As living American composers go, William Bolcom is no small fish. Three operas, nine symphonies, collaborations with a laundry list of who’s who in the classical world, and an impressive list of instrumental and chamber music compositions and songs have earned him not only a Pulitzer Prize, but an uncontested place in the canon of American composers. What a pleasure then, that nearly a quarter century after its première with the Chicago Lyric Opera (1992), Bolcom’s McTeague, a two-act opera based on the 1899 novel McTeague: A Story of San Francisco by Frank Norris, was warmly received at its European première with the Landtheater Linz. Despite certain inherent flaws, the compositional quality, musical realization and visual strength made for a memorable evening full of melodies and themes both jaunty and jarring.
Bolcom is renowned for his combination of modern classical techniques combined with nods to popular music styles. Whether one refers to this compositional bent as pastiche or paraphrase, it was fully in effect. Instead of developing motifs or material to foreshadow or characterize the protagonists and action throughout the work, each musical section in McTeague has its own unique character. Blessedly singable vocal lines hang over suspended string sounds, or move over a repeating, rhythmic orchestral thought. Instrumentation is inventive, and blues, ragtime and jazz live side by side with soaring operatic lines and dissonance, often separated only by the entrance of a new character or a scenic shift. Though moving through such a plethora of musical worlds sometimes threatens to lack unity, the libretto is so straightforward that the musical variety is quite welcome.
The subtitle given for the European version reads “Gier nach Gold” (Greed for Gold) and was a largely unnecessary touch, as there is no doubt in anyone’s mind about the morality lesson of the work at any point in time. The opening desert scene, a flash-forward, features an absolutely blinding golden orb, under which a ruined McTeague (Corby Welch) stumbles, singing of his sad fate. During the second scene we meet his best friend, Marcus Schouler (Michael Wagner). Schouler’s cousin and soon-to-be fiancée, Trina Sieppe (Çiğdem Soyarslan), and maid Maria Miranda Macapa (Karen Robertson). The four share their experiences with gold and remark that it changes everyone it touches. That things will go badly, with gold to blame, could not be more clear – and go bad they most certainly do. McTeague falls in love with Trina and marries her, which is almost fine with Schouler until Trina wins 5,000 dollars in gold on a lottery ticket. The descent into betrayal, insanity and mutual loathing is inexorable, ending (spoiler alert) with Trina strangled, crazy Maria lost in the desert, and the two men handcuffed to each other – in Death Valley – dying or dead of dehydration and strangulation.