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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CLASSICAL MYTHOLOGY IN MUSIC, DANCE, AND FILM 725<br />

in 1987 (in a production that was recorded) and revived in 1989 in New York,<br />

it aroused varied and widespread critical response. This is Partch's most<br />

grandiose musical theater piece. A mobile marching brass band juxtaposes music<br />

in a traditional style; the action requires singers, actors, dancers, acrobats,<br />

tumblers, gymnasts, baton-twirlers, fire-throwers, and a filmed fireworks display.<br />

The scenario alternates between ancient Thebes and the courthouse park<br />

(in Greek revival style) of a small mid western town in the 1950s. Each major<br />

singer plays two roles—Dion, rock star (a pop idol archetype for Elvis Presley)<br />

and Hollywood King of Ishbu Kubu with his fanatic female followers is also<br />

Dionysus, god of the frenzied Bacchae; Sonny, a young, disturbed man in the<br />

courthouse park, becomes Pentheus, the youthful king of ancient Thebes; and<br />

Mom, devotee of Ishbu Kubu and mother of Sonny, plays her alter ego Agave,<br />

mother of Pentheus and leader of the Bacchae. The action is that of ritual theater;<br />

lines are spoken or declaimed with or without music, amidst the more<br />

purely musical episodes; and it is not the music itself that matters as much as<br />

the theatrical impact and the universal import of the imaginative and provocative<br />

libretto. Partch explains: "Dion, the Hollywood idol, is a symbol of dominant<br />

mediocrity, Mom is a symbol of blind matriarchal power, and Sonny is a<br />

symbol of nothing so much as a lost soul, one who does not or cannot conform<br />

to the world he was born to." (See the box on p. 290).<br />

Other works by Partch are influenced by classical mythology. Ulysses at the<br />

Edge (1955) is a "small chamber work" that appears in other versions as Ulysses<br />

Departs from the Edge of the World and Ulysses Turns Homeward from the Edge of<br />

the World. Partch, in reminiscence of his hobo years, thought of Ulysses as another<br />

wanderer like himself. This piece eventually became the fifth part of The<br />

Wayward, a collection of his compositions on American themes. Castor and Pollux<br />

(1952) is called A Dance for the Twin Rhythms of Gemini. It is one part of a<br />

three-part work, Plectra and Percussion Dances, subtitled Satyr-Play Music for Dance<br />

Theater. The work has two sections, one for Castor, the other for Pollux; each<br />

section is in four parts: (1) Leda and the Swan, (2) Conception, (3) Incubation<br />

(or Gestation), (4) Chorus of Delivery from the Egg. Partch reveals that from the<br />

moment of insemination, each egg uses exactly 234 beats in cracking. Daphne of<br />

the Dunes (1958, rev. 1967) was originally the music score for a film. Partch collaborated<br />

with the Chicago experimental filmmaker Madeline Tourtelot in the<br />

making of six films. One of them was Wind Song, a study of nature and a modern<br />

version of the myth of Daphne and Apollo, for which Partch composed and<br />

performed the sound track. Another of their collaborations was for the movie<br />

Revelation in the Courthouse Park (1961).<br />

Barber, Stravinsky, and Some of the Many Others. One of the foremost American<br />

composers is Samuel Barber (1910-1981), whose popularity has been maintained<br />

(despite bitter, adverse criticism) because of the universal persistence of his<br />

melodic neo-romanticism. His Andromache's Farewell (1963) for soprano and

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