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SEEN AND HEARD
INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Last Songs for the King:
Peter Tantsits (tenor), International Contemporary Ensemble, Le
Poisson Rouge,
New York City,
2.4.2009 (BH)
Alvin Lucier:
Bird and Person Dying (1975)
Jean-Philippe Rameau:
"Le rappel des oiseaux" from Pièces de clavecin (1724)
Peter Maxwell Davies:
Eight Songs for a Mad King (1969)
Directed by
Lydia Steier
International
Contemporary Ensemble
Peter Tantsits, Tenor
Claire Chase, Flute
Joshua Rubin, Clarinet
David Bowlin, Violin
Kivie Cahn-Lipman, Cello
Phyllis Chen, Piano
David Schotzko, Percussion
Aaron Mason, Lighting Design
Robert Gonyo, Production Manager
Written in 1969, Davies's score chronicles the mental demise of King
George III and his descent into outright madness. A sextet plays a
dreamlike accompaniment while the title character loses all
inhibitions (or should). Director Lydia Steier's brilliant conceit
is to place Davies's singer on film, here in an Oscar-worthy
performance by Peter Tantsits. As the lights dimmed and the
musicians began (with percussion outbursts by David Schotzko),
Tantsits's face appeared onscreen, eerily captured by a camera in
grainy black-and-white, like a lab specimen undergoing some kind of
unnamed experiment. Or perhaps he's in some hellish government
office renewing a driver's license. Whatever the case, he's never
unaware that he is onscreen; the Mad King appreciates the value of
publicity, and we are uneasy voyeurs.
As the
musicians forge ahead, Tantsits sang in falsetto, scowled, tittered, opened his
mouth rudely wide, offered anemic groans, and painted his face liquid white. At
least, before he took a cloth and removed the make-up, leaving small bits of it
to register, perhaps as remnants of an obsessive-compulsive streak. I kept
thinking of the extreme close-ups in Dreyer's 1928 film, La Passion
de Jeanne d'Arc.
At the
climax, Tantsits emerged from behind the screen, grabbed the violin from an
astonished David Bowlin and began slowly tearing it apart, snapping the wood and
strings, bending the frame so that it cracked in half, ultimately destroying
it. When carefully conceived this sequence can draw gasps from the audience,
and it did so here. (And then Tantsits turned to focus on the cellist, Kivie
Cahn-Lipman, whose look of nervous anxiety was priceless.) Tantsits then
returned to his perch behind the screen to complete the piece, like a caged
animal being returned to his cell. Flutist Claire Chase and Joshua Rubin on
clarinet completed the expert, relentlessly besieged, ensemble.
To set the
mood, as people entered the subterranean space they encountered Alvin Lucier's
Bird and Person Dying, a mix of birdcalls and high-frequency feedback
that created an unearthly ambience. And the Davies was prefaced by pianist
Phyllis Chen in Rameau's "Le rappel des oiseaux" from Pièces de clavecin,
which seemed, in this context, more mock-reverential: a sarcastic anthem to a
king whose downward-spiraling persona needed some serious propping up.
Bruce Hodges
Photo
courtesy International Contemporary Ensemble
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