BBC Music Magazine

David Hertzberg

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The Rose Elf

Samantha Hankey, Andrew Bogard, Sydney Mancasola, Kirk Dougherty; various musicians/robert Kahn Meyer Media MM 20044 53:13 mins

Like his awardwinni­ng The Wake World, David Hertzberg’s The Rose

Elf explores languorous netherworl­ds of desire and death; cruelty, beauty and putrescenc­e. Around two-thirds the earlier opera’s length, the libretto is a florid adaption of what he describes as Andersen’s ‘antic’ fairytale, which charts the murder of a girl’s beloved by her Brother and its aftermath through the eyes of a rose-dwelling Elf. The score is exquisitel­y wrought, with a shimmering, sumptuousl­y dissonant harmonic palette strongly reminiscen­t of Schreker – and the cast of four plus nine-piece ensemble perform it with seductive intensity under conductor Robert Kahn. As a vehicle for Samantha Hankey’s rich, clear mezzo the title role is particular­ly choice.

Yet the line between erotic malaise and dramatic inertia is a fine one, and the gothic horror has a sadistic edge that proves uncomforta­ble. In Andersen’s story, the Elf marshals bees and flowers to exact revenge on the girl’s behalf. Here, however, there is no such reckoning as he sings her into a sleep-death that sums up her lack of agency throughout. Opera is full of tortured victims of course – and not all of them are female. But the passivity of this one feels grimly necrotic. Steph Power PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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