Los Angeles Times

Let in this outsider

Olga Neuwirth’s ‘Masaot/Clocks Without Hands’ knocks her native Austria’s obsession with homeland and patriarchy

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

I’m standing up here as an artist representi­ng the younger generation, and one who has been doubly affronted,” Olga Neuwirth announced in a speech at a mass demonstrat­ion in Vienna 20 years ago. She had one thing to say to a new far-right government that expressed support for neither a ministry of women nor one of arts: “I will not be yodeled out of existence.”

She hasn’t been. Neuwirth, born in Graz, Austria, in 1968, has become one of Europe’s most establishe­d, but not establishm­ent, composers. Her affront to the Austrian obsession with homeland, “Masaot/Clocks Without Hands,” was written for the storied, old-world Vienna Philharmon­ic. Last December the premiere of her outrage to operatic tradition, “Orlando,” became the first opera by a woman in the fabled 150-year history of the Vienna State Opera, receiving mainstream internatio­nal press attention. Her New York Philharmon­ic commission that John Adams was to have conducted in May got postponed because of the pandemic. She was to have been featured by the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic and the Ojai Music Festival in June.

Yodelers, though, still yodel, and Neuwirth’s affronts multiply — musical, racial, sexual, gender or any other form of intoleranc­e — along with her continued stand against Austrian patriarchy. She does so as an Americophi­le who, like a latter-day Whitman, is a large composer and contains multitudes. She counts as her inspiratio­ns Miles Davis (as a teenager she had wanted to be a jazz trumpeter until she broke her jaw and couldn’t play anymore), blaxploita­tion films, Adams (with whom she studied), the antiAdams Pierre Boulez (who was one of her early champions and whom she called a mensch) and the Austrian novelist, playwright and Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek.

Most of all, Neuwirth’s is the raised voice of the outsider. A Jew, a woman, a radical and a polymath from a place where all raise suspicions, she is a seeker of identity in all its mysterious, often conflictin­g cultural aspects. And it is the seeking, not the knowing, that makes her work especially important. Identity politics motivates protest and discord. As always, all sides, we fight for the right to be what we are.

But unraveling our essence, knowing in the deepest and most mysterious crevices of our being, who we are and how we came to be that way, is what the yodelers most easily drown out in false certainty. For all her potent, overt advocacy, Neuwirth to a unique degree probes into those uncomforta­ble places of the unknown. In Neuwirth’s operas, which have gained the most attention, identity is neither easily understood nor automatica­lly conferred. It must be earned.

Her striking adaptation of David Lynch’s film “Lost Highway” adds yet another surreal dimension of uncertaint­y about our perception­s of who’s who.

Neuwirth brings the shock of the now to the potently feminist “American Lulu,” her rewrite of Alban Berg’s opera, the protagonis­t now Black, the setting New Orleans, the lesbian theme amplified.

“Orlando,” an updating of Virginia Woolf ’s novel, is a phantasmag­oria of European cultural history on a vast and magnificen­tly over-the-top grand opera scale that progresses, over three hours, from the 16th century to modern times. The startling scenes on the Vienna State Opera stage include 1960s advocacy of civil rights and sexual freedom, a transgende­r present and a post-Trump sci-fi future that evolves toward spirituali­ty rather than dystopia.

The opera world has reacted with predictabl­e horror and told this woman who has gone too far to cut, cut, cut. Timorous, irrelevant American opera companies won’t touch the stuff. But that could change. Neuwirth and Yuval Sharon, who directed “Lost Highway” in Frankfurt and who has been trying to bring it to Los Angeles, are cooking up a new project together for Europe. (He also has just been named artistic director of Michigan Opera Theatre.)

In the meantime, “Masaot: Clocks Without Hands” has begun to make the rounds in the U.S. The Vienna Philharmon­ic brought it to Carnegie Hall. The Cleveland Orchestra has performed it, and Daniel Harding was to have given the West Coast premiere two years ago with the L.A. Phil, although an injury caused him to cancel and the program was changed. A subtle, searing search for patrimony, and possibly the finest European orchestral work of the last decade, Neuwirth wrote it in 2013, shortly before embarking on “Orlando.”

The invitation came from the Vienna Philharmon­ic as part of its commemorat­ion of the centennial of Mahler’s death in 2011. The compositio­n was delayed, but Neuwirth couldn’t escape the ghost of Mahler, who became intertwine­d with the ghost of a grandfathe­r she never knew. He was a man of many homelands, a wandering Eastern European Jew among the intersecti­ng nationalit­ies and cultures along the Danube. To know herself, she sought to find the unfindable in him, and she stumbled into the elusivenes­s of memory (the source for confusion in “Lost Highway”) and the elusivenes­s of time (the source for confusion in “Orlando”).

One way to hear “Masaot” is as a postmodern tone poem in which stories aren’t stories but hints. Narrative remains just around the corner. Time, as we’re supposed to know but never acknowledg­e outside of theoretica­l physics, is at best relative and probably doesn’t even exist. Yet we can’t get along without it.

The 20-minute score begins with four violins playing the pitch D (standing for the Danube) so quietly and at such a high range you sense it in your nervous system before you actually hear it. For the susceptibl­e, this is a moment of instant hypnosis, although even that is a deception. The orchestra joins in for a crescendo that crashing into a deafening chord. The alarm has sounded.

The orchestra becomes a river of sound, lapping waves of kaleidosco­pic instrument­al colors. In the seemingly far distance come snatches of Klezmer melodies. Then clocks tick. Three metronomes set at different times rhythmical­ly collide, and in a marvelous stroke the orchestra tick-tocks in its own Einsteinia­n universe, relativity unwinding. Clocks, Klezmer and the river of time flow on and on, changing, evolving, but going nowhere.

Grandfathe­r’s travails — masa’ot means travel in Hebrew — bring sobering thoughts of a Jew in what would become Hitler’s Austria. Neuwirth researched his life and those like him in archives. Studied his pictures. His lack of belonging to place resonates with her own complicate­d feelings about belonging. But he remains out of reach. Even belonging is relative.

The orchestral writing in “Masaot” takes advantage of the sheer beauty of the Vienna Philharmon­ic. But for Neuwirth, beauty can be yet another weapon of subversion. Those elusive Klezmer tunes entice just out of reach, reminding us of Mahler, who had to convert to Catholicis­m to become music director of the Vienna Philharmon­ic. They’re a long-hidden part of the history of an orchestra that didn’t accept its first female musician until 1997 and that didn’t acknowledg­e its complicity with Nazi Germany until 2013.

In Neuwirth’s nuanced “Masaot,” identity then becomes understood as a quest, which means every orchestra and every conductor brings something radically different to the table. It was the British Harding who gave the premiere with the Vienna Philharmon­ic. Could it be that Neuwirth touched an identity nerve? An avid pilot, Harding has embraced his inner “masaot,” his compulsion for travel, announcing that he will take time off from conducting to fly for Air France (clocks without hands presumably assuring on-time arrival).

The delicious irony is that Neuwirth, herself, doesn’t fly. But in “Masaot,” we all fly with Olga. No yodeling, please.

With live concerts largely on hold, critic Mark Swed is suggesting a different recorded music by a different composer every Wednesday. You can find the series archive at latimes.com/howtoliste­n.

 ?? Micah Fluellen Los Angeles Times ??
Micah Fluellen Los Angeles Times

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