Dead Man Walking Heggie
One would have thought that Jake Heggie’s Dead Man Walking, which has been staged dozens of times, would offer more originality and nuance in its musical score. If the main purpose of opera is to express in the music what words can’t, then the focus on text in Dead Man Walking leaves a musical void at its most explosive moments
WASHINGTON NATIONAL OPERA
USA
Review by Karyl Charna Lynn
Music ** * *
Staging ** *
Based on Sister Helen Prejean’s true account of her attempt to save a convicted murderer on death row and to make him take responsibility for his gruesome crime, the story deals with the moral issues of capital punishment and the politics surrounding it. Heggie uses the full musical armoury available to him in the operatic canon: impassioned lyricism in arias, duets and ensembles, borrowings from Verdi to Britten and the stylistic gamut from rock and roll to hymns. In spite of this, the work feels more like a narrative with music added rather than an integrated music-drama.