01/05/2024
What started as a conversation about the aria ‘Les oiseaux dans la charmille’ in Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann ended up becoming a commission and deep dive into vocal technique, the inception and evolution of our most ancient theatrical art, and the life of Nikola Tesla.
‘What if there was an entire opera about a robot?’
‘Where did robotics start?’
‘Wait, Tesla had a deceased brother that he tried to communicate with after a tragic accident?’
Five years later, it’s complete. I spent more time than I usually would with a work, because I think subconsciously I didn’t want the sacred process of weaving all the elements of speech and drama, of flittering ornaments and declaimed intrusions, and in the massive forces of the musicians consuming, supporting, drowning the elegance of the human voice in a style of writing that shows the orchestra at its most coordinated and complex.
5 years ago when we interrogated the subject of Tesla’s latent visions of what would eventually become A.I., we questioned if r it would be a hard concept to grasp. At that time I was reading a lot of post-human theory, and even aimed at the opera to try at a posthumanism style of poetry. I don’t think any of us could have expected how relevant A.I. would become in the process of developing it.
I’d like to thank Magdalene Minnaar for approaching me to write the piece, for perennially motivating me to get back to it when I was sidetracked with other commissions, and for the endless technical advice and references in literature and pedagogy.
To Jaco Griessel for crafting the libretto in such a way that takes maximum effect of the stylistic approach of my vision for the piece, for the endless hours of discussions and trying ideas, for the research surrounding the historical, geographical and cultural items that find their way into the corners of the dialogue and lend verisimilitude to the work.
To Paul Griffiths who read directly into the motivation of the characters, designing the setting, the tempos and moods of the psychology that underpins ether characters strengths and faults
to Hendrik Hofmeyr; one of the last voices I trust to guide my art, for the critical insights, the frequent meetings often spending hours on a single passage or topic, and the continual reminder regarding the cyclical nature between drama and technique.
And finally, to my wife Shelly-Ann Blair who always endures the worst parts of the creative burden, yet who has always been a comfort when the traumatic experiences of life derail my focus on work.
I finished the orchestral score in early March, sitting at 300 pages. The vocal score(pictured below), was finished today after nearly 2 months 5 days a week 10 hours a day. The vocal score is 123 pages. The complete work is 2 hours 30 minutes.
Also another special thank you to Hendrik for convincing me to do the reduction myself rather than source it out; the process of reduction is an art in itself that hitherto was hidden to me, but, at the completion of, I could not fathom leaving to someone else.