Originally posted by Flosshilde
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Opera Production
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostAnd yet, Alpie can still refer to it (in #9) as "attention-seeking by the producer", and in terms that suggest that he believed that this wasn't a particularly controversial statement.
Yes, I did say that in #9, and it had the desired effect of stimulating discussion. You'll notice I never said I didn't like it, and as I explained later, my real reservation was a musical one concerning Brunnhilde.
But I still maintain that producers trying to be clever goes much further down the road of distorting the originator's intentions than any amount of unHIPP musical performance. And I appreciate that you make a distinction here.
Updates of a story can sometimes be nonsensical. Take Jesus Christ Superstar. ALW and Tim Rice set this musical in modern times, and yet, when they got to the bit where they put Jesus to death, they used a method of tortuous death - crucifixion - that had been stopped, officially, by the Roman emperor, Constantine the Great.
On the question of tinkering with Wagner, it was the composer himself who wrote the music, libretto, stage directions and even designed the theatre itself. Of course, he might well have liked Chereau's production. Indeed, I liked it a great deal more than those dull Bayreuth productions of the 1950s and 60s.
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Originally posted by Giacomo View PostThis is not re-working of the original but a new work, the original is still available.
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Originally posted by Giacomo View PostI'm still mystified as to why the music and production are treated so differently.
Music is an Art of sound - the instrumental sounds they imagine are essential to their conception; Mozart's Clarinets have a different sound from those of Elgar or, for that matter, Vivaldi - as his Basset Horns also sound significantly different from the timbre of his Clarinets. Play his Music on members of the modern Clarinet family, and you move away from those individual timbres.
Drama works with words and human interactions: it does not require specific physical types, or voice ranges, or exact, positionings of the actors on stage - it does not need the pronunciation of the language of the writer's time in the way that Handel's Music benefits from sensitive employment of the instruments and conventions of Handel's contemporaries. Drama's focus is on the way people behave and the words they use to communicate this behaviour. Music is about sound contrasts and combinations.Last edited by ferneyhoughgeliebte; 04-08-14, 20:12.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostManet's painting is an interpretation and recreation of Titian's (and of other painting showing a similar subject & pose - some earlier than Titian's). Of course, all the earlier paintings still existed - just as any opera still exists while its score and libretto is available in print (& now, thanks to recordings, individual performances and productions can be preserved).
Mind you, The Guardian gave four stars to this production, so it perhaps proves ferneyhoughgeliebte’s point. All the same I DON’T LIKE IT (I suppose it comes down to this, to me at least).
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Originally posted by doversoul View PostSorry, Floss. I’m till splitting the same hair. In the case of Manet's painting, it is entirely up to the viewers to make the connection with Titian's work, whereas in the case of, say Glyndebourne's Hippolyte et Aricie, it was presented as the opera by Rameau. With the original libretto.
Mind you, The Guardian gave four stars to this production, so it perhaps proves ferneyhoughgeliebte’s point. All the same I DON’T LIKE IT (I suppose it comes down to this, to me at least).
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Originally posted by Giacomo View PostI'm still mystified as to why the music and production are treated so differently.
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Originally posted by David-G View PostI once asked Jonathan Miller why when authenticity in musical performance is valued so highly these days, nobody is interested in authenticity in opera production. He could not answer me.
Music is an Art of sound - the instrumental sounds they imagine are essential to their conception; Mozart's Clarinets have a different sound from those of Elgar or, for that matter, Vivaldi - as his Basset Horns also sound significantly different from the timbre of his Clarinets. Play his Music on members of the modern Clarinet family, and you move away from those individual timbres.
Drama works with words and human interactions: it does not require specific physical types, or voice ranges, or exact, positionings of the actors on stage - it does not need the pronunciation of the language of the writer's time in the way that Handel's Music benefits from sensitive employment of the instruments and conventions of Handel's contemporaries. Drama's focus is on the way people behave and the words they use to communicate this behaviour. Music is about sound contrasts and combinations.
Whaddya want? Surtitles?![FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostManet's painting is an interpretation and recreation of Titian's (and of other painting showing a similar subject & pose - some earlier than Titian's)..
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostOf course, all the earlier paintings still existed - just as any opera still exists while its score and libretto is available in print.
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Originally posted by Giacomo View PostThey are related but I'm sorry they are not equivalent, certainly not in the sense that if they were operas they would be musically interchangeable. The Manet is like an Offenbach parody.
To go back to the example of Verdi's La Traviata, which I mentioned earlier. It was based on Dumas' novel La dame aux Camélias; Verdi & Piave chose to give it the title of La Traviata - the Fallen Woman, or The Prostitute; far more direct thatn Dumas' title. They wanted to give it a contemporary setting, but were frustrated by the censor at La Fenice. Verdi considered it "A subject for our own age". Given all this, wouldn't it be more in keeping with the composer's wishes to give it a setting contemporary with us (our own age), emphasising, as Verdi clearly wished, that the problems of women forced (by whatever circumstances) into prostitution are still with us, rather than something that only existed in a past time, related as a pretty historical story?
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostNot necessarily, but an acknowledgement that an opera in an integrated work of art and not two conflicting/opposing ideas, would be a start.
The simple "intergated" vs "conflicting/opposing" duality isn't the option here. In Opera (and Ballet) there are several Art strands that conjoin and feed off and into each other, and these coalesce in the viewer's experience (to greater of lesser degrees). Composers such as Handel and Beethoven reuse material from other works to provide Music for the words that they set; Metastasio wrote libretti by the yard often for composers he never even met - that in itself suggests that "intergration" isn't the precisely correct word to use in those cases at least. Operas are performed mainly for the Music - it's ulikely that a performance of the libretto of, say, Cosi fan Tutte or any of the Orpheus operas as a Play (without Music) would attract much admiration. Thomas' Hamlet is rarely performed because the Music is weak, not because of any deficiencies of the plot. The Magic Flute requires the audience not merely to suspend its disbelief, but to draw and quarter it, too. But it will always be a great Opera, because of that Music. (Pause for momentary reverie remembering the Music.) Even Wagner's attempts at integration don't work - the libretto of his Music Dramas are very poor cousins of the Music; their function is to supply the rhythms and vowel sounds for the chief interest; the Music.
With the unquestionable superiority of the Music in all the Operas we care about, is it any real surprise that the Music is treated with reverence (in the best use of that easily-maligned word) whilst the "story" (which are frequently third-rate; I mean, Il Trovatore? Is it meant to be a comedy?) so often requires more imaginative treatment than the librettist gave it.
Which is not to say that all "traditional" stagings must automatically be dull, nor that all "avant garde" productions must be good - from the descriptions given on this thread of some productions I haven't seen, there seem to have been many that have completely missed the point of the Music (I don't like the idea of women secretly enjoying being raped, for example). But it is a mistake to "start" with the premise that an opera is automatically "an integrated work of Art"; the function of the director is to create such integration on stage from the various (and occasionally conflicting) elements that together go to make up the piece.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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