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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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724<br />

THE SURVIVAL OF CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY<br />

uinely American and the most original. Independent and iconoclastic, he spent<br />

part of his life as a hobo during the Depression. He was at the same time a most<br />

knowledgeable musician and highly literate academic who taught, held research<br />

posts, and accepted grants. His musical theater pieces (original as they are) have<br />

something in common with those of the European Carl Orff, whose musical treatments<br />

of Greek tragedy have a powerful, theatrical impact. Partch's dramatic<br />

break with European and American musical tradition came in 1930, when he<br />

burned his own previous compositions (fourteen years' worth) in an iron potbellied<br />

stove. He would turn his back on the traditional, forge a new music to<br />

be played on new instruments of his own making, and train musicians for performance.<br />

He explains:<br />

/ am first and last a composer. I have been provoked into becoming a musical theorist,<br />

an instrument builder, a musical apostate, and a musical idealist, simply because I ha<br />

been a demanding composer. I hold no wish for the obsolescence of the widely heard instruments<br />

and music. My devotion to our musical heritage is great—and critical. I feel<br />

that more ferment is necessary to a healthy musical culture. I am endeavoring to instill<br />

more ferment. 23<br />

Partch called his new musical language "monophony," built upon a fortythree-tone-to-the-octave<br />

just scale. He designed the original instruments required<br />

to play his unique compositions from fuel tanks, Pyrex jars, and a wide<br />

variety of modified musical instruments. His music and his musical theater are<br />

as much influenced by the Far East as by Western Europe. His Oedipus and Revelation<br />

in the Courthouse Park are classical in their inspiration, and his Delusion of<br />

the Fury is Oriental; its themes, including the release from the wheel of life and<br />

death, come from Japanese Noh drama and West African folktale. 24<br />

Partch originally used the translation of W. B. Yeats for his setting of Oedipus<br />

(1952), which was entitled Sophocles' King Oedipus. Because he could not get<br />

permission from Yeats' literary agent to release a recording, in 1954 he revised<br />

the score for enlarged instrumentation, setting it to his own translation; the final<br />

revision of his operatic dance-drama Oedipus was made in 1967. His treatment<br />

confirms the reason he was attracted to mythology: "There's so much basic<br />

in it." Yet he felt that his Oedipus was too firmly rooted in the ancient past,<br />

and he wanted to strive for more contemporary relevance—hence his Americanization<br />

of Euripides.<br />

Partch's Revelation in the Courthouse Park (1960) is based on the Bacchae of<br />

Euripides. He wrote his own controversial libretto, in which the character of<br />

Dionysus is depicted in the image of Elvis Presley, but based the text for the<br />

choruses on Gilbert Murray's translation.<br />

Because of the many difficulties involved in a performance of Revelation in<br />

the Courthouse Park (with its unorthodox score and orchestra requiring the playing<br />

of unorthodox instruments), any staging of the work is a rare and momentous<br />

theatrical event; and so when it was elaborately produced in Philadelphia

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