Opera in the 20th Century

October 20, 2004

October 22: Opera and Jazz

Posted by Charles T. Downey at 9:25 PM | Link to this post

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Ernst Krenek, Jonny Spielt Auf, Lucia Popp, Evelyn Lear, Thomas Stewart, Vienna State Opera, conducted by Heinrich Hollreiser
Ernst Krenek (1900–1991), Jonny Spielt Auf
Premiered at the Leipzig Stadtheater on February 10, 1927. On New Year's Eve in 1925, Krenek saw an American negro review called "Chocolate Kiddies" in Frankfurt, with music by Duke Ellington. Krenek soon wrote the libretto himself for this early "jazz opera." By 1930, it had been shown in 70 different productions around Europe, making it the most often performed opera of the period. Jonny Spielt Auf made Krenek's name, and he lived off the royalties and repeated performances into the 1930s, when the Third Reich's opposition cut into his profits.

Due to Nazi opposition, the premiere of Krenek's later opera, Karl V, about the disintegration of the Austrian empire under Charles V, was canceled at the Vienna Staatsoper in 1934. At that point, Nazi pressure on conductor Clemens Krauss was at its peak. The Nazis hated the black content of Jonny Spielt Auf and called Krenek a Bolshevik and decadent composer in 1938, at the infamous Entartete Musik exhibit in Dusseldorf, along with Hindemith, Schoenberg, Berg, and many others. The opera received its Prague premiere in June 1938, the last opera performed there before German troops invaded.

Although it evokes the devil-may-care sexual attitude of the 1920s and appealed to mass audiences by incorporating jazz and other dance sounds, the opera was a flop at its New York premiere. That was the beginning of the decline, as more and more critics thought its musical style was more appropriate to an operetta. The Nazis seized Krenek's assets, as well as the rights to his royalties, so when he emigrated to the United States, he landed in New York with almost nothing. Krenek taught briefly at Vassar and in Minnesota, before ending up in California.

You can find more information available from the Ernst-Krenek-Institut-Privatstiftung in Krems, Austria.

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George Gershwin (1898–1937), Porgy and Bess, Willard White, Cynthia Haymon, Glyndebourne Opera
George Gershwin, Porgy and Bess
Premiered at the Alvin Theater, New York City, on October 10, 1935. Libretto based on DuBose Heyward (1885–1940), Porgy (novel from 1925, Broadway play with Dorothy Heyward in 1927; read the hypertext edition of the novel, edited by Kendra Hamilton). Gershwin sketched the opera in 1934 and prepared the orchestral score from September 1934 to September 1935. (Gershwin had seen a performance of Krenek's Jonny Spielt Auf in Vienna, part of the 1928 European trip on which he also met Alban Berg.)

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Kurt Weill, Street Scene, English National Opera (1989)
Kurt Weill (1900–1950), Street Scene
Premiered at the Adelphi Theatre, New York, on January 9, 1947. The libretto was adapted from a Pulitzer Prize-winning play, produced in 1929, by New York-born Elmer Rice (1892-1967), with additional lyrics by Langston Hughes. The original production ran for 148 performances, leading Weill to remark, "Seventy-five years from now, Street Scene will be remembered as my major work." The opera was the first real successor to Porgy and Bess.

Kurt Weill (born in Dessau, Germany) started a theater revolution with his collaboration with Bertold Brecht on Die Dreigroschenoper (The Threepenny Opera), premiered at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm, in Berlin, on August 31, 1928. It was an updating of John Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1720), which had just been given a modern staging in London in 1920, to huge success. Die Dreigroschenoper cannot really be called an opera: it was staged but in a small theater, not an opera house; no member of the original cast was a professional opera singer (the roles are not designed for that sort of voice, and the cast were mostly theater actors who could sing); the instrumentalists were not pit musicians, and most belonged to dance hall bands (2 saxophones, 2 trumpets, trombone, banjo, timpani, harmonium). Weill said at the time that the work "presented us with the opportunity to make 'opera' the subject matter for an evening in the theater." He also said it was "the most consistent reaction to Wagner" and a positive step toward operatic reform. It is important to realize that this premiere took place less than three years after that of Berg's Wozzeck.

Weill then premiered a similar work, Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny), on March 9, 1930, in Leipzig. However, in March 1933, Weill fled Germany with his wife, the singer Lotte Lenya, who had sung important roles in both of the works just mentioned. They spent some time in Paris, where Weill completed his Second Symphony and renewed briefly his collaboration with Brecht for Die sieben Todsünden, a "ballet with singing" for George Balanchine's troupe "Les Ballets 1933." In September 1935, Weill went to America with Lenya (although they later divorced), to oversee Max Reinhardt's production of Franz Werfel's biblical epic Der Weg der Verheissung, for which Weill had written an extensive oratorio-like score. After many delays, the work was finally staged in 1937 but in truncated form as The Eternal Road. Weill's first hit in the U.S. was Lady in the Dark, a musical play about psychoanalysis by Moss Hart, with lyrics by Ira Gershwin, his return to the theater after his brother's death in 1937. Marc Blitzstein made an English translation of The Threepenny Opera that had great success. Weill had a huge influence through his Broadway musicals and became the most challenging figure on that scene before Sondheim (he worked with Lerner and Ira Gershwin).

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October 19, 2004

ionarts: 20th-Century Opera

Posted by Charles T. Downey at 8:49 AM | Link to this post

I draw your attention to the following posts related to our subject at ionarts:I have quoted or linked to earlier posts in my posts here on Bartók and Janáček.

October 18, 2004

John Corigliano Speaks

Posted by Charles T. Downey at 9:38 PM | Link to this post

John CoriglianoAfter our work on John Corigliano's opera The Ghosts of Versailles in class (see October 8: The Ghosts of Versailles and the posts after it), we were able to attend a lecture given by the composer at Catholic University's Benjamin T. Rome School of Music on October 15, after a composition master class he gave there. After having gone through hell and high water to locate a copy of the Met's production of Ghosts for the students to watch, I was quite happy to hear Mr. Corigliano say first that he had made a DVD copy of the Met production, which he was donating to our music library. His plan for his lecture was to introduce the opera, have us watch some excerpts from the DVD, and then take some questions.

Corigliano described how he told James Levine that he wanted to write an opera buffa. When Levine said that an opera buffa wouldn't work at the Met, Corigliano revised his plan for Ghosts, which would be a "grand opera buffa." He said rightly that the production recorded on DVD had performances from "the best singers in the world at the time," and he mentioned Teresa Stratas (Marie-Antoinette), Håkan Hagegård (Beaumarchais), Marilyn Horne (Samira), and Renée Fleming (first Met role as Rosina). What suited Corigliano's interests in the libretto was "the chance to time travel back to the 18th century," allowing him to shift the style back and forth between neoclassical and modern idioms, not to be bound to one style as Stravinsky was in The Rake's Progress. He likened the quotations from Mozart and Rossini, which are heard in the "world of deranged classicism" of the ghosts, to "subliminal flashes."

As for the music of the ghosts, Corigliano said that it was associated in his mind as he composed it with "clouds, smoke, wisps," and that it was based on a tone row. As different instruments take up the row, the color changes, creating a sort of Klangfarbenmelodie. Aside from the range of styles in the opera, Corigliano said that he believed the opera's success was due to the fact that, in his opera, "the singers are given the music for their voices," meaning not only that he wrote for operatic voices, in general, but also that he adapted the opera for these specific singers. We watched Marie-Antoinette's Act I scene, "Once there was a golden bird," which ends with an extremely high note. Although Corigliano notated the note simply as "highest note possible," Teresa Stratas wanted him to change the score to reflect the fact that she hit a high E at this point in the production. It's a dramatic moment on the video version.

There was not time for many questions. In response to the question on many people's minds, Corigliano responded that, no, he and William Hoffman have no plans to create another opera. The Ghosts of Versailles has had several incredibly successful productions (see notes on the productions in my previous post), all completely sold out. At the Met premiere, Corigliano said, "even Jackie Kennedy couldn't get tickets," although she did eventually see it. In spite of the opera's success, he insisted, he is not going to go through the anguish of creating another opera until Ghosts is produced more often and with more regularity. Houston Grand Opera, he says, thinks of Ghosts as "the Met's opera" and refuse to produce it, although they have expressed interest in a new opera from Corigliano. Plácido Domingo, at the Washington National Opera, likes the opera but will not commit to producing it here. Why should composers labor to produce new operas that will only get one or a few productions? John Corigliano may have a point.