Warsaw Chamber Opera (Warszawska Opera Kameralna) - Armide - Jean-Baptiste Lully - 5th November 2017
Renaud et Armide by Nicolas Poussin (1629)
Dulwich Picture Gallery, London
Dulwich Picture Gallery, London
It is a rare event to see an authentic period performance of
a French Baroque opera in Warsaw in modern times. Even rarer is a performance
of Armide, the last spectacle
by the Italian-born French composer Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632-1687). The recent
fraught history of Warszawska Opera Kameralna since the passing of its former Artistic
Director Stefan Sutkowski makes an objective assessment an additional challenge.
One must admire the fortitude in the attempt to resuscitate and renew the
artistic inspiration of this company. Will the artistic traditions of this
distinguished organization survive into the future?
To properly judge the performance of such a work it is
necessary to briefly examine the musical meaning of such stage productions to a
seventeenth century audience which was rather different in motivation and
expectation to ourselves. Under their Apollonian Sun King Louis XIV, France
enjoyed an unsurpassed supremacy of taste, graciousness of manners and a fastidious
brilliance in artistic and intellectual creation. In the seventeenth century the
musical philosophy of Plato and its subsequent development was paramount.
Musical harmony reflected celestial harmony and the desired harmony
between body and soul. Music was considered to exert a profound effect on a man's
moral life and temperament. The art became a formidable politicized weapon in
the maintenance of absolute monarchy. Finally
there was a requirement to establish a proper creative interaction between
harmony, rhythm, language and dance intimately engaged with the subject of the opera
or spectacle and the poetry itself. Inspired
by the ancients, ballet and later opera became the favored dramatic forms. Were
these musical criteria established and observed in this production?
The first performance of Armide,
a 'Musical Tragedy in Five Acts', was in January 1686. The victory by King Jan Sobieski
over the Ottoman Turks in the Battle of Vienna had occurred as recently as September
1683. The subject of this opera then is perhaps unsurprising and singularly appropriate
in that this production is taking place in Poland and in light of current
events throughout the world.
Marcelina Beucher as Armide
The Musicae Antiquae
Collegium Varsoviense under their conductor, the Australian Baroque and Classical
repertoire specialist Benjamin Bayl, gave a fine account of the spell-binding score. Lully pioneered playing with muted strings. They
have clearly absorbed the performance practice ideals of the French Baroque
tradition. Le climat de Lully is
gradually becoming second nature especially in the idiomatic support of the
many dance sequences. Many were written in the,
at times, challenging French baroque rhythms and cross rhythms of the noble
and majestic French overture, danced gavottes, menuets, sarabandes and other dance forms. The dancing by the Nordic Baroque
Dancers under their director Karin Modigh and the inspired baroque dance
choreographer Deda Cristina Colonna, was a physically eloquent expression of the
highly complex baroque dance notation. I was absolutely fascinated by the graceful
and fluent movement of the feet where the fashions of the day laced the body
into a rather upright posture seemingly only permitting the feet to express the
required emotions, synchronized ensemble movements and resulting uplift of
the spirit of the dance. Louis himself was a passionate dancer (as was Lully) and often danced
in Lully's operas, in fact sponsored the first of the large scale court divertissements given during his reign. The
harpsichord basso continuo support
was especially skillful, strong and more to the point, loud enough to hear the harmonic
counterpoint with the theorbo and lute that gave colour to the recitatives.
French Baroque choreographic dance notation
I return briefly to my philosophical opening to this review
on a point of criticism. The Prologue was the most important feature of the
French baroque opera. Certainly to cut it as was done in this production perhaps makes sense for a modern audience in terms of the anachronistic eulogies
between Wisdom and Glory which claimed the fidelity of Louis XIV. Lully may have felt himself out of favour at this time and was perhaps sychophantically pandering to Louis. However they also
performed an important moral pedagogical function, an umbrella of moral thought
and reflection under which the entire opera functioned according to Platonic
principles. Can one simply overlook this moral imperative? Additionally there is some superb music and recitative contained within the Prologue.
Lully himself closely oversaw and controlled his opera productions
with almost tyrannical attention to detail. He also often edited the wording of
libretti provided by Phillipe Quinault (1635-1688), in this case an adapted
story from the 16th century Italian poet Torquato Tasso (1544-1595). Lully jealously guarded his scores from all prying eyes except those of the king. To the
composer's great disappointment, the opera was not initially performed at court
but at the Palais-Royal for the general public. It garnered immediate laurels
and huge popularity followed. It was even performed for an extraordinarily exotic
group of ambassadors to the French court - mandarins from Siam (Thailand). Informed
that the heroine was not French, they observed: 'If she had been French, she
would not have needed magic in order to make herself loved, because the French
are charming by themselves.' When Armide's palace burnt to the ground at the
conclusion of the opera, they decided to leave as they thought their
accommodation had been destroyed.
Marcelina Beucher as Armide
A vocal highlight for me among many (the singers augmenting their delivery with baroque declamatory gesture) was the dramatic role of Armide sung by the soprano Marcelina Beucher
who seemed to me born to the role. After a superb orchestral Prelude to Act II
Scene 5, complete with evocative wind machine and thunderous storm effects, she was utterly convincing in the
monologue recitative expressing her great conflict, torn between the expression
of power and the tortures of angst during the most notorious moment in the
opera, that suspenseful moment when she cannot bring herself to murder Renaud. Soon she is to fall in love with him herself. Quinault creates one of his most complete psychological portraits with this role. The Vocal Ensemble of the Warsaw Chamber Opera directed by Krzysztof Kusiel-Moroz supported and augmented textual meaning from both above us on a gallery and adjacent on a thrust stage as an excellent supporting vocal cast. The formidable voice of Tomasz Rak in the role of La Haine ('Hate') emerging from dreaded Hell was enough to fill one with the greatest of fears of the infernal forces. Another memorable and especially moving moment was the magnificent Passacaille on the nature of love 'Les Plaisirs ont choisi pour asile' accompanying
the resilient although variable tenor, Aleksander Rewiński (Renaud).
The pleasures have chosen as refuge
These agreeable and quiet grounds,
How charming are these sites,
For fortunate lovers!
Some rather amusing comic relief was given by the knight Ubalde (Piotr Pieron) and the Danish Knight (Sylwester Smulczyński) carrying a 'diamond shield' (polished metal in our case) to banish Armide's spell over Renaud.
SCENE II RENAUD,
pleasures, band of fortunate lovers A fortunate lover and
chorus
The
pleasures have chosen as refuge
These
agreeable and quiet grounds,
How charming
are these haunts,
For
fortunate lovers!
It
is love that keeps in its chains
A thousand
birds we hear night and day in our woods.
If love
brought only sorrows
Loving birds would
not sing as much.
Young hearts,
all is favorable to you,
Make the
best of a fleeting happiness.
In the
winter of our years, love reigns no more.
The
beautiful days we lose are lost forever.
These agreeable and quiet grounds,
How charming are these sites,
For fortunate lovers!
Some rather amusing comic relief was given by the knight Ubalde (Piotr Pieron) and the Danish Knight (Sylwester Smulczyński) carrying a 'diamond shield' (polished metal in our case) to banish Armide's spell over Renaud.
The magnificent voice
of Hidraot, magician and King of Damascus, brings me to describe the absolutely opulent
and stunning costumes brought directly from the Versailles atelier and wardrobe
department. I gasped aloud and almost applauded like a child when the king
appeared, possibly a magnanimous manifestation of Louis himself who dispenses the wisdom of a happy and distinguished marriage to the tempestuous Armide - without result and the destruction of her hopes. Followed by his full retinue, the king was caparisoned in a fabulously decorative outfit,
the like of which one seldom if ever sees on the stage outside of the Opéra
Royale at the Château de Versailles. The flamboyant ostrich feathers on all the
helmets would have shamed the Folies Bergère.
This together
with the inventive set designs of Francesco Vitali (a mixture of high
technology laser lighting, projected video scenes and traditional structures)
made the production a true spectacle in
the full Lullian idiom. However I found the group of fluctuating onstage manikins (dressed and later naked) rather obscure in their symbolic significance. The precipitous collapse of Armide's
palace was a sudden and fiendishly dramatic techno conclusion to the opera. I would loved to have seen her swept away by her malignant spirits in her chariot!
Overall a marvelous night full of the orchestral delights of the wide-ranging emotional range of Lully's music, song, inspired recitative and dance in addition to inventive staging
and ravishing costumes. The production has achieved in many respects what I
considered to be unachievable, an at least partial resurrection of the spirit
of Stefan Sutkowski in his own sacred abode.
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