From the House of the Dead is the last opera by Leos Janacek (1854-1928). It was composed in 1927-28 and first
performed in 1930 in Brno (Czechoslovakia then, now Czech Republic). The opera
is based on the book by the same name, which was Fyodor Dostoevsky’s memoir of
the 5 years he spent as a political prisoner in Siberia. Janacek chose episodes from
Dostoevsky’s book, translated them into Czech and arranged them into an opera
libretto.
The opera has almost no plot. It begins with the arrival of a political
prisoner, Alexander Petrovich Goryanchikov (a stand-in for Dostoevsky); it ends
with Goryanchikov’s release. In between
the prisoners go about their daily chores, chat, argue, befriend one another, drink
tea, and stage an amateur theatrical.
All these events are taken from anecdotes in Dostoevsky’s book. Most of all the prisoners tell the stories of
the crimes that got them sent to Siberia. There are three long narratives: Luka tells how he attacked and killed an
official who oppressed the prisoners; Skuratov explains that he shot a German
watchmaker whom his sweetheart was forced to marry against her will; Shishkov
beat his young wife repeatedly, then cut her throat in
a drunken rage. These narratives would
seem to be about man’s hopeless depravity, but instead they are about the spark
of humanity that still shines in every man, not matter how depraved his
actions. This was the lesson that
Dostoevsky drew from his 5 years in Siberia, and it is
the main idea that Janacek conveys in his libretto and his music.
The
House of the Dead works through speech, not through action. In this, as in his other operas, Janacek took
enormous pains to make his characters sing as they would speak. His rhythms mimic speech patterns and his
vocal melodies rise and fall accoring to the inflections of spoken Czech. (For this
reason the opera is particularly difficult to translate.) The orchestra picks up on these speech
rhythms, often echoing them, sometimes anticipating them. When is not reflecting speech, the orchestra
tends to play fragments of melodies and ostinatos that provide a kind of
underscoring as conversations and narratives start, stop and resume again.