Music: Salzburg Sleeper
It's hard to argue with Mozart, but in effect that is what festival devotees have been doing at Salzburg lately. Not that the Mozartor the Tchaikovsky or Haydn, for that matterhas been poor; indeed, Herbert von Karajan's new production of Don Giovanni this year was brilliant. But critics complained that the festival too often failed to go beyond the familiar to the unusual or daring. Last week Salzburg's directors replied with a sleeper production of an opera so obscure that it lives almost exclusively in the history books: Emilio de' Cavalieri's 1598 Rappresentazione di Anima e di Corpo. Musically, the opera does not threaten Mozart, but in the Salzburg setting, it was an imaginative and challenging departure.
Rappresentazione di Anima e di Corpo (Representation of Soul and Body) is a stark allegorical drama bolstered by a rich musical style and an uncommon baroque flamboyance. At the opening, the stage is silent, dark, empty. Then slowly, pitiably, a choir of 100 men and women, clad in earth-colored Florentine gowns file into place at stage center before a deep opening signifying the abyss. An old peasant and a youth approach and speak a prologue heralding the gravity of the matters to follow. Suddenly, a hidden 35-piece baroque orchestra begins the accompaniment to the introductory monody, and a spotlight picks out a bearded Father Time at the door of a pyramid above the abyss. He sings:
Give your soul to the hour of truth, Confess whether it was right to serve this vain world, Or to serve the king of heaven.
On it goes without intermission for 100 minutes. In the principal conflict, the four embodiments of manbody, soul, intellect, reason, each represented by a different singerare tempted to sin by wenches, strapping males and rich men, each dancing a grave Ritornel. But Father Time topples the evil ones into the dust with one swing of his sickle. Then, down from clouds and golden rays above a pyramid come heavenly armies for one last triumphant encounter with the agents of hell, after which a festive ballet brings the work to a close. Accompanying it all is an array of dances, bright, martial processionals, and stirring choral frescoes that almost could have been written a century later by Handel.
If the musical style seems curiously familiar to audiences, the credit, not blame, accrues to Composer Cavalieri. A Roman nobleman at the Medici court in Florence, he introduced two techniques that are fundamental in all opera monody, or music in which one singer performs with instrumental accompaniment; and stile rappresentazione, or recitative. He was also a pre-Wagnerian Wagnerian in regard to stagecraft. With his score, he left a detailed set of stage instructions calling for a maximum of drama, clear diction, expressive hand and body movements, costumes and props. He even specified that the orchestra be invisible, as Wagner did later at Bayreuth. All this enabled Festival President Bernhard Paumgartner and Stage Director Herbert Graf to put together a production of undoubted authenticity.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade From Hell
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- One Year After the Mumbai Massacre, a Trial Plods on
- Me and Orson Welles: Zac Efron Takes the Stage
- Ahmadinejad in Brazil: Why Lula Defies the U.S.
- California Judge Challenging Obama on Gay Rights
- In His Cave, a Palestinian Farmer Makes a Stand
- The Fall of Greg Craig, Obama's Top Lawyer
- Zhu Zhu Mania: Hamster Toys Are Ruling Christmas
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade From Hell
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- In His Cave, a Palestinian Farmer Makes a Stand
- Ahmadinejad in Brazil: Why Lula Defies the U.S.
- Are You Getting Scammed by Facebook Games?
- Getting Real About the High Price of Cheap Food
- Obama's 'Mistakes': Way Too Early to Judge
- Why Exercise Won't Make You Thin
- NARCOTICS: Search and Destroy--The War on Drugs







RSS