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Jake HEGGIE (b.1961)
Moby-Dick
(2010) [142.00]
Jay Hunter Morris (tenor) - Captain Ahab; Stephen Costello (tenor) -
Greenhorn; Morgan Smith (baritone) - Starbuck; Jonathan Lemalu
(baritone) - Queequeg; Talise Trevigne (soprano) - Pip; Robert Orth
(baritone) - Stubb; Matthew O’Neill (tenor) - Flask; Joo Won Kang
(baritone) - Captain Gardner; Carmichael Blankenship (baritone) -
Tashtego; Bradley Kynard (baritone) - Daggon; Chester Pidduck (tenor) -
Nantucket sailor; Anders Froehlich (baritone) - Spanish sailor
San Francisco Opera/Patrick Summers
rec. San Francisco Opera, October 2012
Extras: interviews, time-lapse [51.00]
Picture: 16:9, 1080i Full HD
Sound: PCM Stereo, dts-HD Master Audio 5.1
Region: 0 (worldwide)
Subtitles: English, German, French
Booklet notes: English, German, French
EUROARTS 2059654 [193.00]
The
trawl by American operatic composers in search of subject matter
through the serried ranks of the great American novel proceeds further
with this opera on the subject of Moby-Dick by Jake Heggie.
Actually it would seem surprising that this novel by Hermann Melville
has not been attempted before, and one would suspect that it was only
the sheer difficulties of staging the technically complex drama that
have stood in the way. As it is the novel has already inspired two
major musical works in the form of Philip Sainton’s marvellous score for the 1956 film by John Huston, and Bernard Herrmann’s
1967 cantata for tenor, baritone, chorus and orchestra - both of which
have at various times been available on disc. Heggie himself confesses
in his booklet note with this release that he had severe reservations
about the undertaking of composing an opera on the subject, and the
difficulties he had in coming to grips with the material. In the event
the result is a resounding success.
Melville’s novel is a rather odd work, combining as it does a closely
observed psychological portrait of obsessive madness with factual
commentaries concerning the wholly repulsive business of nineteenth
century whaling and often inaccurate details of natural history. Most
modern readers will tend to skip over the chapters in the latter
category, concentrating on the story itself - as indeed does the
libretto here adapted by Gene Scheer. Parallels with Britten’s Billy Budd,
also based on a story by Melville, are inevitable: the wholly male cast
- (with the exception of a single boy, here taken by a soprano), the
shipboard setting and indeed elements in Heggie’s musical language
itself, including a monologue for Ahab which echoes Claggart’s
soliloquy in Britten. Ahab’s monologue revolves appropriately around an
obsessive statement of a theme rising and falling through a minor
third. It reminds me obstinately of an identical passage at the
beginning of the final scene in Massenet’s Thaïs - not quite
the sort of accidental coincidence which helps credibility. However the
motif is imaginatively developed thereafter, descending into the bass
to register the whale and acquiring a patina of tuned percussion eerily
like Vaughan Williams’ Sinfonia Antartica when the ship is struck by St Elmo’s Fire.
The opera opens not, as one would expect, with Melville’s famous
opening line “Call me Ishmael” - this is reserved for the very end of
the work - but with an orchestral prelude which is positively romantic
in its sweep. Indeed with richer violin tone it could almost be
mistaken for a Hollywood film score - not an observation intended to be
other than complimentary. As the curtain rises we see Queequeg chanting
in Polynesian, and the action soon gathers pace with some very exciting
choral writing leading to the appearance of Ahab. The latter is
somewhat unexpectedly a heroic tenor; Bernard Herrmann used a baritone.
The impression of a deranged Captain Vere is not altogether
inappropriate and the casting yields some exciting opportunities for
climaxes. Melville’s novel, like the voyage itself, is not over-packed
with incident, but Heggie seizes all the opportunities that are
afforded him. He also supplies us with a series of what one might well
term arias and duets in which the characters express their thoughts and
emotions, often rising to passionate emotional heights. After the boy
Pip is nearly drowned, the lament of the sailors is taken up and
developed in an extended ostinato founded on the theme which culminates
at the end of Act One in an aria for Starbuck. There the lament is
raised to positively Puccinian richness.
When the same theme returns immediately at the beginning of Act Two,
one fears that the opera may begin to turn into one of those Andrew
Lloyd Webber musicals where one tune is worked comprehensively to
death; possibly a slightly longer pause between the Acts might have
helped. We soon find the mood changing into another in the series of
sea shanties with which the score is peppered - shades of Billy Budd
again - and then a very beautiful chain of arias which culminate in a
duet for Ahab and Starbuck oddly entitled ‘The Symphony’. Here the mate
nearly convinces his captain to give up the fruitless chase. An
absolutely glorious melody surges in the orchestra to describe the
homesickness and longing for comfort that both characters feel. The
staging in sets by Robert Brill succeeds excellently in conjuring up
the atmosphere of the ship and the sea. There’s a particularly
spectacular series of images as Moby Dick turns on his pursuers and
sinks their boats. Ahab is left centre-stage to sing his curse on the
whale. He is then overwhelmed by a series of projected film images
designed by Elaine McCarthy which have recurred throughout the action.
Then we are left with Greenhorn afloat on the empty sea, responding to
questions and leading to his haunting declamation of the line “Call me
Ishmael” to a theme which one no longer thinks of as being Thaïs.
When reviewing Heggie’s earlier Dead man walking
last year I complained about the lack of catharsis in the final scene,
which seemed to me to end too abruptly. Here there can be no such
possible complaint, with the theme of the lament from the end of Act
One floating over the texture of the sea music like a wistful
benediction. Absolutely beautiful.
The
opera was first given in Dallas in 2010, but the production was then
taken on tour to the other houses who had joined in its commission: the
State Opera of South Australia, Calgary, San Diego and finally San
Francisco where this film was made. One cannot imagine the production
by Leonard Foglia being bettered, but one would very much like to see
it travel further afield - even if this video recording is some
compensation if it doesn’t. By the time the opera reached San Francisco
most of the cast were already thoroughly familiar with the work. This
shows in their commitment to the drama and the perfection of their
rendition of the music. Jay Hunter Morris on the other hand had not
appeared in the original production, but you would never tell from the
conviction of his portrayal of Ahab. He looks properly demented most of
the time and only occasionally relaxes into a more contemplative mood.
He has a particularly hard time with Heggie’s often very loud
orchestration - one wonders how much would come through in the theatre
- but his voice rings out loud and clear with thrilling top notes.
Stephen Costello as the contrasting tenor Greenhorn, more lyrical in
tone, phrases his music with great skill and much beauty in his floated
high notes. His delivery of his aria Human madness is a cunning and most feline thing
is a marvellous moment, as is his final scene. The lion’s share of the
lyrical music however goes to Morgan Smith as Starbuck, rapt in his
‘symphony’ duet with Ahab. He produces a wealth of Verdian tone at the
end of Act One when he contemplates killing the captain.Jonathan
Lemalu as Queequeg is characterful, and seizes his chance for lyricism
too in the duet which opens Act Two. Talis Trevigne, forced to play the
boy Pip - a somewhat annoying character - as he descends into madness,
is nevertheless touching. The rest of the crew are superbly taken by
various soloists and the magnificently masculine San Francisco chorus.
There is however one problem with all this magnificently honed singing,
and that is the matter of diction. I don’t know why modern operatic
singers who manage perfectly well in Italian, German or French seem to
go to pieces when confronted with the English language. Most of the
principals here, while producing wonderfully turned musical phrases,
distort their vowels to an extent that makes the words they are
actually singing almost incomprehensible. Costello is the prime
offender but from the only one. It cannot be the manner in which Heggie
sets the text. Sometimes admittedly distortion of the vowels is
inevitable on high notes, but for much of the time his writing leaves
the voices in their middle register. The mangling of the English
extends well beyond the enunciation of vowels to more easily rectified
faults such as swallowed consonants. Possibly singers nowadays, with
surtitles usually available in live performances, don’t feel the need
to project in the sometimes artificial way that their predecessors did.
That said, one need only listen to English National Opera recordings
from thirty years ago - such as the Goodall Ring
- to hear how much more of the words the singers there managed to get
across even heavy Wagnerian orchestration. The fact that one can hear
performances today on the stage, both in opera and the musical theatre,
where nearly every word is clear, shows that the problems of singing in
English are not insuperable. There are times here when one almost gets
the feeling that the performers don’t speak the language at all and
that is clearly wrong.
Having said all
that, once one turns the subtitles on, everything becomes crystal clear
and one can simply enjoy these performances of some magnificent music.
Other reviewers have hailed Moby-Dick
as Heggie’s best opera to date. While I have not heard all his other
works I am quite prepared to believe it. It is a real delight to find a
modern opera composer who relishes real melodic lines. One might even
have wished - as I have suggested above - a more romantic tone from the
violins to bring out the full emotion of the yearning Puccinian phrases
that recur throughout. The whole work is beautifully judged, and
thoroughly deserves this video recording.
Subtitles are supplied not only in English, but also in French and
German. The booklet contains a synopsis and an essay by Heggie himself.
The Blu-Ray comes with extras: interviews with the cast, conductor,
composer and producer, and also a time-lapse film showing ‘24 hours on
stage in 8 minutes’.
Paul Corfield Godfrey
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