‘Breughelland’: subverting the antinomy of utopia and dystopia

  • Andreas Dorschel Művészeti Egyetem, Zeneesztétikai Intézet, Graz

Abstract

Is György Ligeti’s Le Grand Macabre a dystopian work, or rather one of utopia? Traditionally, dystopia and utopia have formed an alternative. Yet Ligeti/Meschke enact an intertwinement of dystopia and utopia, in a series of moves and countermoves: (1) Death threatens to eliminate all life. (2) The earth is saved from the fate of the destruction of life – ‘Death is dead’ (II/4). (3) Yet ‘Breughelland’ is and will remain a crude and cruel tyranny. (4) The farcical character of the whole
calls into question whether any of the previous moves can be taken seriously. Ligeti/Meschke’s subversion of the antinomy of utopia and dystopia, introduced in the opening ‘Breughellandlied’, turns out to be in the spirit of Piet the Pot’s
namesake Pieter Breughel the Elder, as a closer look at his 1567 painting Het Luilekkerland, an inspiration already to de Ghelderode, reveals. The irritating role thus assigned to consumption, however, seems to trivially lose all ambiguity
through the words of the opera’s final stanza. While this is a weighty objectionto the reading proposed here, the conclusion attempts to outline a rejoinder to it.

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Published
2024-02-01
How to Cite
DorschelA. (2024). ‘Breughelland’: subverting the antinomy of utopia and dystopia. Hungarian Music, 62(1), 68-78. Retrieved from https://ojs.mtak.hu/index.php/magyarzene/article/view/17830
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Articles