Silas Marner (1993)

 

pic-silas.jpg (9116 bytes)Silas Marner was commissioned for the Salisbury Festival in 1993. It was premiered in Wilton Parish Church, and then given a full-scale production by the City of Birmingham Touring Opera - directed by Graham Vick and conducted by Simon Halsey - in December 1994. Housed in a huge space under the Bull Ring Centre in Birmingham, this was community opera at its most vivid; a cast of hundreds of local amateurs played alongside professionals to provide an immediate and real sense of a tight-knit community.

Howard chose to adapt George Eliot’s novel Silas Marner because of his attraction to stories featuring an individual pitted against a community: "Unlike many 19th Century novels which are quite gloomy, Silas Marner is very positive about human nature and has a wonderful redeeming ending. It raises issues concerning parenthood which are relevant today and also very close to my heart. There were also geographical reasons for choosing it. I first discussed writing it with the City of Birmingham Touring Opera, and Silas Marner is set in a small weaving town in the Midlands."

Howard wrote the libretto as well as the score, and was pleased not to have to abridge the novel too drastically: "The great thing about Silas Marner compared to other 19th century classics such as Oliver Twist or Les Miserables is that it is comparatively short! You can use the whole story and do it justice in just an hour and a half".

Silas Marner is a work which does not fit clearly into a particular genre; Howard describes it as "a music-drama because of its idiom. If I were to sit at the piano and play the music, you would say it is a musical. If, however, you had seen it performed in Birmingham, you would say it is an opera. If I had to plump for one or the other, I would call it a musical." Music critic Edward Seckerson has said of the piece: "In keeping with the fashion, it sits somewhere between opera and musical: through-composed, but basically a collection of songs." 

What the critics said…

"Goodall writes such good songs: folksongs, worksongs - pure English pastoral. His melodies are born of Anglican hymns, ancient and modern - memorably modal - and wherever possible he’ll work in telling vocal counterpoint…The skill, the emotional pull, of Goodall’s work is all in his tunes. And he knows exactly where to place them." The Independent

"It’s the best kind of Christmas offering, inspiring and affecting, and there’s no higher praise than to say that it does full justice to George Eliot’s great novel, to its unquenchable optimism and boundless humanity." The Guardian

[The script of Silas Marner is available for perusal here]

[The vocal score of Silas Marner will be available for perusal here soon]

 

poster for the Birmingham production 1994

poster for the London College of Music production 1997

'Alphabet': photo Richard H Smith

Silas and Eppie, photo Richard H Smith

The hunt; photo Richard H Smith

Showing Graham Vick (director) and Simon Halsey (conductor) what the score really says.

The Raveloe women discuss Silas; photo Richard H Smith

The fall of Dunstan Cass; photo Richard H Smith

The wedding of Eppie & Aaron; photo Richard H Smith

Godfrey and Dunstan Cass playing billiards with hositility: Photo Richard H Smith

Little Eppie and the Loom. Photo Richard H Smith

Molly (Phyllida Hancock) and the baby Eppie: Photo Richard H Smith

Silas alone: photo Richard H Smith

Carol singers; photo Richard H Smith

Silas advises Eppie; photo Richard H Smith

last minute orchestral corrections....

 

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