by Porter Anderson, @Porter_Anderson
Appointment With Death is Agatha Christie's travelogue-gone-wrong, set in the "rose red city of Petra." And some years ago, when I directed Christie's 1945 stage adaptation of it, I reached for Vivaldi.
I wanted some big, noisy, precisely orchestrated suspense to get my big, noisy, endlessly patient actors into an opening tableaux. And by setting this whole thing in the swamp-gassy gloom of a weird hotel lobby, I could also show off the smart elevator our designers had rigged up for the stage.
So I used the first movement of the Winter concerto from Vivaldi's Four Seasons. Sounds like the kind of blizzard that gets Mayor Bloomberg into trouble. Worked like a charm. We managed to get the "detestable" Mrs. Boynton into her seat right on the button of that string-section snowstorm every time.
Image: Flickr, National Library NZ
But how I wish I'd had
Q2 Music then. Because I'd have used something far more atmospheric, closer to the exotic locale. Petra, an ancient city carved from rock in Jordan, has little to do with Vivaldi's Europe. And I'd also like something less bombastic, more intimately sinister.
Something like composer
Dohee Lee's "HonBiBaekSan (The Ritual of White Mountain)." After a very eerie, quiet start, she uses a beautiful woman's vocalise, throbbing percussion, queasy glissandi and electronically generated tones oozing through the air. Every sound, like Christie's characters, a suspect. If you don't see the audio file from Q2 here to click on, just go to
this page at Q2 Music and scroll down to Dohee Lee's name. That's the amplified quartet
Ethel playing it, in a live performance.