最近布列兹厅连看了好几场都还挺喜欢的。
一个女高音——虽然我不认识,但看来票卖得还不错,选曲有意思,题为“暗物质”,好多都是跟黑暗 夜晚有关,但倒不一定阴暗爬行。有一些女作曲家,其中Rita Strohl完全没听过,是法国印象派风,第一首《木乃伊》还挺可爱。美国作曲家George Crumb那一套曲子,钢琴大量用拨弦,旋律(如果有的话)很仙很星空,大家听得都超陶醉。
#艺术歌曲 #Crumb #GoldaSchultz #当代音乐 #勃拉姆斯 #都是我辛辛苦苦听的

Opernhaus Zürich: Silvestervorstellung der „Fledermaus“
Marco Stücklin

Traditionsgemäß wird an vielen Opernhäusern am Silvesterabend Johann Strauss‘s Operette „Die Fledermaus“ aufgeführt. Im vergangenen Jahr gedachte man des 200. Geburtstags des Komponisten und so stand die Aufführung dieses Werks auch am 31. Dezember 2025 auf dem Spielplan. Im mit einem festlich gestimmten Publikum ausverkauften Opernhaus Zürich wurde die seit Anfang Dezember von Anna Bernreitner geschaffene Neuinszenierung gezeigt. […]

https://opernmagazin.de/opernhaus-zuerich-silvestervorstellung-der-fledermaus/

Opernhaus Zürich: Silvestervorstellung der "Fledermaus"

Das Opern- und Kulturmagazin im Internet von Detlef Obens

DAS OPERNMAGAZIN

Emilie Mayer defied 19th century mores with grand symphonies

As with many a composer, Emilie Mayer (1812-1883) was very successful during her lifetime, but was forgotten almost immediately after her death. The German historian Barbara Beuys is now restoring her to her former glory with the biography Emilie Mayer, Europas größte Komponistin (Emilie Mayer, Europe’s greatest female composer).

Mayer composed in all genres and left behind a large oeuvre, including eight highly praised symphonies, seven concert overtures and ten string quartets.

Yet in 1893 – only 12 years after her death – a German critic wrote about the premiere of a symphony by Luise Adolpha le Beau that ‘this is unique, a symphony by a lady we have never heard before’.

Beuys gave het biography the somewhat provocative subtitle ‘Europe’s greatest composer’.  In an interview, she laconically states that some exaggeration is appropriate to draw attention to your subject.

Moreover, she stresses that Mayer was considered one of the most important composers of her time, and that critics started to emphasise her gender less and less.

Happy single

Those who listen to Mayer’s colourful symphonies – numbers 3 and 6 have just been recorded by the Philharmonisches Orchester Bremerhaven – and the beautiful songs on the also recently released CD This Be Her Verse by Golda Schultz and Jonathan Ware, will wholeheartedly support Beuys’ decision. Mayer has an enormous flair for orchestration and her setting of Goethe’s poem Erlkönig is at least as chilling as Schubert’s.

On the basis of the little source material available, Beuys tries to sketch Mayer’s personality. This paints a picture of a self-assured woman, who worked purposefully to realise her dreams and deliberately remained unmarried. Thus she was able to avoid the fate of her contemporaries Fanny Mendelssohn and Clara Schumann, who as composers always remained in the shadow of their brother and husband respectively.

Royal blessing

In 1850 Mayer even organised a concert in the Royal Theatre in Berlin, dedicated entirely to her own music and made available free of charge by Friedrich Wilhelm IV. – With foresight, she had earlier given his wife Elisabeth of Prussia a bread sculpture of her own making. The sovereign was so impressed that she awarded Mayer with a gold medal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEubWpNjBkk&t=3s

In her ‘royal’ concert, Mayer presented chamber music as well as choral works, an overture and the premiere of her Third Symphony. This was performed by Wilhelm Wieprecht’s leading orchestra Euterpe, with whom she was studying orchestration at the time.

One critic speaks of ‘captivating phrases’ and ‘a confident command of the material’. The influential Ludwig Rellstab praises the way the themes ‘flow smoothly through the securely defined realm of tonal colours, often with surprising elegance’.

Mayer also managed to lure her former teacher Carl Loewe to Berlin from Stettin, the city she moved to in 1840. This was shortly after the unspecified suicide of her father, who ran a pharmacy in the town of Friedland and had wholeheartedly supported her talent.

Although Loewe was somewhat sceptical about female composers, he had immediately accepted Mayer as a composition student on the basis of her earlier work. Thanks to him, Mayer became a well-known figure in Stettin’s lively music scene, where her first two symphonies were also successfully premiered.

International fame

Gradually, her fame grew and her music was heard in such important cultural centres as Leipzig, Brussels, Vienna and Budapest. She negotiated the publication of her compositions courteously but firmly with the leading publisher Bote & Bock. But despite this glittering career, her fame fades soon after her death.

Beuys is a dedicated but somewhat wide-ranging author, who provides all the people discussed with an extensive biography. – Even when Mayer probably did not know them, like the French composer Louise Farrenc. Moreover, Beuys – no doubt due to a lack of sources – makes quite a few assumptions, which are not always convincing.

The book is off to a fascinating start. It is rather a shock when Beuys points out that women were independent until the 18th century, but were then labelled impotent beings by the Enlightenment philosopher J.J. Rousseau. However, since the author keeps on stressing the point that females were reduced to incubators, she ultimately gets on one’s nerves: yeah, we know it now!

The biographer’s devotion to her subject is sincere, however, and Emilie Mayer’s music deserves to be heard. Apparently Beuys’ appeal has not fallen on deaf ears, as shown by the increasing number of performances, the recent CD-releaes and the first edition being sold out soon after publication.

– As I wrote before: the female composer is definitely on the rise!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLxEmW9RFEU

#BarbaraBeuys #EmilieMayer #EuropasGrößteKomponistin #GoldaSchultz #LudwigRellstab #PhilharmonischesOrchesterBremerhaven

Golda Schultz gives fabulous voice to women composers

In the recent surge of CD’s featuring music by women composers This Be Her Verse offers a veritable breath of fresh air. South African soprano Golda Schultz works from an intrinsic motivation.

In the booklet she writes how she always strived to give voice to unexplored corners of the female perspective in songs written by male composers. During a run-through of  Schubert’s Gretchen am Spinnrade, she realized something essential was missing: the woman’s voice itself.  

Golda Schultz

However brilliantly Schubert depicted ‘the obsession, the restlessness and the sheer panicked joy’ of a young girl overwhelmed by her first love, ‘still, for me, her true voice was missing’. Schultz stopped rehearsal halfway through the piece: ‘What if a woman told her own story?’ she asked her pianist Jonathan Ware. – And got to work.

She commissioned a song cycle from Kathleen Tagg on Lila Palmer’s three-part poem This Be Her Verse, about a woman who takes her life into her own hands. In the title song, muffled strings sound a heartbeat under increasingly agitated outbursts from the soprano who rebels against ‘His ego self’. After this follow hilarious settings of ‘Wedding’, in which a bride waits in vain for her groom, and ‘Single Bed’, about the benefits of living alone and sleeping between clean sheets. The short cycle is a gem of modern Lied-writing.

Schultz also unearthed a setting of Erlkönig by Emilie Mayer, a composer who was forgotten soon after her death in 1883, but has recently been re-discovered. In her unprecedentedly intense setting of Goethe’s poem, Mayer emulates her predecessor Schubert. Powerful rumblings of the piano evoke the child’s fear of the murderous fairy king, whose coaxing whisperings are caught in sweetly flowing lines from the soprano. 

No less exciting is Rebecca Clarke’s Tiger, in which pounding chords and half-whispered melodic phrases make the dark tenor of William Blake’s poem perfectly palpable. In Lieder opus 12, Clara Schumann demonstrates her talent for pairing an expressive vocal part with an equally incandescent piano accompaniment.

Nadia Boulanger’s music may be less poignant than her sister Lili’s, but the recitative style and slow pace of Cantique emanate a serene and wistful charm.

With her nimble voice and perfect diction, Schultz irrevocably takes you in for the 18 highly varied songs on this CD, aided in no small part by the alert and responsive accompaniment of Jonathan Ware. Buy this CD!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEubWpNjBkk

#ClaraSchumann #EmilieMayer #GoldaSchultz #JonathanWare #KathleenTagg #ThisBeHerVerse

Opernhaus Zürich: Premiere von „Die Fledermaus“
Marco Stücklin

Mit der Neuproduktion der wohl bekannstesten Operette „Die Fledermaus“ von Johann Strauss, im Jubiläumsjahr des 200. Geburstag des Komponisten, präsentiere das Opernhaus Zürich eine rasante, farbenfrohe Inszenierung der Regisseurin Anna Bernreitner im Bühnenbild von Hannah Oellinger und Manfred Rainer und Kostümen von Arthur Arbesser. Die Uraufführung im Jahre 1874, als Wien traumatisiert vom großen Gründerkrach und ein Jahr zuvor die Börse zusammengebrochen war, was viele Vermögen vernichtet hat, passte zum Bedürfnis der Menschen nach Ablenkung. Die ganze Verlogenheit der Gesellschaft mit Maskeraden und falschen Identitäten und Gefühlen wurde ihr schonungslos vorgeführt.  (Rezension der Premiere v. 7. Dezember 2025) […]

https://opernmagazin.de/opernhaus-zuerich-premiere-von-die-fledermaus/

Opernhaus Zürich: Premiere von "Die Fledermaus"

Das Opern- und Kulturmagazin im Internet von Detlef Obens

DAS OPERNMAGAZIN
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