Elliott Carter: What next?
The opera that started with a car crash - as illustrated in this clip.
On 16 September, 1999, a giant of American modernism, Elliott Carter, premiered his very first opera, What Next? at the Deutsche Staatsoper in Berlin. He was 90 years old.
Contrary to any stereotype of what an artistβs late style might involve, the opera was hilarious, invigorating, fizzing with bright energy and sharp, surrealist wit. Carter said that, as he got older, heβd become more concerned with the expression of music and less concerned with the formation of details. βIβm trying to be more spontaneous,β he said as he approached his 100th birthday. βIn general, my music seeks the awareness of motion we have in flying or driving a car, and not the plodding of horses.β
In a way, Carter had been writing opera all his life, making characters out of his instruments, setting up dramatic dialogues and ensemble pieces within his concert works. Finally, aged 90, he let loose with vocal lines, filling them with skittish leaps and daunting precipices. It is acrobatic writing, a product of the most agile mental gymnast.
What Next? is music for modern times. The opera starts with a car crash, played out in the spectacular clangs and spasms and general musical wreckage that you can hear in this clip. The action unfolds as we get to know the six survivors. Theyβd been on their way to a wedding - or maybe they hadnβt. It turns out that all the characters think they were going somewhere different. Imagine the opening sequence of Four Weddings and a Funeral, sent spinning through the sweet absurdism of Jacques Tati and set to ultra refined late 20th-Century modernism.
What Next? is a comedy and a tragedy, because what emerges from the farce is a contemplation of something deeper. Towards the end of the opera, a pair of road workers appear. It's like a lost scene from Waiting for Godot. As the workers fail to acknowledge the other characters, it becomes clear that these arenβt survivors after all. Theyβre in a limbo realm, trying to make sense of a question that only the little boy articulates in the very last words of the opera: What next?
This is one of 100 significant musical moments explored by ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 3βs Essential Classics as part of Our Classical Century, a ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ season celebrating a momentous 100 years in music from 1918 to 2018. Visit bbc.co.uk/ourclassicalcentury to watch and listen to all programmes in the season.
This is an excerpt from a recording by the Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra with conductor PΓ©ter EΓΆtvΓΆs.
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