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The Mother of Us All
Virgil Thomson, Raymond Leppard, Santa Fe Opera
The Mother of Us All
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #2

Poet-novelist Gertrude Stein was dying of cancer as she constructed this typically playful, nonlinear, but deadly earnest meditation on Susan B. Anthony in collaboration with composer Virgil Thomson. The result is a comple...  more »

     
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Poet-novelist Gertrude Stein was dying of cancer as she constructed this typically playful, nonlinear, but deadly earnest meditation on Susan B. Anthony in collaboration with composer Virgil Thomson. The result is a complex, even profound, cross section of Anthony's time, but it's also more delicate than Thomson and Stein's previous collaboration, the wacky, childlike Four Saints in Three Acts. Sadly, this 1976 recording from the Santa Fe Opera shows what Mother is like when it fails to take off. British conductor Raymond Leppard is hardly the sort to find the rustic humor in Thomson's quasi hymn tunes. While the cast headed by Mignon Dunn as Susan B. Anthony has lots of vocal riches, the singers' diction is as unclear as their sense of purpose. --David Patrick Stearns

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CD Reviews

Seriously flawed
Timothy Hulsey | Charlottesville, VA United States | 08/18/2002
(4 out of 5 stars)

"For my money, _The Mother of Us All_ may be the finest American opera yet written. The unusual subject matter concerns Susan B. Anthony and the progress of women's rights in America. But this work emerges as neither feminist dogma nor facile avant-gardism. Virgil Thomson's simple, spare music evokes Puritan hymnody; Gertrude Stein's libretto is marked by a brilliant, analytical intelligence. The result is an uncommonly American product -- not imitative of European models or superficially parodic (as I think is frequently true of the earlier Stein/Thomson collaboration _Four Saints in Three Acts_). This opera seems to develop organically, rather than in accordance with any previous stage model. Perhaps for this reason, _The Mother of Us All_ hasn't found a place in standard opera repertory.Sadly, this 1977 recording from the Santa Fe Opera has several serious flaws. Sound quality is not especially good, and the singers are performing in a self-consciously "operatic" mode that doesn't always suit this piece. (That said, the final aria "My Long Life" is still a knockout.) The orchestra, however, sounds fine; tempi are fairly brisk, and the ensemble holds together.I'm splitting the difference with my rating -- five stars for the source material and three (at best) for the performance. The time has come for another, better recording."
Worth the hearing
F. Behrens | Keene, NH USA | 06/22/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Most modern operas, especially American ones, fail badly in that the singers are given very little of musical interest while the orchestra often is reduced to film-score background effects that become meaningless and quickly boring. Virgil Thomson has been highly praised by his colleagues, although the public never proved quite as enthusiastic. I never particularly liked any of his works, with the exception of "Louisiana Story" which was written for a film, but I have to admit that I began almost to enjoy his contribution to the opera . Since it is available on the venerable New World Records label (NW 288/289-2), I want to bring it to your attention. Purporting to tell the story of Susan B. Anthony, it uses a libretto by Gertrude Stein that is maddeningly "deconstructionist." For those who didn't major in English, that means sentences are reduced (Japanese style) to basic words. Try this for size: "And in a way, yes, in a way, yes, really in a way, in a way, really in a way, it is useful to be right. It does what it does, if you are right." Fine for a while, but since the entire libretto is made up of such "Rose is a rose is a rose" sentiments it quickly palls. On the other hand, the New Englandy Churchy music of Thomson provides the perfect setting for Stein's jargon and leads me to wonder if the whole thing is a put on. In this recording, Raymond Leppard's conducting does not quite catch the basic New Worldliness that I feel the music should have; although the performances of The Sante Fe Opera, while not spectacular, are certainly idiomatic. At any rate, this work is miles better than the pap served up recently under the name "A Streetcar Named Desire" which failed for me on all levels. Again "Mother" fails if compared with the far more tuneful "Ballad of Baby Doe." Still it is worth a hearing."
Words and music disappointing
Thomas Dilworth | Windsor, Ontario | 08/12/2006
(3 out of 5 stars)

"In contrast to FOUR SAINTS IN THREE ACTS, this, Thomson's second opera in collaboration with Stein, is disappointing. Stein's libretto is, frankly, tedious (vacuous, frought with redundancies--whereas the more hermetic, nonsensical text of FOUR SAINTS is (though, for many, initially frustrating) continually interesting. That text inspired joyful music. But Thomson's setting for THE MOTHER is largely uninspired. The overture is wonderful, however, and his twice arranging 3 paragraphs to be sung simultaneously is, in both instances, exciting. As for the performance, it seems ok except that the lead singer, who plays Susan B., is just the sort of fruity-voiced opera singer Virgil would never have cast for the part. (I knew him.) In her high range, the words are indistinguishable. That's generally tolerated in European opera, but VT was all about NOT that."