“在我的尽头是我的开始”:彼得·格里姆斯与威尼斯之死

IF 0.3 2区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
Sterling Lambert
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本雅明·布里顿在创作时病重,他肯定知道《威尼斯之死》将是他的最后一部歌剧,这部作品引用了他的第一部歌剧《彼得·格里姆斯》,似乎是在结束他的整个歌剧生涯,并审视他所走过的漫长路程,这也就不足为奇了,这可能被认为是这位作曲家晚期风格的标志。即便如此,这两部作品之间的戏剧和音乐关系却异常广泛。这两部歌剧都涉及一个与周围社会格格不入的局外人,这奇怪地反映了作曲家在创作每部作品时的特殊处境。每一个都设定在一个对作曲家来说特别的地方,陆地与海洋接壤,隐喻着生与死的边界。最后,主人公与一个神秘的沉默男孩的互动暗示了布里顿角色中不敢说出自己名字的一部分。这些戏剧性的对应关系在歌剧之间的重要音乐联系中是平行的,尽管它们表面上的音乐语言非常不同。因此,布里顿的最后一部歌剧可以被理解为T·s·艾略特从苏格兰女王玛丽那里借用的名言的例证:“在我的结尾是我的开始”,考虑到布里顿当时对艾略特诗歌的痴迷程度,这是一个恰当的概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘In my end is my beginning’: Peter Grimes and Death in Venice
Abstract Benjamin Britten, gravely ill at the time of its composition, was surely aware that Death in Venice would be his last opera, and it is not surprising that the work should make reference to his first opera, Peter Grimes, as if to bookend his entire operatic career, and survey the enormous distance he had travelled, as a hallmark of what might be considered the composer's late style. Even so, the dramatic and musical relationships between the two works are unusually extensive. Both operas concern an outsider at odds with the society around him, in a strange reflection of the composer's particular situation as he wrote each work. Each is set in a place particularly special to the composer, where land borders sea in a metaphor for the boundary between life and death. Finally, the protagonist's interactions with a mysterious silent boy in each case hints at a part of Britten's character that dared not speak its name. These dramatic correspondences are paralleled in important musical connections between the operas, despite their ostensibly very different musical languages. Britten's final opera could therefore be understood to exemplify the famous words borrowed by T.S. Eliot from Mary, Queen of Scots: ‘In my end is my beginning’, an appropriate concept given the degree to which Britten was occupied with Eliot's verse at this time.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Containing lively and provocative essays, Cambridge Opera Journal has a well-established reputation for publishing first-rate scholarship on opera in all its manifestations. The Journal not only contains material on all aspects of the European canon, it has now widened its scope to publish high-quality essays on American opera and musical theatre, on non-Western music theatres, and on contemporary works. Carefully researched and often illustrated with music examples and pictures, articles adopt a wide spectrum of critical approaches. As well as major articles, each issue generally includes reviews on recent publications of importance in the field.
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