Antigonae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Antigone (opera))
Jump to: navigation, search
Operas by Carl Orff

Der Mond (1939)
Die Kluge (1943)
Antigonae (1949)
De Temporum Fine Comoedia (1973)

Antigonae (Antigone), written by Carl Orff, was first presented on 9 August 1949 under the direction of Ferenc Fricsay in the Felsenreitsschule, Salzburg, Austria. Antigonae is in Orff's words a "musical setting" for the Greek tragedy by Sophocles of the same name. However, it functions as an opera.

Orff used the German translation of Sophocles' play by Friedrich Hölderlin (1770-1843). The original play was written in 442 BC and the German translation copies faithfully the mood and movement of Greek tragedy.

Contents

[edit] The music

With this work Orff drew a line in his musical output, setting up a demarcation between pre-Antigonae and post-Antigonae style. Hölderlin's translation into lines of ecstatic German inspired the declamatory technique Orff uses for the first time in much of Antigonae. It pre-dates a similar style of the minimalist school by about 50 years. In this way Orff creates unusual sound effects that captures both the dramatic and psychological setting of the original Greek tragedy with emotional color ranging from the ecstatic to the orgiastic.

Frequently an ostinato in the orchestra builds up an almost unbearable tension which is resolved only in the final bars of the piece. Orff frequently uses the technique called Singstimmen, which is half way between singing and speaking, somewhat like Schönberg's Sprechgesang, but still within the tonal language of work.

The sense of antiquity is often enhanced when the text is treated psalmodically in a manner resembling Gregorian Chant. Another early device found in Antigone is the melisma, where many notes are assigned to a single syllable, which is found as well in the music of other ancient and modern cultures.

The structure of the work, its heavy emotional content, its novel fabrics of sound, all demand more of the listener than required in the usual opera performance. While Antigone has never been as popular as, say, Rigoletto, it has set new standards for the orchestra, the singers and the committed listener.

[edit] Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, 9 August 1949
(Conductor: Ferenc Fricsay)
Antigonae mezzo-soprano Res Fischer
A messenger bass Joseph Greindl
A guard tenor Helmut Krebs
Eurydice soprano Hilde Zadek
Haemon tenor Lorenz Fehenberger
Ismene contralto Maria von Ilosvay
Kreon, baritone Hermann Uhde
Tiresias tenor Ernst Haefliger

[edit] Synopsis

The opera begins in the early morning following a battle in Thebes between the armies of the two sons of Oedipus: Eteocles and Polynices. King Kreon (Creon), who ascended the throne of Thebes after both brothers are killed in battle, decrees that Polynices is not to be buried. Antigonae, his sister, defies the order, but is caught. Kreon decrees that she be buried alive in spite of the fact that she is betrothed to his son, Haemon. The gods, through the blind prophet Tiresias, express their disapproval of Kreon's decision, which convinces him to rescind his order, and he goes to bury Polynices. However, Antigonae has already hanged herself rather than be buried alive. When Kreon arrives at the tomb where she was to be interred, his son, Haemon, attacks him and then kills himself. Finally, when Kreon's wife, Eurydice, is informed of Haemon's and Antigonae's death she, too, takes her own life. At the end of the play, and the opera, Kreon is the only principal left alive.

[edit] Instrumentation

Antigonae is scored for 6 pianos (also played with drum stick and plectrum), 4 harps, 9 double basses, 6 flutes doubling 6 piccolos, 6 oboes doubling 3 English horns, 6 trumpets with mutes, 7-8 timpani, and percussion (steinspiel [lithophone], xylophone, wood drum [i.e. log drum], large African slit-drum, 2 bells, 3 glockenspiels, 4 pairs of finger cymbals, 3 Turkish cymbals (i.e. suspended cymbals), 3 pairs Turkish cymbals [i.e. crash cymbals], small anvil, 3 triangles, 2 bass drums, 6 tambourines, 10 "trough xylophones" (Orff Schulwerk instruments, probably referring to xylophones without resonating tubes) of various sizes, 6 pairs of castanets, and 10 large Javanese gongs).

[edit] References

Personal tools