“The moonlit night dazzled us. Birds shrieked in the trees. There was a rush of wind in the fields. We crawled through the dust, a pair of snakes.”
Maybe the pair of snakes is Franz Kafka, the author, and György Kurtág, the composer who set this short passage (along with 39 others by Kafka) to music. Maybe the snakes are Claire Booth and Peter Manning, the soprano and violinist who so superbly realised Kafka Fragments in the ROH Linbury Studio on Thursday night. Maybe there aren’t really any snakes. But at any rate, it doesn’t seem right to describe video artist and director Netia Jones as one of Kafka’s snakes, as her staging of this un-operatic piece did not engage productively with it, instead relying on bafflingly literal visual representations of Kafka’s elusive phrases, and shallow technological thrills.
The thing is, it’s precisely the relationship between the words and the music which makes Kafka Fragments – one of Kurtág’s most substantial pieces, written in 1985–87 – as absorbing as it is. It’s a piece which stands for everything that’s great about aphorism: the minute length of each setting gives room for every single word to resonate, and Kurtág is the most sensitive of text-setters, clearly concerned with letting the text speak as well as with adding his own voice. Kurtág’s presence never silences Kafka, but nor does he follow him blindly: the florid, almost Monteverdian melodies he gives the soprano in the final setting – the one quoted at the start – are a typical gesture, at once totally unexpected and also completely fitting; a fascinating new perspective on the words.
The downfall of this staged production of Kafka Fragments is its inability to do just this: to add a new perspective on the artwork it engages with. When the text being sung is “Someone tugged at my clothes but I shook him off”, there is simply no need to project an image of someone tugging at some clothes, however artfully that image is created. When a sentence starts with the words “My ear”, everyone is then going to be thinking about ears anyway, meaning that we don’t need to be shown a big picture of an ear. I ended up feeling slightly patronised by the idea that Kafka’s open-ended, elliptical phrases – not to mention Kurtág’s equally beguiling music – were deemed to require some sort of visual spelling-out, as if my attention span might not have been able to cope with an hour lacking any visual stimulus.