Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 May-June 2015 | Page 39

program notes { Candide’s Globe-Trotting Plot Act I: The story opens in German Westphalia, where the naive young Candide, the illegitimate nephew of the Baron Thunder-ten-Tronck, is in love with the Baron’s beautiful daughter, Cunégonde. Candide and Cunégonde are pupils of Dr. Pangloss, who has diligently taught them that “all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds.” The Baron opposes their marriage because Candide is a social inferior. The gullible Candide joins the Bulgar Army, which then attacks Westphalia and slays all its inhabitants, including Cunégonde. Now a wandering beggar, Candide tries to hold on to Pangloss’ maxims even though when he meets the philosopher, he finds him ill with syphilis. They arrive in Lisbon as the earthquake strikes and then are seized by the Inquisition and condemned to death. Pangloss is hanged, but Candide escapes. Meanwhile in Paris, Cunégonde is in fact alive and living as a high-class prostitute showered with jewels. The astonished Candide is reunited with her, but after he inadvertently kills her protectors, the two flee along with her companion, the Old Lady, to Spain, and then on to the New World. Act II: The trio arrive in Buenos Aires, where the Governor falls in love with Cunégonde. Candide is forced to flee to the South American jungle, where he discovers the paradise of El Dorado. But without Cunégonde, he finds no happiness there and flees to Surinam, after stealing El Dorado’s golden sheep. There he spends all he has on an unseaworthy vessel to take him back to Europe. In Venice at Carnival time, Candide and the pleasure-loving Cunégonde are again reunited at the vice-ridden casino. Disillusioned at last, Candide returns to Westphalia, where, fully aware of her weaknesses, he marries Cunégonde. Realizing at last that “Life is neither bad nor good,” they decide to buy a little farm, cultivate their garden, and “do the best we know.” The Music of Candide Bernstein called the score of Candide a Valentine card to European music. In the words of biographer Humphrey Burton: “European dance forms such as the gavotte, mazurka, polka, schottische, and waltz pop up all over the place. The conventions of European opera are gently mocked: when the lovers are reunited for the surrealistic duet, ‘You Were Dead, You Know,’ they warble in thirds and sixths in the best bel canto style.” Thus, the score is a pastiche of musical styles, both classical and popular, conjured up by Bernstein, the musical magpie who could borrow from the vast store of music he knew and frequently conducted. The incandescent Overture has become a favorite concert opener on its own. Flying at breakneck speed, it pumps of the adrenaline of players and listeners and reatures two of the show’s big tunes. The romantic love duet, “Oh, Happy We,” and the wacky closing music from Cundgonde’s send-up of coloraturasoprano arias, “Glitter and Be Gay” The most operatic numbers in this production are Candide’s arias—the two Meditations of Act I set to the same music (“It Must Be So” and “It Must Be Me”), “Candide’s Lament” for the supposedly dead Cunégonde with its superb high pianissimo passages. Classical arias are balanced by the irresistible comic songs with their sophisticated word settings, such as Pangloss’ lesson, “The Best of All Possible Worlds;” the Old Lady’s tango, “I Am Easily Assimilated;” and the crazed, cynical waltz, “What’s the Use.” But, Bernstein’s last musical word, “Make Our Garden Grow,” is completely from the heart, voiced in the soaring, utterly personal lyrical style that would blossom again in West Side Story. Instrumentation: Two flutes, piccolo, oboe, English horn, two clarinets, E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon, two horns, two trumpets, two trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, harp and strings. Notes by Janet E. Bedell, Copyright ©2015 The BSO May– June 2015 | O v ertur e Ch r is Lee by audiences and critics. As his last word on his beloved but misunderstood work, Bernstein, now fatally ill with cancer, made an acclaimed studio recording of Candide in 1989 with the London Symphony Orchestra and a cast of international operatic stars including Jerry Hadley, June Anderson, and Christa Ludwig. 37