Toshio Hosokawa's economical chamber opera Vision of Lear
(Munich 1998), about a bardophile Japanese office worker (Nicholas Garrett)
having a nervous breakdown in a corporation undergoing radical restructuring,
recapped the story of Shakespeare's King Lear, inevitably bringing back
to mind Aribert
Reimann's Lear, a notable success at Munich, ENO and on CD.
Hosokawa (b.1955) relied on vocal declamation with falsetti etc, which
at this British premiere sounded dated and his whole modernist idiom
rather stale, although the strong cast of singers did all they could
for it. Instrumental strengths lay in the use of Japanese techniques
(half-blown winds, extended techniques for strings and harp, dominant
percussion) by the 10 part Modern Band under Gregory Rose - rather generalised
atmospheric music, its quieter subtleties swallowed by the Linbury's
noisy air conditioning. The staging was sharply conceived (Mike Jardine)
and directed (Harry Ross) with the lighting especially imaginative (Ben
M Rogers). A brave enterprise but not an opera to join the repertoire.
The hope that a Portrait Concert the next day would
provide a more representative overview of Hosokawa (whose second opera
has been commissioned for the Salzburg Festival) was dashed by the similarity
of the four refined chamber music pieces, presented with dedicated expertise
by musicians of Modern Band and assistant conductor John Page. The intrusive
air conditioning noise had wisely been abated for the few present, without
compromising the sufficiency of air, but talking outside the studio
disturbed ears tuned into this minimal music. Nor could there be any
question of taking notes - the scratch of a pen would have broken the
spell. For their greatest part, we heard elegantly crafted wisps of
sound at the threshold of audibility - think of a lute or a clavichord
in a large auditorium. Is it coincidence that the Honorary President
of Modern Band is Salvatore
Sciarrino?
Peter Grahame Woolf