Morality takes a hike in Claudio Monteverdi’s closing opera, “L’Incoronazione di Poppea.” Bold in its satire and express in its sensuality, much more than 350 years after its creation, the work provides its ruthless lovers, Nero and Poppea, the whole lot they need.
A decadent exploration of Nero’s Rome, “Poppea” may appear to share little with “The Comet,” a W.E.B. Du Bois brief story from 1920. Using tropes of sci-fi disaster, Du Bois, the well-known Black sociologist, asks what it will take for a racially equitable civilization to emerge. But, like Monteverdi’s opera, it has an amoral, ice-cold end: After the merest risk of interracial love, the established order of segregation returns.
On Friday, each the opera and the story can be introduced collectively, united by their widespread denominator of jaundiced cynicism, in “The Comet/Poppea,” which is premiering at Geffen Contemporary, a warehouse-style house on the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. (There are already plans for it to journey to Philadelphia this fall, to New York subsequent 12 months and to the Schwarzman Center at Yale University in 2026.)
ePresented in Los Angeles by MOCA and the director Yuval Sharon’s firm of operatic experimenters, the Industry, “The Comet/Poppea” was commissioned by the American Modern Opera Company. Over a 90-minute run time, it alternates between a radically pared-down “Poppea” and an adaptation of Du Bois’s story by the librettist Douglas Kearney and the composer George E. Lewis, for a mash-up that includes stark transitions — and superimpositions — between Monteverdi’s Baroque fashion and Lewis’s high-modernist states of frenzy.
Lewis’s rating for “The Comet” may stand by itself as a one-act. For this manufacturing, although, it’s blended with “Poppea,” and quite freely: In the weeks earlier than the premiere of “The Comet/Poppea,” the exact sequential pairing of scenes from the 2 scores had but to be firmly determined.
Still, throughout an early June rehearsal in Manhattan, thematic resonances between “The Comet” and “Poppea” had been clearly discernible as singers traversed their totally different musical worlds. That transfer, forwards and backwards, has unfolded experimentally, and never with out challenges. But on the rehearsal, Sharon, who’s directing the manufacturing, projected calm. “No rush this morning,” he stated, welcoming enter from the forged.
Among those that spoke up was the soprano Joelle Lamarre, who, whereas engaged on her strategy to a mournful scene for Nellie (in “The Comet”), additionally wanted to think about her music from “Poppea.” So, she requested the Industry’s musical director, Marc Lowenstein, for a slower tempo earlier than a transition between the scores.
Explaining her transition into the world of “Poppea,” she instructed the conductor: “You need it to be ‘dance,’ and my consciousness just isn’t there.” She was talking of shifting into the sunshine and buoyant Monteverdi from a tonally attractive aria by Lewis, impressed, he stated in a current telephone interview, by the “Psalm” motion of John Coltrane’s “A Love Supreme.”
Davóne Tines, who additionally performs roles in each “The Comet” and “Poppea,” chimed in to agree together with her request. Because he and Lamarre could be popping out of a tragic second within the Lewis opera, he promised Lowenstein, “We will promote the hell out of the slower tempo as a result of we actually can be weeping the entire time.”
Lowenstein consulted with Sharon, then indulged the singers. Everyone agreed that the transition clicked, with a brand new frisson. “The tales aren’t parallel,” Lowenstein stated throughout a break. “But they rhyme quite a bit: You have the established order that’s deeply unjust. And how do you navigate that?”
Navigating opera, whether or not conventional or cutting-edge, is nothing new for Sharon. He has even staged works by a basic composer like Wagner in each a Detroit parking storage and on the storied Bayreuth Festival.
In 2018, the countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo approached Sharon about staging “Poppea.” But Sharon stated he balked on the thought of doing “an opera about highly effective folks performing badly” throughout Donald J. Trump’s presidency. Then a lightweight went on: If Shakespeare may very well be minimize and reimagined for up to date efficiency, he thought, why not Monteverdi?
Monteverdi, Sharon stated, is “sort of encyclopedic in the identical means that Shakespeare is,” and might survive, even thrive, with substantial reducing, pasting and recontextualizing that goes past fixing riddles posed by the a number of editions of the rating. He thought of inserting work by Du Bois — an opera lover himself — and approached Lewis with the thought of setting Du Bois’s sociological nonfiction to music.
Why not Du Bois’s fiction, as an alternative, Lewis countered.
From there, the thought of “The Comet/Poppea” gathered steam. It hit delays in the course of the pandemic, however now its items are in place, together with its idiosyncratic stage: To emphasize the vertiginous high quality of the mashup, Sharon conceived a slowly rotating turntable, divided by a mirror that separates two discrete units designed by the Tony Award-winner Mimi Lien.
At first look, the mirror looks like a option to formally separate the tales: The Monteverdi half makes use of intricate ornament, together with plaster-relief flowers; Du Bois’s Nineteen Twenties milieu is rendered in Art Deco fashion. But Lien’s set additionally supplies a hallway portal between these worlds — which, past a symbolic connection, permits for the straightforward motion of singers who journey between each halves of the manufacturing.
The pit musicians, coming from Baroque and up to date backgrounds, will carry out offstage. The viewers can be seated on two sides of the turntable, seeing the identical present however from totally different, rotating views. In promotional supplies for the present, Sharon has described this mutable body as a gloss on Du Bois’s idea of “double consciousness,” saying that the present “begins as a critique of the establishment of opera and ends as a justification of the artwork type’s radical potential.”
For his half, Costanzo stated that “the connections that we draw, together with in vocal colours, are fascinating.” He in contrast some delicate, floating notes in his portrayal of Nero in “Poppea” with the ultimate phrases his patriarchal character delivers to the Black protagonist of “The Comet.”
“The final thing he says is, if you happen to ever need a job, ‘name’ — and that’s, after all, a very disingenuous line, because it’s staged,” Costanzo stated. “I hand him a tip, a bit of cash — mainly, , exerting my white supremacy. And I sing ‘name’ with that very same sort of eerie pianissimo that we hear in Nero’s world. And so I’m looking for, by vocal colours, the connections quite than the variations.”