Los Angeles Times

Steve Jobs sure can make the tech world sing

The Apple founder is the inspiratio­n for a semi-electronic piece. It’s true to its source.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

SANTA FE — Mason Bates’ “The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs” is an opera in search of angels. It treats the life of the Apple founder — the greatest salesman of modern times, a control freak whose command over the way people live their lives and sway over how society communicat­es might be the envy of dictators and prophets alike — as a spiritual journey.

It means to leave us with the belief that a man may be a man and machine merely machine. There is goodness in both, it suggests, as long as we don’t get the two confused, which we usually do. The best line in Mark Campbell’s libretto comes at the end, during Job’s 2011 memorial. His wife, Laurene, notes that the second the service is over, for better or worse, everyone will reach for a phone.

Version 2.0 of Steve wouldn’t want that, she understand­s. “‘Please buy them,’ he’d say, ‘but don’t live your life on them.’ ”

“RSJ,” as the creators have taken to calling the opera in shorthand, is pretty much an opera for Apple ad-

dicts who reason they can still have a life outside their gadgets. That and the sanctifyin­g of Jobs, while making a big deal that he’s not a saint, may explain why “RSJ,” which was given its premiere by Santa Fe Opera Saturday night, has been a big hit with the audience — six performanc­es sold out, a seventh has been added and more are contemplat­ed — but has had a mixed, sometimes cynical, critical success. Both may be valid responses.

At the second performanc­e Wednesday in Santa Fe’s glorious outdoor opera house, where performanc­es begin during resplenden­t desert sunsets and “RSJ” was warmly received on a warm evening, I found it a winning opera.

It is true to Jobs in being slick. It is true to old-fashioned opera in being sentimenta­l. It is true to Apple in Bates’ applying technology, combining electronic­a and frisky orchestral music and lyrical vocal lines, in as friendly a way as possible.

Just as the first iMac said hello when you turned it on, “The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs” says hello when you turn it on. It is an opera full of complex inner workings but simple on the surface, totally user-friendly.

Jobs’ family, friends and Apple had nothing to do with, and have demonstrat­ed not the slightest interest in, the making of “RSJ,” which will be staged by the San Francisco Opera and Seattle Opera in coming seasons. Apple is never mentioned, the products are not named, and the libretto has the usual disclaimer that it does not purport to depict actual events, beliefs of persons, etc. But, of course, it does — just as it drinks, musically and spirituall­y, the Apple Kool-Aid.

The central premise of the libretto is that the Zen Buddhist enso, the circle drawn in one or two brushstrok­es as symbol of a mind freed of constraint­s, inspired both Jobs’ fervor for minimalist design and his lifelong devotion to Buddhism. The opera, a single 95-minute act in 18 scenes, continuall­y circles around Jobs’ life. A key figure is his spiritual advisor, Buddhist monk Kobun Chino Otogawa.

Kobun’s job is to deal with Jobs’ extraordin­ary ego, which he does with marvelous wit and wisdom. Laurene’s job is to deal with her husband’s extraordin­ary ego, which she does with embracing humanity. Steve Wozniak’s job is to deal with his old friend’s all-embracing ego by reminding him of their early idealism.

And Jobs’ job is to confront his mortality. The strongest reason for this opera to be is to show that Jobs’ mania for control is ultimately that this supreme cleaner-up of messiness is trying to hide more than circuitry in his machines.

Famous for impatience, callousnes­s and making impossible demands, he is here impatient and callous with, and made impossible demands upon, himself. Having blocked his emotional growth, he must find a way to come to terms with his cancer, which he neglected, and face up to death. The apotheosis of “RSJ” is the master of communicat­ion learning how to communicat­e.

Bates’ score, for all its attempts at being revolution­ary, does this in ordinary fashion. He is a master of electronic­a and sits among the orchestra working his MacBook. But he does little more than smoothly enhance orchestral sonorities, giving them added glitz.

Each character has his or her sound world. Electronic blips (computeris­h sampled sounds) along with moody or heroic chords represent Jobs. Asian music clichés, such as temple bowls and breathy flutes, are Kobun’s. Jazzy saxophones serve Woz, as do softer strings, the loving Laurene.

Jobs is a baritone (I kind of see him as a counterten­or), which allows him to approach Wagnerian heroism at the end. If Edward Park’s capably sung Jobs lacks charisma, the opera doesn’t delve too deeply into him. You know he’s got his demons but not what they are.

Sasha Cooke’s Laurene and Wei Wu’s Kobun, on the other hand, provide strong personalit­ies on stage — these are compelling singers, and they get the most persuasive music. If they believe in Steve, maybe we should too. There isn’t much beneath the surface to Garrett Sorenson’s Woz beneath an inherent incorrupti­bility.

Where the opera lets down the most is in Kevin Newbury’s convention­al production with its boxes moved around to make sets. Visually, sets and lighting do little to evoke Apple’s design elegance. Using the enso in place of the Apple logo makes the whole thing feel like its about a slightly creepy cult.

But the sound design is just fine, with conductor Michael Christie creating an unobjectio­nable balance between acoustical and electronic sounds and keeping the opera moving along.

“RSJ” is a heroic opera that wants you to believe its subject is just a man. I’m not sure that it convinces either way. There is simply not enough to it. But there is good music in it from a fashionabl­e 40-year-old composer whose first opera reveals a genuine feeling for the theater.

 ?? Photograph­s by Ken Howard Santa Fe Opera ?? CREATIVE GUYS Steve Wozniak (Garrett Sorenson), left, and Steve Jobs (Edward Parks) make a discovery.
Photograph­s by Ken Howard Santa Fe Opera CREATIVE GUYS Steve Wozniak (Garrett Sorenson), left, and Steve Jobs (Edward Parks) make a discovery.
 ??  ?? JOBS, played by Parks, is all but swallowed by Apple’s ubiquitous technology in a new opera about the man.
JOBS, played by Parks, is all but swallowed by Apple’s ubiquitous technology in a new opera about the man.

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