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AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
Festival d’Aix en Provence 2008 (1):
Pascal Dusapin, Passion:
Soloists, Ensemble Modern Frankfurt. Franck Ollu (conductor).
Théâtre du Jeu de paume, Aix en Provence, 4.7.2008 (MB)
Lei
(Her) – Barbara Hannigan
Lui (Him) – Georg Nigl
Gli Altri (The Others) – Ensemble Musicatreize (direction: Roland
Hayrabedian)
Giuseppe Frigeni (director, designs)
Amélie Haas (costumes)
Dominique Bruguière (lighting)
Thierry Coduys (electronics)
Ensemble Modern Frankfurt
Franck Ollu (conductor)
Barbara Hanningan, whom I have recently heard give outstanding
performances of music by Nono, Berg, and Webern, shone once again
here. Occasionally I felt that she lacked the warmth of tone I had
heard her project on previous occasions, but in a new work it is
often difficult to know how much this might have been attributable
to the demands of the music and interpretation. Certainly her range
and precision were as impressive as ever, as was her acting. Georg
Nigl was subjected to equally great demands in his part. He appeared
to grow into the part, his tone sounding a little pinched earlier on
but extraordinarily impressive subsequently in terms of ranging from
the baritonal to the haut-contre. Once again, his acting
skills were noteworthy. The varied contributions of the
Marseilles-based Ensemble Musikatreize were throughout of the very
highest order. Its members’ musical and dramatic versatility, both
individually and corporately, would have been apparent to all. Their
interventions on stage and throughout the theatre always looked and
sounded well-judged.
The production also seemed to me a triumph. Giuseppe Frigeni
eschewed an overly naturalistic presentation, in terms of a
stylisation that worked. Every movement – unlike so many current
productions one could name – appeared to have a justification, and
therefore told most effectively. The production drew inspiration
from, rather than pointlessly railing against, the text and music,
although this should in no sense be taken to betoken an
unimaginative literalism. Symbolism rather was the order of the day.
Lighting and costumes contributed to an impeccable team effort. In
the programme, Frigeni also drew our attention – although he hardly
needed to – to the centrality of the sun, or ‘le sol(o)eil’, as he
put it, punning on the French words for sun and eye. The senses of
watching, of being watched, and also, crucially, of transformation
of time, were simply but powerfully portrayed by the figure of the
sun on stage and its movements. This helped deliver us to our
destination, the unsettling conclusion, in which score, performance,
and production worked so closely together, to ask us whether Orpheus
and Eurydice had ever really been listening to each other – or,
indeed, whether they had truly been looking at each other.
Passion left us asking more questions than had been answered:
not a bad sign at all.
Mark Berry
[1] J'ai une relation très profonde avec cette période de l'histoire de la musique qui ressemble beaucoup à la nôtre par son goût de la recherche expérimentale.’ (Interview with Jean-Louis Validire, ‘À Aix, Pascal Dusapin assouvit sa «Passion»,’ in Le Figaro, 1 July 2008, http://www.lefigaro.fr/musique/2008/07/01/03006-20080701ARTFIG00300--aix-pascal-dusapin-assouvit-sa-passion.php.)
Pictures
©
Elisabeth Carecchio
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