Musgrave (An) Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
Archers, Goons, Bonanza and Beckett collide in an American Civil War opera
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Label: NMC
Magazine Review Date: 7/2011
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 0
Mastering:
Stereo
Catalogue Number: NMCD167

Author: Philip_Clark
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge is terrible, even more heinous than Roberto Gerhard’s not dissimilar The Plague, because at least Gerhard was wise to the problem of losing his compositional identity inside the plot. Although enticing lyricism occasionally asserts itself – “I can feel the sand, like diamonds” even has a hint of the Sondheims – too much of Musgrave’s music is “incidental” in the worst possible sense: chords have no function other than as scene-setting prompts; dialogue is underpinned with pointless ostinatos. And that no one shows much awareness of how ridiculous the caricatured American accents sound, or what a twee and hollow response this is to Bierce’s text, is unforgivable.
Wild Winter I (1993), scored for voices and viol ensemble, knits poetry and music together with greater synergy; but Green for 12 strings (2007) sets tonalities against each other and has something of Occurrence’s contrived drama. Is it a coincidence that one section climaxes with the DSCH motif pinballing around the ensemble?
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