L'écume des jours (opera)
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L'écume des jours (English: The Foam of Days) is an opera in three acts (14 scenes) by the Russian composer Edison Denisov. The French (also German and Russian) text is by the composer based on the novel of the same title by Boris Vian. It was composed in 1981.
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[edit] Creation and performance history
Premiere: Saturday, March 15, 1986 at Salle Favart, the Opéra Comique, Paris
The idea of this opera came to Denisov in the beginning of the 1970s and he worked on it up until 1981. In the libretto, written in French, Denisov not only used text from the novel, and from numerous songs by Boris Vian, but also texts from a religious song by an anonymous author (14th tableau) from a funeral liturgy (13th tableau), and the Latin text from the mass (Credo and Gloria – 2nd tableau) and from the requiem (Agnus dei and Requiem aeternam – 13th tableau).
Denisov himself defined his opera as a lyrical drama. The plot has something in common with La traviata by Verdi. The atmosphere of the opera in some respects is similar to Pelléas et Mélisande by Debussy. The influence of Tristan und Isolde by Wagner is also notable here. There are many comical or absurd elements that reinforce dramatic or even tragic aspects of the story.
The musical language is typical of Denisov’s music of 1980s with complex chromatic vocal lines, dissonant harmony and rich orchestral textures. There are many quotations, hidden quotations or allusions to music of different styles and epochs: songs by Duke Ellington, American jazz, French chanson, or Gregorian chant. All of these are veiled and transformed in some way, and even the quotation from Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde has a jazzy hue.
This work is probably the first contemporary Russian opera written in French and on a French subject. This (but not only this) gives it special qualities that have not been seen in Russian music before.
[edit] Roles
The characters | Voice | Premiere: March 15, 1986 |
---|---|---|
Colin | tenor | Thierry Dran |
Chloé | light soprano | Véronique Dietschy |
Chick | tenor | Marcel Quillevéré |
Alise | mezzo soprano | Eva Saurova |
Isis | soprano | Elian Lublin |
Nicolas | bass | Fernand Dumont |
Mangemanche | bass | Jean-Louis Soumagnas |
Le sénéchal | tenor | Bruce Brewer |
Le Directeur d'usine (Director of the plant) | baritone | Michel Philippe |
Jésus | baritone | Jean-Noël Beguelin |
La souris (The Mouse) | speaker | Sarah Mesguich |
Le Pharmacien | speaker | Jean Rumeau |
La Fillette (Little Girl) | child voice | Catherine Martin |
- Stage director Jean-Claude Fall
- Chorus and orchestra, conducted by John Burdekin
Subsequent productions: at the Perm Opera Theatre in 1989 (in Russian).
The duration of the work is 2 hours and 20 minutes. It was published by Le Chant du Monde, Paris.
[edit] Scoring
- Singers: 2 sopranos, mezzo, 4 tenors, 2 baritones, 3 basses, 2 mimes, 1 boy soprano, chorus
- Orchestra: 3.3.3.3 – alt saxophone, tenor saxophone – 3.3.3.1– percussion – electric guitar, bass guitar – piano/celesta – harp – strings
[edit] Synopsis
Act I
- 1st Tableau: At Colin. The room of Colin, where he lives together with Mouse, the friend of his house. Colin is waiting for his friend engineer Chick whom he invited for dinner. His cook Nicolas is reading the recipes from the cooking book. Chick arrives, and Colin shows him the “piano-cocktail”, his own invention – the piano that makes cocktails. Chick plays an improvisation on Duke Ellington themes and then tells him about Alise, the niece of Nicolas, whom he met at the conference of Jean-Sol-Partre (a broad hint on Jean-Paul Sartre). They both go skating.
- Intermezzo. Colin dreams about a girl he wants to meet.
- 2nd Tableau: The skating-rink "Molitor". Chick and Colin meet Alise and Isis, who invites them to the birthday celebration of her dog. One of the skaters breaks up on the wall. They all join the burial liturgy.
- Intermezzo. The windy street. Colin repeats: “I would like to fall in love, you would like to fall in love”, and so on.
- 3rd Tableau: At Isis. Alise tells Colin that Chick doesn’t want to marry her, because he expends all his money on the books by Jean-Sol-Partre. Chloé enters. Colin feels that she is the girl of his dream. They dance.
- 4th Tableau: The Quarter. Colin meets Chloé and they walk along the streets. Terrified by the absurd shop-windows they went to the forest where surrounded by the pink cloud they are invisible for other people.
Act II
- 5th Tableau: Wedding preparations. Two “honorary homosexuals” Pégase and Coriolan are preparing themselves for the wedding. Simultaneously Chloé, Alise and Isis also prepare themselves for the wedding.
- Intermezzo. The wedding of Colin and Chloé: Hymn of Love
- 6th Tableau: The honeymoon trip. Colin and Chloé travel by car with Nicolas as a driver. Chloé is frightened by the vision of strange fish-scale beasts, smoke and dirt of the copper mines.
- 7th Tableau: At Colin. Colin and Chloé are in a bed. Chloé complains about pain in her lungs. They play a record, and the room is transformed into a sphere. The visit of a doctor.
- Intermezzo. The Medical Quarter, the channel with some fragments of blooded cotton, the eye gazing to Colin and Chloé.
- 8th Tableau: The pharmacy. Colin and Chick are in a strange pharmacy with a guillotine for recipes and a mechalical rabbit making pills. Colin tells that Chloé has a lily in her lungs, and only flowers can cure her.
- 9th Tableau: At Colin. Chloé is surrounded by flowers. The room became smaller. Colin reads her a novel about Tristan and Iseult.
Act III
- Intermezzo. Colin walks along the road; the vision of strange shapes and shadows.
- 10th Tableau: The military plant. Colin found job at the military factory. Director explains that weapons are growing from the seeds if you warm them with your naked body.
- 11th Tableau: At Colin. Chloé sleeps among the flowers. Alise enters and tells Colin that Chick spent all his money to the books by Jean-Sol-Partre, and now wants to separate with her. Colin tries to consolate her.
- Intermezzo. Seneschal and eight policemen and are coming to Chick to confiscate his property.
- 12th Tableau: At Chick. Chick is died defending his books. Paris is on fire.
- Intermezzo. Alise sets fire to the bookshops with the books by Jean-Sol-Partre.
- 13th Tableau: Chloé’s death. The dialogue between Colin and Jesus nailed to the cross.
- Intermezzo. The empty town. The little girl sings a song about the dead town.
- 14th Tableau: An Epilogue. Dialogue of Cat and Mouse. Mouse wants to die putting its head into the Cat’s mouth. Blind girls walk the street singing a song about Jesus. One of the girls stepped on the Cat’s tail. The Cat shuts its mouth.
[edit] Score and music samples
- Sound sample of the first bars of the opera (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- Problems playing the files? See media help.

- Sound sample of the beginning of the final Chorus of the Blind Girls (file info) — play in browser (beta)
- Problems playing the files? See media help.
[edit] Recordings
Colin et Chloé, suite from the opera L'écume des jours (The Foam of Days) for soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor, chorus and orchestra (1981) 36' Text by Boris Vian (French)
- LP Melodiya 24593: USSR Ministry of Culture SO, Latvian SSR Academic Chorus, The USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra,Vasili Sinaisky (conductor), Nelli Lee (soprano), Nina Terentieva (mezzo-soprano), Nikolai Dumtsev (tenor)
- CD Melodiya SUCD 10-00107: USSR Ministry of Culture SO, Latvian SSR Academic Chorus, The USSR Ministry of Culture Symphony Orchestra, Vasili Sinaisky (conductor), Nelli Lee (soprano), Nina Terentieva (mezzo-soprano), Nikolai Dumtsev (tenor)
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- 1. The Street - 22.36 (1-7)
- 2. The Molitor Skating Rink
- 3. On the Way to Chloé
- 4. The Wedding
- 5. Соlin et Chloé
- 6. The Medical Quarter
- 7. Alice's Death
- 8. Epilogue - 7.40
[edit] Bibliography
- Yuri Kholopov & Valeria Tsenova: Edison Denisov, Harwood Academic publ., 1995
- Yuri Kholopov & Valeria Tsenova: Edison Denisov - The Russian Voice in European New Music; Berlin, Kuhn, 2002