Gormenghast (opera) explained

Gormenghast
Composer:Irmin Schmidt
Librettist:Duncan Fallowell
Language:English
Based On:Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast Trilogy

Gormenghast is an opera in three acts composed by Irmin Schmidt to an English-language libretto by Duncan Fallowell, based on Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast Trilogy. It premiered at the Opernhaus Wuppertal on 15 November 1998.

Background

Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast Trilogy, on which the opera is based, is a Gothic tale recounting the rise of the evil Steerpike from a kitchen boy in Gormenghast castle to total domination of the castle and its aristocratic inhabitants.[1] Benjamin Britten had contemplated composing an opera based on the trilogy in the 1950s, but then changed his mind. Irmin Schmidt and his librettist Duncan Fallowell, the first to base on opera on the work, began working on it in the early 1990s after receiving a commission from the Wuppertaler Bühnen.[2] Schmidt had studied composition with Stockhausen and Ligeti in the 1950s. As an avant-garde rock musician, he founded the rock band Can in 1968 and performed with them as its keyboardist for ten years. Fallowell, who had written the lyrics to two of Schmidt's albums, Musk at Dusk (1987) and Impossible Holidays (1991), wrote the first draft of the libretto while he was living in Saint Petersburg.[3]

Schmidt calls Gormenghast a "fantasy opera"', saying that "Gormenghast is, both in spirit and form, grand opera. But elements and characteristics of musical, the rock concert, and modern dance theatre play equally important roles within it".[4] At a meeting of the UK's Mervyn Peake Society in 1995, Schmidt played three excerpts from the opera-in-progress, recorded on audio cassette—the music for the castle kitchen scene, a duet sung by the twins Cora and Clarice, and Steerpike's drunken song as he climbs to the top of the castle. The music for the castle kitchen had been recorded in his own kitchen using saucepans, plates, spoons, and forks as the percussion. At the meeting he said that writing Gormenghast had been a revelation for him; "I'm no longer an avant-garde artist, out to shock. I want people to enjoy my music."

Performance history

Schmidt was present during weeks of rehearsals before the premiere and re-wrote parts for specific voices.[5] The opera premiered at the Opernhaus Wuppertal on 15 November 1998, sung in English.[6] [7] The stage director was Michael Sturminger, Simon Rekers conducted the Wuppertal Sinfonieorchester. A performance takes about three hours with singers and a string quartet performing live. The rest of the music, including full orchestra and performances from Can members Jaki Liebezeit and Michael Karoli, is pre-recorded, mixed and produced for multi-channel playback by Prof. Jono Podmore.[8] The opera has three tenor roles—one scored for the operatic tenor voice (Swelter), and two for rock singers (Barquentine and Steerpike).

The Wuppertal production transferred to the Musiktheater im Revier in Gelsenkirchen in February 1999. Highlights from the opera were recorded that same year and released in 2000 by Spoon Records, with the composer conducting the Brandenburger Symphoniker. Gormenghast was revived with a new production directed by Andreas Baesler in June 2004 when it was staged at the Völklinger Hütte, an industrial UNESCO World Heritage Site. Later that month the production transferred to the Grand Théâtre de Luxembourg.[9]

Roles

RoleVoice typePremiere cast, 15 November 1998[10]
Conductor: Simon Rekers
Titus Groan, heir to the Earldom of Gormenghast(mimed role)Jakob Fedler / Thomas Hartung
Lord Sepulchrave, Titus Groan's fatherlyric baritoneMark Morouse
Lady Gertrude, Titus Groan's mothermezzo-sopranoDanielle Grima
Cora, Lord Sepulchrave's sistercoloratura sopranoElise Kaufman
Clarice, identical twin of Coracoloratura sopranoSabine Schnitzer
Swelter, Lord Sepulchrave's cheflyric tenorMarkus Heinrich / Florian Simson
Barquentine, Master of Rituals at Gormenghast Castletenor (rock singer)Ulrich Wewelsiep
Dr. Prunesquallor, the court physiciancountertenorReiner Beinghaus
Fuchsia, the elder sister of Titus GroansopranoClaudia Visca
Flay, Lord Sepulchrave's manservant(speaking role)Markus Dietz
Steerpike, an ambitious former kitchen-boy and Machiavellian schemertenor (rock singer)Stefan Vinzberg
Nanny Slagg, Fuchsia's elderly companion and the former nurse of both Fuchsia and Titus(speaking role)Walter Theil

Reception

According to Spoon Records, Rodney Milnes wrote in a review that appeared in The Times on 24 November 1998, "the sheer range of "sensurround" sound is bewildering, loud, sensuous, always intriguing, especially the rustles of exotic percussion emerging from around the auditorium. If Richard Strauss had written rock music, this is what it would have sounded like – gloriously, unashamedly lush." Douglas Wolk, in a review of the 1999 recording for the CMJ New Music Monthly, wrote that Schmidt "occasionally covers up the frailness of his melodies with superfluous beat-jockeying" but found that the opera's best pieces were "convincing both as drama and as compositions." In his review of the 2004 revival, Dieter Lintz described Schmidt's score, especially for the singers, as predominantly tonal and "quite ear-friendly" with elements of Baroque music, Benjamin Britten, and Andrew Lloyd Webber. He also noted how overwhelming sound waves combined with "a rich, driving, yet finely differentiated beat" often washed over the auditorium and concluded that the work was such an unusual combination of elements that it constituted a new and unique musical art form.

Notes and References

  1. Sturges, Fiona (7 January 2000). "Castles in the Air". The Independent. Retrieved 11 July 2013 .
  2. Clinch, Dermot (5 November 1995). "The Peake of his career". The Independent. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  3. Aitken Alexander Associates. Duncan Fallowell. Retrieved 17 July 2013.
  4. [Spoon Records]
  5. Gerhard Menzel (15 November 1998). Gormenghast Online Musik Magazin
  6. Steiger, Karsten (2008). Opern-Diskographie, p.428. Walter de Gruyter
  7. Larkin, Colin (2006). "Schmidt, Irmin", p. 287. The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, 4th edition, Vol. 7. Oxford University Press
  8. Wolk, Douglas (November 2000). "Reviews: Gormenghast", p. 70. CMJ New Music Monthly
  9. Lintz, Dieter (7 June 2004). "Mysterien-Schloss in der Gebläsehalle". Trierischer Volksfreund. Retrieved 11 July 2013 .
  10. [Spoon Records]