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Track Listing: 1. In Re Don Giovanni 2. Revisiting the Don 3. Trysting Fields 4. Not Knowing the Ropes [otherwise known as 2M6] 5. Wedding Tango 6. Wheelbarrow Walk 7. Fish Beach 8. Knowing the Ropes 9. O my Dear Papa 10. I am an Unusual Thing 11. Profit and Loss
Performed by the Michael Nyman Band Hillary Summers contralto Andrew Slater bass-baritone
MNRCD113 |
MOZART 252
Music Composed by Michael Nyman
This album was designed to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the birth of
Mozart in 2006, but it seemed more appropriate to miss the boat, by two years
- hence the 252. It could equally have been Mozart 30, since it is 30 years
since In Re Don Giovanni originally saw the light of day in 1977 in
the very first Campiello Band concert, in the National Theatre foyer. The Campiello
Band was born out of the onstage band used for my arrangements of 18th century
gondoliers’ songs for Bill Bryden's production of Goldoni's ‘Il Campiell’, which
opened the Olivier Theatre in October 1976 and was thus the father of the current
Michael Nyman Band.
Two main bodies of Mozart-derived works are presented on Mozart 252;
the soundtrack to Peter Greenaway's ‘Drowning by Numbers’ (1988), and songs
and duets from ‘Letters. Riddles and Writs’, a TV film developed in 1991 with
the director Jeremy Newson as part of BBC2's Not Mozart series, which marked
the 200th anniversary of Mozart's death.
My “Mozart music” is best understood by reading Pwyll ap Sion's impressive analyses
in his book The Music of Michael Nyman:Texts, Contexts and Intertexts
(Ashgate, 2007). But, briefly the first Nyman/Mozart collaboration, In Re
Don Giovanni effectively samples and remixes the first 16 bars the Catalogue
Song from ‘Don Giovanni’, and Revising the Don (a Radio 3 commission
for the 250th anniversary) is a lyrical and literal revisiting of In Re.
The ‘Drowning by Numbers’ score is derived, in accordance with Greenaway's
strict instructions, entirely from the slow movement of the ‘Sinfonia Concertante’
for violin and viola: Trysting Fields simply 'lists', in order of occurrence
and each repeated three times, all the “unprepared” dissonances, (appoggiaturas)
from the Mozart piece, and at the end introduces the 8-chord E flat/C minor/A
flat/B flat/C min/E flat/A flat/B flat 'rock 'n' roll' sequence which ends the
exposition of the movement, and which, along with a kind of retrograde version,
is heard throughout Sheep 'n' Tides, Wheelbarrow Walk, Fish Beach and
Not Knowing the Ropes (so called because on the ‘Drowning’ soundtrack
album it is erroneously called Knowing the Ropes!).
Wedding Tango is built out of a chord-by-chord alternation of both
the minor key version (from the very end of the movement) and more familiar
major key versions of the 8-chord sequence. Knowing the Ropes, like
Trysting Fields is a musical list (though with more conscious structural
organization) - this time of a wiggly semiquaver motif, which is threaded through
the movement and ends with a grand statement of the theme that is accompanied
by the 8-chord sequence in the Mozart original.
‘Letters, Riddles and Writs’ deals in general, through texts taken from Mozart’s
letters and riddles (the writs have to do with my frequent theft of Mozart's music)
with his relationship with his father (O my dear Papa, a remake of O
Isis und Osiris from The Magic Flute), with his own mortality (I
am an Unusual Thing, which uses the texts from one of the riddles that Mozart
wrote and distributed in Vienna during the 1787 Carnival and is based entirely
on extract from two of his Haydn quartets) and with his business acumen [Profit
and Loss, modeled on In Re Don Giovanni) |