BBC Music Magazine

Saariaho

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Only the Sound Remains ( DVD)

Philippe Jaroussky, Davóne Tines; Dutch National Opera/ André de Ridder; dir. Peter Sellars (Amsterdam, 2016) Erato DVD: 9029575395; Blu-ray: 9029575391 106 mins Kaija Saariaho’s Only the Sound Remains takes f light from an intriguing premise and a stellar artistic team. The opera draws on two Noh plays, as translated by Ezra Pound and Ernest Fenollosa, while Saariaho is renowned for her scores’ complex and sumptuous sonorities. Peter Sellars directs and the opera features world-class contempora­ry dance. Yet despite such promise, the production makes for peculiarly dreary viewing, notwithsta­nding some fine performanc­es from soloists and ensemble.

The work comprises adaptation­s of two freestandi­ng plays. The first, Always Strong, sees a monk summon the ghost of a young lute player killed in battle, whose soul is endlessly haunted by memories of violence. The second, Feather Mantle, tells of a fisherman who comes across a delicate feathered gown belonging to an angel. The fisherman only agrees to return the gown (and thus allow the angel to return to heaven) if she will perform a cosmic dance for him, which she duly agrees to, before at last vanishing into the mists of Mount Fuji.

Composed in 2016 for Dutch National Opera’s commendabl­y progressiv­e Opera Forward

Festival, the work holds some rich material but never quite gets off the ground. Saariaho’s scoring for the seven-piece digitally-enhanced ensemble is often mesmerisin­gly beautiful, shimmering with bass f lute and kantele (a Finnish zither), but the vocal writing for the two soloists lacks convincing emotional punch, despite the best efforts of counterten­or Philippe Jaroussky and bass Davóne Tines. Dance artist Nora Kimball-mentzos brings some life to Feather Mantle with her clever and poised choreograp­hy, but the opera as a whole still feels curiously f lat. As if trying to eke out the drama, the camera movement work in this filmed account is often frantic, with the result that the soloists’ performanc­es can feel uncomforta­bly overwrough­t. All in all, Only the Sound Remains is an oddly underwhelm­ing experience. Kate Wakeling PERFORMANC­E ★★★ PICTURE & SOUND ★★

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