DEAD DRAW? AN ENCOUNTER BETWEEN KURTÁG AND BECKETT: THE OPERA FIN DE PARTIE

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24193/subbmusica.2019.1.17

Keywords:

contemporary opera, Kurtág, Beckett, world premiere.

Abstract

One could consider that over a period of six decades, between 1957 and 2017, Kurtág developed the ever-expanding idea of an opera based on the writings of Samuel Beckett. It started in 1957 when Ligeti, then living in Vienna, strongly suggested to his friend Kurtág, who was based in Paris, to go and see Beckett`s latest plays, En attendant Godot and Fin de partie. The experience inspired Kurtág’s immediate and enduring admiration for the Irish writer and since then, he has come a long way through the labyrinth of his own work. He made use of Beckett in his piece for the Hungarian singer Ildikó Monyók What is the word, then in ...pas à pas – nulle part..., always proving that sounds and words share equal importance in musical setting. With his rich experience and mastery, the 92-year old Kurtág approached his first opera, plunging into the depths of Beckett’s piece Fin de partie; he infused the theatre of the absurd with exquisite lyricism, thus enhancing the metaphorical power of the text with a refined musical discourse. The outcome of seven years of intense work (2010-2017), Kurtág’s Fin de partie surprises the listener by the freshness of its musical language, an accurate translation into sound of Beckett’s poetic theatrical universe. Rather than resulting in a mere tie, this encounter between two great artists sees music and text as equal winners in terms of expressive content, a true collaboration enriching the contemporary dramatic repertoire with a unique masterpiece.

References

Adorno, Theodor: “Intento de entender Final de partida”, Notas sobre Literatura II. Madrid, Akal, 2003.

Chabagi, Haydée: „Comment le dire ? Sur ‘… pas à pas – nulle part...’, une œuvre de György Kurtág sur des poèmes de Samuel Beckett et des maximes de Sébastien Chamfort. Pour baryton solo, trio à cordes et percussions, opus 36 (1993-1998)”, in Po&sie 2007/2, No. 120, pp. 142-164.

Esslin, Martin: El teatro del absurdo. Barcelona, Seix Barral, 1966.

Laws, Catherine: Headaches Among the Overtones. Music in Beckett, Beckett in Music, Editions Rodopi, Amsterdam – New York, 2013.

Mathon, Geneviève: „Quelques mots de Beckett dans la langue de Kurtág”, Pierre Maréchaux, Grégoire Tosser (eds.), in Ligatures: la pensée musicale de György Kurtág, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, (collection ”Æsthetica”), 2009, pp. 67-78.

Tosser, Grégoire: „Maximes et mirlitonnades : …pas à pas -nulle part… op. 36 de György Kurtág, long after Beckett”, in Beckett et la musique (Geneviève Mathon, David Lauffer eds.), Presses Universitaires de Strasbourg, 2014, pp.121-159.

Țiplea Temeș, Bianca: „De la Cluj Modern la Palais Garnier. Itinerarul Colindei-Baladă op. 46 de György Kurtág (From Cluj Modern to Palais Garnier. The Itinerary of György Kurtág’s Colindă-Baladă op. 46), in Actualitatea Muzicală, No.1/2011, p. 17.

Țiplea Temeș, Bianca: “Modern Tapestry from Vintage Fabrics: ‘Colindă Baladă’ by György Kurtág”, in Folk Music as a Fermenting Agent for Composition, Past and Present (Bianca Țiplea Temeș, William Kinderman eds.), MediaMusica, Cluj-Napoca, 2019, pp.105-118.

Ţiplea Temeş, Bianca: „Remiză Kurtág – Beckett? Premiera operei Fin de partie la Scala din Milano”, in Muzica, No. 1/2019, pp. 52-58.

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Published

2019-06-20

How to Cite

ŢIPLEA TEMEŞ, B. (2019). DEAD DRAW? AN ENCOUNTER BETWEEN KURTÁG AND BECKETT: THE OPERA FIN DE PARTIE . Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Musica, 64(1), 269–276. https://doi.org/10.24193/subbmusica.2019.1.17

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