With Orpheus Unsung Mark DeChiazza (director, choreographer) and I explore story telling in untexted media (music, movement, and image). As a conceptual premise we had the notion of an opera without singing – a guitar opera. While acknowledging the paradox of an unsung opera the notion at least aims us in an uncommon trajectory and helps distinguish this from a dance piece with accompanying music.
The hour-long narrative is driven by the music – solo electric guitar and drums – which traces the myth of Orpheus in the underworld. Our hero Orpheus marries is true love Eurydice. Following the wedding, Eurydice is bitten by a snake and dies. Orpheus cannot bear this and embarks on a perilous journey to the underworld with the aim of bringing her back. O’s musical gifts are supreme, animals, plants and even stones, move in order to better hear him sing and play his lyre. He sings his plea to the ruler of the underworld who does allow him to take E back with him under the condition that he not look back to check to see if she is still there. When O crosses the threshold back to the surface he can no longer resist and he looks back but E has not yet crossed and she is immediately drawn back to the underworld, gone for ever. O mourns but eventually comes to terms with his loss. Later, a mob of Thracian women in a Dionysian Orgy rip O apart. Dismembered, his head and lyre float down a stream, his head still singing and his lyre still playing, until they rest at the head of the stream and become an oracle.
The hour-long piece is structured in 3 acts that delineate the three phases of the journey – above ground, travelling in the underworld and the return to the surface and the land of the living.
The arc of the narrative is explicit in the titles:
Act I: Super Terram
1. Orpheus Cowboy; 2. The Wedding; 3. Snakebite; 4. First Lament; 5. Pursuit and Trespass
Act II: Sub Terra
1. Down; 2. Stalactites; 3. … and other strange things; 4. Lyre Music; 5. Up; 6. The Look
Act III Super Terram
1. Final Lament; 2. Orpheus Redux; 3. The Mob; 4. Orpheus Oracle (The Stream)
Some of the features that characterize the music are the use of two guitars, one tuned normally and the other tuned microtonally which gives the harmony an other worldly sound or rather an “underworldly” sound. The guitar uses effects to inhabit different voices and suggest antiphony. Loopers which record and playback material in real time are used to multiply and stratify layers of activity. It is an orchestral conception of the electric guitar and the virtuosity lies not only in the finger play but also in the footwork on the pedals which coax the loops into being more like responsive partners in chamber music rather than drones.
The drum part was co-created with Jason Treuting (SO percussion) who teases out the layers of polyrhythm and adds some of his own. The drums are expanded with a large array of tuned gongs.