THOMMESSEN The Hermaphrodite
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Olav Anton Thommessen
Genre:
Opera
Label: Aurora
Magazine Review Date: 04/2017
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 104
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ACD5049
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
The Hermaphrodite |
Olav Anton Thommessen, Composer
Anna Elisabeth Einarsson, Mezzo soprano Christian Eggen, Conductor Eir Inderhaug, Soprano Espen Fegran, Baritone Isa Katharina Gericke, Soprano Ketil Hugaas, Bass Nils Harald Sodal, Tenor Olav Anton Thommessen, Composer Oslo Sinfonietta |
Author: Andrew Mellor
The work’s seven parts chart the faltering journey of a hermaphrodite into life, its struggle to accept itself and others (despite its beautiful effect on a group of men who attack it), its troubled journey to physical confidence, sexual awakening and eventual love. That journey is told clearly, brutally and tenderly by the various components but I have yet to get a handle on the symbolism of the epilogue, in which a man dives into the sea and copulates with an enormous female shark.
Nor is that an issue, because however absorbing Olav Anton Thommessen’s work is on the surface, it is surely filled with unknown unknowns that have yet to pose similar riddles. The music is spare, skeletal (often underpinned by careful, capering percussion) and tense. The use of singing voices as instruments to accompany spoken Norwegian creates the most tender of soundscapes, notably at the Hermaphrodite’s lurching retreats from sensuality (as in Act 1 part 4, ‘Desire’). Elsewhere the vocal writing is exceptional, as when soprano Eir Inderhaug quivers, splutters and then joins the wordless fabric of the ensemble in Act 2 part 1, ‘A Concert Chamber’.
The composer has a habit of alighting upon fertile textures and mining deep into them (as in that same movement’s entwined high-pitch ribbons on what sounds like flute and violin). Rarely are non-spoken voices foregrounded, but when they are – as when two cautiously approach one another in Act 2 part 3, ‘The Meeting’ – the effect is of pure nature music without a hint of contrivance.
Thommessen’s etched textures want to burst into expressionism in ‘Sleep’, the epilogue to Act 1, but he reins them in and the delicate equilibrium of the piece is preserved. In Act 2 part 2, ‘Insight’, the Hermaphrodite experiences playful impulses and accepts its duality; again Thommessen’s scoring is thrilling precisely because it is contained – the creature’s understanding remains limited. A moving and absorbing creation that proves even more so now, 40 years after it was written, given Western society’s journey down the very same paths (though we’ve yet to embrace bestiality with sharks).
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