Tom CUNNINGHAM (b. 1946)
The Okavango Macbeth – chamber opera
(2009)
Lady Macbeth – Beth Mackay (soprano),
Macbeth – Rónan Busfield (tenor),
Duncan – Andrew McTaggart (baritone),
Lady Macbeth’s friend – Lucinda Stuart-Grant (mezzo)
Primatologists – Nicholas Morris, Jamie Rock, Jessica Leary
(baritone, baritone, soprano)
Mr McFall’s Chamber Orchestra/Michael Bawtree
Edinburgh Studio Opera Chorus
rec. 22-23 April 2011, Queen’s Hall, Edinburgh
DELPHIAN DCD34096 [49:28 + 33:40]
This is a heartening project, an opera created
and performed in Edinburgh, combining the literary talents of a
world famous Edinburgh author and the evident musical qualities
of an Edinburgh composer who gets on with things quietly. McCall
Smith (b. 1948), who spends a lot of time in Botswana, thought that
the Okavango delta would be a good setting for an opera, so he re-imagined
the Macbeth story to take place within a troop of baboons, all the
while observed by a group of primatologists. The premiere took place
in a converted garage in the Botswana bush (known as the No.
1 Ladies’ Opera House) and was then performed again at
the Cambridge Music Festival and in Edinburgh. That led to this
recording on Delphian, a Scottish label which does a lot to promote
Scottish music and musicians.
Tom Cunningham’s score is eminently approachable and instantly
engaging. It’s full of hummable melodies and inventive instrumentation
for the chamber forces he uses. It is also carried forward by an
infectious rhythm that quietly and unobtrusively suggests Africa.
Some of the more intimate scenes, however, have just a tinge of
Celtic music to them, suggesting their point of origin. Snobs might
complain that it’s too much like a West End show, and maybe
it’s a little repetitious at times, but it’s rich in
tunes and contrasting dramatic situations in the best manner of
musical theatre, and I enjoyed it very much.
The primatologists are initially quite bumbling but they are capably
sung and their comments on the unfolding events in the Baboon troop
are well observed. Beth Mackay sings Lady Macbeth with a rich sense
of imperiousness, and Rónan Busfield, whose voice I have
enjoyed in performances with the Scottish Conservatoire, sings Macbeth
with clarity and a good dose of heroism. Andrew McTaggart makes
a gravelly Duncan, but that fits his more authoritative role, and
the singing of the chorus is strong, with all the solos taken very
successfully.
McCall Smith’s libretto is also skilfully put together, drawing
parallels between human society and that of the baboons without
underlining them too severely, though some of the moral messages
are a little heavily done. The recording quality is also excellent,
perhaps favouring the voices a little too much, but still capturing
all the parts well. In short, this is well worth a look.
Simon Thompson