Yannick
Nézet-Séguin, the Met’s Jeanette Lerman-Neubauer Music Director, turns his
attention this month to Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande, which returns to the
Met stage for the first time in eight years on January 15. He recently sat down
with the Met’s Will Berger to discuss conducting one of opera’s landmark
masterpieces.
Pelléas et Mélisande
is recognized as not only one of the great operatic masterpieces but also one
of the great musical masterpieces, period. What makes it so special?
It’s a little bit of
a paradox because my initial answer would be that the instrumental score,
without the vocal lines, is in itself one of the greatest scores ever written.
But then what may come to mind is, “Well, that means that the vocal lines are
not interesting,” or “It must not make for a great opera because that means
it’s mostly instrumental.” But the genius of it is that when you add the vocal
lines, it becomes something completely different from any other opera.
How so?
The vocal lines are
very melodic, but they are also quintessentially French, which means that the
sound of the language and the rhythm of the text is quite conversational. Yet
there are still beautiful intervals that make for very nice melodies, though
we’re very far from any conception of an aria or a recitative. It’s something
that is an uninterrupted flux of dialogues and soliloquies, with the whole
atmosphere around it provided by the orchestra. The poetry that comes out of it
is unique in the entire operatic repertoire.
And it really does
seem to be poetic rather than literal drama. In some ways, it’s a typical story
of a love triangle, but so much is left unanswered or is only hinted at.
Actually what
touches me most about Pelléas et Mélisande is what goes unspoken. For example,
only once does anyone say “Je t’aime”—and it’s so short, with no orchestra
underneath. Pelléas, finally, after three and a half acts, admits that he loves
Mélisande. The music stops, and it’s so quick, almost like he’s ashamed of
saying it. Whereas, a few decades before, we had something like Tristan und
Isolde, which is the complete opposite in how effusive, how magnified love is.
In Pelléas, it’s actually the orchestral music, especially the interludes
between the scenes, in which Debussy is the most directly emotional, where he
gives us a hint of his own heart.
Do you believe in
the concept of a “conductor’s opera,” that there are someworks—like Pelléas,
Parsifal, or Wozzeck, for example—that are more dense or more elusive and
require more from the conductor than, say, something like La Traviata, which
you conducted last month?
No, I don’t agree
with the concept of a “conductor’s opera.” Maybe I could agree with the idea of
a symphonic opera, to be more specific. Pelléas is a good example of one of
these because, as I mentioned, the score can stand without the presence of the
voices. In La Traviata, by comparison, very often only the voice carries the
melody. The orchestra really functions as accompaniment. In Pelléas or Wagner
or Strauss, the melodic material is also in the orchestra, and the vocal line
is adding to that or is doubled by an instrument. And the orchestra can be more
of a character in the emotional content of the opera. But for the conductor,
it’s as fascinating to conduct Bellini or Verdi as it is to conduct Debussy or
Berg or Wagner or Mozart. You still have to approach it like chamber music, to
make music together, with the singers as a primary part of the ensemble.
The orchestra must
love playing Debussy’s music. Do you find them particularly enthusiastic with a
piece like this that draws on every color and shade they can muster?
Always. There are
even fights within the orchestra about who will play a run of Pelléas. I had a
few musicians come to me saying, “I so wanted to play it, but I played it last
time, so now I have to give it to my colleague.” They love it because every
section of the orchestra has so much to do. There’s not only one line of first
violins, for example. There will be two, three, or four— multiple layers within
the section. There’s also a lot for the woodwinds. In opera, very often
whenever a woodwind has a beautiful line, it’s doubling the singer. In this,
they have the melodic material while the singing line has the words that carry
the story—but the musical shape is provided by the instruments. The brass love
it too, even though they are the only ones that have a big gap in the opera in
which they don’t play. But this is the genius of Debussy, not to overload his
orchestration.
What is your personal history with Pelléas?
I’ve conducted it
only once, in Montreal in 2001. And I’m amazed that I was able to do it then
because I actually had not conducted a single note of Debussy. I only knew his
language through the piano works. I’ve been desperate to come back to Pelléas
ever since, and I’ve tried to suggest it everywhere for concert performance. As
a guest conductor, I also asked the Met to let me do Pelléas a number of years
ago, but a certain Simon Rattle had already been signed up, so I did not
object. Now it’s finally my turn. And now, many years later, I’ve conducted a
lot of Debussy, and that makes things easier and allows me to see more layers.
I understand how he transposes his symphonic language to an operatic work.
You have a brilliant cast for this run. What excites you about
working with them?
Well, I’ve always
admired Isabel Leonard’s unique personality onstage. Her voice is so beautiful
and so expressive, yet self-contained. There’s something so compelling about
how she brings the audience inward to her instead of giving everything
outwardly to the audience. Mélisande is all about that. I’ve admired Paul
Appleby, our Pelléas, and Kyle Ketelsen, our Golaud, for many years, but this
will be our first time working together. And Ferruccio Furlanetto is also a
brilliant choice as Arkel. Met audiences know him in many great roles,
espcially King Philip II in Don Carlo, and it will be wonderful to have him as
a different king in Pelléas. Finally, as Geneviève, we have Marie-Nicole
Lemieux, who is a dear friend of mine from Quebec. She is one of the most
charismatic singers I know, and it seems almost written in the stars that she
would make her Met debut with me conducting.
William Berger is a
Met staff writer and radio producer and commentator.
https://www.metopera.org/discover/articles/the-poetry-of-pelleas/
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