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- Aug 24, 2014
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MGV (Musique à Grand Vitesse) is my favorite piece by Michael Nyman. Scored for orchestra and his own "Michael Nyman Band" and written for the inauguration of France's high-speed railway, the piece consists of five movements, or "regions", the first four of which are constructed around the fragments of a theme that only reveals itself in its entirety in the "5th region". So, by posting this final "region" I'm giving the game away:
Ahhh, I misunderstood. I entirely agree, the plot [of Tristan und Isolde] is bollocks but the score is monumental. To be fair, we can probably say this about a number of other operas. I recently sat through Pelleas et Melisande and despite lovely performances, I was pissed off with every character by the end of the first act and glad they were dying by the end.
I do wonder if I would enjoy some operas more if the supertitle had never been invented. I would be less aware that the plot is frequently bollocks and the characters frequently hideous. (Special shout out to Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly here)
I've given up trying to make sense of Pelléas et Mélisande, and instead sees it as a emotional journey of Golaud, the only character that matters in this opera. People tend to characterize old Arkel as the wise one -- he's old, he's blind, and he doesn't involve himself in the affairs, but I think Golaud, despite his frequent fits of anger and jealously, manages to put his finger to the whole affair: Pelléas and Mélisande are mentally children, and it is their childish, self-centered behavior that brought their destruction and Golaud's torment.
No, I just know another opera he provided the libretto for: Dukas's Ariane et Barbe-bleue (hehe) which is very well scored and very funny. And how can I not like the ending, with Bluebeard's wives cuddling him, and the feminist and probable lesbian Ariane leaving the castle crestfallen?Do you have any familiarity with the original play, or anything else Maurice Maeterlinck ever wrote?
I have trouble sleeping in silence, so I almost always have some kind of music in the background. Scheherazade is my favourite at the minute, but I'm also very fond of Matthew Bourne's Swan Lake arrangement.
Not even aware of that, sorry, and looks as though it is not my thing at all.Did you see Bourne's Swan Lake?
No, I just know another opera he provided the libretto for: Dukas's Ariane et Barbe-bleue (hehe) which is very well scored and very funny. And how can I not like the ending, with Bluebeard's wives cuddling him, and the feminist and probable lesbian Ariane leaving the castle crestfallen?
The part when Ariane uses each of Bluebeard's keys, and finds behind each door a torrent of gems of a different color, shows how incredibly resourceful Dukas's orchestration is:
I've seen it twice! I'm also very fond of traditional ballet, but something about Matthew Bourne's work really appeals to me.Did you see Bourne's Swan Lake? What did you think of it? I saw it and ....eh. The choreography is fantastic, but it turns out I have very traditional tastes in ballet![]()
I've seen it twice! I'm also very fond of traditional ballet, but something about Matthew Bourne's work really appeals to me.