Nicholas McGegan must surely be one of this country’s
most remarkable musical exports to the U.S. – his stellar career has
taken him all over the world, and he is internationally respected not
only for his influential conducting of Handel but for the many musical
enterprises with which he has distinguished involvement. He resides
in Berkeley and is director of the San Francisco-based Philharmonia
Orchestra, with whom he was visiting New York this season for the ‘Mostly
Mozart’ festival, a festival initially dogged by controversy owing to
the dispute between the organizers and the festival’s own orchestra;
many events featuring that group having been cancelled, it was left
to McGegan and a few others to ‘save’ the festival, a situation about
which McGegan was characteristically direct when I spoke to him during
a break in rehearsals at the Lincoln Center: ‘Here we have what is basically
a British conductor, a British tenor leading, more or less carrying
an American music festival – and do critics come over in droves and
see that here in New York, the capital of the music world, it is full
of Brits? Of course not!’ This critic, of course, had come over to do
just that, and we were to return to this notion of insularity later
on in our conversation.
These performances of Handel’s ‘Acis and Galatea’ and
‘L’Allegro’ were to be McGegan and his orchestra’s debut at the festival
– ‘Don’t forget that the West Coast, from here, is as far away as London;
if you have a period instrument orchestra from, say, Boston, it’s somehow
in the neighbourhood, but we count as a European ensemble in terms of
distance, but without the charm of the exotic! Of course, we have to
get over that by being very good indeed, which is not a problem.’ Debut
it might be, but McGegan has not only conducted both pieces many times,
but worked with Mark Morris on ‘L’Allegro’ twice before: ‘We have played
with the Mark Morris group more than any other orchestra, and working
with Mark is basically just about as much fun as you can have legally
and in public! He is the most musical of all choreographers, and what
he does is the most marvellous translation into movement of words and
music, so it’s a great treat to conduct it. In so many ballets one wonders
why the music is not a tape, and one feels at times that one is a technical
adjunct, like the lights, but in this, we all take part. It’s the same
production as we did in London but it will always be slightly different
because Mark allows his dancers to bring their own instincts to it,
and that’s the great thing about them, they are not a Corps de Ballet,
they don’t have the regulation height or amount of anorexia, so it’s
not like buying a box of dolls.’
Acis and Galatea
The four evenings of ‘L’Allegro’ were to be preceded
by a concert performance of ‘Acis and Galatea,’ a work for which McGegan
clearly shares the present writer’s enthusiasm: ‘The music has such
immediacy, and the text is wonderful, as well as the whole thing being
so succinct, and so devoid of pomposity. It’s music of great joy, and
it’s such a jolly pastoral despite the sadness – you get the feeling
that these characters sit about and read ‘Hello’ all day, but the ending
of it really touches your heart, because the death of Acis, although
not tragic in the proper sense, is all the more touching because you’re
at the demise of somebody you know rather than have read about, you
actually feel the loss of this young shepherd.’ The work was to be given
as a concert performance ‘…which is right, since it’s really a secular
oratorio and Handel would have done it with a set but not fully staged,
there being no such things as concert halls then – you did things either
in churches or a theatre…’ and in English, even though the version used
was Mozart’s, which is often performed in German: ‘I would do so if
we were in Germany, but I can’t see the point here, since it needs to
be comprehensible!’
McGegan described the timing of the performance – at
5.00 p.m. on the Sunday as ‘The Cocktail Time’ and enthused about the
afternoon’s other work, the recently discovered cantata ‘Gloria’ to
be sung by Dominique Labelle, making this a New York premiere. ‘Dominique
is heaven, and John Mark (Ainsley) who is – well – just the Prince of
English tenors, is singing Acis, so we’re really having a blast with
it all.’ This enthusiasm was much in evidence at Friday’s rehearsal,
where the atmosphere was so perfect a blend of hard work and fun; in
96F heat, and with the air conditioning having broken down, it was remarkable
to see such ebullient direction and such committed playing from the
orchestra. No detail was overlooked either by the leader or the conductor,
and it was fascinating to hear some of the advice and comments given
to both players and singers, such as ‘Yes, of course you play what’s
written! The printed marks are the whole point of doing it like this!
– then, to one of the soloists who sounded in danger of becoming a little
inappropriate in style –‘ You don’t want too much vibrato, here; that
may be the way you do it, but we’re 18th century here, not
19th century!’ and ‘Otherwise, we sound like a Catholic orchestra
and Protestant singers!’ It was certainly an experience to listen to
McGegan advising the very young tenor Michael Slattery (singing Damon)
and the soprano Christine Brandes (Galatea) as well as to hear singers
and orchestra performing with such unfettered joy; at one especially
lovely moment, after Ainsley had sung a heart-stopping ‘Love in her
Eyes,’ the singer said to the orchestra ‘Thank you – that was bliss…’
and McGegan’s response was characteristic – ‘I think that’s our line!’
Sunday’s performance lived up to expectations in every
respect (the present writer’s review
being ecstatic even by previous standards) and I expressed sadness
that so few critics were present to hear it; ‘Well, I don’t see many
British critics coming over here; maybe if they went a little outside
Zone 6 occasionally we might get past this very deep provinciality,
but of course less and less space is being given to classical music
– you only have to look at the ‘Independent’ which has five pages of
Pop and half a page of Classical in their Friday music section. We’ve
quite a little Scottish mafia over in San Francisco, what with Runnicles,
myself, Ian Robertson, but not many ‘home’ writers come over to see
us, though I do recall Michael White and Hugh Canning having visited
in the past. On the whole, I think we’re more interested in you than
you are in us – just to give you an example, on CNN there was a whole
segment given over to the big costume sale at Covent Garden, and I can’t
imagine, say, ITN doing that for a similar event at, say, the Met.’
L’Allegro
McGegan is encouragingly positive about websites and
online musical publications; ‘It is becoming totally international,
and newspapers are painting themselves into a corner if they don’t go
any further than Lewes, if readers can simply go online to find out
what’s happening in Sydney! The web is going to take over, I think,
and that’s no bad thing, since you do get so many knowledgeable people
there, and they can of course write at length about the background and
context of the music as well, rather than being confined to soundbites
– it’s to the web that one now looks for the kind of wonderful stuff
that Andrew Porter used to do when he wrote for the ‘New Yorker,’ and
London could do with that. It’s a snobbery thing, of course, and one
of the nicest things about being here is that levels of such things
are lower – people pay to hear what they want to hear.’ Not that McGegan
regards the London musical scene as dull; ‘The ROH has a truly wonderful
orchestra and there is a lot going on there, but it’s so British to
want to cut it down, to say it’s only for toffs! It would be nice if
there were a smaller auditorium, say 1200 seats, for all the things
for which the main house is too big, since the Linbury is rather, let’s
just say, unalluring. I have to say that nowadays, that sort of repertoire
gets done rather marvellously in places like the Royal College of Music!
The Met here, of course, is built for ‘Aida’ and scenes between two
people look a bit strange so they tend to fill the stage with chorus
and pets.’
He also feels that there is a lack of exciting places
in which to perform Handel in London, with the notable exceptions of
Christ Church, Spitalfields, which he describes as ‘The most blessed
venue, in terms of date, size, and with a totally unpretentious, unsnobby
London town audience of which Handel would have been very proud. The
Purcell Room is too small, the QEH too Soviet – you need to see the
whites of the singers’ eyes! St. John’s in Smith Square is lovely but
those places don’t have large amounts of funding to buy things in, and
I hope that the London Handel Festival really takes off in a big way,
since I think that Denys Darlow is a bit of an unsung hero.’
Darlow and McGegan have indeed been in the forefront
of the Handel revival of recent years, something which the latter sees
as a logical development of the growth in the number of singers who
specialize in this area; ‘Of course it’s singer-led. There can’t be
too many singers who don’t love singing Handel, since it’s great for
the voice, showy in a way that’s comfortable to sing, and the roles
are fantastic, especially for the women. They get the really big sings
– the basses huff and puff, the counter-tenors are nobly heroic, the
tenors sing mostly short but happy pieces, grateful not to have been
castrated. The oratorios do also have the great advantage of being in
English, and there isn’t all that much great music in English between
Purcell and – oh, Gilbert and Sullivan. It’s easy to make Handel live
for an audience – you just cast it with singers who can act and can
improvise their own ornaments, and you employ a stage director who loves
the works passionately, and last but not least a conductor who understands
the dramatic potential of a da capo aria, which is no more stultifying
than ‘Lucia,’ and usually a lot better written. It’s so easy to get
the Handel bug – they’re just the best musicals ever written, and once
you’ve got it you can’t get rid of it!’
Talk of opera production led us to discussion of styles
of direction, about which McGegan is extremely forthright. ‘I have no
objection to the kind of productions done by people like Sellars and
the Aldens – people whose work is based upon a love of the music and
the values it espouses. On the other hand, there are productions done
by people who really should look for other work. It’s not a question
of setting – I don’t care if it’s set on Mars, but what I’m talking
about is the kind of director who really does not want the audience
to be moved by the music, only astonished by what they see, and the
moment the music becomes slow or moving, they do something to distract
from it. I don’t always handle such situations with tact, since I cannot
hide the fact that I despise such stage directors, but fortunately nowadays
I often hire the director myself so I can avoid Eurotrash!’
McGegan spoke vividly about ‘the experience of being
told ‘We’ve hired someone who has never done an opera before – won’t
that be exciting?’ Well, no, it won’t, actually, because one will find
oneself teaching a movie director that singers have to face the audience,
or teaching a theatre director that the time is given to you by the
composer and you can’t just suddenly speed up the aria because there
are not enough words. Even very famous conductors have had to put up
with that, and I can recall one director saying about an aria ‘Do we
really have to have all that music before he sings?’ and another responding
to my comment ‘The Italian word does not mean that’ by saying ‘It does
now.’ That is a level at which I no longer work; opera should be done
by professionals, it is an art form in its own right and deserves to
be done by those who understand and respect it.’
His own opera plans include a ‘Hansel and Gretel,’
which he describes as ‘the best opera Wagner never wrote’ and which
one might not expect a conductor best known for his Handel to do, but
McGegan is very far from being a narrow specialist, loving such composers
as Strauss and Britten almost as much as Handel; ‘It’s all music I like,
and the only operas I really shy away from are the tubercular ones,
since I like my sopranos to live, preferably happy ever after.’ A major
event of the coming season is the Göttingen festival where he is
Director, with a starrily cast ‘Jephtha’ the highlight in late May and
early June; ‘I’m even doing it with the English Concert and the Choir
of Winchester Cathedral – finally, with an all male choir as it is meant
to be. It’s a shame that we are not doing it in London; you have to
remember that Germany is about as far away as Bangladesh as far as some
people’s imagination goes – it’s only 400 miles from London but it’s
a whole world away in terms of co-operation.’
He expressed the wish for ‘Some kind of European Arts
fund, so that something that began life at the Gulbenkian in Portugal
could end up in Helsinki! But for now, such places as Göttingen’s
perfect little theatre, with its 450 seat capacity and 60 feet deep
stage, as well as the absolute charm of the town itself, must suffice.
‘Göttingen’s theme this time is the last works of Handel and the
music at around the time of his death, so not only do I get to do a
concert with John Mark and the English Concert, but Gustav Leonhardt
and I are going to play the Concerto for harpsichord and piano of C.P.E.
Bach, and that’s something which is making me nervous already.’
Asked to choose one of his many recordings in terms
of his favourite and one which most readily springs to mind as suitable
as introductions to his style, I was delighted that he selected my own
favourite, the wonderful ‘Ariodante’ with Lorraine Hunt Lieberson in
the title role. McGegan’s direction of such works, and indeed of the
‘Mostly Mozart’ performances of ‘Acis’ and ‘L’Allegro’ are typical of
his style, which combines scholarly respect with a kind of infectious,
ebullient espousal of the music in such a way that one sees and hears
that both conductor and players actually enjoy what they are doing.
Melanie Eskenazi
Photographs © Marc Eskanazi