fbpx
Wikipedia

Carmen Suite (ballet)

Carmen Suite is a one-act ballet created in 1967 by Cuban choreographer Alberto Alonso to music by Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin for his wife, prima ballerina assoluta Maya Plisetskaya. The premiere took place on 20 April 1967 at the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow. The music, taken from Bizet's opera Carmen and arranged for strings and percussion, is not a 19th-century pastiche but rather "a creative meeting of the minds," as Shchedrin put it, with Bizet's melodies reclothed in a variety of fresh instrumental colors (including the frequent use of percussion), set to new rhythms and often phrased with a great deal of sly wit. Initially banned by the Soviet hierarchy as "disrespectful" to the opera for precisely these qualities, the ballet has since become Shchedrin's best-known work and has remained popular in the West for what reviewer James Sanderson calls "an iconoclastic but highly entertaining retelling of Bizet's opera."[1]

Carmen Suite
Maya Plisetskaya as Carmen, 1974
ChoreographerAlberto Alonso
MusicRodion Shchedrin
Based onBizet's Carmen
Premiere20 April 1967 (1967-04-20)
Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow

Structure

The ballet is in one act containing 13 dance numbers:

  • I. Introduction: Andante assai
  • II. Dance: Allegro
  • III. First Intermezzo: Allegro moderato - Andante moderato - (attacca)
  • IV. Changing of the Guard: Moderato
  • V. Carmen's Entrance and Habanera: Allegro moderato - Quasi andante
  • VI. Scene: Allegro moderato - Tempo precedente - Andante assai
  • VII. Second Intermezzo: Larghetto
  • VIII. Bolero: Allegro vivo
  • IX. Torero: Moderato con stoltezza
  • X. Torero and Carmen: Lento - Tempo I
  • XI. Adagio: Andante moderato - Adagio
  • XII. Fortune-Telling: Andantino - Andante assai
  • XIII. Finale: Allegro - Tempo precedente - Andante assai

Instrumentation

A standard string orchestra of violins, violas, cellos, double basses is augmented by a percussion battery of one timpanist and four members, who play the following:

Player 1: marimba, vibraphone, xylophone, castanets, three cowbells, four bongos, tubular bells, snare drum, guiro

Player 2: vibraphone, marimba, snare drum, tambourine, two woodblocks, claves, triangle, guiro

Player 3: glockenspiel, crotales, maracas, whip, snare drum, cabasa, guiro, three temple blocks, bass drum, tam-tam, tenor drum, triangle

Player 4: cymbals, bass drum, tam-tam, hi-hat, triangle, tambourine, five tom-toms

Two factors influenced Shchedrin in choosing this instrumentation. The first, he said in an interview with BBC Music Magazine, was that, "to be [as] totally far [as possible]" from Bizet's scoring for the opera, he wanted an ensemble "without brass and woodwind... that gave me many possibilities" for timbral variety. The second was the high level of string and percussion players then available in the Bolshoi orchestra.[2]

Composition

 
Rodion Shchedrin with his wife, Maya Plisetskaya, in 2009. He wrote Carmen Suite for Plisetskaya

The idea for Carmen Suite originated with Shchedrin's wife, Bolshoi Theatre ballerina Maya Plisetskaya. In 1964, she asked composer Dmitri Shostakovich to compose a ballet on the story of Carmen, since, Shchedrin said, they were both on good terms with him.[2] Shostakovich "gently but firmly refused," Plisetskaya remembers. "I'm afraid of Bizet," he told her half-jokingly. "Everyone is so used to the opera that whatever you write, you'll disappoint them." He suggested that perhaps Shchedrin could "come up with something special" to fulfill her request. Instead, she went to Aram Khachaturian, the composer of the ballets Gayane and Spartacus, but "things never went beyond talking."[3] Shchedrin added that Khachaturian told Plisetskaya, "Why you need me? You have a composer at home, ask him!" It was then, he said, that she asked him to write the music.[2]

In late 1966, the Ballet Nacional de Cuba stopped in Moscow during its Soviet tour. Plisetskaya's mother attended its performances and encouraged her to go. Eventually, Plisetskaya approached the company's choreographer, Alberto Alonso and told him of her desire for a Carmen ballet.[4][5] Alonso developed the libretto and worked with Ballet Nacional dancers on the choreography, then flew to Moscow to teach the work to Plisetskaya. Shchedrin watched her initial rehearsals with Alonso and agreed to write music for the ballet.[6]

However, as much as he struggled to write an original score for this project, Shchedrin found he could not extricate the story from the music that French composer Georges Bizet wrote for his opera of the same name, a score Shchedrin called "fantastic, one of the best in the whole history of music."[2] Eventually, Shchedrin decided to exploit this connection in what he called "a creative meeting of the minds."[7] With Shostakovich's words in mind, Shchedrin said, "I had to combine ... something fresh ... with these famous melodies." From this motive came the idea to use just strings and percussion for the instrumentation "because then it is a totally modern combination."[2] His intent was to give homage to what Bizet had done and acknowledge the universality of his music in telling the story of Carmen while adding his own ideas to the work. In this way, Andrew Lindemann Malone writes in his description of the ballet, Shchedrin positioned him on a creative middle ground, "making himself if not an equal partner at least something above the level of arranger."[8]

Toward this end, Shchedrin set Bizet's music with a number of clever and unexpected rhythmic twists and subtler changes in notes and chords. This gives the impression of simultaneously recognizing something familiar and being surprised in hearing something slightly distorted about it. Some melodies are "combined for 'found' counterpoint," Malone writes, others interrupted and still more left unaccompanied where Shchedrin assumes the listener knows both music and story all too well. An instance of the last mentioned, Malone writes, is "when a big whipped-up climax in the Torero scene leads to nothing but the lowest percussion, pumping quietly, merrily, and obliviously along."[8] He also adds a number of humorous touches, such as the off-color use of the "Farandole" from Bizet's incidental music to L'Arlésienne and the sudden, unexpected hesitations in the Toreador Song.[1] None of these changes obfuscate either the general melodic curves of Bizet's music—all the familiar tunes are easily recognizable—or the intricacies of the plot.[8]

Shchedrin's orchestration proved equally unexpected and creative. Eschewing the full orchestra of Bizet for one of strings and an enlarged percussion section, he "boldly overhauled" the orchestral sound, as Sanderson phrases it, with a greatly widened timbrel range enhancing the sharpened rhythms and sudden hairpin turns in phrasing and mood.[1] The Habanera, Malone says, is introduced "in a bouncy duet" for vibraphone and tympani, while various percussion instruments accentuate separate notes in the "Changing of the Guard" scene to "unexpectedly rattle" the melodic line."[8] The full extent of Shchedrin's emendations and their faithfulness to Bizet and the story, Malone writes, are both shown in the finale of the ballet: "melodies get twisted, thrown to exotic percussion, and otherwise trampled, but the resulting music, with its passionate climax and coda of distant bells and pizzicato strings, still has gravity and depth, due both to Bizet and to Shchedrin's interventions."[8]

Roles

Carmen, a gypsy woman

Don José, corporal of Dragoons

Escamillo, a bullfighter (toreador)

Zúñiga, captain of Dragoons

Fate

Magistrate

Synopsis

Place: Seville, Spain, and surrounding hills
Time: Around 1820

Alonso's scenario centers on Carmen, Don José and the bullfighter Escamillo. Carmen is a passionate, free-spirited woman in contrast to the temperamental and fickle Don José. Fate, a ballerina dressed in black and a representation of Carmen's alter ego, tells Carmen's fortune with a deck of cards. A fight with tobacco dealers leads to Carmen's arrest by Captain Zúñiga. In jail, she seduces Don José and convinces him to release her. Carmen is subsequently caught in a love triangle between Don José and popular bullfighter Escamillo.[6]

Boris Messerer's sets included a mock bullring which symbolizes life, uniting the bullfight and Carmen's destiny in a sinister personage.[4] Masked spectators and a uniformed judge represent society's disapproval for the unconventional behavior of Carmen and her lovers. Fate reappears in the final act playing the role of a bull and the three main characters meet in the arena. Carmen dances alternatively with Fate, Escamillo and Don José until she is stabbed. She dies caressing Don José's face, revealing him as the assassin.[6]

Official ban

The Bolshoi premiered Carmen Suite in 1967 but the fact that Bizet's music was so well-known actually worked against its favor, at first. Soviet Minister of Culture Yekaterina Furtseva, was repelled by the modernist flavor given to the music and the sexual overtones of both the story and the title character. She banned the work immediately following its premiere as "insulting" to Bizet's masterpiece.[7] Explaining this, Furtseva commented to Soviet media, "We cannot allow them to make a whore out of Carmen, the heroine of the Spanish people." (Unfortunately for Furtseva, her words were taken as a joke among the Moscow public following the controversy.[9]) When she met privately at the Bolshoi with Plisetskaya and other members, Furtseva called Carmen Suite "a great failure," the production "raw. Nothing but eroticism. The opera's music has been mutilated. The concept has to be rethought. I have grave doubts as to whether the ballet can be redone."[10]

Not long after the meeting with Furtseva, Shostakovich called the ministry about Carmen Suite. He told Furtseva that he considered the ballet both a masterly transcription and highly effective dance music.[10] At this time, Shostakovich was First Secretary of the Composer's union of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR); this made him effectively leader of that union. Even if it were not meant as an official call and regardless of his official position still being subservient to hers, the fact it was Shostakovich calling might have still carried some cachet.[11] Because of this personal intervention, the ban was lifted.[12] Plisetskaya confessed in her autobiography that without Shostakovich's help, the ban on Carmen Suite might have remained permanent.[13]

Shostakovich's call did not end all official interference with the ballet, however. Carmen Suite had been planned for the Bolshoi's upcoming tour of Canada as part of Expo 67, scheduled to be held in Toronto. In fact, the Canadian impresario assisting with the Bolshoi on the tour, Nikolai Kudryavtsev, had specifically requested it and felt it would be highly appropriate.[14] Kudryavtsev, assured by the Ministry of Culture that Carmen Suite would be included, booked the Maple Leaf Gardens and began advertising Plisetskaya's appearance in it, expecting a full audience of 6,000. However, when he arrived in Moscow in July 1967 to sign contracts, he was told that Furtseva had seen the ballet and decided it would not be shown in Canada. The objection at that time appeared to be that Plisetskaya had danced in "very abbreviated black tights."[15]

Two weeks later, Kudryavtsev, who was then in Vienna, was asked by the Soviets to a meeting at Furtseva's office in Moscow. The meeting lasted from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM and consisted mainly, as he recalled later to Canadian poet and diplomat Robert Ford, of "a running battle between Plisetskaya and Furtseva."[16] Furtseva told Plisetskaya that not only would Carmen Suite not be included but that she was to tell the foreign press that the work was not ready to be performed. When told this, Plisetskaya refused to go on tour and that if she were forced to do so, she would tell the foreign press the truth about Carmen Suite.[17] At one point, Kudryavtsev remembered, Furtseva accused Shchedrin of plagiarism for claiming Carmen Suite "was his own work when 'everyone knew that it had been written by a French composer, Bizet.'" Plisetskaya demanded that Furtseva withdraw this charge or she would never dance again, either in the Soviet Union or abroad. Kudryavtsev told Ford that Furtseva said this was fine by her as Plisetskaya was too old to continue dancing anyway.[18] Plisetskaya, in her version of the meeting, said that Furtseva "screeched" that Plisetskaya would be "a traitor to classical ballet" by leaving, to which she did not reply. As it turned out, Plisetskaya became seriously ill and could not go on the tour. Carmen Suite was not performed but the sets were shipped regardless.[17][a 1]

With its sets still abroad, Carmen Suite could not be performed for the 50-year celebration of the October Revolution. Once they were returned, the Bolshoi was allowed to stage the ballet, which became popular with Moscow audiences. In 1968, Premier Alexei Kosygin saw and praised it. When a tour of Great Britain was scheduled for later that year and the British impresario requested Carmen Suite, the Ministry of Culture agreed.[19]

Critical reactions

In the April 1969 issue of Gramophone, reviewer Edward Greenfield called Carmen Suite "A real curiosity" and, while "a skilful hotchpotch on popular themes [that] has its attractions," it was "Not the sort of thing, then, that is going to endear itself to the US State Department"—a nod to the work's Soviet-Cuban roots and the Cold War climate prevailing at the time.[20] More recent commentators seem to have taken the ballet's tongue-in-cheekiness more in stride. In his review of the Kremlin Chamber Orchestra recording, Sanderson calls the ballet "an iconoclastic but highly entertaining retelling of Bizet's opera,"[1] and John Armstrong, in his BBC Music review of the Mikhail PletnevRussian National Orchestra recording, writes that in Carmen Suite, "you get all the familiar tunes dressed up in a way Bizet would never have imagined, and with a sly grin and a twinkle in the eye."[7] The music is still not universally loved, though. In his review of the Pletnev recording, Raymond Tuttle calls Shchedrin's efforts "a sort of classical 'bachelor pad' takeover, half lurid and half disturbing, of Bizet's immortal soul" and notes "the score's incipient vulgarity" and "grotesque elements."[21]

Like the music, the ballet still comes under critical fire at times. In a New York Times 2011 review of the Mariinsky staging, Alastair Macaulay faults Alonso for turning "the dance impulse in Bizet’s music into something heavier and more clumsily expressionistic," then adds,

Nothing about "Carmen Suite" is remotely subtle, though the narrative makes Carmen look considerably more dishonest about her change of erotic allegiance (from José to the Torero) than in the opera. The characters keep posing for us and one another; steps are hurled flamboyantly, like stunts. Early on it seems Carmen is the bullfighter aiming her darts at first one lover, then the next; but a final quartet — featuring her, José, the Torero and Fate — proceeds through a certain amount of partner changing until Carmen lies dead at José’s feet and Fate at the Torero’s. (It’s not often that you come away feeling Fate got a rough deal.)[22]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Instead of Carmen Suite, the Bolshoi offered Don Quixote danced by Ekaterina Maximova. Only 2,500 people attended, which made the performance a financial disaster (Ruud, 150).

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Sanderson, allmusic.com.
  2. ^ a b c d e Duchen, BBC Music Magazine.
  3. ^ Maya, 269–70.
  4. ^ a b Ballet Nacional de Cuba website.
  5. ^ Maya, 270.
  6. ^ a b c balletbag.com notes.
  7. ^ a b c Armstrong, BBC Music.
  8. ^ a b c d e Malone, allmusic.com work description.
  9. ^ Dance, 205.
  10. ^ a b Maya, 276.
  11. ^ Fanning, 20.
  12. ^ Armstrong, BBC Music; Maya, 276; Sanderson, allmusic.com.
  13. ^ Maya, 276–7.
  14. ^ Maya, 277.
  15. ^ Ruud, 149.
  16. ^ Ruud, 149–50.
  17. ^ a b Maya, 279.
  18. ^ Ruud, 150.
  19. ^ Maya, 280.
  20. ^ Greenfield, gramophone.net.
  21. ^ Tuttle, classicalnet.com review.
  22. ^ Macaulay, NY Times review.

Sources

  • Armstrong, John, BBC Music review of Pletnev/RNO recording, 20-Nov-2002. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012
  • balletbag.com notes for Carmen Suite, 8-May-2010. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012
  • Fanning, David, "Placing Shostakovich and the Eighth Quartet." In Shostakovich: String Quartet No. 8 (Landmarks in Music Since 1950) (Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2004). ISBN 0-754-60699-6.
  • Greenfield, Edward, gramophone.net review, Apr-1969. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012
  • Malone, Andrew Lindemann, allmusic.com work description for Carmen Suite ballet. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012
  • Macaulay, Alastair, "This Carmen Seeks Liberty in a Bullring, With Strokes of Fate." In The New York Times, 17 Jul 2011. Retrieved 23 Mar 2012
  • Messerer, Azary, "Plisetskaya, Maya." In International Encyclopedia of Dance, Volume 5 (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2004), ed. Cohen, Selma Jeanne. ISBN 0-19-517589-1.
  • Plisetskaya, Maya, I, Maya Plisetskaya (Yale University Press, 2001). ISBN 0-300-08857-4.
  • Sanderson, Blair, allmusic.com review of Carmen Suite; Russian Photographs; Glorification, Kremlin Chamber Orchestra conducted by Misha Rachlevsky. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012
  • Ruud, Charles A. The Constant Diplomat: Robert Ford in Moscow (Quebec City: McGill–Queen's University Press, 2009). ISBN 0-773-53585-3.
  • Tuttle, Raymond, classicalnet.com review of Pletnev/RNO recording. Posting date not available. Retrieved 23 Mar 2012

External links

  • Boosey & Hawkes page for Shchedrin Carmen Suite Ballet. Retrieved 22-Mar-2012

carmen, suite, ballet, carmen, suite, ballet, created, 1967, cuban, choreographer, alberto, alonso, music, russian, composer, rodion, shchedrin, wife, prima, ballerina, assoluta, maya, plisetskaya, premiere, took, place, april, 1967, bolshoi, theatre, moscow, . Carmen Suite is a one act ballet created in 1967 by Cuban choreographer Alberto Alonso to music by Russian composer Rodion Shchedrin for his wife prima ballerina assoluta Maya Plisetskaya The premiere took place on 20 April 1967 at the Bolshoi Theatre Moscow The music taken from Bizet s opera Carmen and arranged for strings and percussion is not a 19th century pastiche but rather a creative meeting of the minds as Shchedrin put it with Bizet s melodies reclothed in a variety of fresh instrumental colors including the frequent use of percussion set to new rhythms and often phrased with a great deal of sly wit Initially banned by the Soviet hierarchy as disrespectful to the opera for precisely these qualities the ballet has since become Shchedrin s best known work and has remained popular in the West for what reviewer James Sanderson calls an iconoclastic but highly entertaining retelling of Bizet s opera 1 Carmen SuiteMaya Plisetskaya as Carmen 1974ChoreographerAlberto AlonsoMusicRodion ShchedrinBased onBizet s CarmenPremiere20 April 1967 1967 04 20 Bolshoi Theatre Moscow Contents 1 Structure 2 Instrumentation 3 Composition 4 Roles 5 Synopsis 6 Official ban 7 Critical reactions 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 External linksStructure EditThe ballet is in one act containing 13 dance numbers I Introduction Andante assai II Dance Allegro III First Intermezzo Allegro moderato Andante moderato attacca IV Changing of the Guard Moderato V Carmen s Entrance and Habanera Allegro moderato Quasi andante VI Scene Allegro moderato Tempo precedente Andante assai VII Second Intermezzo Larghetto VIII Bolero Allegro vivo IX Torero Moderato con stoltezza X Torero and Carmen Lento Tempo I XI Adagio Andante moderato Adagio XII Fortune Telling Andantino Andante assai XIII Finale Allegro Tempo precedente Andante assaiInstrumentation EditA standard string orchestra of violins violas cellos double basses is augmented by a percussion battery of one timpanist and four members who play the following Player 1 marimba vibraphone xylophone castanets three cowbells four bongos tubular bells snare drum guiroPlayer 2 vibraphone marimba snare drum tambourine two woodblocks claves triangle guiroPlayer 3 glockenspiel crotales maracas whip snare drum cabasa guiro three temple blocks bass drum tam tam tenor drum trianglePlayer 4 cymbals bass drum tam tam hi hat triangle tambourine five tom tomsTwo factors influenced Shchedrin in choosing this instrumentation The first he said in an interview with BBC Music Magazine was that to be as totally far as possible from Bizet s scoring for the opera he wanted an ensemble without brass and woodwind that gave me many possibilities for timbral variety The second was the high level of string and percussion players then available in the Bolshoi orchestra 2 Composition Edit Rodion Shchedrin with his wife Maya Plisetskaya in 2009 He wrote Carmen Suite for Plisetskaya The idea for Carmen Suite originated with Shchedrin s wife Bolshoi Theatre ballerina Maya Plisetskaya In 1964 she asked composer Dmitri Shostakovich to compose a ballet on the story of Carmen since Shchedrin said they were both on good terms with him 2 Shostakovich gently but firmly refused Plisetskaya remembers I m afraid of Bizet he told her half jokingly Everyone is so used to the opera that whatever you write you ll disappoint them He suggested that perhaps Shchedrin could come up with something special to fulfill her request Instead she went to Aram Khachaturian the composer of the ballets Gayane and Spartacus but things never went beyond talking 3 Shchedrin added that Khachaturian told Plisetskaya Why you need me You have a composer at home ask him It was then he said that she asked him to write the music 2 In late 1966 the Ballet Nacional de Cuba stopped in Moscow during its Soviet tour Plisetskaya s mother attended its performances and encouraged her to go Eventually Plisetskaya approached the company s choreographer Alberto Alonso and told him of her desire for a Carmen ballet 4 5 Alonso developed the libretto and worked with Ballet Nacional dancers on the choreography then flew to Moscow to teach the work to Plisetskaya Shchedrin watched her initial rehearsals with Alonso and agreed to write music for the ballet 6 However as much as he struggled to write an original score for this project Shchedrin found he could not extricate the story from the music that French composer Georges Bizet wrote for his opera of the same name a score Shchedrin called fantastic one of the best in the whole history of music 2 Eventually Shchedrin decided to exploit this connection in what he called a creative meeting of the minds 7 With Shostakovich s words in mind Shchedrin said I had to combine something fresh with these famous melodies From this motive came the idea to use just strings and percussion for the instrumentation because then it is a totally modern combination 2 His intent was to give homage to what Bizet had done and acknowledge the universality of his music in telling the story of Carmen while adding his own ideas to the work In this way Andrew Lindemann Malone writes in his description of the ballet Shchedrin positioned him on a creative middle ground making himself if not an equal partner at least something above the level of arranger 8 Toward this end Shchedrin set Bizet s music with a number of clever and unexpected rhythmic twists and subtler changes in notes and chords This gives the impression of simultaneously recognizing something familiar and being surprised in hearing something slightly distorted about it Some melodies are combined for found counterpoint Malone writes others interrupted and still more left unaccompanied where Shchedrin assumes the listener knows both music and story all too well An instance of the last mentioned Malone writes is when a big whipped up climax in the Torero scene leads to nothing but the lowest percussion pumping quietly merrily and obliviously along 8 He also adds a number of humorous touches such as the off color use of the Farandole from Bizet s incidental music to L Arlesienne and the sudden unexpected hesitations in the Toreador Song 1 None of these changes obfuscate either the general melodic curves of Bizet s music all the familiar tunes are easily recognizable or the intricacies of the plot 8 Shchedrin s orchestration proved equally unexpected and creative Eschewing the full orchestra of Bizet for one of strings and an enlarged percussion section he boldly overhauled the orchestral sound as Sanderson phrases it with a greatly widened timbrel range enhancing the sharpened rhythms and sudden hairpin turns in phrasing and mood 1 The Habanera Malone says is introduced in a bouncy duet for vibraphone and tympani while various percussion instruments accentuate separate notes in the Changing of the Guard scene to unexpectedly rattle the melodic line 8 The full extent of Shchedrin s emendations and their faithfulness to Bizet and the story Malone writes are both shown in the finale of the ballet melodies get twisted thrown to exotic percussion and otherwise trampled but the resulting music with its passionate climax and coda of distant bells and pizzicato strings still has gravity and depth due both to Bizet and to Shchedrin s interventions 8 Roles EditCarmen a gypsy womanDon Jose corporal of DragoonsEscamillo a bullfighter toreador Zuniga captain of DragoonsFateMagistrateSynopsis EditPlace Seville Spain and surrounding hills Time Around 1820Alonso s scenario centers on Carmen Don Jose and the bullfighter Escamillo Carmen is a passionate free spirited woman in contrast to the temperamental and fickle Don Jose Fate a ballerina dressed in black and a representation of Carmen s alter ego tells Carmen s fortune with a deck of cards A fight with tobacco dealers leads to Carmen s arrest by Captain Zuniga In jail she seduces Don Jose and convinces him to release her Carmen is subsequently caught in a love triangle between Don Jose and popular bullfighter Escamillo 6 Boris Messerer s sets included a mock bullring which symbolizes life uniting the bullfight and Carmen s destiny in a sinister personage 4 Masked spectators and a uniformed judge represent society s disapproval for the unconventional behavior of Carmen and her lovers Fate reappears in the final act playing the role of a bull and the three main characters meet in the arena Carmen dances alternatively with Fate Escamillo and Don Jose until she is stabbed She dies caressing Don Jose s face revealing him as the assassin 6 Official ban EditThe Bolshoi premiered Carmen Suite in 1967 but the fact that Bizet s music was so well known actually worked against its favor at first Soviet Minister of Culture Yekaterina Furtseva was repelled by the modernist flavor given to the music and the sexual overtones of both the story and the title character She banned the work immediately following its premiere as insulting to Bizet s masterpiece 7 Explaining this Furtseva commented to Soviet media We cannot allow them to make a whore out of Carmen the heroine of the Spanish people Unfortunately for Furtseva her words were taken as a joke among the Moscow public following the controversy 9 When she met privately at the Bolshoi with Plisetskaya and other members Furtseva called Carmen Suite a great failure the production raw Nothing but eroticism The opera s music has been mutilated The concept has to be rethought I have grave doubts as to whether the ballet can be redone 10 Not long after the meeting with Furtseva Shostakovich called the ministry about Carmen Suite He told Furtseva that he considered the ballet both a masterly transcription and highly effective dance music 10 At this time Shostakovich was First Secretary of the Composer s union of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic RSFSR this made him effectively leader of that union Even if it were not meant as an official call and regardless of his official position still being subservient to hers the fact it was Shostakovich calling might have still carried some cachet 11 Because of this personal intervention the ban was lifted 12 Plisetskaya confessed in her autobiography that without Shostakovich s help the ban on Carmen Suite might have remained permanent 13 Shostakovich s call did not end all official interference with the ballet however Carmen Suite had been planned for the Bolshoi s upcoming tour of Canada as part of Expo 67 scheduled to be held in Toronto In fact the Canadian impresario assisting with the Bolshoi on the tour Nikolai Kudryavtsev had specifically requested it and felt it would be highly appropriate 14 Kudryavtsev assured by the Ministry of Culture that Carmen Suite would be included booked the Maple Leaf Gardens and began advertising Plisetskaya s appearance in it expecting a full audience of 6 000 However when he arrived in Moscow in July 1967 to sign contracts he was told that Furtseva had seen the ballet and decided it would not be shown in Canada The objection at that time appeared to be that Plisetskaya had danced in very abbreviated black tights 15 Two weeks later Kudryavtsev who was then in Vienna was asked by the Soviets to a meeting at Furtseva s office in Moscow The meeting lasted from 10 00 AM to 5 00 PM and consisted mainly as he recalled later to Canadian poet and diplomat Robert Ford of a running battle between Plisetskaya and Furtseva 16 Furtseva told Plisetskaya that not only would Carmen Suite not be included but that she was to tell the foreign press that the work was not ready to be performed When told this Plisetskaya refused to go on tour and that if she were forced to do so she would tell the foreign press the truth about Carmen Suite 17 At one point Kudryavtsev remembered Furtseva accused Shchedrin of plagiarism for claiming Carmen Suite was his own work when everyone knew that it had been written by a French composer Bizet Plisetskaya demanded that Furtseva withdraw this charge or she would never dance again either in the Soviet Union or abroad Kudryavtsev told Ford that Furtseva said this was fine by her as Plisetskaya was too old to continue dancing anyway 18 Plisetskaya in her version of the meeting said that Furtseva screeched that Plisetskaya would be a traitor to classical ballet by leaving to which she did not reply As it turned out Plisetskaya became seriously ill and could not go on the tour Carmen Suite was not performed but the sets were shipped regardless 17 a 1 With its sets still abroad Carmen Suite could not be performed for the 50 year celebration of the October Revolution Once they were returned the Bolshoi was allowed to stage the ballet which became popular with Moscow audiences In 1968 Premier Alexei Kosygin saw and praised it When a tour of Great Britain was scheduled for later that year and the British impresario requested Carmen Suite the Ministry of Culture agreed 19 Critical reactions EditIn the April 1969 issue of Gramophone reviewer Edward Greenfield called Carmen Suite A real curiosity and while a skilful hotchpotch on popular themes that has its attractions it was Not the sort of thing then that is going to endear itself to the US State Department a nod to the work s Soviet Cuban roots and the Cold War climate prevailing at the time 20 More recent commentators seem to have taken the ballet s tongue in cheekiness more in stride In his review of the Kremlin Chamber Orchestra recording Sanderson calls the ballet an iconoclastic but highly entertaining retelling of Bizet s opera 1 and John Armstrong in his BBC Music review of the Mikhail Pletnev Russian National Orchestra recording writes that in Carmen Suite you get all the familiar tunes dressed up in a way Bizet would never have imagined and with a sly grin and a twinkle in the eye 7 The music is still not universally loved though In his review of the Pletnev recording Raymond Tuttle calls Shchedrin s efforts a sort of classical bachelor pad takeover half lurid and half disturbing of Bizet s immortal soul and notes the score s incipient vulgarity and grotesque elements 21 Like the music the ballet still comes under critical fire at times In a New York Times 2011 review of the Mariinsky staging Alastair Macaulay faults Alonso for turning the dance impulse in Bizet s music into something heavier and more clumsily expressionistic then adds Nothing about Carmen Suite is remotely subtle though the narrative makes Carmen look considerably more dishonest about her change of erotic allegiance from Jose to the Torero than in the opera The characters keep posing for us and one another steps are hurled flamboyantly like stunts Early on it seems Carmen is the bullfighter aiming her darts at first one lover then the next but a final quartet featuring her Jose the Torero and Fate proceeds through a certain amount of partner changing until Carmen lies dead at Jose s feet and Fate at the Torero s It s not often that you come away feeling Fate got a rough deal 22 References EditNotes Edit Instead of Carmen Suite the Bolshoi offered Don Quixote danced by Ekaterina Maximova Only 2 500 people attended which made the performance a financial disaster Ruud 150 Citations Edit a b c d Sanderson allmusic com a b c d e Duchen BBC Music Magazine Maya 269 70 a b Ballet Nacional de Cuba website Maya 270 a b c balletbag com notes a b c Armstrong BBC Music a b c d e Malone allmusic com work description Dance 205 a b Maya 276 Fanning 20 Armstrong BBC Music Maya 276 Sanderson allmusic com Maya 276 7 Maya 277 Ruud 149 Ruud 149 50 a b Maya 279 Ruud 150 Maya 280 Greenfield gramophone net Tuttle classicalnet com review Macaulay NY Times review Sources Edit Anonymous Ballet Nacional de Cuba notes on Carmen Ballet Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Armstrong John BBC Music review of Pletnev RNO recording 20 Nov 2002 Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 balletbag com notes for Carmen Suite 8 May 2010 Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Duchen Jessica Shchedrin amp the Carmen Suite BBC Music Magazine Aug 2009 As posted by Duchen on Standpoint Blogs as Plisetskaya Shchedrin Carmen 7 Aug 2009 Accessed 25 Mar 2012 Fanning David Placing Shostakovich and the Eighth Quartet In Shostakovich String Quartet No 8 Landmarks in Music Since 1950 Ashgate Publishing Limited 2004 ISBN 0 754 60699 6 Greenfield Edward gramophone net review Apr 1969 Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Malone Andrew Lindemann allmusic com work description for Carmen Suite ballet Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Macaulay Alastair This Carmen Seeks Liberty in a Bullring With Strokes of Fate In The New York Times 17 Jul 2011 Retrieved 23 Mar 2012 Messerer Azary Plisetskaya Maya In International Encyclopedia of Dance Volume 5 Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 2004 ed Cohen Selma Jeanne ISBN 0 19 517589 1 Plisetskaya Maya I Maya Plisetskaya Yale University Press 2001 ISBN 0 300 08857 4 Sanderson Blair allmusic com review of Carmen Suite Russian Photographs Glorification Kremlin Chamber Orchestra conducted by Misha Rachlevsky Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Ruud Charles A The Constant Diplomat Robert Ford in Moscow Quebec City McGill Queen s University Press 2009 ISBN 0 773 53585 3 Tuttle Raymond classicalnet com review of Pletnev RNO recording Posting date not available Retrieved 23 Mar 2012External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carmen Suite ballet Boosey amp Hawkes page for Shchedrin Carmen Suite Ballet Retrieved 22 Mar 2012 Portals Classical music Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carmen Suite ballet amp oldid 1126549592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.