The very best ghost stories begin in the dark. It is a pitch black filthy night. Two sinister-looking men hooded in bulky outdoor walking gear with backpacks clamber up a ladder from the orchestra pit into sight – wet, ravenous and hopelessly lost. They glimpse a pinprick of light which is not a star, as they first imagine, but a far off house where they are greeted by a strange, world-weary old man carrying an umbrella. It is a wonderfully atmospheric beginning to The Devil Inside, a new opera receiving its first performance in Glasgow from Stuart MacRae, with libretto by Louise Welsh, based on The Bottle Imp, a deliciously dark Hawaiian short story by Robert Louis Stevenson.
The aim of Scottish Opera's Five:15 project was to introduce composers and writers to work together to produce 15 minute operas which would hopefully result in the creation of larger scale works. MacRae and Welsh worked together to produce Remembrance Day in 2009, and then Ghost Patrol at the 2012 Edinburgh Festival. One of the big challenges faced by the librettists in particular was cutting wordy scripts down to the barest of bones to convey the story for opera. The learning experience has been successful for Welsh, who has not only distilled Stevenson’s tale using effective simple poetic clarity, but has come up with a new utterly chilling ending.
The Faustian plot is beguilingly simple. There is a bottle in which lives a devilish imp who will grant the current owner whatever he or she desires. The bottle may be sold on, but always for less than its purchase price, but with it comes the curse that a person dying in possession gets to roast in hellfire for ever. Shaking up the fairy-tale bottle for today’s more secular times, considerable thought was given to the modern equivalent of Stevenson’s eternal damnation, with the result that by the end it is clear that the Bottle Imp is indeed the worst sort of devil, his work shockingly unfinished.
Scored for just 15 players, MacRae’s music was tautly drawn, angular and intense as conductor Michael Rafferty relished the swings between orchestral lyrical richness and exposed, nervy solos and ensembles to reflect the strange twists of the tale. At key ‘bottle’ moments there was an ethereal quality to the writing and instrumentation, with slippery microtones appearing and odd noises emerging, at one point involving the percussionist slowly deflating a balloon as the three upper string players set down their instruments and blew softly into harmonicas. Each of the seven scenes had a different musical feel, with short sparky interludes joining up the gaps. The spiky and occasionally riotous score was matched with lyrical and expressive vocal parts which seemed to come very naturally following speech pattern.