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              Kaija Saariaho, Adriana Mater:
              
              (Finnish Premiere - First Night)  Soloists, Chorus and 
              orchestra of Finnish National Opera, 
              
              
              Ernest Martínez 
              Izquierdo 
              conductor, Helsinki, Finland. 23.2.2008 (BK) 
               
               
                Adriana Mater deals with war, rape, motherhood and 
              ultimately with the significance of compassion. The narrative 
              was developed after  Kaija Saariaho  described her 
              experiences of her first pregnancy to 
              librettist Amin Maalouf, especially her  musings about her  
              baby's heart beating next to her own. What kind of person was 
              this growing child, what events might shape its future, what 
              could it / might it  become? 
              
              Seventeen years pass. The 
              boy Yonas discovers his  history and is  furiously 
              angry after learning the truth and  realising that  his mother has deceived 
              him.  He resolves to kill Tsargo and sets off to do so,  
              only to find that Tsargo has lost his 
              sight. Yonas realises that he is not a murderer - he cannot kill 
              because of his father's blindness - and  
              confesses his 'weakness'  to his mother. Comforted at 
              last, and having a growing man's shoulder to lean on now,  Adriana  tells Yonas, 'We are 
              not avenged Yonas : we are saved.'
              
              A joint production by Bastille Opera, Paris and Finnish National 
              Opera. Computer music by the IRCAM studios, Paris. 
              
              Production:
              
              
              Conductor-Ernest 
              Martínez Izquierdo
              Libretto - Amin Maalouf
              Director  - Peter Sellars
              Sets  - George Tsypin
              Costumes  - Martin Pakledinaz
              Lighting design -  James F. Ingalls
              Sound design  - IRCAM computer music designer Gilbert Nouno,
              Petteri Laukkanen, Josi Keinonen
              
              Cast: 
              
              
              
              
              Adriana -               Monica Groop (mezzo-soprano)
              Refka (Adriana's Sister) - Pia Freund (soprano)
              Tsargo (A Soldier) - Jyrki Korhonen (bass)
              Yonas (Adriana's Son) - Tuomas Katajala (tenor)
               
              
              L- R : Yonas, Adriana, Refka and Tsargo
              Two years 
              after its world premiere in  Paris, Kaija Saariaho's 
              Adriana comes to Finland, tenderly re-polished to be new-pin 
              bright. Much more a new production than a revival for Helsinki, 
              the stage set has been trimmed by a third and some scoring 
              redrafted, tailoring the sound carefully to the FNO's clean acoustic. The 
              result is both moving and impressive. 
              
              All
              Kaija
              Saariaho's operas  - L'Amour de Loin and the 
              opera/oratorio La Passion de Simone (see
              
              review) are the  others -  move very slowly, tracing 
              their characters' experiences rather than 
              dramatised
              events. Very  little happens in the way of action, but 
              the audience shares deeply in the emotional  impact of such events 
              as there are, and also in the characters'  thoughts about them. 
              It was Messiaen's St. Francis of Assisi that led Kaija 
              Saariaho to turn to writing opera herself and like so much of Messiaen's 
              own output, all of the Saariaho narratives draw us gently 
              into an unusually contemplative frame of mind. As   the characters make sense of what happens to them and 
              distil out the meaning 
              of their lives, we  share 
              in their meditations about the things that affect them :  
              we share in their  Regards, to use one of  Messiaen's  
              carefully chosen words. This curious sense of sharing - which steals 
              up on us so quietly that we may not realise what  is happening 
              at first - is what makes Kaija Saariaho's operas so unusual 
              and compelling.  It is also what makes them so complete. 
 
              
              Pia Freund (Refka) and Monica Groop (Adriana)
 
             
              
              Using the background of a modern civil war, Amin Maalouf's plot  
              describes  how  a young  woman called Adriana, is raped 
              and made pregnant by Tsargo, a man active in the conflict and living in her village. Against advice from her sister Refka,  Adriana bears the child and brings him up to believe 
              that his father died heroically in the fighting,  which ended 
              shortly before he was born. While carrying her unborn child, 
              Adriana wonders if the baby will become like its father. 'Will he 
              be Cain or Abel?' she asks herself repeatedly.
             
              
             Jyrki Korhonen (Tsargo)
              
              
              The creative team that developed the three operas, librettist 
              Maalouf, director Peter Sellars and the composer herself,  
              have come to regard their work as a trilogy of which Adriana Mater 
              is the final third, even though it was composed and written before
              La Passion de Simone. They share both a creative vision and 
              a commitment to economy. There is not a superfluous word in the 
              libretto, the direction and sets are deliberately spare -  the rape  is not visible to the audience and is suggested 
              only 
              by James F. Ingalls'  lighting and the orchestra - and even 
              the music has a carefully restricted palette, despite substantial  instrumental forces, the IRCAM designed computer sound and a large 
              off-stage chorus. The totality however, including George Tsypin's 
              set design which in Helsinki exposes the complex lighting rig on 
              the stage, adds up to the nearest thing to a Wagnerian 
              gesamtkunstwerk imaginable these days. Less, as they say, 
              really can be more in careful and capable hands.
              
              Better singing and a better orchestral interpretation, from the 
              four principals and conductor
              
              Ernest Martínez 
              Izquierdo,  
              would be difficult to find anywhere in the world just now.  This is not an easy score by any means and is typical 
              of Kaija Saariaho's mature style, in which the balance between 
              soloists, the orchestra and computer sound design, not to mention the 
              impeccable FNO chorus, feels completely seamless. The  overall 
              effect is of an engaging and innovative soundscape depicting 
              everything from extreme violence through to the tenderest human 
              emotions with equally easy facility. Small wonder then that the Helsinki 
              performances are now completely sold out. They certainly deserve 
              to be.
              
              
              
              
              
              Pictures © Heikki Tuuli 
              
              A concert version of Adriana Mater will be performed at London's 
              Barbican Hall by the BBC Symphony Orchestra  and BBC Singers 
              on April 24th, conducted by Edward Gardner. The soloists are Solveig Kringelborn, Monica Groop,
              
              Jyrki Korhonen and
              
              Gordon Gietz.
              
              Santa Fe Opera will offer a staged version with Pia Freund, Monica 
              Groop and tenor Joseph Kaiser in July and August. See the Santa Fe 
              season preview page 
              
              here.
              
              
              
              
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