Into the Little Hill
Into the Little Hill | |
---|---|
Chamber opera by George Benjamin | |
Librettist | Martin Crimp |
Language | English |
Based on | legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin |
Premiere | 22 November 2006 Opéra Bastille, Paris |
Into the Little Hill is a 2006 chamber opera by British composer George Benjamin.
Described by the composer as a "lyric tale in two parts", the libretto is by playwright Martin Crimp and it is Benjamin's first stage work.[1] They have since collaborated on a further two operas, Written on Skin (2012) and Lessons in Love and Violence (2018). All three works draw upon medieval subject matter in some way, and Into the Little Hill is a modern retelling of the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin. Crimp has stated that he was introduced to Benjamin by musicologist Laurence Dreyfus.[2]
The piece was commissioned by Festival d'Automne à Paris. It premiered at Opéra Bastille on 22 November 2006, conducted by Franck Ollu, directed by Daniel Jeanneteau, and performed by Anu Komsi and Hilary Summers with instrumentalists from Ensemble Modern.[3] It has since been performed in over 100 productions in Europe, North America, China, Australia.[4] It is approximately 40 minutes in length.
Scoring
Roles
Into the Little Hill is scored for one soprano and one alto, each representing different roles between scenes:
Soprano | Alto |
---|---|
The Crowd | The Crowd |
The Stranger | Narrator |
Narrator | The Minister |
The Minister's Child | The Minister's Wife |
The Children | The Mothers |
The use of two singers has drawn comparison with Herbert Parry's setting of Robert Browning's 1842 poem "The Pied Piper of Hamelin", which casts a tenor as the Piper and a baritone as the Mayor.[5]
Crimp's libretto uses a mixture of direct and reported speech. Elisabeth Angel-Perez describes this technique as "self-narration", noting its elision of more traditional operatic forms of recitative and aria as well as its extensive use in Written on Skin.[6]
Benjamin makes versatile use of vocal register for characterization. High, simple soprano writing is used to convey the innocence of the Child, while more extreme coloratura passages represent the other-worldliness of the Stranger.[7] The alto line makes considerable use of low tessitura to convey the Minister's masculinity and the Mother's lamentations.[1]
Instrumentation
- Bass flute (doubling flute and piccolo), two basset horns in F, contrabass clarinet
- Two cornets, trombone
- Cimbalom
- Percussion: cymbals, guiro, whip, 2 crotales
- Two violins (second doubling mandolin), two violas (second doubling banjo), two cellos, double bass (lowest string tuned to C)
Several reviewers have remarked upon Benjamin's orchestration, particularly the cimbalom's "eerie" quality[7] and the unusual timbres of the contrabass clarinet and basset horn.[8] The use of traditionally non-orchestral instruments such as the cornet, mandolin and banjo has been interpreted as an evocation of the folk origins of the story, while the extended obbligato passages on the bass flute imply the Pied Piper's flute.[1]
Synopsis
Part One
The opera opens with the angry Crowd calling for the extermination of the rats in their town. The Minister suggests that they try to coexist peacefully with the rats, but the people insist singing, "kill and you have our vote".
At night, the Minister finds a mysterious man in his daughter's bedroom. The Stranger has "no eyes, no nose, no ears", and offers to charm the rats away in exchange for a large sum of money. The Minister offers to pay twice as much if he is re-elected, and the Stranger forces him to swear on the bargain by his sleeping child.
After an instrumental interlude, the Minister's Child asks the Mother why the rats have to die, becoming agitated as she describes them wearing clothes and carrying suitcases and babies. The Mother reassures her that they will "die with dignity".
Part Two
The Minister is re-elected and the Stranger comes to his office to collect his payment. When the Minister insists that the rats "chose to leave of their own free will" and refuses to pay, the Stranger reminds him of their bargain and leaves.
After another musical interlude, the townspeople discover that their children are missing. The Mother confronts the Minister, asking "where is my child?". The Children respond that they are "inside the Little Hill ... with the angel under the earth".
Critical reception
Into the Little Hill has been variously interpreted as a commentary on contemporary attitudes to immigration,[9] a "satire on the way power corrupts" and "the tabloid fetishisation of the disappearance of children",[10] a metaphor for genocide,[7][11] a commentary on government cuts to arts funding,[8][12] and a "parable about the power of music".[13] Because they are coded as socially undesirable and described with clothes and suitcases, the plight of the rats has been read by several commentators as a reference to the Holocaust.[14][15]
Because of its ambiguous text and frequent role changes, the opera is usually staged very sparsely, and has been described as a "secular oratorio".[16]
The opera has been widely well-received, described by Rupert Christiansen as "a startling miracle of originality".[17] Critics have praised the piece's concision of both Crimp and Benjamin's writing,[18][19] favourably comparing the opera to chamber works by Benjamin Britten,[20] Judith Weir[13] and Harrison Birtwistle.[21]
Less positive reviews cite the alienating effect of the narrative style and its cryptic modes of expression, describing it as dramatically "non-committal".[22]
References
- ^ a b c Mead, Rebecca (17 September 2018). "How the Composer George Benjamin Finally Found His Voice". The New Yorker. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Crimp, Martin (October 2006). ""Into the Little Hill" A work for stage by George Benjamin and Martin Crimp". Ensemble Modern. Ensemble Modern Newsletter No. 23. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Clements, Andrew (25 November 2006). "Into the Little Hill (Opéra Bastille, Paris)". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ "Performances". Faber Music. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Porter, Andrew (27 February 2009). "Small but perfectly charmed". The Times Literary Supplement. p. 18. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Angel-Perez, Elisabeth (3 July 2014). "Martin Crimp's Nomadic Voices" (PDF). Contemporary Theatre Review. 24 (3): 353–362. doi:10.1080/10486801.2014.921054. S2CID 194098708.
- ^ a b c Cadagin, Joe (November 2017). "Benjamin: Into the Little Hill/Dream of the Song". Opera News. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ a b Brown, Geoff (21 April 2008). "Into the Little Hill". The Times. No. 69303. p. 82. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Church, Michael (19 February 2009). "Into The Little Hill/Down By The Greenwood Side, ROH Linbury Theatre, London". The Independent. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Service, Tom (2008). "Into the Little Hill (CD booklet NI 5828)" (PDF). Chandos. Nimbus Records. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Barnard, John Marten (17 February 2020). "La Veronal heads Into the Little Hill in Madrid". Bachtrack. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Schweitzer, Vivien (25 July 2007). "A Minimalist Pied Piper (Imagine, Please, Those Rats)". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ a b Tommasini, Anthony (28 July 2007). "Oh Rats! Paying the Piper in an Opera: Calling on an ominous stranger with no eyes, ears or nose". The New York Times. pp. B7, 11. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Ozorio, Anne (26 July 2010). "George Benjamin: Into the Little Hill, Linbury, London". Opera Today. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Picard, Anna (10 April 2015). "Speech Acts at the Courtyard, N1". The Times. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Lay, Julius (19 February 2020). "Into the Little Hill : George Benjamin clôt le Festival Présences 2020". Bachtrack (in French). Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Christiansen, Rupert (17 June 2007). "A startling miracle of originality". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
- ^ Clements, Andrew (16 February 2009). "Into the Little Hill/Down By the Greenwood Side". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
- ^ Damman, Guy (16 July 2010). "How plural a thing is joy". The Times Literary Supplement. p. 18. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Carlin, Francis (28 November 2006). "Into the Little Hill Bastille Amphitheatre, Paris". Financial Times. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- ^ Whittall, Arnold (December 2008). "Unsettling, nightmarish take on the Pied Piper grips like a vice". Gramophone.
- ^ Fanning, David (21 April 2008). "Into the Little Hill: unmoved by Liverpool's highbrow offering". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 17 August 2020.