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Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin” from Bärenreiter

Pyotr Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin” is probably the most frequently-performed Russian opera. But its success was not assured from the outset. Now this stagework is being published by Bärenreiter in an edition reflecting the latest state of research, taking into consideration the somewhat complicated history of its composition. The new edition finally clears up the many mistakes and inconsistencies in the previous editions of the score. It follows the 1885 St Petersburg version which can be regarded as the final authorised version since Tchaikovsky prepared it for the second edition of the score published by Jürgenson in 1891.

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Surprise of surprises. Rameau’s “Surprises de l’amour”

With the concert performance of Rameau’s opéra ballet “Les Surprises de l’amour” on 26 January in the Liszt Academy in Budapest, Hungarian conductor György Vashegyi and his Orfeo Orchestra continue the series of first performances using the “Opera Omnia Rameau”. The Centre de musique baroque de Versailles once again shares the production. The one-act “Adonis” from the little-known first version of 1748, not performed for another 274 years, is sure to be of particular interest to connoisseurs and admirers of Jean-Philippe Rameau’s work.

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“La clemenza di Tito” in reduced orchestration

Anna Skryleva, General Music Director in Magdeburg, made a virtue out of necessity brought about by the pandemic for the new production of Mozart’s last opera she conducted in May 2020, reducing the orchestral writing to just twenty musicians in a careful, yet sensitive arrangement. The result is a translucent chamber music version, which promises to become an attractive option for smaller opera houses well beyond the current restrictions. The performance material is now available on hire from Bärenreiter/Alkor.

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Laying a curse to rest - The new edition of Rameau’s Les Boréades

It is hard to believe, but Jean-Philippe Rameau’s Opus summum et ultimum “Les Boréades”, only premiered in 1975 in London, has never before been heard in a German opera house. This is no doubt because of the problematic access to the posthumously-published work. Long awaited by the music world, and by connoisseurs of Rameau in particular, Bärenreiter has just published a critical new edition meticulously prepared by Sylvie Bouissou, Editorial Director of the “Opera Omnia Rameau”. The enterprising Oldenburg Staatstheater, renowned for its Rameau productions, did not want to miss out on this double chance, and on 2 October presents the first German production of “Les Boréades” – at the same time the first performance using the new edition. Under director Christoph von Bernuth, Rameau’s legacy proves to be a parable of the Enlightenment and of striking timeless relevance. Alexis Kossenko conducts once again, following his triumphant success with Rameau’s comédie-ballet “Les Paladins” two years ago in Oldenburg. A further eleven performances are scheduled until 20 November. This gives opera connoisseurs from the larger musical centres the opportunity to experience the programming policy and high artistic level of one of the smaller German opera houses.

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Theatrically rich. Telemann’s Orpheus opera

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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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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Music theatre

Typically French. The “Faust” works by Berlioz and Gounod
A crazy idea. Bohuslav Martinů’s comic opera “Alexandre bis”
“Leonore”: Beethoven’s unknown “Fidelio”. The new edition of the 1805 version
Can this turn out well? Love between enemies in Rameau’s “Les Fêtes de Ramire”
Orpheus and Euridice. The drama about the power of singing, about love and death
Counterpoint and theatrical instinct. Four new editions of works by Conti
Full of dramatic and psychological intensity Jean-Baptiste Lully’s opera “Psyché”
Gluck’s ballet music to “L’Île de Merlin”
Deadly Encounters. Miroslav Srnka’s new opera “Voice Killer”
Of wood and angels of lizards. Beat Furrer’s opera “DAS GROSSE FEUER” for Zurich
Joseph Haydn’s operas offer something for every taste
Celestial twin love. The first version of Rameau’s opera “Castor et Pollux”
“Simply brilliant!” Marco Comin edits the music of Francesco Bartolomeo Conti
Egyptian flair in Fontainebleau. Rameau’s opera “La Naissance d’Osiris”
“Carmen” under the magnifying glass. The potential of different versions
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