
''Montezuma'' is an
opera
Opera is a form of theatre in which music is a fundamental component and dramatic roles are taken by singers. Such a "work" (the literal translation of the Italian word "opera") is typically a collaboration between a composer and a libre ...
in three acts by the American composer
Roger Sessions
Roger Huntington Sessions (December 28, 1896March 16, 1985) was an American composer, teacher and musicologist. He had initially started his career writing in a neoclassical style, but gradually moved further towards more complex harmonies and ...
, with an English
libretto by
Giuseppe Antonio Borgese
Giuseppe Antonio Borgese (12 November 1882 – 4 December 1952) was an Italian writer, journalist, Literary criticism, literary critic, Germanist, poet, playwright and academic naturalized American.
Biography
During the academic year 1899-1900, un ...
that incorporates bits of the
Aztec
The Aztecs () were a Mesoamerican culture that flourished in central Mexico in the post-classic period from 1300 to 1521. The Aztec people included different ethnic groups of central Mexico, particularly those groups who spoke the Nahuatl ...
language,
Nahuatl
Nahuatl (; ), Aztec, or Mexicano is a language or, by some definitions, a group of languages of the Uto-Aztecan language family. Varieties of Nahuatl are spoken by about Nahua peoples, most of whom live mainly in Central Mexico and have small ...
, as well as
Spanish
Spanish might refer to:
* Items from or related to Spain:
** Spaniards are a nation and ethnic group indigenous to Spain
**Spanish language, spoken in Spain and many Latin American countries
**Spanish cuisine
Other places
* Spanish, Ontario, Ca ...
,
Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through the power ...
, and
French.
Though Sessions did not receive Borgese's libretto (in first draft) until 1941, and work on the opera proceeded in an irregular fashion after ("Sessions thought that the end of his labor was in sight in the summer of 1952. He was mistaken, and the work on ''Montezuma'' was suspended"), the opera incorporates, essentially unchanged, sketches (from Sessions' notebooks) dating from the late 1930s, and was completed on July 1, 1962.
Performance history
''Montezuma'' was first performed on 19 April 1964 at the
Deutsche Oper
The Deutsche Oper Berlin is a German opera company located in the Charlottenburg district of Berlin. The resident building is the country's second largest opera house (after Munich's) and also home to the Berlin State Ballet.
Since 2004, the ...
in
Berlin
Berlin is Capital of Germany, the capital and largest city of Germany, both by area and List of cities in Germany by population, by population. Its more than 3.85 million inhabitants make it the European Union's List of cities in the European U ...
, in a German translation.
The American premiere (and the first performance with the original English libretto) was given on 31 March 1976 by the
Opera Company of Boston
The Opera Company of Boston was an American opera company located in Boston, Massachusetts, that was active from the late 1950s through the 1980s. The company was founded by American conductor Sarah Caldwell in 1958 under the name Boston Opera Gr ...
, conducted by
Sarah Caldwell
Sarah Caldwell (March 6, 1924March 23, 2006) was an American opera conductor, impresario, and stage director.
Early life
Caldwell was born in Maryville, Missouri, and grew up in Fayetteville, Arkansas. She was a child prodigy and gave publ ...
. The cast included
Richard Lewis Richard, Rich, Richie, Rick, Ricky or Dick Lewis may refer to:
Arts and entertainment
* Richard Field Lewis Jr. (1907–1957), American radio network owner
* Dick "Rocko" Lewis (Richard Henry Lewis III, 1908–1966), American entertainer
* Richar ...
(Montezuma), Alexander Stevenson (Bernal Díaz del Castillo, the Young),
Donald Gramm
Donald John Gramm (February 26, 1927 – June 2, 1983) was an American bass-baritone whose career was divided between opera and concert performances. His appearances were primarily limited to the United States, which at the time was unusual for ...
(Bernal Díaz del Castillo, the Old),
Brent Ellis (Cortez),
Phyllis Bryn-Julson
Phyllis Mae Bryn-Julson (born February 5, 1945) is an American operatic soprano and pedagogue.
A native of Bowdon, North Dakota, Bryn-Julson is one of five children born to Norwegian parents. She initially studied to be a pianist at Concordia C ...
(Malinche),
Alan Crofoot (Jerónimo Aguilar/veteran), and
Eunice Alberts
Eunice Alberts (1927–2012) was an American contralto who had an active career as a concert soloist and opera singer during the 1950s through the 1980s.
Early life and education
Born in Boston, Alberts attended the Girls' Latin School i ...
as Cuaximatl.
The New York City premiere was given in February, 1982 by the Juilliard American Opera Center, conducted by
Frederik Prausnitz. Bernal was sung by Robert Keefe, Cortez by James Dietsch, Alvarado by Cornelius Sullivan, Montezuma by Robert Grayson, and Malinche by
Hei-Kyung Hong. The scenery was designed by
Ming Cho Lee
Ming Cho Lee (; October 3, 1930 – October 23, 2020) was a Chinese-American theatrical set designer and professor at the Yale School of Drama.
Personal life
Lee was born on Oct. 3, 1930, in Shanghai, China to Lee Tsu Fa and Tang Ing. Lee, who ...
, costume design by Nan Cibula, and the lighting was by
Beverly Emmons.
Roles
Reception
Former British Prime Minister
Edward Heath
Sir Edward Richard George Heath (9 July 191617 July 2005), often known as Ted Heath, was a British politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1970 to 1974 and Leader of the Conservative Party from 1965 to 1975. Heath a ...
, after hearing the US premiere in Boston in 1976, said "I found it fascinating. … I liked the subject—one of the few instances of an important event in history where the British played no part. In the tragedy of Montezuma we share no responsibility". The opera contains human sacrifice, burning at the stake, stabbing, stoning, rule by terror, cannibalism, a love story, war, homesickness, intrigue, a ritual dance, and the supernatural.
Frank J. Oteri
Frank J. Oteri (born May 12, 1964) is a New York City-based composer, a music journalist, lecturer, and new music advocateDrew McManuAn Interview with Frank J. Oteri ''The Partial Observer'', June 5, 2006.
His musical works have been performed ...
asks whether ''Montezuma'' and the operas of
Dallapiccola ought to be regarded as being among the "important 12-tone operas", along with
Berg's ''
Lulu
Lulu may refer to:
Companies
* LuLu, an early automobile manufacturer
* Lulu.com, an online e-books and print self-publishing platform, distributor, and retailer
* Lulu Hypermarket, a retail chain in Asia
* Lululemon Athletica or simply Lulu, ...
'',
Schoenberg's ''
Moses und Aron
''Moses und Aron'' (English: '' Moses and Aaron'') is a three-act opera by Arnold Schoenberg with the third act unfinished. The German libretto is by the composer after the Book of Exodus. Hungarian composer Zoltán Kocsis completed the last act ...
'', and
Zimmermann's ''
Die Soldaten
' (''The Soldiers'') is a four-act opera in German by Bernd Alois Zimmermann, based on the 1776 play by Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz. In a letter accompanying his newly printed play (23 July 1776, aged 24) that he sent to his best friend, the Ger ...
''.
Andrea Olmstead
Andrea Olmstead (born September 5, 1948) is an American musicologist and historian.
Reared in Grand Forks,North Dakota, Olmstead studied violin with Burton Kaplan in New York and with Lea Foli at the Aspen Music Festival; she was a member of the ...
agrees that ''Montezuma'' may aptly be compared with Berg's ''Lulu'' and ''Wozzeck'', but primarily because of their shared extensive use of
ostinato
In music, an ostinato (; derived from Italian word for ''stubborn'', compare English ''obstinate'') is a motif or phrase that persistently repeats in the same musical voice, frequently in the same pitch. Well-known ostinato-based pieces include ...
rhythms.
Michael Steinberg says that it is "arguably the richest opera yet written by an American composer", and like Olmstead compares it to ''Wozzeck'' and ''Lulu'' (as well as to ''
Les Troyens
''Les Troyens'' (; in English: ''The Trojans'') is a French grand opera in five acts by Hector Berlioz. The libretto was written by Berlioz himself from Virgil's epic poem the ''Aeneid''; the score was composed between 1856 and 1858. ''Les T ...
'', ''Moses und Aron'', ''
War and Peace
''War and Peace'' (russian: Война и мир, translit=Voyna i mir; pre-reform Russian: ; ) is a literary work by the Russian author Leo Tolstoy that mixes fictional narrative with chapters on history and philosophy. It was first published ...
'', and ''
Palestrina
Palestrina (ancient ''Praeneste''; grc, Πραίνεστος, ''Prainestos'') is a modern Italian city and ''comune'' (municipality) with a population of about 22,000, in Lazio, about east of Rome. It is connected to the latter by the Via Pre ...
'') because, like them, ''Montezuma'' has long remained a "legend".
Andrew Porter echos the "legendary" characterization and the comparison to
Pfitzner's ''Palestrina'', adding that these two operas, as well as
Busoni's ''Doktor Faust'',
Hindemith's ''
Harmonie der Welt'', and
Dallapiccola's ''
Ulisse
''Ulisse'' is an opera in a prologue and two acts composed by Luigi Dallapiccola to his own libretto based on the legend of Ulysses. It premiered at the Deutsche Oper Berlin (in German translation by Karl-Heinrich Kreith as ''Odysseus'') on 29 ...
'' are "both personal and closely argued". At the same time, he cautions that "both text and music are insistent, unrelaxed, and reject passive acceptance", placing unusually high demands on the audience through the combination of Borgese's "
Wardour Street
Wardour Street () is a street in Soho, City of Westminster, London. It is a one-way street that runs north from Leicester Square, through Chinatown, across Shaftesbury Avenue to Oxford Street. Throughout the 20th century the street became a c ...
diction" and Sessions's musical setting, which frequently superimposes two different vocal settings or accompanies the voices with orchestration that "amounts in performance to stiff competition". Patrick Smith agrees with the comparison to ''Moses und Aron'' because both are works "of the mind rather than of the opera stage". However, he does not find Sessions the match of Schoenberg's "ramrod genius", so that ''Montezuma'' "remains a tableau-oratorio" in which the salient moments (including a love duet inspired by
Verdi's ''
Otello
''Otello'' () is an opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Arrigo Boito, based on Shakespeare's play '' Othello''. It was Verdi's penultimate opera, first performed at the Teatro alla Scala, Milan, on 5 February 1887. ...
'') fail to be "drawn into a cohesive and ongoing whole." He finds the opera's greatest defect is its libretto, a "farrago of poetasty", which is "a ghastly example of self-parody that even a
Robert Benchley
Robert Charles Benchley (September 15, 1889 – November 21, 1945) was an American humorist best known for his work as a newspaper columnist and film actor. From his beginnings at '' The Harvard Lampoon'' while attending Harvard University, thr ...
could not have topped".
John Harbison
John Harris Harbison (born December 20, 1938) is an American composer, known for his symphonies, operas, and large choral works.
Life
John Harris Harbison was born on December 20, 1938, in Orange, New Jersey, to the historian Elmore Harris Harb ...
similarly finds parallels between the act-1 endings of both ''Montezuma'' and ''Otello'', but also notes similarities to ''
Aida
''Aida'' (or ''Aïda'', ) is an opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi to an Italian libretto by Antonio Ghislanzoni. Set in the Old Kingdom of Egypt, it was commissioned by Cairo's Khedivial Opera House and had its première there on 24 Decemb ...
'' and ''
Tristan und Isolde
''Tristan und Isolde'' (''Tristan and Isolde''), WWV 90, is an opera in three acts by Richard Wagner to a German libretto by the composer, based largely on the 12th-century romance Tristan and Iseult by Gottfried von Strassburg. It was compos ...
''.
He regards the opera highly, describing it as "one of four or five great operas of the century", and this in spite of the fact that, as a "continuous-flow" opera, it is the opposite of the set-piece operas he generally prefers, with clear division between aria and recitative, simple textures, frequent ensembles, and unambiguous dramatic situations and text. As the "best 'way in'" to the music's "monumental force and vivideness", he recommends listening to Sessions's cantata ''When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloomed'' (1969) and the
Eighth Symphony (1968).
Donal Henahan
Donal Henahan (February 28, 1921 – August 19, 2012) was an American music critic and journalist who had lengthy associations with the '' Chicago Daily News'' and ''The New York Times''. With the ''Times'' he won the annual Pulitzer Prize f ...
said that the opera lacks, "a dramatically viable libretto and a score worth hearing sung."
Peter Maxwell Davies
Sir Peter Maxwell Davies (8 September 1934 – 14 March 2016) was an English composer and conductor, who in 2004 was made Master of the Queen's Music.
As a student at both the University of Manchester and the Royal Manchester College of Mus ...
said that the libretto is "full-blown and rhetorical", but "the composer dealt with his text with such assurance that the music convincingly carried even this ponderous weight of language. ... There is little doubt that this is Sessions' masterpiece", and described ''Montezuma'' as "a huge step in the history of American music." Reflecting a few days later, Davies conceded that the "profusion of musical detail obscured, for many listeners, the basic simplicity of Sessions' musical material", and that the "surface" of the music is "by no means always ingratiating" but nevertheless maintained that, "if one can take in the music as a whole, its enormous gestures and long articulations begin to fall into place, and Sessions emerges as a great lyricist with a full and virile melodic sweep." For "unprepared ears", Davies recommended the best approach is through Sessions's "readily assimilated
Fifth Symphony ... the stylistic key to the most difficult section of the opera, the third and final act." An unnamed correspondent for the ''Times'', reporting on the Berlin premiere, found the score "spare and mechanical", and felt that listening "requires far more application than most theatregoers are prepared to give it". Defects included "complex scoring" and "impenetrable subtleties of the vocal line", so that the "strain on the ear is excessive". After hearing both the American premiere in Boston and the 1982 Juilliard production,
Peter G. Davis concurred: "the opera's flaws only become more apparent and aggravating with each hearing". Citing the "syntactically tortured libretto", combined with the thick textures of Sessions's music, "the ear becomes lost in a sea of gray monotony". In sum, "there can only be one sad conclusion: Sessions has written a terrible opera, a tragic waste of a valuable composer's precious time." Martin Brody, on the contrary, finds the overlapping, complex vocal lines consistently reinforce "an ironic undercutting of virtually all the ethical and political positions taken by the characters", so that the portrayed events are "viewed as tragic and absurd in equal parts". Conceding that the language of the libretto is largely "complicated and awkward", the drama nevertheless is "psychologically and politically focussed at all times". The music is "among Sessions’s richest: dense and colourful, gesturally graphic throughout, dramatically motivated and fully integrated at all structural levels."
[Brody 1992.]
Notes
Sources
*Anon. 1964. 'American Opera Staged in Berlin First'. ''The Times'' (6 May).
*Brody, Martin. 1992. 'Montezuma (ii)' in ''The
New Grove Dictionary of Opera
''The New Grove Dictionary of Opera'' is an encyclopedia of opera, considered to be one of the best general reference sources on the subject. It is the largest work on opera in English, and in its printed form, amounts to 5,448 pages in four volu ...
'', edited by Stanley Sadie. London: Macmillan Publishers. .
*
Davies, Peter Maxwell. 1964a. 'Sessions's Opera Stirs Berliners: "Montezuma" Is Greeted by Violent Reactions'. ''New York Times'' (Tuesday, April 21): 43.
*Davies, Peter Maxwell. 1964b. '"Montezuma" Creates a Stir in Berlin'. ''New York Times'' (Sunday, May 3): X11.
*Davis, Peter G. 1982.
Montezuma's Revenge. ''New York Magazine'' (8 March): 89–90.
*
Harbison, John. 1977. "Roger Sessions and ''Montezuma''". ''Tempo'', new series, no. 121 (June): 2–5.
*
Henahan, Donal. 1982.
Opera: Julliard Gives Sessions 'Montezuma', ''New York Times'' (Sunday, February 21): section1, part 2:51. Reprinted on ''NYTimes.com''. Accessed: August 2015.
*Kessler, Daniel. 2008. ''Sarah Caldwell: The First Woman of Opera''. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. (cloth) (pbk).
*Olmstead, Andrea. 1985. 'The Plum'd Serpent: Antonio Borgese's and Roger Sessions's ''Montezuma. ''Tempo'', new series, no. 152 (March): 13–22.
*Olmstead, Andrea. 2008. ''Roger Sessions: A Biography''. New York: Routledge. (hardback) (pbk.) (ebook).
*Oteri, Frank J. 2008.
Why Not 12-Tone Opera?. ''Sequenza21 /'' (July 11 blog post) (accessed 19 August 2015).
*
Porter, Andrew. 1976. 'The Matter of Mexico'. ''The New Yorker'' (April 19): 115–21. Reprinted in his ''Music of Three Seasons: 1974–1977'', 337–44. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1978.
*Prausnitz, Frederik. 2002. ''Roger Sessions: How a "Difficult" Composer Got That Way''. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
*Smith, Patrick J. 1976. 'Boston Opera: "Montezuma"'. ''High Fidelity/Musical America'' 26, no. 7 (July): MA-24.
*
Soria, Dorle J. 1976. 'Artist Life'. ''High Fidelity/Musical America'' 26, no. 7 (July): MA-5 & MA-35.
*
Steinberg, Michael. 1976. 'Enter Montezuma: Roger Sessions' Complex Opera Finally Gets Its U.S. Premiere in Boston—A Dozen Years after Its World Premiere in Berlin'. ''Opera News'' 40, no. 19 (April 3): 10–16.
Further reading
*Bollert, Werner. 1964. "Roger Sessions: ''Montezuma''". ''Musica'' 18 (July–August): 206.
*Di Steffano, Giovanni. 2013. "La conquista del Messico come clash of civilizations" ''Il Saggiatore Musicale'' 20, no. 2:215–35.
*Laufer, Edward C. 1965. "Roger Sessions: ''Montezuma''". ''Perspectioves of New Music'' 4, no. 1 (Fall-Winter): 95–108.
*Mason, Charles Norman. 1982. 'A Comprehensive Analysis of Roger Sessions' Opera ''Montezuma. DMA diss. Urbana-Champaign: University of Illinois.
*Oppens, K. 1982. "Von hohem Anspruch; Roger Sessions' ''Montezuma'' im New Yorker Juilliard Center". ''Opernwelt'' 23, no. 6:54
*
Peyser, Joan. 1982.
'Montezuma' Reaches New York—at Last. ''The New York Times'' (February 14): D21, 26.
*Porter, Andrew. 1982. 'A Magnificent Epic'. ''The New Yorker'' (March): 128 & 132.
*Rich, Alan. 1976.
Noble Savage, Noble Failure. ''New York Magazine'' (19 April): 90.
*Rockwell, John. 1976. "Sessions ''Montezuma'' Comes to U.S." ''New York Times'' (2 April): 19.
{{Authority control
1964 operas
Multiple-language operas
Operas set in Mexico
Aztecs in fiction
Operas by Roger Sessions
Cultural depictions of Hernán Cortés
Operas set in the 16th century
Operas