From the House of the Dead [Blu-ray]
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商品の説明
Death is never far away in Leoš Janácek's work: in The Cunning Little Vixen, the main character falls under the fire of a hunter, Katia Kabanova kills herself, Emilia Marty in The Makropulos Case has to deal with the hard consequences of eternal youth. From the House of the Dead makes no exception, especially since the composer knew he was living out his final days when he decided to adapt into an opera Fyodor Dostoyevsky's eponymous novel, a literary work inspired by the time the novelist spent in a Siberian prison. This painful feeling of ineluctability pervades through his disillusioned and savage score, that recounts the hopeless life of the convicts of a Soviet concentration camp. In this place where life has already drawn out, in this no man's land forsaken by civilization, Janácek portrays the anonymous and daily sufferings, the abuses, the corporal punishments, but also evokes fragments from the prisoners' past, bringing them back to life for the duration of a game or of a story. Against this background that contrasts the empathic solidarity of simple men with the horrific brutality of the prison guards, stage director Frank Castorf - who created a memorable Ring Cycle in Bayreuth for the Wagner Bicentennial in 2013 - embraces the aesthetics of grotesque and absurd suggested by Janácek's score, and chooses to crudely display, with stark realism, the physical and psychological violence at the heart of the opera. In the pit, conducting the house orchestra, Simone Young underlines the power plays and the overwhelming lyricism unleashed by Janácek's music. As the main protagonists, Peter Rose, Charles Workman and Bo Skhovus, all familiar with Janácek's subtleties, bring back to life these agonizing anti-heroic characters forsaken by God and men.
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The opening is rather strange with action and subtitles but no singing, thought something was wrong , but that is how it is meant to be.
The house is a Siberian prison, a new prisoner is brought in, he is a political prisoner, the head of the prison degrades him and has him lashed 100 times.
The action continues with stories centering on different prison inmates who tell or enact their stories. They put on plays . One young lady who is supposed to be a man but dresses as an exotic bird features from time to time. Another girl also features at times, I never quite worked out why.
I will now justify my down marking, the various characters are covered in blood, gore and injuries, this seems to be gratuitous and not something that enhances the plot. This seems to be a self indulgent director.
There are a few bits that I like such as the rotating stage and the screen interjections.
I cannot fault the artistes voices all good and I would single out Charles Workman, he is one of my favourites .
If you are A Janacek fan then the descriptive and exciting orchestrations are top notch an executed by a highly competent orchestra and conductor.
Our opening hero is pardoned at the end but the rest of the inmates struggle on.
There is a synopsis in the accompanying booklet, but it does not throw a lot of light on what is happening.
There is an alternative production which I suspect will be much better but it is way down the list of my future purchases.