I listened to The Knot Garden yesterday, not paying as much attention to the libretto as perhaps I ought to have been, and once more found it musically fascinating from start to finish, full of sharply etched ideas in the manner of his 3rd Symphony and with a beautiful sense of dramatic pacing despite the somewhat oblique nature of the drama itself - for example following Flora's Schubert song with Dov's "play it cool" which for me is exactly the kind of emotional/stylistic disjuncture that Tippett's non-vocal music also thrives on. I do agree with my learned friend about the arch way in which some of the words are delivered by the cast of the recording. The whole thing seems more like a "chamber opera" even though it uses a full-sized orchestra - has anyone here heard Meirion Bowen's version for a reduced orchestra of 22 players? I'm not generally in favour of this kind of tampering with scores, but MB is about as close as you can get to Tippett's thinking without actually being him, and since most of the orchestration is rather soloistic anyway it might not make too much of a difference apart from bringing the orchestra onto the same kind of scale as the onstage activity.
Now for The Rose Lake (Tippett's homage to Messiaen!) - in the past I've found that this piece spreads itself a bit thin, the challenge now being to try and see that as a positive rather than negative feature.
Now for The Rose Lake (Tippett's homage to Messiaen!) - in the past I've found that this piece spreads itself a bit thin, the challenge now being to try and see that as a positive rather than negative feature.
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