Lost Highway (2002-2003), by composer
Olga Neuwirth and librettist Elfriede Jelinek, is based on
David Lynch's 1992 cult classic and was one of the first operas derived from a film with an original screenplay (excluding films derived from preexisting works). It's also been the most successful, with multiple acclaimed international productions and now a splendid recording from Kairos, which won a Diapason d'Or Award in 2007. While there are few moments where
Neuwirth's score resembles
Angelo Badalamenti's brilliantly evocative original, her basic approach to musical dramaturgy is not far from his. Both use sounds, often low-pitched and ominous, intended to trigger anxiety in the listener, in response to, or foreshadowing, a viscerally disturbing image or action. Huge expanses of the film are silent (which creates its own sense of terror), and
Badalamenti's underscoring is so subtle that its effect is virtually subliminal. In opera, the music is the primary focus, and
Neuwirth manages to sustain an aural equivalent to
Lynch's mysterious and terrifying visual imagery. If anything, the opera is darker than the film;
Lynch sets some of his scenes in daylight and allows in moments of warped humor, but
Neuwirth's score, while richly varied in textures and colors, could never be characterized as light. It's a testimony to her inventiveness and inspiration that her depiction of grimness is never monotonous; she finds an infinitely diverse number of ways to express psychological and physical hysteria.
The recording features performers from the original 2003 production in Graz, including
Klangforum Wien, conducted by
Johannes Kalitzke.
Neuwirth's exquisitely complex score includes the extensive use of both pre-recorded sound and live electronics, and
Kalitzke and his ensemble (with the assistance of a crew of very capable audio engineers) pull off a performance that's searing in its intensity and impact. Against the backdrop of the nightmarish orchestral and electronic landscape, the singers and actors develop the freakishly twisted story through Sprechstimme, bel canto singing, speaking, and extended vocal techniques.
Constance Hauman is totally gripping both in her spoken dramatic sections as Renée and in her virtuosic coloratura turn as Alice. In the speaking role of Fred, Vincent Crowly seems to be eerily channeling the timing and intensity of Bill Pullman's performance in the film.
Neuwirth creates a powerhouse of a role for
David Moss as Mr. Eddy/Dick Laurent, one of the most freakish in any opera, and
Moss does it full justice. In the score's cast list,
Neuwirth describes the part this way: for "Singer/Actor/Improvising musician (native language English; ideally
David Moss.)" It's a harrowing performance; there's nothing in any opera comparable to his death scene, a two-minute aria in which he chokes on his own blood.
Andrew Watts' Mystery Man is also memorable; his falsetto Sprechstimme, full of slithering portamenti, is chillingly threatening. There are a few weak links; several of the performers aren't native English speakers and their mannered, heavily accented delivery is distracting. The sound of the SACD is superb and was created to be experienced in 5.1 surround sound. Fans of contemporary opera who aren't squeamish owe it to themselves to explore the new terrain that
Neuwirth opens up in Lost Highway.