Among my biggest regrets is
having missed the 1960s. Not the fashion or the drugs, I hasten
to add, but the music. Creative things were happening then that
just didn't apply during my teens in the Eighties. When The Who
released their double album Tommy in 1969, they coined a new
concept of 'rock opera', following it up with Quadrophenia in
1973. Both were made into feature films, but by then I was busy
practising piano, violin, oboe and ballet, so I missed the lot.
So a new DVD set of The Who performing live " Tommy from 1989
and Quadrophenia from a 1996 tour " is my first taste of Pete
Townshend's 'rock operas'. They're original, stirring,
peculiarly irresistible. They're certainly 'rock'. But are they
remotely 'operatic'?
The New Grove Dictionary of Music, music
academia's Bible, gives the following definition of opera: 'The
generic term for musical dramatic works in which the actors sing
some or all of their parts. Opera is a union of music, drama and
spectacle.' Its most extreme manifestation is Wagner's ideal,
the Gesamtkunstwerk " 'complete art work', combining music,
drama and spectacle to the highest degree.
More generally, when you go to an opera, you
expect to see a good story and believable characters, with music
that is appropriate, inspired, sophisticated and well performed.
You hope to come out moved and uplifted.
A purist, of course, would have plenty of
objections to calling Tommy and Quadrophenia operas. For a
start, in most operas, you find a variety of musical structures:
dramatic scenas, choruses, love duets, solo arias and ensembles
where characters simultaneously express different viewpoints.
The singers have to act, staying in their roles for the
duration.
But the majority of the songs in Tommy and
Quadrophenia are simply songs. They progress, in Tommy, one
after the other without speech; telling a story, but without the
wide variety you'd expect in a 'real' opera. In these staged
versions, unlike the feature films, the members of the band
aren't in costume, and they convey different viewpoints as the
stories unfold. The guest artists do adopt characters: in Tommy,
Patti Labelle sings the Acid Queen, Billy Idol the bullying
Cousin Kevin, and there are guest spots for Phil Collins and
Elton John; Quadrophenia features Billy Idol as the Ace Face.
On the other hand, Townshend " who'd penned
operas and studied orchestration, but didn't expect The Who to
perform such things " lets rip when opportunity allows. Tommy's
recurring plaint, 'See me, feel me, touch me, heal me', is as
raw and vulnerable as anything you'll hear in Covent Garden,
though probably not every singer could bring it off as
convincingly as Daltrey. And Tommy's overture is as fizzy and
galvanising as any Rossini.
Opera traditionally deals with emotion on a
grand scale. Tommy and Quadrophenia both involve powerful
emotions, springing from a shared underlying theme: the legacy
of a generation's wartime traumas upon its children. Unlike many
operas other than Wagner's, words and music originate (mainly)
with the same creator. Tommy's plot lets it down a bit,
requiring major suspension of disbelief: a child witnesses the
murder of his father by his mother's lover, turns blind, deaf
and dumb in consequence, becomes a pinball champion, then is
cured by a smashed mirror and turns into a pseudo- Messiah who
nonetheless remains alienated by his experience.
Quadrophenia is more internalised: most of it
takes place inside Jimmy's muddled head. Yet this adolescent
anti-hero's spiritual journey involves emotions that run so
high, with imagery so strong and archetypal, that Townshend
borrows directly from Wagner's Das Rheingold to depict a boat
journey.
Wagner writes about gods building Valhalla,
Townshend about an alienated teenager running away to Brighton;
yet their protagonists are tormented to the limits of their
experience, whether through godhood or through drink and drugs.
Wagner's monumental power matches the myths behind his stories;
Townshend's rock soundworld fits Jimmy's angry internal agony to
perfection.
It's in Quadrophenia that Townshend really
crosses the divide. The four different aspects of Jimmy's mind
are each represented by a leitmotif, a Wagnerian association of
idea with musical theme, which join together at the climax when
Jimmy is stranded on a rock in the sea and experiences his
spiritual epiphany. Meanwhile, there's a Gesamtkunstwerk idea,
too: in this version, Jimmy's narration is portrayed on film,
images of the sea return constantly, and a lengthy instrumental
interlude accompanies a montage of newsreel footage, tracing the
evolution of teenagers against a background of the Blitz,
Hiroshima and The Beatles. What's more, Quadrophenia's subject
matter " growing up " is timeless.
In some ways, Quadrophenia is more
successfully operatic than many 'official' operas of the same
time, not least because it's a sophisticated fusion of art
forms, primarily well-wrought music, with something powerful to
communicate. Townshend reached his audience by writing about
alienation; but his classical contemporaries, experiencing
alienation themselves, frequently forgot their audience
altogether.
Stockhausen's operas (such as Donnerstag aus
Licht, 1978) are too navel- gazingly bizarre to expect much
uptake. Michael Tippett, who wrote his own libretti, sometimes
created psychological stories so convoluted that they can remain
baffling even if you like the music.
But The Who's rock operas connect with a
public wide enough to include classical-music journalists. We
were all teenagers once. We've been there too, even if we were
practising three instruments at the time. And we love good
music, well performed, whatever its genre. Tommy and
Quadrophenia are as characteristic of their era as any opera by
Mozart or Wagner.
Labels can be deceptive. Quadrophenia may not
be a traditional opera, but it's a marvellous band performing
terrific music that tells a strong story, blending song, drama
and spectacle in a manner of its own. Moved? Exhilarated?
Uplifted? You bet. Rock opera? Yeah. Why not?
'The Who " Tommy and Quadrophenia Live with
Special Guests' is released on 7 November by Warner Music Vision
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