Davies, Sir Peter Maxwell (1934-2016) | Eight Songs for a Mad King | |
Kurtág, György (b. 1926) | Kafka Fragments, Op.24 |
Barrie Kosky | Regie | |
Urs Schönebaum | Bühnenbild, Licht | |
Pierre Bleuse | Musikalische Leitung | |
Ensemble intercontemporain | ||
Anna Prohaska | Sopran | |
Patricia Kopatchinskaja | Violine | |
Johannes Martin Kränzle | Bariton | King George III |
The very essence of performance in a pair of major works of contemporary music theatre. A man, a woman: the complete possible gamut of vocal expression, an infinite collection of emotional states, changing all the time. Around them, a small ensemble forced to its expressive limits as it rushes in a flash through the history of music; a violin driven to the utmost excess, out of tune or broken. Eight Songs for a Mad King (1969) deals with the insanity of King George III of England, who wanted to learn to sing to his birds, and evokes a powerful empathy with the ‘mad’ – those ventriloquists of shared traumas. The Kafka-Fragments (1987) are a succession of forty miniatures, being as many physical and metaphysical variations on walking – determined, wayward or constrained – expressing Kafka’s existential anxiety in an instant and with exquisite nuance. Barrie Kosky’s approach is intense and pared-down, entirely at the service of first-class interpreters and an unsparing reading of these extreme works.