seekingferret: Two warning signs one above the other. 1) Falling Rocks. 2) Falling Rocs. (Default)
[personal profile] seekingferret
This past Thursday, I saw Shostakovich's Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk at the Met with [personal profile] ghost_lingering. I imagine that in three months [personal profile] ghost_lingering will post about the opera more thoughtfully and interestingly than I can, but I'll do my best anyway.

It's a gleefully murderous story about a bored, childless housewife in Russia and a series of really, really awful men she is connected to. My program said Shostakovich labeled it 'tragi-satirical', which maybe sounds more like a word in Russian. It's also historically famous for having led to Stalin's denunciation of Shostakovich, likely because of some scathing attacks on Russia's penal system in the final act.

At intermission I told [personal profile] ghost_lingering that it seemed like the men in the story were competing on a scoreboard to be the worst man in the opera. The standings kept changing as they one-upped each other. Sergei, the poor laborer, rapes Katerina in her bedroom while her husband is away on business. While this is happening, her father in law Boris gets drunk and melancholy and therefore decides he's going to rape her, and he is colossally angry when he realizes that someone else got there first... so angry that he seizes the man, strips him naked, and beats him with a whip until he is too exhausted to keep whipping. At this point, I was pretty sure Boris was going to win the prize, but Sergei kept going and by the end, I think he managed to outdo Boris. And this doesn't even mention the stupidest priest in existence, the police sergeant more interested in wangling an invitation to Katerina's wedding than in chasing down crime, or Katerina's husband Zinoviy, who spends most of his time travelling on business so he can avoid the horror of having to kiss his wife. Basically, men are terrible. Really, really terrible.

Being surrounded by horrible men eventually turns Katerina, our Lady Macbeth, into a serial murderess. As I read the story, it is the specific nature of Sergei's rape that changes her: She says no repeatedly to his advances and he tells her that he is going to take her anyway because he wants her, and from this she learns that her desires, heretofore unfulfilled, do not need to be constrained by society. She adopts Sergei as her lover and begins to dominate him. She kills her father in law to end his harassment of her. She kills her husband so that she is no longer beholden to a man that hates her, and she uses his money to marry the man that she wants to marry. Katerina learns that power emerges from, er, leaning in. So she leans, and once she starts leaning she can't stop. She leans way too hard.

And ultimately she learns that there is a problem with this theory of society, and it's the obvious one. If you live in a society where the only decider of whose desires are fulfilled is physical power and the will to take, ultimately you will be put down if you are put into collision with someone with more physical power and more will to take: In other words, the State. The State does not care all that much that she murdered her father in law, but it does care that she killed Zinoviy, who as a wealthy land owner embodied the desires of the state. For this crime the State turns her into a prisoner.

Yet even as a prisoner Katerina does not forget the lesson Sergei taught her. When Sergei takes up with another prisoner, Katerina exercises her power one final time, killing her ex-lover's new flame and dying in the process. It is not a tragic ending for Katerina and Shostakovich's music mostly doesn't treat it as such. After a very brief lamentation, Shostakovich moves back to his real point: a dirge sung by the remaining prisoners about the misery of their lives. The power play is over, and the State has won, because in a society where power rules unchecked, that is the only plausible outcome.

Shostakovich's music is, unsurprisingly, brilliant. Wikipedia calls Lady Macbeth 'incorporates elements of expressionism and verismo', which is a great way of saying that the mixture of dramatic moods is unharmonious yet strangely effective. Shostakovich uses his orchestra with incredible expressiveness as another character, with opinions about the other characters that are sometimes surprising and often enlightening. He introduces the four main players in the first act with instrumental lead-ins that communicate so much that by the time the singers opened their mouths, you already knew exactly who they were. Later, orchestral interludes turn dramatic scenes into comic ones and vice versa, with retrospective commentary that transforms how you viewed the things you'd just seen.

I think I'm putting it at #11 on my list of favorite 20th century operas.

(no subject)

Date: 2014-11-19 01:45 am (UTC)
ghost_lingering: Minus prepares to hit the meteor out of the park (today I saved the world)
From: [personal profile] ghost_lingering
I imagine that in three months ghost_lingering will post It's like you understand my posting schedule!

I started to write up my thoughts, but I'm still thinking through it and changing my mind and also I keep coming back to the tiny mortal frog souls, which aren't the heart of the opera, except in my head where they are possibly the heart of everything. (Joking! Mostly.)

Anyway: I really like your read of the politics / power dynamics! Very different from my read, but also in some ways more empowering to Katerina, which I like. Your read also makes the implicit comparison to Shakespeare's Lady Macbeth more understandable in that Katerina's murders are about gaining power and that power is, ultimately, political in nature, which echoes Lady Macbeth's plots to gain political power for her husband/herself. I'd been struggling with the invocation of Shakespeare's Lady Macbeth because I think she's a very different character than Katerina is.

Strangely, Sergei managed to not anger me as much as Boris did, perhaps largely because for all that he raped and cheated on her, he didn't manage to constrain her life to the extent that Boris did. DIE BORIS, DIE DIE. EAT THOSE MUSHROOMS.

(no subject)

Date: 2014-11-21 03:06 am (UTC)
ghost_lingering: Geoffrey describes the storm ... until a fuse blows (he was my first hamlet)
From: [personal profile] ghost_lingering
So, weirdly, even though you are right about the different definitions of empowerment at play, your read on Katerina is still more empowering to her in both senses! My read is that she is very reactionary and her reactions are spiraling more and more out of control -- she is not attempting to take control of her life or gain power in the slightest, she has not learned anything from the rape, she is just reacting more and more violently in response to events, in part because the dehumanization and violence she is exposed to has also escalated. She is raped and watches her rapist whipped as she, herself, is exposed as an adulterer --> she lashes out in response and kills Boris, who has been, essentially, her prison guard and is now attempting to be Sergei's guard as well. Her husband comes home and threatens her --> she hits back in self defense and Sergei brains him. (Which really makes Sergei the killer in that case, no?) She is thrown in jail (just a larger version of the control Boris had over her) and humiliated by Sergei --> she kills Sergei's new lover and herself in the process. I agree that her death is not a tragedy; I just don't think that her escape from state power or any kind of power is something that she was reaching for; her escape was not planned -- it was her lashing out, hurt and afraid. Which isn't to say that I didn't like Katerina or think she's weak or whatever, but I read her as much more confused and scared and much less purposeful in her actions.

My read on her might also be because I simply can't believe that anyone who hides a body in the trunk of the car and doesn't at least drive it to a less obvious location than their own wedding is someone who is purposefully killing people to gain power. But maybe I shouldn't judge her getting away with murder abilities given that this is also an opera where the priest was given a deathbed summary of how the murder took place and his response was "wow, that was weird, must have been those mushrooms after midnight!"

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