nicolas mcgegan on singing baroque music amanda keil

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  • 8/13/2019 Nicolas Mcgegan on Singing Baroque Music Amanda Keil

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    As printed in the October 2010issue of Classical Singer Magazine.

    Improvised LeadershipNicholas McGegan and What It Takes to sing Baroque Operaby Amanda Keil

    Where would Baroque music be if it werent for Nicholas McGegan? Over a period of 25 years, the British-born conductor has

    established the San Franciscos Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra as one of thepreeminent period performance bands in the

    country. At the same time, McGegan has produced one of the most extensivediscographiesof any of his contemporaries. He

    has more than 100 recordings to his credit, nearly half of which are Handel opera and oratorio. McGegans world premiere

    recording of Handels oratorio Susanna won a Gramophone Award and a Grammy nomination.

    Somehow he also finds time to direct the International Handel Festival in Gt tingen, Germany, and guest conduct all over the

    world. But perhaps his most important work has been as an ambassador of historically informed practice to modern

    instrument ensembles. He has led the decidedly non-Baroque institutions of orchestras like Concertgebouw, Chicago, and

    Philadelphia; and the New York, Los Angeles, and Hong Kong Philharmonics; as well as opera companies like Covent Garden,

    San Francisco, and Santa Fe. Other conductors may interpret Baroque scores as plains of sewing machine rhythms and

    textures, wrote the Los Angeles Times. McGegan finds in them rivulets, courses, hairpin turns, and breezes gusting through

    valleys and up and around mountains.

    So does McGegan consider himself an early music specialist?

    Aw, now really, he groans in reply, reached on telephone between gigs in Santa Barbara and Dresden. Saying that youre

    a specialist implies that you dont do other things. And certainly McGegans repertoire includes Beethoven and Schubert and

    runs as late as clean-limbed twentieth-century music, as he calls it. He doe s confess that he does not particularly enjoy

    conducting tubercular operas, though he attends happily and with a big bo x of Kleenex. But his greatest renown comes

    as a conductor of high Baroque opera.

    What does McGegan look for in his singers? In general, he says, singers need to be quicklearners, flexible for Handel, and

    able to sing coloratura. Perhaps due to the repetitive nature of da capo arias, singers mustfind inventive ways to personally

    connect with the words. Or, as McGegan says, You cant just be a brightly plumed parrot.

    Beyond these qualities, it can depend on the occasion. If an opera is to be staged, Im interested if the person can act, he

    says. Casting decisions can come down to howtall is the mezzo. McGegan aims to hire a team of equals for each

    production, preferring singers with some Baroque experience, knowledge and, most importantly, an interest in the style. But

    he places the highest consideration on a singers flexibility.

    What I do not enjoy are ornaments and cadenzas that have been pre-written by a teacher and pre- learned by the singer,

    but do not work with a production, he says. Im looking for team building. He adopts an Ill try this, you try that way of

    working in rehearsals that leaves room for some spontaneity. McGegan does prefer to write his own cadenzas and ornaments

    for singers in his productions, but he encourages them to improvise within the vocabulary.

    Each Handel role, McGegan explains, is like a Coco Chanel dress. Handel custom fit them for his singers. In modern times,

    casting the right singer is a matter of finding the best fit. You can always change things slightly to adapt a role to the singer,

    however, such as writing higher ornaments if someones voice is higher than the role.

    To address the question of whether a role is more appropriate for a countertenor or a mezzo, McGegan suggests looking at

    what Handel did. For example, Ariodante is a castrato role, intended for a manalbeit there is no authentic way to replicate

    this voice today. Ariodantes nemesis Polinesso is a contralto role, intended for a woman. In some modern productions,

    McGegan observes, the genders are reversed.

    When it comes to the right voices for Mozart operas, another important part of McGegans career, certain roles demand a

    heavier voice than Handel does. Idomeneo, for example, is a heavier part than those found in Handel operas, which were

    written for a young tenor. However, the singer of Idomeneo would be appropriate forJudas Maccabeus, a later Handeloratorio. In general, voices appropriate for Mozart opera are also well suited to Handel oratorio, with both styles requiring a

    similar weight. However, the Countess does not have the coloratura of Alcina, McGegan says, noting that female roles in

    Mozart rarely have brilliant, fast-moving lines. By contrast, Handels female characters are often title roles, with great variety

    among arias. Handel, however, does not write the jumps of Fiordiligi, and Mozarts soprano roles tend to lie higher than

    Handels roles for women.

    McGegan also points out that a singer in a Mozart opera has to sing well enough in an ensemble, while a singer in a Handel

    opera has mostly solos. Mozart has more company divas, he says. You have to be someone who is comfortable in a

    group [to sing Mozart] and a lot less selfish as a singer. On stage it means being concerned with balancing and blending,

    and not with being a diva.

    When writing cadenzas, McGegan considers the purpose of the musical moment, the strengths of the singer, and the context

    of the production. Recordings are the hardest [to write for], he says, as you dont want something so elaborate that it

    becomes annoying and mannered, especially if the recording is one of only a few available of an opera, and thus at risk of

    becoming the gospel standard. In addition, cadenzas that have a function on stage might not work on a recording, he

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  • 8/13/2019 Nicolas Mcgegan on Singing Baroque Music Amanda Keil

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    continues. For example, a long, kissy-kissy cadenza in a love duet wont necessarily seem as nice when you listen to it in

    your living room.

    The musical choices, as with everything else in a Baroque production, serve the whole. But the team building approach to

    casting is different than what is found in grand opera, he says, where you cast stars. With an audible smirk, McGegan

    remarks that when he attends operas as an audience member, he can tell when singers are not on speaking terms with each

    other. As for how he chooses his casts and hears about individual singers, his circles are close. Im generally working with

    friends, he says. Some soloists may come to him from colleague recommendations, but he rarely [takes] people from an

    audition and certainly never from a tape.

    Among his regular collaborators are Lisa Saffer (whose roles range from Cleopatra to Gilda to Lulu) and Dominique Labelle,

    whom McGegan describes as a singer who has it all: musicianship, technique, experience, and a warm heart. He continues,

    She can really make you believe the situation in the aria. While a singer like that is singing, you believe every word she

    says. Its a thrilling experience.

    McGegans attitude to leadershipwhether hes conducting his own group or if hes a guest conductoris quintessentiallyBaroque. He lets musicians and ensembles be themselves instead of lecturing them on a narrow view of performance

    practice. At the same time, modern orchestras are a great deal more flexible than they were 20 years ago, he says.

    Theres less of an us-versus-them feeling between performers of modern and early music.

    The average grand opera house has much more early opera than ever, observes McGegan. He also notes that young

    professionals today can find role models in seasoned singers who make their careers in Baroque music alongside grand opera

    and contemporary music, such as Susan Graham and the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson. He also speaks approvingly of

    conservatory programs where modern instrumentalists can try period instruments and experiment with historical styles.

    McGegan can be found at Juilliard this fall, coaching the Handel trio cantata Clori, Tirsi, e Fileno, which he helped bring to

    prominence with his 1992 recording of the work with Lieberson, Drew Minter, and Jill Feldman.

    In fact, it was during appointments at Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Maryland that McGegan began

    to experiment with different ways of dramatizing da capo arias and to bring to light lesser known Handel operas. This

    willingness to explore Baroque music on its own terms, and invite other musicians to do the same, is perhaps McGegans

    greatest accomplishment.

    McGegan notes that while America hasnt led the way [in the early music revival], it has been a beneficiary of itlikelyreferring to the fact that while early music in America has a devoted following, much of the revival of historical performance

    practice has been led by European ensembles. As McGegans long career in America has shown, however, stateside audiences

    certainly keep up their healthy appetite for historically informed and innovative music-making.

    Amanda Keil is a singer, voice teacher, and freelance writer based in Boston and New York. She is the founder of Musica Nuova, a chamberensemble that uses the meaning of texts to transform concerts of Baroque songs into theatrical scenes.E-mail the author at: [email protected]

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