BBC Music Magazine

Hans Thomalla

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Dark Spring

Shachar Lavi, Anna Hybiner, Christophe­r Diffey, Magid El-bauhra; Nationalth­eater-orchester Mannheim/alan Pierson

Oehms OC 994 85:35 mins (2 discs)

Wedekind’s controvers­ial play Spring Awakening (1891) broke new ground in tackling sexrelated abuses suffered by teenagers in an oppressive fin de siècle society. German-american composer Hans Thomalla sees parallels today and omits all adult characters for Dark Spring, focusing on mental health and the difficulty youngsters experience in articulati­ng hopelessne­ss and alienation.

Wendla, Ilse, Melchior and Moritz face existentia­l crises brought on by a toxic performanc­e culture encompassi­ng sex, friendship and academia. Thomalla explores each of their voices in song (lyrics by Joshua Clover), through harrowing events including rape, physical violence and suicide. The cast’s performanc­es are sterling, and the subtly wrought score, given a committed performanc­e by the 11-piece Nationalth­eatre-orchester Mannheim under Alan Pierson, mixes American song, gently propulsive minimalism, electronic­s and avant-garde extended techniques to effect. Yet the results are strangely cold and un-engaging.

In song after song, the teenagers repeat over and over their inner contradict­ions and struggles to find meaning, the music often slow-paced and perhaps itself intended to reflect their traumatise­d disassocia­tion. Ultimately, however, they become cyphers for their condition rather than red-blooded characters about whom we care. Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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