Tag Archives: kurt weill

A Dangerous World Viewed Best From Afar

Don’t try to grip Baron Samedi too tightly (through May 11 at On The Boards); close inspection will squeeze the pleasure out of it, and there’s a lot of pleasure here. The late Allain Buffard’s dance-theatre song cycle also features torture, enslavement, rape, child soldiers, and all the other social weapons of despotism and fanatical insurrection.

The music is mostly Kurt Weill, which does not cleave seamlessly to this world but complements it. Such environments breed the louche, distanced tone of Weill’s music and the characters of his songs. When vulnerability is fatal then cool remove and hostile seduction define the survivors from the fodder. Buffard’s choreography rarely takes enough focus in this work to speak in its own voice alone but rather reveals itself as integral to the language and physicality of this society.

Our set appears to be a giant sheet of paper, curled up at two corners and scrolling down from a platform to the orchestra floor. An upright electric bass, a keyboard, and a guitar with a deck of pedals live just off stage left. Out of the darkness we hear a voice—a hell of a voice—singing to an open, often discordant guitar melody, heavy on the contour, making a smooth, round, jazz ballad sound. As “Trouble Man” takes shape the guitar comes in from the hinterlands and connects more directly with the voice and light catches the singer.

Those eccentric orchestrations (by Sarah Murcia along with much of the playing) are the norm here often relying on either a driving bass (slapped, plucked, or growlingly bowed) or a wandering guitar (Seb Martel), sometimes an arch organ. Actor/Dancer/Singers support with slapping and snapping percussion.

Through all this we see and hear stories of disassociation by race, conflict, the criminalization of prostitutes, and more. We see the struggles of the dispossessed, mostly in broad, universal stories, occasionally with devastating specificity, often emotionally represented through dance.

These stories touch mostly on nations of European colonization in Africa, the Caribbean, and South America. Zulu and Portuguese join German, French, and English, often in simultaneous murmured echoes. Here we are a planet unified in our dysfunctional response to colonialism.

The dances play, sliding down the curve of the paper from platform to orchestra. They struggle through asphyxiating tension. They play the roles of asymmetrical power structures: feeble tyrants who draw attention that totters between obeisance and the covetous salivation of hyenas circling the ailing. Dancers sing, singers dance, musicians act. There is a democratic feeling about the show.

Costumes, by Buffard with Nadia Lauro, share the general tone of decrepit decadence. A top hat embodies formal power, but a kilt has power too. Suits make uniforms for the anonymous as much as the iconoclastic. Hoods blind the wearer while hiding her from others’ gaze.

The overall effect is one of a cabaret presentation of the international headlines, less in narrative detail than emotional specificity. The texts of the songs–including a surprise bookend from Billie Holiday–have metaphoric relationships with the circumstances of the vignettes. These might be songs these characters would sing to speak their souls instead of writing the words themselves.

It all plays with such knowing style that the show avoids becoming depressive. It disturbs just enough to unsettle without provoking action. It gives us a way to see the world we know lies out there and to cope with it from a safe distance.

{Baron Samedi runs through May 11 at On the Boards, tickets and more info can be found here.}

In Oregon Symphony Visit, Seattle Hears What It’s Been Missing

Carlos Kalmar, conductor (Photo: Leah Nash)

As conductor Carlos Kalmar commented from the stage of Benaroya Hall, it had taken 117 years for the Oregon Symphony to make its way to Seattle, but here they were (Seattle Symphony will pay a return visit next season). Seattle has really been missing out, given the caliber of Friday night’s performance and the content of the program presented.

It began with Phenomenon—The Mysterious and Unexplained, from 2004 by Thai composer Narong Prangcharoen, which began with loud bangs and the whole orchestra playing fast and furious in organized cacophony with lots of percussion, then dropping suddenly to slow whispers like the wind whistling through trees.

The program notes described it as crowds arriving for a national Buddhist festival in which fireballs mysteriously ascend into the sky and never descend—rather like July 4th fireworks. The sound and fury rise again in the music, and at the end—it’s quite short—we get the papery whisper of what we imagine to be the burned-out leftover residue floating to earth.  The piece is thrilling and had audience members holding their collective breath.

The orchestra followed with another work not often heard on a concert stage, Kurt Weill’s and Berthold Brecht’s The Seven Deadly Sins, with the incomparable crossover singer Storm Large, soprano, as the two sides of protagonist Anna, and tenors Jorge Garza and Carl Moe, baritone Anton Belov and bass-baritone Richard Zeller as the Family.

It was originally a very odd ballet, and probably works better in concert. Here we had Anna, in a drab coat over a long dress, with a high stool and small table on one side of the conductor and, on the other, the four men in order of ascending height and size from a small thin tenor to the large, tall bass-baritone, the first with a black homburg, two in the midst with caps and the last with a preposterous flowered hat. (Anna gets a wine bottle and wine glass to drink from: the others just get water bottles.)

The story is that the young Anna sets forth from Louisiana to make her fortune (and incidentally that of her family back home). As she goes from city to city she encounters the seven deadly sins: Sloth, Pride, Anger, Gluttony, Lust, Covetousness and Envy, and in each city she discovers that being a good girl doesn’t pay, that accepting the more dubious path brings her money, but not happiness. Throughout, the Family comnments.

Storm Large, soprano

The music is pure Weill, The Threepenny Opera on steroids. Large, who used a microphone but never so that its use became audibly obvious, is not only a fine and expressive singer but a fine actress, sliding off her coat in the Pride section to reveal a slinky white satin gown in which she becomes a seductive siren, exasperating her family, showing her feelings—whichever Anna she was—by the set of her shoulders or stance.

The four male singers acted equally well by means of small gestures, and all five singers made the words clear.  Kalmar meanwhile kept the orchestra just under them for audibility, but brought out the senuous waltz, the agitation of the family in Anger, all very 1930s in a lively, colorful performance.

The first half by itself would have sent this audience member home happy, but after intermission, Kalmar conducted a nuanced and expressive, a very musical performance of Schubert’s Symphony No. 8, the “Unfinished.” Nothing was overstated, but Kalmar brought out its inherent drama without making a meal of it. The orchestra sounded well balanced, so that one could hear inner voices, and it was well together, except for a couple of times when the timpanist seemed a hair in front of the beat (which might have been due to the unfamiliar acoustics of the hall).

Without a pause, Kalmar launched straight into Ravel’s La Valse. Beforehand, he explained that the Schubert represented Vienna at the end of the elegant classical age, just moving into the romantic, while the Ravel showed the end of it with Vienna’s descent into horrors and destruction of World War I. Ravel began La Valse in 1906, but he finished it in 1920, after working as an ambulance driver in that most slaughterful of wars.

This was abundantly clear in the music, Kalmar and the orchestra did it proud, from the danceable start to the menacing change in tone, then to the chaos at the end. This is a conductor it would be a pleasure to hear from again. He conducts with dynamism, his whole body mirroring the feelings in the music. His beat is clear even when it seems wild, and he’s almost a podium dancer, but with intent.

Let’s hope he and the Oregon Symphony are invited back soon.