If his decade-long relationship with Clara Schumann is any indication, Johannes Brahms had always been attracted by strong, intelligent and beautiful women. And in the world of opera, face it, there is no stronger woman than Carmen. She is certainly the most intelligent person in the story, managing to free her husband from jail, and organizes all the business transactions of the band of smugglers. Carmen is smart, brave, resolute, independent, and exotic. But above all, Carmen is obsessed by her physicality, her body and its movements. Although she is a prostitute, she is primarily interested in having sex for the sake of physical closeness, and not for getting money. “The opera is so loaded with sexual imagery,” explains feminist musicologist Susan McClary, “it is not to be believed, as we see Carmen rolling up cigars on her bare thigh. And none of that kind of explicit sexuality had been on the operatic stage at all. And to have this woman who smokes and does exactly what she pleases just blew everybody’s mind.” According to McClary, “Carmen’s powerful sexuality engenders a sense of male inadequacy, and it is one of the reasons why the character has to be punished and killed at the end of the opera.” In other words, Carmen is a victim of male paranoia about female power, and the opera demands Carmen’s death as a means to reaffirm the male hegemony, which her transgressive sexuality has disturbed.
Brahms was, paradoxically, devoted to prostitutes. At age 13, he spent his evenings playing the piano in some waterfront establishment in Hamburg. Catering predominantly to sailors, these red-light locales combined the services of bar, restaurant, dance hall and brothel. Brahms talked about his youthful experiences with rage and anguish for the rest of his life, but above all, he considered himself a survivor. He also said that these experiences ruined women for him, and for the rest of his life he visited prostitutes for his sexual needs. To be sure, he fell in love with a number of exceptional women—most notably Clara Schumann, Agathe von Siebold and Marie Soldat—but love and sex simply did not mix. As such, Brahms seeing more than 20 performances of Carmen had preciously little to do with a reaffirmation of male hegemony or power, but everything with his obvious fascination of seeing professional sexuality—something he had become quite an expert in—publically staged in the temple to high art. To McClary, “Carmen lacks interiority and exists only through the cultural imagination of others.” For Brahms, I would suggest, Carmen was real enough!
George Bizet: Carmen, “Habanera”
Jan Swafford, in his marvelous biography of Brahms, suggests that an additional motivation for his 20 visits to performances of Carmen in 1876 may have been his eagerness to learn how to write such a stunning opera (or even any worthwhile opera), something he had never been able to get himself to do.
[I personally have had a life-long (9 – 90) admiration for Carmen over all other operas: More than most operas, Carmen is all happening on the stage, there is not a dull moment and the music just fits throughout].