The following review was first published in Wales Arts Review, Vol 3, Issue 2: http://www.walesartsreview.org/fallen-women-wno-orchestra-introduces-the-season/ 
St David’s Hall, Cardiff, 17 January 2014
Alban Berg: Lyric Suite (Three Movements, arranged for string orchestra by the composer)
Richard Wagner: Wesendonck Lieder
Hector Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique
Welsh National Opera Orchestra
Soprano: Emma Bell
Conductor: Lothar Koenigs
The status of women in opera is fraught with social and artistic 
contention. No masculine term carries the equivalent power of ‘prima 
donna’ or ‘first lady’ which, in opera, denotes the soprano heroine 
around whom both narrative and music often pivots.* But the accolade is 
an ambivalent one for, as Roger Parker has noted of nineteenth century 
opera – in a comment which carries far wider resonance – there are 
largely two types of women to be found: ‘the docile ones who usually 
suffer and die; and the scary ones who almost always suffer and die.’ 
Murder, banishment, abandonment, fatal illness, torture, suicide, 
despair: these are the fates which await the heroines of tragic opera, 
regardless of where that heroine might sit on the sliding scale from 
passive to strong spirited.
‘Fallen Women’ are so common in opera as to be cliché. This season, 
Welsh National Opera is putting the term under the microscope with 
dramatically linked new productions of Puccini’s Manon Lescaut and Henze’s 1950s’ take on Manon’s story, Solitude Boulevard, together with a reprise of David McVicar’s classic production of Verdi’s literal ‘fallen woman’, La traviata.
 Of course, these operas were composed by men, depicting stories by men 
from a male-dominated world. Still today, in our less polarised yet 
unequal society, operas are more often than not written, conducted, and 
even directed by men, as these will be this season (here’s an interview 
with director Mariusz Treliński).
 So the opportunity to consider issues affecting contemporary young 
women from a woman’s perspective will be welcome indeed with a staging, 
by WNO Youth Opera in March, of Errollyn Wallen’s new work for young 
people, ANON. How ‘Anon’ might be related to ‘Manon’ will be intriguing to discover.
This concert by the WNO Orchestra was intended to introduce the 
‘fallen women’ theme, with three works inspired by a composer’s 
impossible love for a particular woman; Berg’s yearning string orchestra
 arrangement of three inner movements from his Lyric Suite, encoded with references to Hanna Fuchs; Wagner’s uniquely intimate Wesendonck Lieder, setting poems of love by Mathilde Wesendonck, and Berlioz’s revolutionary Symphonie fantastique,
 an outpouring of frustrated passion for the actress Harriet Smithson. 
But, whilst this programme made for a satisfying – not to mention 
superbly performed – concert, ‘impossible love’ by no means equals 
‘fallen woman’, which was confused here with quite different themes of 
the ‘muse’ and the ‘forbidden woman’.
For it is sexual trangression 
which causes a woman to ‘fall’, thereby unleashing the retribution of 
her society. As far as we know, however, none of these women 
transgressed through seducing, betraying nor, indeed, submitting to 
their wooer. Rather, they were unattainable – and that, in the case of 
Smithson only temporarily, as she eventually consented to marry the man 
who had made her his psychological-cum-musical idée fixe 
(unsurprisingly, the marriage did not last long). Wesendonck and Fuchs 
were already married – as were their would-be lovers, Wagner and Berg. 
These women were not fictional operatic characters. The fact that their 
respective composers turned them into highly romanticised fantasies 
encoded into music (whether for public or private consumption) says more
 about the composers and the prevailing aesthetic than it does about the
 women themselves or women in general. Indeed, the potent fascination 
with the female ‘muse’ still common today, and the complex, paradoxical 
relationship of this idea to modern-day notions of ‘fallen women’,** 
tells us more about our society’s continued enthrallment to the cultural
 and aesthetic norms of the nineteenth century than it tells us about 
actual women.
Happily, the confused theme did not detract from an evening of 
outstanding music-making, with the WNO Orchestra under conductor Lothar 
Koenigs, joined for the Wagner by soprano Emma Bell, together on 
excellent form. A wonderful array of colours, energy and dramatic 
contrast greeted the St David’s Hall audience. Especially striking were 
the evident commitment of the musicians and the detailed fineness of 
phrasing and articulation, which Koenigs deftly shaped into a dramatic 
whole in each piece, culminating in a Symphonie fantastique which was both riotous and grotesque without tipping overboard or becoming sloppy.
Berg’s Lyric Suite arrangement set a delicately serious 
tone, with the composer’s original forces of string quartet expanded 
into an ensemble of lush, ethereal orchestral textures. It was only in 
the 1970s of course, that George Perle discovered the entwined 
numerological and poetic symbolism embedded at the secret, structural 
heart of this exquisite work. Tonight, searing yet often pianissimo lines combined with wonderfully tight pizzicato and col legno
 in a luminous, almost impressionist performance evocative of tortured 
love. High praise is due to section leaders Stephen Bingham, Philip 
Heyman and, in particular, William Schofield and orchestra leader David 
Adams.
That this orchestra instinctively knows how to accompany is 
undoubted, but the sensitivity of ensemble with Emma Bell in the Wagner 
was acute. I had remembered Bell as a fine, intelligent Elsa in WNO’s Lohengrin
 last year but was taken aback by the sheer mellifluousness of her voice
 on this occasion. Initial tiny hints of a vocal catch in the upper 
register were soon dismissed to produce a beautifully rounded tone in 
tender service of music saturated with pre-Tristan und Isolde passion and pathos. The fourth and fifth songs, Schmerzen and Träume,
 were especially beguiling, with the brass and woodwind shining in 
support (though the lack of reproduction of the text in the programme 
was an oversight).
Berlioz is famous for his radical orchestration as well as his 
dramatic symphonic narratives, and Koenig’s players entered into the 
spirit of the fantastique with gusto. Not tonight the 
‘post-classical’ Berlioz with smooth, rounded edges – nor the patchwork 
dilettante of misguided lore – but a truer, edgier portrait of a 
composer always highly charged, but here completely gripped by a 
narcotically-aided monomania. For it is he – not Smithson – who we see 
in this dreamscape, by turns alluring and alarming. Berlioz effectively 
wrote his own pathology into the score as he stalked the actress, 
determined to win his Ophelia.
Indeed, Francesca Brittan has pointed out
 that, as a one-time medical student, Berlioz would have had particular 
insight into the fashion in Paris at the time for the new scientific 
theories of romantic obsession as nervous disorder, developed by 
Jean-Etienne-Dominique Esquirol and others. Berlioz himself wrote of his
 fixation in 1830 that ‘sometimes I can scarcely endure this mental or 
physical pain (I can’t separate the two), especially on fine summer days
 when I’m in an open space … alone … I suffer so much … that if I did 
not take a grip of myself I should shout and roll on the ground.’ 
Fallen? I should say so – but into what? And, of course, this is the 
composer, not the object of his desire.
* ‘primo uovo’ (usually a tenor) denotes the ‘first man’ of an opera 
company or production but it lacks the iconicity of ‘prima donna’.
** for instance, on the one hand, famous women who embody highly 
sexualised ideals of feminine glamour and beauty continue to inspire 
outpourings of artistic and other forms of devotion but, on the other, 
ordinary women who dress in ways reflecting those ideals are often seen 
as ‘asking’ to be raped.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment