the Met's outstanding production of Britten's Melville-inspired nautical opera, Billy Budd (for which our friend Steven White was the associate conductor), the sea chanteys and the ritualistic aspects of singing on board echo...
"They sang, as generations had done before them, the old hymn dedicated to the sailing profession…a hymn about their own fragility, and that of a ship’s timbers, and the strength of God:
The cruel sea shall be our grave | Be thou not by our side.
Mid raging wind and crashing wave | And lightning’s flashing sword,
Your word can calm the surging tide. | Be with us now on board!" (468)
"Somewhere in the sea of people, a sailor started up a chantey. The others joined in, and soon they were all singing, swaying rhythmically to the old working song that had rung across the sea for centuries… It made no difference what language it was sung in; the message was in the rhythm, not the words. It didn’t preach; it traveled to men’s hearts via their muscles, reminding them what they were capable of, so that forgetting their exhaustion, they’d toil in unison." (231-2)
"One started singing, and others joined him until soon they were all singing a song that seemed to use the Pacific as a metronome rising and falling with the slow dignity that matched the immense swelling rhythm of the waves." (139)
The book's main port is Marstal, one of the maritime centers of Northern Europe. Jensen's novel is the result of careful research and if not a work of "historical fact," it is still invaluably informative for its portraits of sea-faring life in dangerous waters...
"… but he’d overlooked one essential thing about the art of steering a ship. You don’t just keep your eye on the compass; you also check the rigging, you read the clouds, you observe the direction of the wind and the color of the current and the sea, and you look out for the sudden surf that warns of a rock ahead…that’s how it is on a sailing ship, and in this respect its journey parallels that of life: simply knowing where you want to go isn’t enough, because life is a windblown voyage, consisting mainly of the detours imposed by alternating calm and storm." (429)
"When one of us was once asked why, when his ship was floundering in a storm, he’d refused to give up even though death seemed like a certainty, he’d given an answer that would seem strange to anyone but a Marstaller…”What made you keep going?” we asked… he gave us something completely different: an intelligent answer to a stupid question. 'I kept going because I wanted to be buried in the new cemetery.'
…On a ship, one man’s negligence could have fatal consequences for everyone. A sailor was quick to see that. The minister called it morality. Albert called it honor. In the church you were accountable to God. On a ship you were accountable to everyone. That made a ship a better place to learn...
Life had taught him about something far more complicated than justice. Its name was balance." (222-228)
The Italian poet and director Pasolini, who cast Maria Callas as Medea in one of her most striking non-operatic roles, called myth "a thriller of intelligibility." The "shadow of a menace" Jensen's describes applies to Wagner, The Flying Dutchman and tragedies from ancient Greece and Shakespeare to grand opera and epic war films.
"He felt the shadow of a menace that went beyond the fury of the wind and the pounding of the waves: a foreboding of looming disasters from which even the unyielding boulders of the breakwater couldn’t protect Marstal. The sensation was so vague and dreamlike that he thought he must have briefly nodded off…" (229)
"Every sailor knows the bitter feeling: the coast is near, but you’ll never reach it. Is there anything more heartbreaking than drowning in sight of land? Is there a single one of us who hasn’t at least once felt haunted by the fear of slipping away with sight of a safe haven?" (174)
We never cease to be fascinated and amazed by natural landscapes. And the severe landscapes of desert and polar regions are especially enthralling. Experiencing them vicariously - and vividly - through art may be the closest thing to living the danger and risk the explorers themselves took...
"Winter arrived, and with it the frost. The boats were laid up in the harbor, the harbor froze over, and an ice pack formed on the beach. Island and sea became one; we inhabited a white continent whose infinity both beckoned and terrified us…It looked so wild, windswept and deserted...
This new landscape even forced its way into our streets, where a blizzard of snowflakes whirled and danced on the heavy drifts, then leapt back into the air to obliterate the world once more." (75)
"Just then, the church bells started tolling a long-drawn-out farewell; a funeral procession was coming down… Death was a certainty for all of us, but whether the bells of Marstal would ever toll for us, there was no knowing. If we drowned at sea, there’d be only silence." (58)
Friday, August 31, 2012
Goth, Classical style: a playlist...
One of our hobbies is creating eclectic playlists of classical music inspired by our travels, reading lists or interests. Thus we have a "myths & titans" playlist reflecting our interest in the classics & antiquity, and a "L'invitation au voyage" playlist of music connected to the sea, and especially the incomparable Mediterranean. So we attach the following bibliography (or playlist) of Flying Dutchman inspired “dark & stormy” music: Goth, Classical Style…
This is a highly subjective and randomly ordered list reflecting the author's taste for what his wife refers to as "crazy music..."
1. Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique – especially the wicked Witches’ Sabbath
2. Marshner: Der Vampyr – see separate musing on Wagner & Vampirism…
3. Weber: Der Freischütz – another Faustian deal w/ the devil (see musing on W. & W.)
4. Verdi: Macbeth – Verdi said the Witches’ chorus was the third leading role…
5. Mahler: Das Klagende Lied – early oratory is a Grimm-inspired ghost tale
6. Strauss: Salomé – an erotic bacchanalia-cum-strip-tease, w/ John the B’s head…
7. Shostakovich: Lady Mcbeth of Mtsensk – a grim & gritty updating of murder…
8. Henze: Royal Winter Music – eerie solo guitar fantasia on mad Lady M.
9. Britten: Turn of the Screw – a Henry James – inspired Victorian ghost story…
10. Henze: Tristan – the haunting Halloweenesque epilogue to his 2nd Piano Cto…
11. Birtwistle: Night’s Black Bird – is it an ominous Crow, Raven or Witch?
12. Henze: 7th Symphony – the frenetic “dance with the devil” opening movement…
13. Turnage: Three Screaming Popes – inspired by Bacon’s violent & horrific vision
14. Macmillan: The Confession of Isobel Gowdie – elegy for a real Witch-hunt victim
15. Henze: Barcarola – the Ferryman (aka: Grim Reaper) rows the dead across Styx
16. Gubaidulina: 4th Quartet – a dark & primeval northern Slavic string quartet…
17. Holst: The Planets – the furthest “ghost” trio from us, Saturn, Neptune & Uranus
18. Pintscher: Towards Osiris – a satellite tribute to Holst & the dismembered god…
19. Rachmaninov: The Isle of the Dead – an expressionist Böcklin-inspired lament
20. Nørgard: 4th Symphony – especially the uncanny Chinese Witch’s Dance…
21. Henze: The Bassarids (suite) – a modern bacchanalia & orgiastic Greek dance
22. Britten: Owen Wingrave – another James-inspired ghost story of dead children…
23. Birtwistle: Gawain’s Journey – the medieval gothic alive in Harry’s mythology…
24. Henze: Aristaeus – a melodrama for Orpheus & Eurydice & the Underworld
25. Bennett: The Bermudas – a haunting otherworldly set of Elizabethan choral songs
26. Janacek: Makropulos Case – a gothic tale of a 300-year-old Diva…
27. Birtwistle: Theseus Game – an elemental tone poem of a beastly Greek battle…
[Böcklin's 1883 eerie landscape: "The Isle of the Dead"]
This is a highly subjective and randomly ordered list reflecting the author's taste for what his wife refers to as "crazy music..."
1. Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique – especially the wicked Witches’ Sabbath
2. Marshner: Der Vampyr – see separate musing on Wagner & Vampirism…
3. Weber: Der Freischütz – another Faustian deal w/ the devil (see musing on W. & W.)
4. Verdi: Macbeth – Verdi said the Witches’ chorus was the third leading role…
5. Mahler: Das Klagende Lied – early oratory is a Grimm-inspired ghost tale
6. Strauss: Salomé – an erotic bacchanalia-cum-strip-tease, w/ John the B’s head…
7. Shostakovich: Lady Mcbeth of Mtsensk – a grim & gritty updating of murder…
8. Henze: Royal Winter Music – eerie solo guitar fantasia on mad Lady M.
9. Britten: Turn of the Screw – a Henry James – inspired Victorian ghost story…
10. Henze: Tristan – the haunting Halloweenesque epilogue to his 2nd Piano Cto…
11. Birtwistle: Night’s Black Bird – is it an ominous Crow, Raven or Witch?
12. Henze: 7th Symphony – the frenetic “dance with the devil” opening movement…
13. Turnage: Three Screaming Popes – inspired by Bacon’s violent & horrific vision
14. Macmillan: The Confession of Isobel Gowdie – elegy for a real Witch-hunt victim
15. Henze: Barcarola – the Ferryman (aka: Grim Reaper) rows the dead across Styx
16. Gubaidulina: 4th Quartet – a dark & primeval northern Slavic string quartet…
17. Holst: The Planets – the furthest “ghost” trio from us, Saturn, Neptune & Uranus
18. Pintscher: Towards Osiris – a satellite tribute to Holst & the dismembered god…
19. Rachmaninov: The Isle of the Dead – an expressionist Böcklin-inspired lament
20. Nørgard: 4th Symphony – especially the uncanny Chinese Witch’s Dance…
21. Henze: The Bassarids (suite) – a modern bacchanalia & orgiastic Greek dance
22. Britten: Owen Wingrave – another James-inspired ghost story of dead children…
23. Birtwistle: Gawain’s Journey – the medieval gothic alive in Harry’s mythology…
24. Henze: Aristaeus – a melodrama for Orpheus & Eurydice & the Underworld
25. Bennett: The Bermudas – a haunting otherworldly set of Elizabethan choral songs
26. Janacek: Makropulos Case – a gothic tale of a 300-year-old Diva…
27. Birtwistle: Theseus Game – an elemental tone poem of a beastly Greek battle…
[Böcklin's 1883 eerie landscape: "The Isle of the Dead"]
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
The Romantic Gothic, Wagner & Vampirism...
Below is an essay on the Gothic craze that swept the Romantic artists of 19th century in Europe (and the US). Wagner was one of those fascinated by this trend. The Flying Dutchman - coming up at Opera Roanoke September 21 & 23 - was his first gothic masterpiece.
The Romantic Gothic, Wagner & Vampirism (or: Dutchman ain’t Twilight)
During this season of interesting travels, adventures and artistic musings we have enjoyed spending time with various artists who might be “outside the box” of the mainstream, so-called members of the avant-garde or simply fascinating characters unknown because unread un-translated unsung or unperformed… A couple of such eccentric writers relatively new to us include G. de Nerval & H.P. Lovecraft. Their nocturnal settings, strange dreamworlds & mysterious visions connect directly to the Romantic & Gothic realm of Wagner. All three romantics were influenced by the fantastic Tales of E.T.A. Hoffmann & the craze for the “Un-dead” Byron helped inspire across the “dark & stormy” 19th century. More on both influences in a moment.
The Flying Dutchman is arguably the most gothic of Wagner’s operas and is frequently referred to as “Vampiric” in motif and character. Senta’s love for the Dutchman is echoed today in (among many others) the popular teen series Twilight*, another adaptation of the “lost soul” or “dark love" story of a young bride beloved of and / or by a vampire, devil (Mephistopheles) or creature who may take the form of anything from a handsome young Faust to a Frankenstein, a Jekyll & Hyde, Doppelgänger,Vlad the Impaler or a Vampire King in Louisiana… This complex ‘villain’ may be an historical figure or he may be a Shakespearean anti-hero (the so-called “tragic hero” which finds Macbeth keeping company with Hamlet, and King Lear dining with Othello in the Bard’s pantheon of tragic heroes, anti-heroes and generally flawed humans).
The Gothic fad that coursed across Europe in the 19th century (and has not abated since) may have begun in 1816 when Lord Byron had the clever idea of creating literary “ghost stories” during the so-called “Year without a Summer” in which stormy and unseasonably cool weather swept across the continent and forced many indoors for their holidays.
Sounds positively chilling already, doesn't it?!
Byron’s circle was exceptionally literate and included the great writers Percy Bysshe Shelley and his equally gifted wife Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (whose Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus was the most famous fruit of Byron’s challenge until Stoker’s Dracula). It was Byron’s physician, however, who wrote what many consider to be the first Vampire story. And since Dr Polidori’s novella, The Vampyre was falsely attributed to that original Byronic hero George Gordon (aka: Lord Byron) its success was insured from its release.
This new Gothic strain of literary Romanticism felt itself kin to the “classical” revival also spreading across 19th century Europe. These so-called “romantics” were Janus-faced visionaries who invented new forms and revived old ones in new ways. These artists connected back through the Renaissance to the ancient world of the Greco-Roman-Egyptian-Babylonian gods, myths, spirits, sirens & creatures. Indeed, “weird” tales would remain in vogue well beyond the ever-ebbing tides of “Romanticism.” In American literature a line runs clearly from Edgar Allan Poe through his fellow romantics Hawthorne and Melville to the 20th century master H.P. Lovecraft. European writers indebted enthralled or included in this new craze for scary stories start with E.T.A. Hoffmann (whose bizarre tales have inspired many operas and spin-offs). Other literary giants participated, from Nikolai Gogol, the Grimm brothers, Alexander Dumas (of Three Musketeers and Count of Monte Crisco fame, source of the novel upon which Verdi based La Traviata) to Bram Stoker and Sheridan Le Fanu (whose novella Carmilla would inspire one of the original vampire [silent] films, Dreyer’s Vampyr). This gothic strain appears across the 20th century from the “dystopian” visions of Kafka & Borges, the “magic realism” of Latin American literature, and among other varieties, the gothic fantasies of Margaret Atwood, Anne Rice and Haruki Marukami (to name a random trio from our library). Back to Wagner.
We had the exciting and daunting task at the 2009 Bard Festival of singing Wagner’s “insert aria” for the romantic opera Der Vampyr, by Heinrich Marschner (based on Ritter’s story, Der Vampyr, oder die Totenbraut – The Vampire, or the Bride of Death). A common practice until late in the 19th century, composers and impresarios would insert new or more popular pre-existing arias & cabalettas into another composer’s opera to, so to speak “jazz it up.” Preparing to conduct a production of Marschner’s gothic opera, Wagner composed a new allegro cabaletta to follow the young tenor’s cantabile aria. It is a tour-de-force of “storm & stress” passion we shan’t soon forget performing, vividly recalling our heart racing with the cruel & demanding tessitura that would become one of the hallmarks of this ambitious & exciting composer’s style. Wagner would not have taken the trouble to compose an insert aria had he not found his elder contemporary’s (whose work he openly admired) opera worth updating with his hipster & innovative style. This sheds interesting light on the dark gothic world of The Flying Dutchman, begun soon after his work on Der Vampyr.
As a “cursed soul” the Dutchman (Davy Jones in the Pirates movies) is a ghastly ghostly ghoulish Vampiric figure. And he is a complex human being who has made that proverbial “deal with the devil.” The archetypal Faust myth of selling one’s soul in the name of a vain and ultimately deadly ambition is timeless & universal. Hence the term “tragic flaw” in great drama from the Greeks to Shakespeare to Tennessee Williams. Wagner would revivify ancient mythology & archetypes with his singular vision. The Dutchman is his first masterpiece, his first Shakespearean hero. And thus Senta is his first Muse, his Mary, his beloved & unattainable “other.” The Dutchman will be followed (in roughly chronological order) by Tannhäuser, Lohengrin, Wotan, Siegfried, Brünnhilde, Tristan & Isolde and among others, Parsifal, Amfortas & Kundry (in case any inquiring readers or newcomers to Wagner want to explore this rich & fascinating world…)
In a case of artistic serendipity (connections seem to materialize with uncanny frequency when one is attuned to them) we have recently added Nosferatu: an opera libretto to our eclectic library. The book includes a perceptive essay written by the poet Dana Gioia on the subject of opera, Sotto Voce (from which we quoted when writing about opera’s immediate appeal in popular works like Carmen). The poet and librettist Dana Gioia just so happens to be the same author writing the libretto for the opera we are co-commissioning & co-producing with the new Va. Tech Center for the Arts and Tech’s Music and Theatre departments. Stay tuned for more on that new opera for the 2013-2014 Season.
The serendipity in Gioia’s Nosferatu was cinched by the book’s foreword, Listening to the Children of the Night: The Vampire & Romantic Mythology by Anne Williams. She expands on many of the connections and motifs we have briefly glossed in this humble attempt to shed light on Wagner’s gothic romantic opera. Williams makes the connection for us. The love stories of the “Un-dead” are “fated and doomed.” They are the gothic horror version of the romantic operatic Liebestod (or Love-death) with which Wagner was identified from The Flying Dutchman to the more famous examples of Tristan & Isolde and Götterdämmerung (Roanoke audiences heard the Liebestod from Tristan & the Immolation scene from the last chapter of Wagner’s Ring cycle in a “Wagner in the Valley” concert in 2009).
Like the “Bride of Death” in the Vampire stories, Wagner’s Senta has an ill-fated love for the shadowy Dutchman. Williams notes that Nosferatu’s avenging bride, “as an operatic soprano” – unlike other heroine-victims of (usually male) monsters – “she has a voice of her own. But she triumphs at the price of joining Nosferatu in death, in a dark but unmistakable Liebestod. It is, however, a love-death reminiscent less of Tristan und Isolde than of Senta and her beloved, another Byronic overreacher, Wagner’s Flying Dutchman.” She concludes that “Gioia’s Nosferatu is thus not only a libretto with strong ties to the traditions of Romantic opera [and Wagner] it also reveals the vampire’s essential being as a Romantic archetype.” It might be one of the few such supernatural archetypes to have survived modernism squelching of the romantic era, but that is another subject… The Romantic un-dead is alive and well.
From the stormy tempests of Der Fliegende Holländer’s bold overture to the mysterious appearance of the ghostly captain and his fata morgana phantom ship, Wagner is re-creating (in his own image) the romantic gothic world of mystery and secrets, ghosts & demons, fate & chance, the mythic curse and the transfiguring redemption of love. It’s magical. It’s awesome. It’s opera at it’s best ability to bring an impossible fantasy to life through a one-of-a-kind harmony of music, drama & poetry – technique, craft & art –lights, opera singers – action!
*Tongue-in-Cheek Disclaimer: Audiences should not expect Wagner’s characters or mise-en-scene to resemble Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series or the Sookie chronicles upon which HBO’s True Blood is based. Audiences should not expect Wagner’s Flying Dutchman to be an operatic “prequel” to Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean. Wagner’s opera has traits in common with both the vampire love-story & the ghost-pirate adventure. Wagner shares motifs, symbols and themes with the Romantic-Gothic tradition that includes Vampires and ghost-ships. We recommend audiences explore the world of Wagner’s operas, starting with The Flying Dutchman, and look for connections to the fantasy, adventure & romance genres from Dracula to the Dark Knight… -- H. L. McCrea (Summer, 2012)
The Romantic Gothic, Wagner & Vampirism (or: Dutchman ain’t Twilight)
During this season of interesting travels, adventures and artistic musings we have enjoyed spending time with various artists who might be “outside the box” of the mainstream, so-called members of the avant-garde or simply fascinating characters unknown because unread un-translated unsung or unperformed… A couple of such eccentric writers relatively new to us include G. de Nerval & H.P. Lovecraft. Their nocturnal settings, strange dreamworlds & mysterious visions connect directly to the Romantic & Gothic realm of Wagner. All three romantics were influenced by the fantastic Tales of E.T.A. Hoffmann & the craze for the “Un-dead” Byron helped inspire across the “dark & stormy” 19th century. More on both influences in a moment.
The Flying Dutchman is arguably the most gothic of Wagner’s operas and is frequently referred to as “Vampiric” in motif and character. Senta’s love for the Dutchman is echoed today in (among many others) the popular teen series Twilight*, another adaptation of the “lost soul” or “dark love" story of a young bride beloved of and / or by a vampire, devil (Mephistopheles) or creature who may take the form of anything from a handsome young Faust to a Frankenstein, a Jekyll & Hyde, Doppelgänger,Vlad the Impaler or a Vampire King in Louisiana… This complex ‘villain’ may be an historical figure or he may be a Shakespearean anti-hero (the so-called “tragic hero” which finds Macbeth keeping company with Hamlet, and King Lear dining with Othello in the Bard’s pantheon of tragic heroes, anti-heroes and generally flawed humans).
The Gothic fad that coursed across Europe in the 19th century (and has not abated since) may have begun in 1816 when Lord Byron had the clever idea of creating literary “ghost stories” during the so-called “Year without a Summer” in which stormy and unseasonably cool weather swept across the continent and forced many indoors for their holidays.
Sounds positively chilling already, doesn't it?!
Byron’s circle was exceptionally literate and included the great writers Percy Bysshe Shelley and his equally gifted wife Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin (whose Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus was the most famous fruit of Byron’s challenge until Stoker’s Dracula). It was Byron’s physician, however, who wrote what many consider to be the first Vampire story. And since Dr Polidori’s novella, The Vampyre was falsely attributed to that original Byronic hero George Gordon (aka: Lord Byron) its success was insured from its release.
This new Gothic strain of literary Romanticism felt itself kin to the “classical” revival also spreading across 19th century Europe. These so-called “romantics” were Janus-faced visionaries who invented new forms and revived old ones in new ways. These artists connected back through the Renaissance to the ancient world of the Greco-Roman-Egyptian-Babylonian gods, myths, spirits, sirens & creatures. Indeed, “weird” tales would remain in vogue well beyond the ever-ebbing tides of “Romanticism.” In American literature a line runs clearly from Edgar Allan Poe through his fellow romantics Hawthorne and Melville to the 20th century master H.P. Lovecraft. European writers indebted enthralled or included in this new craze for scary stories start with E.T.A. Hoffmann (whose bizarre tales have inspired many operas and spin-offs). Other literary giants participated, from Nikolai Gogol, the Grimm brothers, Alexander Dumas (of Three Musketeers and Count of Monte Crisco fame, source of the novel upon which Verdi based La Traviata) to Bram Stoker and Sheridan Le Fanu (whose novella Carmilla would inspire one of the original vampire [silent] films, Dreyer’s Vampyr). This gothic strain appears across the 20th century from the “dystopian” visions of Kafka & Borges, the “magic realism” of Latin American literature, and among other varieties, the gothic fantasies of Margaret Atwood, Anne Rice and Haruki Marukami (to name a random trio from our library). Back to Wagner.
We had the exciting and daunting task at the 2009 Bard Festival of singing Wagner’s “insert aria” for the romantic opera Der Vampyr, by Heinrich Marschner (based on Ritter’s story, Der Vampyr, oder die Totenbraut – The Vampire, or the Bride of Death). A common practice until late in the 19th century, composers and impresarios would insert new or more popular pre-existing arias & cabalettas into another composer’s opera to, so to speak “jazz it up.” Preparing to conduct a production of Marschner’s gothic opera, Wagner composed a new allegro cabaletta to follow the young tenor’s cantabile aria. It is a tour-de-force of “storm & stress” passion we shan’t soon forget performing, vividly recalling our heart racing with the cruel & demanding tessitura that would become one of the hallmarks of this ambitious & exciting composer’s style. Wagner would not have taken the trouble to compose an insert aria had he not found his elder contemporary’s (whose work he openly admired) opera worth updating with his hipster & innovative style. This sheds interesting light on the dark gothic world of The Flying Dutchman, begun soon after his work on Der Vampyr.
As a “cursed soul” the Dutchman (Davy Jones in the Pirates movies) is a ghastly ghostly ghoulish Vampiric figure. And he is a complex human being who has made that proverbial “deal with the devil.” The archetypal Faust myth of selling one’s soul in the name of a vain and ultimately deadly ambition is timeless & universal. Hence the term “tragic flaw” in great drama from the Greeks to Shakespeare to Tennessee Williams. Wagner would revivify ancient mythology & archetypes with his singular vision. The Dutchman is his first masterpiece, his first Shakespearean hero. And thus Senta is his first Muse, his Mary, his beloved & unattainable “other.” The Dutchman will be followed (in roughly chronological order) by Tannhäuser, Lohengrin, Wotan, Siegfried, Brünnhilde, Tristan & Isolde and among others, Parsifal, Amfortas & Kundry (in case any inquiring readers or newcomers to Wagner want to explore this rich & fascinating world…)
In a case of artistic serendipity (connections seem to materialize with uncanny frequency when one is attuned to them) we have recently added Nosferatu: an opera libretto to our eclectic library. The book includes a perceptive essay written by the poet Dana Gioia on the subject of opera, Sotto Voce (from which we quoted when writing about opera’s immediate appeal in popular works like Carmen). The poet and librettist Dana Gioia just so happens to be the same author writing the libretto for the opera we are co-commissioning & co-producing with the new Va. Tech Center for the Arts and Tech’s Music and Theatre departments. Stay tuned for more on that new opera for the 2013-2014 Season.
The serendipity in Gioia’s Nosferatu was cinched by the book’s foreword, Listening to the Children of the Night: The Vampire & Romantic Mythology by Anne Williams. She expands on many of the connections and motifs we have briefly glossed in this humble attempt to shed light on Wagner’s gothic romantic opera. Williams makes the connection for us. The love stories of the “Un-dead” are “fated and doomed.” They are the gothic horror version of the romantic operatic Liebestod (or Love-death) with which Wagner was identified from The Flying Dutchman to the more famous examples of Tristan & Isolde and Götterdämmerung (Roanoke audiences heard the Liebestod from Tristan & the Immolation scene from the last chapter of Wagner’s Ring cycle in a “Wagner in the Valley” concert in 2009).
Like the “Bride of Death” in the Vampire stories, Wagner’s Senta has an ill-fated love for the shadowy Dutchman. Williams notes that Nosferatu’s avenging bride, “as an operatic soprano” – unlike other heroine-victims of (usually male) monsters – “she has a voice of her own. But she triumphs at the price of joining Nosferatu in death, in a dark but unmistakable Liebestod. It is, however, a love-death reminiscent less of Tristan und Isolde than of Senta and her beloved, another Byronic overreacher, Wagner’s Flying Dutchman.” She concludes that “Gioia’s Nosferatu is thus not only a libretto with strong ties to the traditions of Romantic opera [and Wagner] it also reveals the vampire’s essential being as a Romantic archetype.” It might be one of the few such supernatural archetypes to have survived modernism squelching of the romantic era, but that is another subject… The Romantic un-dead is alive and well.
From the stormy tempests of Der Fliegende Holländer’s bold overture to the mysterious appearance of the ghostly captain and his fata morgana phantom ship, Wagner is re-creating (in his own image) the romantic gothic world of mystery and secrets, ghosts & demons, fate & chance, the mythic curse and the transfiguring redemption of love. It’s magical. It’s awesome. It’s opera at it’s best ability to bring an impossible fantasy to life through a one-of-a-kind harmony of music, drama & poetry – technique, craft & art –lights, opera singers – action!
*Tongue-in-Cheek Disclaimer: Audiences should not expect Wagner’s characters or mise-en-scene to resemble Stephanie Meyer’s Twilight series or the Sookie chronicles upon which HBO’s True Blood is based. Audiences should not expect Wagner’s Flying Dutchman to be an operatic “prequel” to Disney’s Pirates of the Caribbean. Wagner’s opera has traits in common with both the vampire love-story & the ghost-pirate adventure. Wagner shares motifs, symbols and themes with the Romantic-Gothic tradition that includes Vampires and ghost-ships. We recommend audiences explore the world of Wagner’s operas, starting with The Flying Dutchman, and look for connections to the fantasy, adventure & romance genres from Dracula to the Dark Knight… -- H. L. McCrea (Summer, 2012)
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