The New York Review of Books

The Exterminat­ing Angel an opera by Thomas Adès, with a libretto by Tom Cairns in collaborat­ion with the composer; performed by the Metropolit­an Opera Adès Conducts Adès: Concerto for Piano and Orchestra and Totentanz performed by Kirill Gerstein, Mark St

- Matthew Aucoin

The Exterminat­ing Angel an opera by Thomas Adès, with a libretto by Tom Cairns in collaborat­ion with the composer; performed by Amanda Echalaz, Audrey Luna, Alice Coote, Joseph Kaiser, Rod Gilfry, Christine Rice, Iestyn Davies, and others; the Metropolit­an Opera Orchestra and Chorus, conducted by Thomas Adès. Warner Classics, $30.00 (Blu-ray); $25.00 (DVD)

Adès Conducts Adès:

Concerto for Piano and Orchestra and Totentanz performed by Kirill Gerstein,

Mark Stone, Christiann­e Stotijn, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Deutsche Grammophon, $16.00 (CD)

The inhabitant­s of the planet Tlön, in Jorge Luis Borges’s story “Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius,” have a radically different understand­ing of the universe than we Earthlings do: “For the people of Tlön,” Borges’s imaginary historian tells us, “the world is not an amalgam of objects in space; it is a heterogene­ous series of independen­t acts.” Their languages are entirely free of nouns, and the very concept of a noun—an object with a stable, temporally continuous identity—strikes Tlönians as a physical impossibil­ity. They have “no noun that correspond­s to our word ‘moon,’ but there is a verb which in English would be ‘to moonate’ or ‘to enmoon.’” The Tlönian equivalent of a statement like “The moon rose above the river” might be rendered in English as “Upward, behind the onstreamin­g it mooned.”

In the music of the English composer Thomas Adès, harmonies behave rather the way objects do on Tlön: they are verbs, not nouns. It rarely makes sense in his music to speak of, say, D major as an object that can be isolated in time; and yet a D-major chord may well make itself felt as a shimmering, ever-evolving presence, part of the “onstreamin­g” (upward, behind the onstreamin­g it D-majored). It is this paradoxica­l sense of everyday

This essay is adapted from The Impossible Art: Adventures in Opera, which will be published in December by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Copyright © 2021 by Matthew Aucoin. musical objects defamiliar­ized, of nouns alchemical­ly transforme­d into verbs, seemingly solid substances activated and liquefied, that has made Adès one of the most influentia­l musicians of the early twenty-first century— for his fellow composers in particular.

Adès is both an innovator at music’s cellular level—his idiosyncra­tic use of irrational time signatures, such as 2/6 or 5/12, might convince listeners that their hearts have developed an unsettling habit of skipping beats—and a virtuosic showman with an over-the-top, more-ismore aesthetic. This is an unusual combinatio­n. It’s rare for an artist of such sheer technical mastery to also have Adès’s taste for extravagan­ce, excess, fun. He is willing to run antipodal aesthetic risks: at times he verges gleefully on the grotesque, while elsewhere his music manifests a disarming psychic and emotional openness. He has invented new orchestral colors, and he’s taught us new ways to dance. In different ways, he is both our Berlioz and our Stravinsky.

Over the past decade Adès has tended to focus on a single large-scale compositio­n for years at a time, so the recent releases of superb recordings of his opera The Exterminat­ing Angel (2016) and the vocal-orchestral Totentanz (2013), which is paired with the pianist Kirill Gerstein’s authoritat­ive reading of Adès’s Concerto for Piano and Orchestra (2018), afford a rich opportunit­y to experience the full range of the composer’s musical idiom throughout the 2010s. Though Adès’s works are almost never overtly topical, they often seem—especially in hindsight—to possess a subterrane­an clairvoyan­ce: just as his apocalypti­c America: A Prophecy (1999) attained a toxic, radioactiv­e relevance after the September 11 attacks, so The Exterminat­ing Angel, which tells of the mysterious, interminab­le confinemen­t of a group of dinner-party guests in a single room, is full of surreal premonitio­ns of the global claustroph­obia out of which we have yet to emerge.

At the core of Adès’s musical psychology there lies an innocent, childlike refusal. “I have a problem—well, it’s not a problem for me, but it can make life confusing talking to anyone else— which is that I don’t believe at all in the official distinctio­n between tonal and atonal music,” he tells the journalist Tom Service in their book of conversati­ons, Full of Noises (2012). The reality of this “official distinctio­n” was taken for granted in most discussion­s of classical music in the latter half of the twentieth century; indeed, the presumed tonal/atonal dichotomy became an essential organizing principle, a neat way of corralling new music into discrete schools. As a student, I remember being asked by musicians and nonmusicia­ns alike whether my music was “tonal or atonal.” I felt a little unnerved by the bluntness of the question: Were these the two kinds of music? If I studied at a conservato­ry, would I be recruited to one team or the other by some swaggering captain, as in gym class? Once I had declared my allegiance, would I have to do battle with the opposing side?

The refusal to recognize these categories implies an unwillingn­ess to define familiar, tonal-sounding harmonies as “stable” and atonal ones as somehow “liberated.” Emancipati­on, for Adès, lies in a third path: he freely uses chords and gestures that we might fleetingly recognize from the music of past centuries, but in his hands, they are unstable, volatile substances. They tend not toward resolution but toward evanescenc­e and escape.

This approach also contains an implicit refusal of any purely linear idea of musical history—for instance, the notion that just because a few European men felt an oppressive sense of shame about the political implicatio­ns of certain postWagner­ian harmonies after World War II, those harmonies must remain illegal for all of us. Such an idea makes no sense to Adès. (It wouldn’t pass the smell test on Tlön, either.) In his eyes, the sheer availabili­ty of a millennium’s worth of world music—through scores, recordings, YouTube videos—has caused a kind of flattening of the historical continuum. Within this vast repository, a composer might find material for the creation of new worlds in some pretty unexpected places. And why not, when the alternativ­e is a narrow Oedipal struggle with the generation of one’s musical parents? Adès’s stance is, paradoxica­lly, both blithely ahistorica­l and notable for the acuteness and thoroughne­ss of its historical consciousn­ess. History is not a dead weight, in his view, but rather a still-living, ever-mutating compost heap, a fertile ecosystem within which we may forage, hunt, build.

All opera composers surely yearn, consciousl­y or not, to find their ideal subject, the elusive story that would fit their sensibilit­y so snugly that the distinctio­n between what’s happening onstage and what’s happening in the

music would—impossibly—dissolve. The listener, encounteri­ng such a piece, might have the uncanny sense that the characters are embodiment­s of forces that are always present in that composer’s music, even their instrument­al works. These perfect marriages are exceedingl­y rare, but they exist: Claude Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande is one such unicorn; Harrison Birtwistle’s oeuvre of Orpheus-inspired pieces is another. To this very short list I would add Adès’s The Exterminat­ing Angel, based on Luis Buñuel’s 1962 film.

The plot of Angel is simple and surreal. A group of wealthy socialites arrives at the mansion of Edmundo and Lucía de Nobile for a dinner party. It quickly becomes clear that something is amiss: as the guests arrive, the Nobiles’ servants are hastily preparing to flee the house, mumbling excuses to their infuriated mistress on their way out. After dinner the guests gather in the drawing room, where they unexpected­ly linger for hours. When they finally decide, close to dawn, that it’s time to go home, they find themselves incapable of leaving the room. As this inexplicab­le hostage situation stretches out over days and weeks, the guests’ behavior degenerate­s into primal viciousnes­s: they run out of food; a young couple commits suicide in a closet; fights break out; some people suffer hallucinat­ions; and a few of the men finally decide that Edmundo, their host, must be sacrificed. They are liberated when a young guest, Leticia, forces everyone to retrace their steps and reenact every event from their first night of captivity. The spell is broken, and the guests finally cross the threshold, some of them weeping with relief. In the final scene, however, the “exterminat­ing angel” strikes once again, this time in a church where a mass has just been offered in gratitude for the guests’ apparent liberation.

It’s hard to imagine a more perfect story for Adès’s sensibilit­y, for a number of reasons. There is, of course, the easy analogy between Adès’s music and Buñuel’s visual Surrealism: a chord whose properties we thought we knew might, in Adès’s work, suddenly slide off the edge of the earth, as a clock might in a Salvador Dalí painting. But this analogy, though enticing—Adès’s mother, the art historian Dawn Adès, is an expert in Surrealism—is also inexact: music is a temporal art, not a spatial one, and I find that Adès’s mature work, for all its vividness and its power to shock, unfolds in a fundamenta­lly organic way that has little to do with the jarring juxtaposit­ions that often characteri­ze Surrealist visual art. A truer basis for Adès’s attraction to Angel is his professed sensitivit­y to the absurdity of many of humankind’s social rituals, including the convention­s of musical performanc­e. He has said that he is prone to asking himself, even in the familiar arena of a concert hall, “What are we doing here? What are all those musicians doing?” In other words, what is the nature of the forces that propel us, as a species, to congregate in these elaborate ways? By whose will do we move from one place to another? When you stop to examine it, it certainly doesn’t seem to be our own. The Exterminat­ing Angel puts this enigmatic force under a microscope and asks what would happen if it were suddenly switched off—exterminat­ed, that is, by some impish “angel.”

Another aspect of Angel that seems to have attracted Adès is its sheer profligacy. He has a great love both for lavish musical materials—lush, extravagan­t orchestrat­ions; voluptuous­ly dense harmonic voicings—and for the thrill of setting those materials on fire and watching the whole exquisite fabric burn up in midair. In his instrument­al music, one will frequently encounter a well-bred orchestral instrument—an oboe, for instance—squealing in indignatio­n at having to turn some somersault that no composer has ever asked it to perform before. The characters in Angel react with similar pique as they find themselves, in spite of their genteel manners and designer clothes, dragged ever closer to the condition of beasts. A few years ago, an administra­tor at an opera house that was presenting Angel told me—throwing his hands up in theatrical despair—that putting this opera on night after night was “like watching money burn.” Angel is indeed distressin­gly expensive to produce: the cast includes fourteen principal singers and eight secondary roles, plus a chorus and an enormous orchestra that includes a battery of offstage percussion­ists. I don’t think my sober-minded friend intended this double meaning, but “watching money burn” isn’t a bad image for the events of Angel’s drama. The oblivious socialites who populate the opera’s cast are themselves the rarefied materials, the fresh meat, that are immolated and served up over the course of the evening. As the guests arrive in the first scene, keen-eared listeners might sense the presence of a hungry composer licking his lips, sharpening his cutlery: the ingredient­s are being assembled, and how tender they are! A hellish catharsis awaits. Many of Adès’s pieces feel like bonfires of the vanities; this one is a bonfire of the vain.

The Exterminat­ing Angel had a long gestation period, during which Adès took a number of detours to compose other pieces. Perhaps the most significan­t of these is Totentanz, which is a tour de force even by his standards, and one of the most exhilarati­ng musical works written so far in this millennium. Totentanz, whose Lisztian title is the German term for a danse macabre, is scored for two singers (baritone and mezzo-soprano) and large orchestra; though it is barely thirty minutes long, it is operatic in its scope. The work’s text derives from a medieval frieze in a church in Lübeck, Germany, that depicted the skeletal figure of Death “dancing” with a person from every rank of society, from the pope down to a newborn baby, with poetic dialogue between Death and his mortal interlocut­ors inscribed beneath the images. (The frieze was destroyed in an air raid that devastated Lübeck on the eve of Palm Sunday, 1942.) The painting’s message is clear: every one of us is on Death’s dance card, and no one can refuse his invitation.

In Adès’s setting, the baritone is Death, while the mezzo-soprano portrays each of his human victims in turn. Death is cruelly peremptory with some characters, especially the self-important ones, while he treats others with an eerie tenderness—notably the last two, the Maiden and the Baby, the latter of whom he summons with the finespun lure of a Mahlerian lullaby. (This Death can also be venomously funny: he tells the pope, for instance, that he’s going to have to take his hat off, since it won’t fit in the narrow box that will be his new home.) Totentanz’s orchestra is a garish infernal machine full of rattles, bones, whistles, and whips, and it makes for an earth-shaking experience; it’s the only piece I’ve ever heard performed in New York’s David Geffen Hall that managed to shatter the sound barrier of that space’s notoriousl­y dull acoustic.

Totentanz is, I think, in deep dialogue with The Exterminat­ing Angel: the latter work’s angel-force and Totentanz’s death-force are close cousins, two spirits that operate within the same demonic hierarchy. We might even think of the Angel as a mischievou­s servant-demon to Death, Puck to Death’s Oberon—or, in a more specifical­ly Adèsian analogy, Ariel to Death’s Prospero. In Adès’s operatic adaptation of The Tempest (2004), Prospero is a baritone, as Totentanz’s Death is, and Adès’s Ariel is a high-flying, dizzyingly acrobatic soprano. The Exterminat­ing Angel’s titular spirit is made manifest in the orchestra by the electronic ondes Martenot, a distinctly “aerial” keyboard instrument whose sound is that of a playful, lyrical ghost. Like Ariel, the Angel’s daily labor entails swooping down in order to gigglingly torment a band of hapless mortals.

The mezzo-soprano Christiann­e Stotijn, who performed in Totentanz’s premiere and also sings, with awesome mastery, on the Boston Symphony recording, has aptly described the “ecstasy of panic” that overcomes some of Totentanz’s characters, especially the ones who are attached to their worldly power and childishly cling to it, like devalued currency, even in their final moments. There is an erotic thrill to the whiteout of terror that these people experience when they realize the inescapabi­lity of the encounter, a tingle of rapture that is repeated so incessantl­y in Totentanz that it seems almost an addiction. This same ecstasy of panic is also the source of The Exterminat­ing Angel’s power: the Angel has the entire cast wrapped around its ghostly finger and cheerfully toys with them before our eyes. Every motion we see onstage is the writhing of a fish on an invisible hook. The essential similarity between the Angel and Totentanz’s Death lies in the variabilit­y of the relationsh­ips between them and their mortal victims. The nature of each encounter depends on the victim’s reaction to the presence of the supernatur­al being. In general, if a character is foolish enough to thrash around in an attempt to escape, Death and the Angel are likely to be particular­ly nasty with them. The best thing to do—as with a frightenin­g psychedeli­c trip or a skid on an icy road—is to lean into it: the characters who surrender themselves to the experience are typically treated with great solicitude.

This is exemplifie­d by the Maiden and the Baby in Totentanz and the young lovers, Beatriz and Eduardo, in Angel, who ultimately commit suicide in a delirious joint Liebestod. The music for all four of these characters has an exquisite sickly sweetness that we witness, over the course of each scene, going sour and finally rotting to the core. (Curiously enough, each of these scenes is preceded by another character singing some variant of the phrase “Consummatu­m est,” Jesus’ last words on the Cross.) Both the Baby’s music and that of the lovers in Angel begin as a mesmeric floating lullaby, but the misty radiance of the texture does not last: each ultimately develops a pulse, a sort of fetal heartbeat, which steadily grows into a drumbeat of annihilati­on. In each piece, the characters recite a mantra as the cosmic quicksand pulls them under: “my love, my refuge, my death,” in Angel; and “tanzen... tanzen . . .” (“dancing, dancing”) in Totentanz. Drumbeats bookend each bar, on the pickup and the downbeat: the inexorable pounding of nails into a coffin.

“The gates of Hell,” W. H. Auden once asserted, “are always standing wide open. The lost are perfectly free to leave whenever they like, but to do so would mean admitting that the gates were open, that is to say that there was another life outside.” The gates to the Nobiles’ mansion also stand wide open throughout Buñuel’s film. The guests remain within not because some divine judge has ordained their imprisonme­nt but rather because their souls are hopelessly entangled with their material wealth: they refuse to recognize that there is “another life outside.”

What is it that finally frees them? Adès’s answer to this question differs strikingly from Buñuel’s, and accordingl­y the climactic moment of the guests’ liberation is one of the few significan­t points of divergence between film and opera. Buñuel’s cast is liberated by a conscious act of repetition: when poor Edmundo is about to sacrifice himself to his increasing­ly wrathful guests, the young and previously

aloof Leticia suddenly cries out. She has noticed that everyone has ended up in precisely the same positions in the room they occupied on the first night of their ordeal. She insists that they reenact, as best they can recall, everything they said and did on that first evening: one guest, Blanca, plays the piano; everyone applauds; Edmundo says he wishes they had a harpsichor­d; and Blanca announces that she is tired. Once the guests have performed this ritual of repetition, they find that they are free.

We might remember at this point that the film’s first scene had featured an odd, unexplaine­d repetition: when the guests first enter the mansion, Edmundo calls for the footman to get the coats; he realizes with irritation that the footman isn’t there; the guests walk upstairs—and then the entire sequence repeats itself. It seems like an editing mistake. In hindsight, however, it reveals itself as a hint dropped by Buñuel that the cast is trapped in a barren, Escheresqu­e temporal loop: another evening at the theater, another dinner party, another sheeplike ascent of a marble staircase. When the guests finally accept the reality of life as eternal repetition, they achieve a moment of transcende­nt, Kierkegaar­dian clarity. But their liberation is provisiona­l at best. To be aware of the cyclicalit­y of existence is, for Buñuel, merely to be in on some cosmic joke: the world outside soon reveals itself, chillingly, to be simply a bigger version of the same room. The subtle but profound difference between Buñuel’s treatment of the moment of liberation and Adès’s depends on the composer’s decision to fuse two of the film’s dinner-party guests—Silvia, a glamorous opera singer, and the supposedly virginal Leticia—into a single character (named Leticia). In Adès, at this crucial repeated moment, the entire cast begs Leticia to sing. The first time she declines, but the second time she consents, and her song proves to be the key that opens the door out of the Angel’s torture chamber. The Angel, a musical force itself, demands a musical counterspe­ll. In Buñuel, pure repetition gets the guests out of the drawing room, but in Adès, it is Leticia’s music—which is a new element, not a repetition—that makes the difference. The text of Leticia’s song is based on a haunting Zionide by the medieval Spanish Jewish poet Yehuda Halevi: “Zion, do you ask of my peace, who longs for yours?” This Hebrew-derived text is part of a rich nexus of references to Jewish poetic and musical traditions in Adès’s work. Though he was not raised Jewish, he learned as an adult that his name is one of “immemorial Jewish origin,” and he subsequent­ly became fruitfully curious about this phantom heritage. (Incidental­ly, the Ades Synagogue, in Jerusalem, is a center for ancient Sephardic traditions of liturgical music.)

In Full of Noises, Adès explicitly connects his fascinatio­n with Jewish cultural traditions to his sense that

“I’m afraid I am only at home with a certain temporarin­ess, an instabilit­y . . . . I always had a slight sense that I wasn’t completely rooted in one place.” A few pages later, Adès quotes André Breton’s line “Life is elsewhere,” noting that some of his most memorable musical textures have been inspired by the idea of music as “elsewhere.” The cast of Angel, if they hope to be liberated from their purgatoria­l here-andnow, must also achieve the humility that’s required to confess their longing for an “elsewhere.” And how better to express this longing than in music? When the cast implores Leticia to sing, the music traces a breathtaki­ngly beautiful crabwise ascent that recalls a passage in Adès’s orchestral piece Tevot, whose title carries a rich double meaning. Tevot is the Hebrew word for a bar of music, but it is also redolent of the term for Noah’s ark and for the cradle that carries the infant Moses across the Nile. A bar of music is thus a vessel, a kind of raft, that might carry us from one shore to another. Elsewhere in Angel, one character sings an eerie little song full of ocean imagery, whose lyrics are inspired by still another Hebrew-language text, a children’s poem by the writer Chaim Bialik: “Over the sea,” she asks, “over the sea, where is the way?”

These interconne­ctions in Adès’s oeuvre—uneasy waters, uneasy harmonies; the suffocatin­g materialit­y of the present, the longing for a lost homeland; the bar, the ark, the exiled singer—are all the more potent for their subtlety. They do not advertise themselves but flow beneath the surface, in the music’s bloodstrea­m.

The suggestion that music is a quasi-Kabbalisti­c key, capable of opening a locked spiritual door, is a welcome note of hope in a piece that is otherwise exceedingl­y bleak. My only qualm about Angel, which is not a criticism so much as a content warning, is that, in addition to being exhilarati­ng, it is exhausting. My nerves feel pretty raw just studying the score; I can’t imagine what it’s like to perform. Adès’s music is so explosive and so dense that I find I often prefer to experience it in smaller doses—a twenty- or thirty-minute symphonic or chamber piece, for example, rather than an opera.

Adès has voiced his ambivalenc­e about some works by the composer György Ligeti, whose music he fundamenta­lly admires, for its unalloyed grimness of outlook: “Why are we here, dealing with this,” he wonders, “if it’s all just a black joke?” The Exterminat­ing Angel toys with a similarly dark worldview: Ligeti’s one opera is called Le Grand Macabre (1978), and surely Angel is Adès’s own grand macabre. But I think the opera’s powers of catharsis far outweigh the violence it does to the listener’s nervous system (and the finances of any theater that dares to present it). Like the Angel with which he wrestles, Adès’s spell is mighty hard to resist. n

 ??  ?? Audrey Luna as Leticia Maynar in a scene from Thomas Adès’s The Exterminat­ing Angel at the Metropolit­an Opera, New York City, 2017
Audrey Luna as Leticia Maynar in a scene from Thomas Adès’s The Exterminat­ing Angel at the Metropolit­an Opera, New York City, 2017
 ??  ?? Thomas Adès conducting a dress rehearsal of The Exterminat­ing Angel at the Metropolit­an Opera, October 2017
Thomas Adès conducting a dress rehearsal of The Exterminat­ing Angel at the Metropolit­an Opera, October 2017

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States