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Theatrically rich with varied chorus and dance scenes - Telemann’s opera for Hamburg “Die wunderbare Beständigkeit der Liebe oder Orpheus”

Georg Philipp Telemann’s Orpheus opera for the Gänsemarkttheater in Hamburg stands apart from typical works of its time in its opulence. Unfortunately the surviving sources are incomplete. But now, a basis for effective performances is provided by the volume from the Telemann Selected Edition published by Bärenreiter.
Amongst Telemann’s surviving Hamburg stage works, “Die wunderbare Beständigkeit der Liebe oder Orpheus” (TVWV 21:18) can be regarded as the most unusual, and at the same time the most problematic in its surviving form. Of all the operas produced at the Theater am Gänsemarkt, it was not only unusual but also unique in that the libretto contains a combination of German, Italian and French; the first known performance of the opera as a “concert” on 9 March 1726, staged by the famous singer Margaretha Susanna Kayser (1690–1775), was peculiar and requires further explanation. “Orpheus” was originally conceived as a typical repertoire opera with different set designs, rich action on stage and varied chorus and dance scenes. It is unclear why the piece was only performed as a concert in 1726. But one-off performances of this type presented an opportunity for the opera house to earn some income, despite the theatres being closed during Lent when opera performances were forbidden in Hamburg.

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Magnificent music and drama - A conversation with René Jacobs about Telemann’s opera “Orpheus”

In 1994 René Jacobs made his debut at the Deutsche Staatsoper Berlin with Telemann’s “Orpheus”. 27 years later the renowned conductor returns to a work he loves, highlighting its uniqueness. He was inspired by Wolfgang Hirschmann’s critical new edition, which was published in the Telemann Edition in 2011. Bärenreiter has now produced performance material for the forthcoming series of concert performances in major European cities. The missing sections of this opera, which survives incomplete, have been added in sympathetic style by Jacobs, including the Overture from Telemann’s opera “Miriways” and music by contemporaries such as Georg Caspar Schürmann and Maurice Green. The conductor discussed the details of his performance version in the accompanying interview. The tour, with specially selected singers and the Belgian early music ensemble B’Rock begins on 21 October in Antwerp (Concertgebouw) and ends on 30 October in Barcelona (Gran Teatre del Liceu), René Jacobs’ 75th birthday. Other venues are Amsterdam (Concertgebouw) on 23 October, Cologne (Philharmonie) on the 25th, and Tourcouing (Théâtre) on 28 October.

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Jean-Philippe Rameau’s “Les Fêtes d’Hébé ou Les Talents lyriques”

The courtly Opéra-ballet Les Fêtes d'Hébé was premiered in May 1739 at the Académie royale de musique in Paris and was immediately extremely successful. Rameau had probably not reckoned on such a resounding success with a work he had evidently composed very quickly, to a libretto by dilettante authors who shared the same box at the Opéra – Antoine-César Gaultier de Montdorge and Louise-Angélique Rondin de La Tournerie. Their idea of writing a libretto for a ballet occurred to them following the performances of Les Indes galantes in 1735. In that year, Rameau had been unable to perform his tragedy Samson, based on a libretto by Voltaire, because of the censor, and so he decided to re-use a large portion of the music from Samson in his score for Les Fêtes d’Hébé.

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Erotic, mystical, nightmarish - Jules Massenet's opera “Thaïs” available for the first time in a scholarly-critical edition

On 10 February 2022 Jules Massenet’s “Thaïs”, a major work of French 19th century opera, will be performed at La Scala, the legendary Italian opera house. Directed by star director Olivier Py, the conductor is Lorenzo Viotti, chief conductor at Dutch National Opera Amsterdam, and one of the most sought-after conductors of the up-and-coming generation. The main roles are luxuriously cast with Mariana Rebeca, Ludovic Tézier and Giovanni Sala. The production benefits from research findings made by the French musicologist  Fabien Guilloux, which are documented in his critical new edition in the series “L‘Opéra français”, and can now be evaluated for practical use for the first time.

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“Singularity” – Miroslav Srnka’s Space Opera

A glimpse into the not-too-distant future: In their new opera "Singularity," composer Miroslav Srnka and author Tom Holloway dramatize mind games about computerized people, updates, and human and technical malfunctions. Their opera is a fast-paced play with set pieces of the cyber world, combining vision with farce and a glimpse into human abysses.  Expressly composed for young voices, “Singularity” was written for the opera studio of the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. Nicolas Brieger signed responsible for the production of the premiere on 5 June 2021 in the Cuvilliés Theatre, the Klangforum Wien played under the baton of Patrick Hahn. The opera was performed both live and per live-stream. The live-stream is still accessible. "Singularity" is the third opera by Miroslav Srnka and Tom Holloway commissioned by the Bavarian State Opera, following “Make No Noise” and “South Pole”.

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Charles Gounod’s “Faust“ in the dialogue version of 1859 at Oper Köln

Following the multi prize-winning first CD recording of the dialogue version of Gounod’s “Faust”, edited and reconstructed by Paul Prévost, this can now be seen on the stage for the first time. With set designs by Herbert Murauer, renowned director Johannes Erath has conceived his production specially for Oper Köln’s venue in the Staatenhaus, creatively approaching this with current distancing rules in mind. The production embodies both the spirit of the Opéra Comique and the musical interpretation by Music Director François-Xavier Roth, the Gürzenich Orchester and the vocal soloists. These are largely drawn from the ensemble of Oper Köln, with Anne-Catherine Gillet (Marguerite) as the sole guest artist. Audiences will be particularly excited to hear the second part of Faust’s famous aria “Salut! demeure chaste et pure”, only recently rediscovered. This was cut from the Paris premiere on 19 March 1859 at the Théâtre Lyrique because of a change of singer at short notice, and has now been published exclusively in a Bärenreiter edition. Young Woo Kim gives the belated premiere of the young Faust’s Cavatina in the original two-part version on 5 June 2021. The first performance and all subsequent performances will be given by Oper Köln both with a live audience and streamed, on a pay as you wish basis.

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Le retour à la vie – Summer Festivals 2021

The return to life is the evocative title of this year’s Festival Berlioz in the composer’s birthplace of La Côte-Saint-André. In the second half of August leading Berlioz interpreters such as Sir John Eliot Gardiner, Francois-Xavier Roth, Jérémy Rhorer, John Nelson and Valery Gergiev perform key works from Berlioz’s output including Les Troyens à Carthage, La Damnation de Faust, L’Enfance du Christ, Requiem, Symphonie fantastique, Lelio ou Le retour à la vie and Les nuits d’été. The fact that music can finally be performed again after a long period of enforced silence is also another reason for traditional summer festivals in Aix-en-Provence, Glyndebourne, Munich, Salzburg and Lucerne – to name just the most prominent – to celebrate. Bärenreiter features many times with its critical new editions and performance material of Baroque and classical-romantic operas, and in addition, first performances of new concert works by Beat Furrer and Miroslav Srnka feature. Here is an overview of dates. Please check these with the respective organisers beforehand.

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Deutsch wechsle zu deutsch

Music theatre

„Rusalka“ – finally revised. The new Urtext Edition of Dvořák’s Opera
Rameau’s masonic opera “Zoroastre” in the 1756 version
Not just “Carmen”: the new editorial project “Bizet’s Other Operas”
Conquest opera - Gaspare Spontini’s “Fernand Cortez”
Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin” from Bärenreiter
Surprise of surprises – Rameau’s “Surprises de l’amour”
“La clemenza di Tito” – even with social distancing
Premiere in Bregenz: Ľubica Čekovská’s “Impresario Dotcom”
“My music is fundamentally political in expression” - Paul Dessau’s operatic output
Less theatrical, but more successful – Rameau’s “Dardanus”
An army commander torn between two women. Handel’s opera “Alessandro”
Purified Beauty. Handel’s first oratorio in the Halle Handel Edition
A vocal challenge, then as now. Gluck’s “Atto di Bauci e Filemone”
George Frideric Handel’s “Fernando” in Halle
Arcadia breathes a sigh of relief. Handel’s “Il pastor fido” in the Halle Handel Edition
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