Endgame
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Endgame
Never heard of Kurtag. Regards, Len
A 92-Year-Old Composer’s First Opera Is His ‘Endgame’
By Palko Karasz
Nov. 7, 2018
BUDAPEST — In the fall of 1956, the Soviet Union crushed an uprising in Hungary, swiftly ending an attempt to escape the superpower’s grip on the Eastern bloc. The Soviet tanks that rolled through Budapest also brought an end to the belief of many intellectuals and artists here in the ideals of Communism.
The Hungarian composer Gyorgy Kurtag, then 30, felt his whole world collapse that year. “Not just the outside world, but my inner universe, too,” he once said in an interview.
Mr. Kurtag spent the next two years in Paris, seeking new meaning for his life and work under the guidance of a psychoanalyst. He studied with the composer Olivier Messiaen, and heard the music of Anton Webern and Arnold Schoenberg at concerts given by Pierre Boulez. From the isolation of Communist Hungary, he had emerged into the West’s center of musical modernism.
It was in Paris during this period that Mr. Kurtag first saw Samuel Beckett’s play “Endgame.” The encounter set him on a lifelong journey, studying Beckett’s works and creating music inspired by them. Six decades later, on Nov. 15, this odyssey — and the career of one of the last living giants of 20th-century music — will culminate in Mr. Kurtag’s long-awaited, long-delayed first opera, based on “Endgame,” at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan.
Mr. Kurtag’s career has been full of unfinished projects, among them several operas; Alexander Pereira, the general director of the Teatro alla Scala, has been waiting to present the premiere of “Endgame” for nearly a decade. He has persevered, he said, because Mr. Kurtag is “probably the most important composer in the world at this moment.”
In an interview last month in his attic study at the Budapest Music Center, where he lives with his wife, Marta, Mr. Kurtag, 92, spoke about the importance of opera to him. (Stuffed with papers and books, the study has whole shelves devoted to Beckett.) The art form, he said, brought together his two great passions: the spoken word and the singing voice.
Mr. Kurtag said he had reached back to Claudio Monteverdi for inspiration. The Italian Renaissance composer, whose “Orfeo” was one of the first operas, made it clear that words and score need to be equal partners. In Monteverdi, Mr. Kurtag said, “the text doesn’t move to the background in favor of the music.”
While it looks back to the origins of the art form, Mr. Kurtag’s “Endgame” — in its radical (and very Kurtagian) compression and starkness — also heralds a conclusion of sorts. “Fundamentally, this is the end of a genre,” said the musicologist Andras Wilheim, who is writing a book-length study of the composer. “Kurtag’s opera could be the end of traditional thinking in opera.”
Mr. Kurtag was born to a Hungarian Jewish family in Lugoj, Romania, in 1926. He studied piano, chamber music and composition in Budapest, where he met his wife, also a pianist. They married in 1947.
Reducing music to its intense essentials, Mr. Kurtag cultivated a style of precisely controlled intensity. His works are often collections of tiny bits — some of his set of 40 “Kafka Fragments,” for soprano and violin, are just a few seconds long — which pack a concentrated punch, extravagant in expression while rigorously focused and astringent.
He is perhaps the last of the great generation of European composers to have come of age in the wake of World War II: Gyorgy Ligeti, a friend, died in 2006; Boulez, the dean of the postwar avant-garde, in 2016. Mr. Kurtag’s 1994 orchestral work “Stele” is “like a gravestone on which the entire history of European music is written,” the conductor Simon Rattle once told The Boston Globe.
Throughout his career, Mr. Kurtag, who speaks six languages, has made music out of the literature he loves. A handful of works inspired by Beckett have included “Samuel Beckett: What Is the Word,” based on a late poem. Mr. Kurtag wrote it for the Hungarian singer Ildiko Monyok, who had developed severe aphasia in a car accident. Ms. Monyok learned to speak again while rehearsing the piece with Mr. Kurtag, and her struggle was reflected in the composition: a harrowing landscape of stuttering repetition, of language trying reluctantly to form itself.
That reluctance to be formed has been a feature of Mr. Kurtag’s “Endgame,” too: The music world has been waiting for it for years. Mr. Pereira, of the Teatro alla Scala, has penciled it in for every opera season he has overseen for almost a decade — at the Zurich Opera, then the Salzburg Festival, and now in Milan — only to be told, again and again, that it wasn’t yet ready.
“I suffered a lot,” Mr. Pereira said, “but now we are at the end.”
When Mr. Pereira’s Salzburg Festival wrote to Mr. Kurtag asking him to accept the commission for the opera, he said he wanted no contract and no money. In his study in Budapest, he added he couldn’t promise to finish every piece he started, and didn’t want to compromise his creative freedom. He said he could have taken much longer to finish, but he had only “this one life” — “so I had to let this one out now.”
“Endgame” — Kurtag’s libretto adapts Beckett’s original French version, “Fin de Partie” — is, like the play, a tragicomedy of four characters: the tyrannical master Hamm; his mother, Nell; his father, Nagg; and his servant, Clov. Beckett included copious stage directions alongside the gnomic dialogue as the characters discuss, with dark humor, the meaninglessness of the human condition. Only Clov moves around freely: Hamm stays still in a wheelchair at the center of the stage, and his parents sit in dustbins at the side.
“I almost obsessively want to remain faithful to his text and his initial concept,” Mr. Kurtag said of Beckett’s play. He added he had spent two years just on studying the playwright’s word choices. What Beckett does, Mr. Kurtag said, “is already music.”
Every note matters in Mr. Kurtag’s miniatures, and although “Endgame” is around two hours long, he applied the same painstaking method to its composition as he has to his shortest pieces. He is as hard on himself as he is on his performers; the cellist Tamas Zetenyi described playing a Kurtag string quartet at a concert in Budapest. At the end, its composer stood up to thank the group — and proceeded to give 90 minutes of feedback.
Marta Kurtag was a partner in the new opera’s creation, as she has been in the composing and performance of many of Mr. Kurtag’s works. (Much of his continuing series of short piano pieces, “Jatekok,” or “Games,” has been written with their duet in mind.) When asked a question by a reporter, he sometimes simply offered a smile when a precise answer wasn’t forthcoming; his wife would then answer. At other times, she interjected to gently clarify or contradict Mr. Kurtag’s point.
“At the end,” he said of “Endgame,” “she didn’t just have thoughts on orchestration; she was composing the music.”
Mrs. Kurtag broke in: “That is a bit of an exaggeration.”
If it’s in part an exaggeration, “Endgame” remains the crowning achievement not just of Mr. Kurtag’s career, but also of the couple’s creative relationship. The interview in Budapest began with his tribute to Mrs. Kurtag. Moving with difficulty, a walker supporting his frail figure, Mr. Kurtag visibly softened as he sat at the piano. There, he performed what he called a “pocket opera” that he wrote for his wife’s 90th birthday this year.
His eyes gleamed and his lips joined in a smile as he turned to Mrs. Kurtag. He recited two lines from the Hungarian poet Attila Jozsef, written in French, that roughly translate as “I have no theme other than that I love you.” He then took the syllables apart, repeating each one until the line of poetry was impossible to pick out among the bare sounds. Each repeated phrase resolved itself with soft chords.
He said he didn’t see his own life playing out in his new Beckett opera, and yet he felt that Mrs. Kurtag and himself were present in the piece.
“It is us who are in ‘Fin de Partie,’ ” Mr. Kurtag said.
Mrs. Kurtag added: “This is our endgame.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/07/arts ... opera.html
A 92-Year-Old Composer’s First Opera Is His ‘Endgame’
By Palko Karasz
Nov. 7, 2018
BUDAPEST — In the fall of 1956, the Soviet Union crushed an uprising in Hungary, swiftly ending an attempt to escape the superpower’s grip on the Eastern bloc. The Soviet tanks that rolled through Budapest also brought an end to the belief of many intellectuals and artists here in the ideals of Communism.
The Hungarian composer Gyorgy Kurtag, then 30, felt his whole world collapse that year. “Not just the outside world, but my inner universe, too,” he once said in an interview.
Mr. Kurtag spent the next two years in Paris, seeking new meaning for his life and work under the guidance of a psychoanalyst. He studied with the composer Olivier Messiaen, and heard the music of Anton Webern and Arnold Schoenberg at concerts given by Pierre Boulez. From the isolation of Communist Hungary, he had emerged into the West’s center of musical modernism.
It was in Paris during this period that Mr. Kurtag first saw Samuel Beckett’s play “Endgame.” The encounter set him on a lifelong journey, studying Beckett’s works and creating music inspired by them. Six decades later, on Nov. 15, this odyssey — and the career of one of the last living giants of 20th-century music — will culminate in Mr. Kurtag’s long-awaited, long-delayed first opera, based on “Endgame,” at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan.
Mr. Kurtag’s career has been full of unfinished projects, among them several operas; Alexander Pereira, the general director of the Teatro alla Scala, has been waiting to present the premiere of “Endgame” for nearly a decade. He has persevered, he said, because Mr. Kurtag is “probably the most important composer in the world at this moment.”
In an interview last month in his attic study at the Budapest Music Center, where he lives with his wife, Marta, Mr. Kurtag, 92, spoke about the importance of opera to him. (Stuffed with papers and books, the study has whole shelves devoted to Beckett.) The art form, he said, brought together his two great passions: the spoken word and the singing voice.
Mr. Kurtag said he had reached back to Claudio Monteverdi for inspiration. The Italian Renaissance composer, whose “Orfeo” was one of the first operas, made it clear that words and score need to be equal partners. In Monteverdi, Mr. Kurtag said, “the text doesn’t move to the background in favor of the music.”
While it looks back to the origins of the art form, Mr. Kurtag’s “Endgame” — in its radical (and very Kurtagian) compression and starkness — also heralds a conclusion of sorts. “Fundamentally, this is the end of a genre,” said the musicologist Andras Wilheim, who is writing a book-length study of the composer. “Kurtag’s opera could be the end of traditional thinking in opera.”
Mr. Kurtag was born to a Hungarian Jewish family in Lugoj, Romania, in 1926. He studied piano, chamber music and composition in Budapest, where he met his wife, also a pianist. They married in 1947.
Reducing music to its intense essentials, Mr. Kurtag cultivated a style of precisely controlled intensity. His works are often collections of tiny bits — some of his set of 40 “Kafka Fragments,” for soprano and violin, are just a few seconds long — which pack a concentrated punch, extravagant in expression while rigorously focused and astringent.
He is perhaps the last of the great generation of European composers to have come of age in the wake of World War II: Gyorgy Ligeti, a friend, died in 2006; Boulez, the dean of the postwar avant-garde, in 2016. Mr. Kurtag’s 1994 orchestral work “Stele” is “like a gravestone on which the entire history of European music is written,” the conductor Simon Rattle once told The Boston Globe.
Throughout his career, Mr. Kurtag, who speaks six languages, has made music out of the literature he loves. A handful of works inspired by Beckett have included “Samuel Beckett: What Is the Word,” based on a late poem. Mr. Kurtag wrote it for the Hungarian singer Ildiko Monyok, who had developed severe aphasia in a car accident. Ms. Monyok learned to speak again while rehearsing the piece with Mr. Kurtag, and her struggle was reflected in the composition: a harrowing landscape of stuttering repetition, of language trying reluctantly to form itself.
That reluctance to be formed has been a feature of Mr. Kurtag’s “Endgame,” too: The music world has been waiting for it for years. Mr. Pereira, of the Teatro alla Scala, has penciled it in for every opera season he has overseen for almost a decade — at the Zurich Opera, then the Salzburg Festival, and now in Milan — only to be told, again and again, that it wasn’t yet ready.
“I suffered a lot,” Mr. Pereira said, “but now we are at the end.”
When Mr. Pereira’s Salzburg Festival wrote to Mr. Kurtag asking him to accept the commission for the opera, he said he wanted no contract and no money. In his study in Budapest, he added he couldn’t promise to finish every piece he started, and didn’t want to compromise his creative freedom. He said he could have taken much longer to finish, but he had only “this one life” — “so I had to let this one out now.”
“Endgame” — Kurtag’s libretto adapts Beckett’s original French version, “Fin de Partie” — is, like the play, a tragicomedy of four characters: the tyrannical master Hamm; his mother, Nell; his father, Nagg; and his servant, Clov. Beckett included copious stage directions alongside the gnomic dialogue as the characters discuss, with dark humor, the meaninglessness of the human condition. Only Clov moves around freely: Hamm stays still in a wheelchair at the center of the stage, and his parents sit in dustbins at the side.
“I almost obsessively want to remain faithful to his text and his initial concept,” Mr. Kurtag said of Beckett’s play. He added he had spent two years just on studying the playwright’s word choices. What Beckett does, Mr. Kurtag said, “is already music.”
Every note matters in Mr. Kurtag’s miniatures, and although “Endgame” is around two hours long, he applied the same painstaking method to its composition as he has to his shortest pieces. He is as hard on himself as he is on his performers; the cellist Tamas Zetenyi described playing a Kurtag string quartet at a concert in Budapest. At the end, its composer stood up to thank the group — and proceeded to give 90 minutes of feedback.
Marta Kurtag was a partner in the new opera’s creation, as she has been in the composing and performance of many of Mr. Kurtag’s works. (Much of his continuing series of short piano pieces, “Jatekok,” or “Games,” has been written with their duet in mind.) When asked a question by a reporter, he sometimes simply offered a smile when a precise answer wasn’t forthcoming; his wife would then answer. At other times, she interjected to gently clarify or contradict Mr. Kurtag’s point.
“At the end,” he said of “Endgame,” “she didn’t just have thoughts on orchestration; she was composing the music.”
Mrs. Kurtag broke in: “That is a bit of an exaggeration.”
If it’s in part an exaggeration, “Endgame” remains the crowning achievement not just of Mr. Kurtag’s career, but also of the couple’s creative relationship. The interview in Budapest began with his tribute to Mrs. Kurtag. Moving with difficulty, a walker supporting his frail figure, Mr. Kurtag visibly softened as he sat at the piano. There, he performed what he called a “pocket opera” that he wrote for his wife’s 90th birthday this year.
His eyes gleamed and his lips joined in a smile as he turned to Mrs. Kurtag. He recited two lines from the Hungarian poet Attila Jozsef, written in French, that roughly translate as “I have no theme other than that I love you.” He then took the syllables apart, repeating each one until the line of poetry was impossible to pick out among the bare sounds. Each repeated phrase resolved itself with soft chords.
He said he didn’t see his own life playing out in his new Beckett opera, and yet he felt that Mrs. Kurtag and himself were present in the piece.
“It is us who are in ‘Fin de Partie,’ ” Mr. Kurtag said.
Mrs. Kurtag added: “This is our endgame.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/07/arts ... opera.html
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Re: Endgame
Thanks.
I just downloaded yesterday's RAI Radio 3 & Bartok Radio b'csts and plan to listen over my T-giving break. Kurtag is a fairly well-known avant-gardist. I have lots of his chamber and orchestral works.
I just downloaded yesterday's RAI Radio 3 & Bartok Radio b'csts and plan to listen over my T-giving break. Kurtag is a fairly well-known avant-gardist. I have lots of his chamber and orchestral works.
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Re: Endgame
Arditti Quartett - Kurtag: Clov's Last Monologue (a fragment) [WP]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJz6NjBwyNA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJz6NjBwyNA
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Re: Endgame
Samuel Becket, who insisted in his lifetime on complete artistic control of every one of his works no matter where in the world it happened, would never have allowed this. I guess he left no estate that maintains that standard, so I would have to take an opera of Endgame on its own terms. Incidentally, ham and clove, which makes no sense in French, is an actual dish in which a ham is studded with whole cloves. My mother used to make it. That does not explain the complicated relationship of the two characters in the play, but there it is.
There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself.
-- Johann Sebastian Bach
Re: Endgame
The Beckett estate has barred productions of his works for various reasons, such as an all-women "Godot," so they're still guardians at the gates. Like you, I was surprised that they allowed an operatic treatment, but maybe Kurtag provided them with a recording that impressed them. Beckett's mentor James Joyce was an enthusiast of opera, and maybe Beckett shared that enthusiasm and his heirs take it into account.
John Francis
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Re: Endgame
Beckett and Morton Feldman collaborated on an opera, loosely defined, entitled Neither, recorded in 2000 by col legno.
Wikipedia wrote:Neither
Opera by Morton Feldman
Librettist Samuel Beckett
Language English
Premiere 1977
Neither is the only “opera” by Morton Feldman, dating from 1977. Its “libretto” is a 16-line poem by Samuel Beckett. Composer and librettist had met in Berlin two years earlier with plans for a collaboration for Rome Opera, but in their encounter Beckett had told Feldman that he himself did not like opera, and Feldman had echoed Beckett’s sentiment, so that the work emerged in Rome as a setting for soprano soloist only, accompanied by orchestra. It could theoretically be termed a “monodrama,” but given the creators’ disdain for opera, the label “anti-opera” fits better.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0exs9F-888s
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Re: Endgame
Many people don't know that James Joyce was himself a world-class tenor. In a competition of Irish tenors, he was beaten only by John McCormack.John F wrote: ↑Sat Nov 17, 2018 3:06 amThe Beckett estate has barred productions of his works for various reasons, such as an all-women "Godot," so they're still guardians at the gates. Like you, I was surprised that they allowed an operatic treatment, but maybe Kurtag provided them with a recording that impressed them. Beckett's mentor James Joyce was an enthusiast of opera, and maybe Beckett shared that enthusiasm and his heirs take it into account.
There's nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself.
-- Johann Sebastian Bach
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- Joined: Sun May 29, 2005 7:06 am
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Re: Endgame
I keep dropping names because I've lots of names to drop. In Berlin I saw a production of "Endgame," in German, directed by Beckett himself. It was at the Schiller Theater Werkstatt. The most straightforward, natural thing in the world, and very funny - which you wouldn't guess from reading the script.
John Francis
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Re: Endgame
Kurtág’s Fin de partie
by Pierre Audi, stage director of the La Scala production
A Beckett opera and its fate against all odds
Samuel Beckett was somewhat adamant that his famous stage works should
not be put to music. Not surprisingly: they are in themselves music to be
brought to life by actors. Beckett did write one text though which he once
posted unexpectedly to the composer Morton Feldman who had begged him
(unsuccessfully he thought!) to write a libretto for him. This resulted in a bold
opera entitled Neither for solo voice and large orchestra. Feldman handed me
this score at the end of the 80s and proposed I direct it. he died unexpectedly
three months later. As a homage to Feldman I chose to direct this piece in
1991 in my first season in Amsterdam as Artistic Director of Dutch National
Opera. The sets were by Jannis Kounellis with Reri Grist as the soprano conducted
by Oliver Knussen. Since then the fascinating subject of Beckett and
music started many questions in my head...
György Kurtág and I had met in London back in the 80s thanks to Claudio Abbado.
The latter was at the time Chief Conductor of the London Symphony
Orchestra and was looking for a chamber venue to present chamber music related
to mahler, the composer at the centre of a large project Abbado was
leading at the Barbican in London. Kurtág’s works on the other hand, needed
an intimate theatre and the Almeida Theatre which I founded a few years earlier
proved the perfect setting for his music. We became friends without
knowing that only three years later I would be asked to lead Dutch National
Opera.
What I discovered on taking up the job was that Kurtág had agreed to a commission
to write his first opera for Amsterdam but had sadly decided a few
weeks before I was announced, that he could not after all write it and returned
his fee to the great disappointment of everyone. I tried to persuade
him to change his mind but he persisted in saying no. I found Alfred Schnittke
at the time to take his place.
However, our discussions continued until the mid 90s when the Kurtágs moved
to Amsterdam for a few years where they visited every opera premiere. I
thought I could make another few attempts to reopen the subject of an opera
but those attempts also failed. What started emerging though was Beckett‘s
oeuvre as a powerful magnet for the composer, resulting in an impressive
chamber work for voice and ensemble but no opera. perhaps a collage of
pieces one day Kurtág seemed to suggest?... but not an opera. No thank you.
Jump nearly fifteen years later and Alexander Pereira, a man who knows how
not to take no for an answer, persuaded Kurtág to start composing an opera
on arguably Beckett’s greatest work Fin de Partie. From one development to
another - too complex to retell - from Salzburg to Milan to Fin de partie Amsterdam,
I found myself miraculously reconnected to this extraordinary utopic
dream that astonishingly became over a period of eight years, an absolute reality.
After La Scala, a historic house with a distinguished history of world premieres,
Amsterdam will get to experience the opera it once commissioned before
this piece starts its journey as one of the first masterpieces of the opera
repertoire of the XXI century.
The task of a composer in turning a theatrical masterpiece into an opera
It would not be an exaggeration to say that the general consensus has it that
Verdi’s Otello is a more effective work for the stage than Shakespeare‘s original
play. To achieve this Verdi and his librettist had to somewhat “betray” the
author in order to end up doing him full justice. And so it went with Shakespeare
with later operatic adaptations such as Aribert Reimann’s Re Lear and
Thomas Ades’ The Tempest.
In all those cases the operatic adaptation was only imaginable through the
rewriting of a completely new text.
Not since those historic operatic adaptations and those of Alban Berg of Büchner
and Wedekind (also free adaptations) has an iconic masterpiece of world
literature been turned into an opera until Kurtág’s Fin de partie. This time
though, the composer had decide to set the original Beckett text word for
word and unedited, treating the words as dramatic poetry as did Schubert,
Schumann, in their song cycles by writers such as Heinrich Heine and others.
Still this radical method constitutes an operatic first.
Kurtág’s decision to respect the text by not adapting the play was a highly
risky decision. It meant that he was going to compose an extended recitative,
sung-spoken and enriched by a highly colorful orchestral accompaniment with
occasional passages of music without words.
Where this decision “betrays” the original conception of the play is that it
turns it into an emotional existential drama which builds to a powerful tragic
climax. Where Beckett imagined his words spoken fast and often casually,
Kurtág dwells on every nuance, repeated words, to delve deep in the souls of
the four characters of the play. This elevates the message of the play but it
does it in a method which in effect contradicts Beckett’s own.
By writing scenes with endings and by preceding the drama by a prologue
that sets a Beckett poem to music, the composer frees us from making comparisons
with the original. It also implied that I needed to think of a new way
to show the “refuge”, the home of Hamm, Clov, Nagg and Nell. Every scene
in our production shows this refuge from a different perspective mirroring a
scene of the play as yet not composed by Kurtág: le tour du monde, when
Hamm makes Clov explore the room as a journey round the Globe.
Staging the opera called for a reinvention of a world intended by Beckett as
devoid of hope, inside-outside, and identity. The characters though survive the
changes and share their ordeals with the dignity, the sense of humor, the
compassion and ruthlessness that Beckett engraves in every word they speak.
After seven weeks rehearsing this complex score one comes to realize that
Kurtág did in his own way what Verdi had done to Otello: he rethought its
subtext and amplified its lyricism allowing music to speak for the psyche of
protagonists and thus removed the encryption that keeps emotion at bay
when you watch Fin de partie as a play performed by actors. And for Kurtág
and in many respects, for us today, by letting a new truth emerge in the process,
the composer is doing full justice to the soul of the piece and showing its
timeless relevance in a new light.
At least this is the debate that a bold work such as Fin de partie, the opera,
will inevitably ignite.
Milan, November 2018
by Pierre Audi, stage director of the La Scala production
A Beckett opera and its fate against all odds
Samuel Beckett was somewhat adamant that his famous stage works should
not be put to music. Not surprisingly: they are in themselves music to be
brought to life by actors. Beckett did write one text though which he once
posted unexpectedly to the composer Morton Feldman who had begged him
(unsuccessfully he thought!) to write a libretto for him. This resulted in a bold
opera entitled Neither for solo voice and large orchestra. Feldman handed me
this score at the end of the 80s and proposed I direct it. he died unexpectedly
three months later. As a homage to Feldman I chose to direct this piece in
1991 in my first season in Amsterdam as Artistic Director of Dutch National
Opera. The sets were by Jannis Kounellis with Reri Grist as the soprano conducted
by Oliver Knussen. Since then the fascinating subject of Beckett and
music started many questions in my head...
György Kurtág and I had met in London back in the 80s thanks to Claudio Abbado.
The latter was at the time Chief Conductor of the London Symphony
Orchestra and was looking for a chamber venue to present chamber music related
to mahler, the composer at the centre of a large project Abbado was
leading at the Barbican in London. Kurtág’s works on the other hand, needed
an intimate theatre and the Almeida Theatre which I founded a few years earlier
proved the perfect setting for his music. We became friends without
knowing that only three years later I would be asked to lead Dutch National
Opera.
What I discovered on taking up the job was that Kurtág had agreed to a commission
to write his first opera for Amsterdam but had sadly decided a few
weeks before I was announced, that he could not after all write it and returned
his fee to the great disappointment of everyone. I tried to persuade
him to change his mind but he persisted in saying no. I found Alfred Schnittke
at the time to take his place.
However, our discussions continued until the mid 90s when the Kurtágs moved
to Amsterdam for a few years where they visited every opera premiere. I
thought I could make another few attempts to reopen the subject of an opera
but those attempts also failed. What started emerging though was Beckett‘s
oeuvre as a powerful magnet for the composer, resulting in an impressive
chamber work for voice and ensemble but no opera. perhaps a collage of
pieces one day Kurtág seemed to suggest?... but not an opera. No thank you.
Jump nearly fifteen years later and Alexander Pereira, a man who knows how
not to take no for an answer, persuaded Kurtág to start composing an opera
on arguably Beckett’s greatest work Fin de Partie. From one development to
another - too complex to retell - from Salzburg to Milan to Fin de partie Amsterdam,
I found myself miraculously reconnected to this extraordinary utopic
dream that astonishingly became over a period of eight years, an absolute reality.
After La Scala, a historic house with a distinguished history of world premieres,
Amsterdam will get to experience the opera it once commissioned before
this piece starts its journey as one of the first masterpieces of the opera
repertoire of the XXI century.
The task of a composer in turning a theatrical masterpiece into an opera
It would not be an exaggeration to say that the general consensus has it that
Verdi’s Otello is a more effective work for the stage than Shakespeare‘s original
play. To achieve this Verdi and his librettist had to somewhat “betray” the
author in order to end up doing him full justice. And so it went with Shakespeare
with later operatic adaptations such as Aribert Reimann’s Re Lear and
Thomas Ades’ The Tempest.
In all those cases the operatic adaptation was only imaginable through the
rewriting of a completely new text.
Not since those historic operatic adaptations and those of Alban Berg of Büchner
and Wedekind (also free adaptations) has an iconic masterpiece of world
literature been turned into an opera until Kurtág’s Fin de partie. This time
though, the composer had decide to set the original Beckett text word for
word and unedited, treating the words as dramatic poetry as did Schubert,
Schumann, in their song cycles by writers such as Heinrich Heine and others.
Still this radical method constitutes an operatic first.
Kurtág’s decision to respect the text by not adapting the play was a highly
risky decision. It meant that he was going to compose an extended recitative,
sung-spoken and enriched by a highly colorful orchestral accompaniment with
occasional passages of music without words.
Where this decision “betrays” the original conception of the play is that it
turns it into an emotional existential drama which builds to a powerful tragic
climax. Where Beckett imagined his words spoken fast and often casually,
Kurtág dwells on every nuance, repeated words, to delve deep in the souls of
the four characters of the play. This elevates the message of the play but it
does it in a method which in effect contradicts Beckett’s own.
By writing scenes with endings and by preceding the drama by a prologue
that sets a Beckett poem to music, the composer frees us from making comparisons
with the original. It also implied that I needed to think of a new way
to show the “refuge”, the home of Hamm, Clov, Nagg and Nell. Every scene
in our production shows this refuge from a different perspective mirroring a
scene of the play as yet not composed by Kurtág: le tour du monde, when
Hamm makes Clov explore the room as a journey round the Globe.
Staging the opera called for a reinvention of a world intended by Beckett as
devoid of hope, inside-outside, and identity. The characters though survive the
changes and share their ordeals with the dignity, the sense of humor, the
compassion and ruthlessness that Beckett engraves in every word they speak.
After seven weeks rehearsing this complex score one comes to realize that
Kurtág did in his own way what Verdi had done to Otello: he rethought its
subtext and amplified its lyricism allowing music to speak for the psyche of
protagonists and thus removed the encryption that keeps emotion at bay
when you watch Fin de partie as a play performed by actors. And for Kurtág
and in many respects, for us today, by letting a new truth emerge in the process,
the composer is doing full justice to the soul of the piece and showing its
timeless relevance in a new light.
At least this is the debate that a bold work such as Fin de partie, the opera,
will inevitably ignite.
Milan, November 2018
Re: Endgame
Unless I missed something, Audi doesn't say how they obtained permission to perform this opera, or whether they did. He's an experienced man of the theatre and must have been aware of the need.
John Francis
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Re: Endgame
Kurtag: Fin de partie (Endgame) - La Scala world premiere - audio only.
I assume this is sourced from either the Bartok Radio or RAI Radio 3 broadcasts of 11/15/2018.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFOUf9WAY8Y
I assume this is sourced from either the Bartok Radio or RAI Radio 3 broadcasts of 11/15/2018.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFOUf9WAY8Y
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Re: Endgame
Zachary Woolfe's NY Times Review https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/16/arts ... opera.html
A 92-Year-Old’s ‘Endgame’ Opera Is Patiently Perfect
Fin de Partie
By Zachary Woolfe
Nov. 16, 2018
MILAN — In the middle of Samuel Beckett’s bleak but endlessly wry play “Endgame,” a character tells a joke about a man who goes to the tailor to get a pair of pants. The tailor dithers and dawdles, making one tiny change at a time.
Finally, the customer explodes: God made the world in six days, he screams, “and you are not bloody well capable of making me a pair of trousers in three months!”
The tailor answers, “But, my dear sir, my dear sir, look” — with a disdainful gesture — “at the world, and look” — lovingly, proudly — “at my trousers!”
The punch line had extra relish at the Teatro alla Scala here in Milan on Thursday when “Fin de Partie,” the eminent Hungarian composer Gyorgy Kurtag’s operatic adaptation of “Endgame,” had its long, long-awaited premiere. Mr. Kurtag, 92, has taken a protracted path to this patiently, perfectly tailored work, his first opera.
Over the past decade, we were told time and again that the opening was coming. Time and again, the pants were not quite ready. “Fin de Partie,” based on Beckett’s original French version of the play, became the white whale of contemporary music.
As Mr. Kurtag turned 85, then 90, we could be forgiven for quietly fearing it would never be finished. And it wouldn’t, perhaps, have been too much of a surprise if it hadn’t been: A master of miniatures, best known for collections of pieces a few dozen seconds each, Mr. Kurtag had stubbornly resisted the idea of working on a vaster canvas.
But Beckett had already provided him with vital inspiration for other works over the years. And “Endgame” — its text, like Mr. Kurtag’s classics, an assemblage of small self-sufficiencies surrounded by space — was an apt partner for what the play calls “the prolonged creative effort.” If Mr. Kurtag felt uncertain about how to sustain his gnomic style over a two-hour span, it’s undetectable in an opera that, even constructed as a series of discrete “scenes and monologues,” unfolds with the confidence — the paradoxically unsettled serenity — of his best music.
He can revel in mood, color and agile, even raucous, rhythms because there is barely a plot to convey. A sick man in a wheelchair (Hamm), his companion (Clov), his father (Nagg) and his mother (Nell) recall the joys and sorrows of the past and curse the indignities of the present and future. That’s all; that’s everything.
Shuffling around nervously, Clov (the robustly gruff baritone Leigh Melrose) is characterized in jittery blots of music, as if he consists entirely of punctuation marks. The orchestra quietly trembles under the bass Frode Olsen’s more authoritative roars as Hamm. Old Nagg (the tenor Leonardo Cortellazzi) and Nell (the contralto Hilary Summers), stuffed by Beckett into side-by-side ashcans, exist in a sphere of ethereal nostalgia and thread-thin high notes that Ms. Summers, in particular, spins with the eerie softness of elderly skin.
Though spare, Mr. Kurtag’s music isn’t severe. The string sound has been pared back, so the ensemble feels transparent and winds-heavy, with an airy chamber-music intimacy, whipping occasionally into passionate outpourings and embroidered here and there with the coppery twang of cimbalom. The vocal line is often mirrored in the orchestra, giving a feeling of purity, coherence and deceptive simplicity. (There is nothing simple about it.)
There are echoes of Monteverdi in the piece’s declamatory, text-forward quality; Debussy’s “Pelléas et Mélisande,” in its atmospheric ambiguity; Berg’s “Wozzeck,” in its episodic structure and concentrated expression. Glistening and nimble, the Scala orchestra is conducted by Markus Stenz, who leads an exceptionally delicate score — its balances and pauses fragile and exposed — with naturalness and a sense of spontaneity.
Pierre Audi’s staging provides some of the physical comedy Beckett intended, while slyly inverting the play’s scenic indications. Rather than looking out from an interior, the characters here are outside a small, grim house, looking in. (The designer is Christof Hetzer.) The house, partly overhung by the shells of yet larger structures, rotates with each scene change; Hamm, in turn, rotates in his wheelchair. It is a little solar system onstage, a theater of the cosmos.
I had worried that Mr. Kurtag would stint the music-hall roots of Beckett’s dramaturgy, but bits of accordion and whistles peep out from the orchestra, faraway glimpses of vaudeville. The opera extracts roughly half of the play, meaning we lose some of the slapstick circularity; what’s gained is starkness, each episode standing in harsh isolation.
We lose, too, the full depth of the relationship — defined by Beckettian repetition — between Hamm and Clov. So the opera’s final scene of simultaneous separation and togetherness, while powerful, doesn’t quite break your heart. Nagg and Nell, their music luminous, are now the emotional center — appropriate for a work that is, if not quite autobiographical, then at least resonant on the subject of growing old alongside one’s mate. (Mr. Kurtag’s wife of more than 70 years, Marta, has long been his close collaborator in composition and performance.)
“Fin de Partie” is a farewell not just to a life and a marriage, but also to a whole culture. Mr. Kurtag is one of the last who remain of the generation of avant-garde composers that came of age during World War II and in its wake: Boulez, Ligeti, Henze, Stockhausen, Schnittke. Even if the great final scene equivocates — modernism is always on the verge of leaving, it seems to say, yet it is also always here to stay — the opera, drawn from a play that Mr. Kurtag saw in Paris as a young man, is truly goodbye to all that.
It’s a world that ends, in his telling, with both a bang and a whimper: apocalyptic brass chords alternating with a hushed stillness, off which rises a mist of cimbalom and suspended cymbal. This kind of quick transition from seizure to stillness is a characteristically Kurtagian move, as in the final of his six “Moments Musicaux” for string quartet, from 2005, when a sudden ripping roar fades to a faint march, pricked by an even fainter violin.
It is a gesture that challenges the very notion of an ending. And Mr. Kurtag may not be done yet; he has mulled filling in some of the gaps he has left in creating the “Fin de Partie” libretto. Future presentations — the work travels next to Amsterdam, in March — may well set more of the play’s text. But it by no means feels curtailed in its current form.
Look at our world, indeed, then look at this exquisite opera, a miracle of dedication, craft and care. This, as Clov says near the end of the piece, is what we call making an exit.
Fin de Partie
Through Nov. 25 at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan; teatroallascala.org.
A version of this article appears in print on Nov. 17, 2018, on Page C1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Premiere Extra Long In the Works.
A 92-Year-Old’s ‘Endgame’ Opera Is Patiently Perfect
Fin de Partie
By Zachary Woolfe
Nov. 16, 2018
MILAN — In the middle of Samuel Beckett’s bleak but endlessly wry play “Endgame,” a character tells a joke about a man who goes to the tailor to get a pair of pants. The tailor dithers and dawdles, making one tiny change at a time.
Finally, the customer explodes: God made the world in six days, he screams, “and you are not bloody well capable of making me a pair of trousers in three months!”
The tailor answers, “But, my dear sir, my dear sir, look” — with a disdainful gesture — “at the world, and look” — lovingly, proudly — “at my trousers!”
The punch line had extra relish at the Teatro alla Scala here in Milan on Thursday when “Fin de Partie,” the eminent Hungarian composer Gyorgy Kurtag’s operatic adaptation of “Endgame,” had its long, long-awaited premiere. Mr. Kurtag, 92, has taken a protracted path to this patiently, perfectly tailored work, his first opera.
Over the past decade, we were told time and again that the opening was coming. Time and again, the pants were not quite ready. “Fin de Partie,” based on Beckett’s original French version of the play, became the white whale of contemporary music.
As Mr. Kurtag turned 85, then 90, we could be forgiven for quietly fearing it would never be finished. And it wouldn’t, perhaps, have been too much of a surprise if it hadn’t been: A master of miniatures, best known for collections of pieces a few dozen seconds each, Mr. Kurtag had stubbornly resisted the idea of working on a vaster canvas.
But Beckett had already provided him with vital inspiration for other works over the years. And “Endgame” — its text, like Mr. Kurtag’s classics, an assemblage of small self-sufficiencies surrounded by space — was an apt partner for what the play calls “the prolonged creative effort.” If Mr. Kurtag felt uncertain about how to sustain his gnomic style over a two-hour span, it’s undetectable in an opera that, even constructed as a series of discrete “scenes and monologues,” unfolds with the confidence — the paradoxically unsettled serenity — of his best music.
He can revel in mood, color and agile, even raucous, rhythms because there is barely a plot to convey. A sick man in a wheelchair (Hamm), his companion (Clov), his father (Nagg) and his mother (Nell) recall the joys and sorrows of the past and curse the indignities of the present and future. That’s all; that’s everything.
Shuffling around nervously, Clov (the robustly gruff baritone Leigh Melrose) is characterized in jittery blots of music, as if he consists entirely of punctuation marks. The orchestra quietly trembles under the bass Frode Olsen’s more authoritative roars as Hamm. Old Nagg (the tenor Leonardo Cortellazzi) and Nell (the contralto Hilary Summers), stuffed by Beckett into side-by-side ashcans, exist in a sphere of ethereal nostalgia and thread-thin high notes that Ms. Summers, in particular, spins with the eerie softness of elderly skin.
Though spare, Mr. Kurtag’s music isn’t severe. The string sound has been pared back, so the ensemble feels transparent and winds-heavy, with an airy chamber-music intimacy, whipping occasionally into passionate outpourings and embroidered here and there with the coppery twang of cimbalom. The vocal line is often mirrored in the orchestra, giving a feeling of purity, coherence and deceptive simplicity. (There is nothing simple about it.)
There are echoes of Monteverdi in the piece’s declamatory, text-forward quality; Debussy’s “Pelléas et Mélisande,” in its atmospheric ambiguity; Berg’s “Wozzeck,” in its episodic structure and concentrated expression. Glistening and nimble, the Scala orchestra is conducted by Markus Stenz, who leads an exceptionally delicate score — its balances and pauses fragile and exposed — with naturalness and a sense of spontaneity.
Pierre Audi’s staging provides some of the physical comedy Beckett intended, while slyly inverting the play’s scenic indications. Rather than looking out from an interior, the characters here are outside a small, grim house, looking in. (The designer is Christof Hetzer.) The house, partly overhung by the shells of yet larger structures, rotates with each scene change; Hamm, in turn, rotates in his wheelchair. It is a little solar system onstage, a theater of the cosmos.
I had worried that Mr. Kurtag would stint the music-hall roots of Beckett’s dramaturgy, but bits of accordion and whistles peep out from the orchestra, faraway glimpses of vaudeville. The opera extracts roughly half of the play, meaning we lose some of the slapstick circularity; what’s gained is starkness, each episode standing in harsh isolation.
We lose, too, the full depth of the relationship — defined by Beckettian repetition — between Hamm and Clov. So the opera’s final scene of simultaneous separation and togetherness, while powerful, doesn’t quite break your heart. Nagg and Nell, their music luminous, are now the emotional center — appropriate for a work that is, if not quite autobiographical, then at least resonant on the subject of growing old alongside one’s mate. (Mr. Kurtag’s wife of more than 70 years, Marta, has long been his close collaborator in composition and performance.)
“Fin de Partie” is a farewell not just to a life and a marriage, but also to a whole culture. Mr. Kurtag is one of the last who remain of the generation of avant-garde composers that came of age during World War II and in its wake: Boulez, Ligeti, Henze, Stockhausen, Schnittke. Even if the great final scene equivocates — modernism is always on the verge of leaving, it seems to say, yet it is also always here to stay — the opera, drawn from a play that Mr. Kurtag saw in Paris as a young man, is truly goodbye to all that.
It’s a world that ends, in his telling, with both a bang and a whimper: apocalyptic brass chords alternating with a hushed stillness, off which rises a mist of cimbalom and suspended cymbal. This kind of quick transition from seizure to stillness is a characteristically Kurtagian move, as in the final of his six “Moments Musicaux” for string quartet, from 2005, when a sudden ripping roar fades to a faint march, pricked by an even fainter violin.
It is a gesture that challenges the very notion of an ending. And Mr. Kurtag may not be done yet; he has mulled filling in some of the gaps he has left in creating the “Fin de Partie” libretto. Future presentations — the work travels next to Amsterdam, in March — may well set more of the play’s text. But it by no means feels curtailed in its current form.
Look at our world, indeed, then look at this exquisite opera, a miracle of dedication, craft and care. This, as Clov says near the end of the piece, is what we call making an exit.
Fin de Partie
Through Nov. 25 at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan; teatroallascala.org.
A version of this article appears in print on Nov. 17, 2018, on Page C1 of the New York edition with the headline: A Premiere Extra Long In the Works.
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Re: Endgame
jbuck919 wrote: ↑Fri Nov 16, 2018 7:54 pmSamuel Becket, who insisted in his lifetime on complete artistic control of every one of his works no matter where in the world it happened, would never have allowed this. I guess he left no estate that maintains that standard, so I would have to take an opera of Endgame on its own terms. Incidentally, ham and clove, which makes no sense in French, is an actual dish in which a ham is studded with whole cloves. My mother used to make it. That does not explain the complicated relationship of the two characters in the play, but there it is.
Sue's mother would buy cooked hams and doctor it up in the oven with cloves. It's a very nice spice imo. Len
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