BBC Music Magazine

Scott Ordway

-

The Outer Edge of Youth

Amy Broadbent (soprano), Emily Marvosh (contralto); The Thirteen/ Matthew Robertson

Acis Production­s APL 30001 81:32 mins

Did American composerli­brettist Scott Ordway draw inspiratio­n from Attar of Nishapur? His ‘choral opera’ The Outer Edge of Youth (2020) contains

echoes of the Sufi’s celebrated The Conference of the Birds in its journey from innocence to awakening via parables delivered by talking birds. The language is rhetorical­ly archaic, and the setting recalls oratorio in its detached, semi-dramatic characteri­sation and dialogue: yet Ordway’s narrative is secular, and strongly topical. Representi­ng ‘the inner lives of boys … [who are] desperatel­y searching for beauty’, Sebastian and Nicholas find themselves able to understand forest birds, who teach them about human love and empathy.

Supported by The Thirteen and a similarly excellent trio of cellos plus double bass under director Matthew Robertson, soprano Amy Broadbent and contralto Emily Marvosh are fervent as Sebastian and Nicholas respective­ly. Yet, beautiful as they undoubtedl­y are here, mature female voices sound odd in the roles of the boys whose words, moreover, possess a sophistica­tion that belies their supposed youth. When Sebastian declares ‘this endless longing overflows … Even as I am a child, I see a wider world,’ there’s an uncomforta­ble sense of the adult composer behind him – and Ordway’s message is not always helped by a tendency to languorous sentimenta­lity. Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom