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Akhnaten (opera)

Akhnaten is an opera in three acts based on the life and religious convictions of the Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV),[1] written by the American composer Philip Glass in 1983. The libretto is by Philip Glass in association with Shalom Goldman, Robert Israel, Richard Riddell, and Jerome Robbins. According to the composer, this work is the culmination of a trilogy including his two other biographical operas, Einstein on the Beach (about Albert Einstein) and Satyagraha (about Mahatma Gandhi). These three people were all driven by an inner vision which altered the age in which they lived: Akhenaten in religion, Einstein in science, and Gandhi in politics.

Akhnaten
Opera by Philip Glass
Poster for the cinema broadcast of the 2019 production at the Metropolitan Opera
LibrettistPhilip Glass, Shalom Goldman, Robert Israel, Richard Riddell, and Jerome Robbins
Premiere
March 24, 1984 (1984-03-24)

The text, taken from original sources, is sung in the original languages, linked together with the commentary of a narrator in a modern language, such as English or German. Egyptian texts of the period are taken from a poem of Akhenaten himself, from the Book of the Dead, and from extracts of decrees and letters from the Amarna Period, the seventeen-year period of Akhenaten's rule. Other portions are in Akkadian and Biblical Hebrew. Akhnaten's Hymn to the Sun is sung in the language of the audience.

Performance history edit

Akhnaten was commissioned by Württembergische Staatstheater, Stuttgart and had its world premiere on March 24, 1984, at the Stuttgart State Theatre, under the German title Echnaton. Paul Esswood sang the title role, German director Achim Freyer staged the opera in an abstract style with highly ritualistic movements. The American premiere, directed by David Freeman, was on October 12, 1984, at the Houston Grand Opera, where Glass's opera The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 also premiered. The UK premiere, based on the American production, was on June 17, 1985, by English National Opera at the London Coliseum.[2] This production was revived at the London Coliseum in March 1987.

 
The composer in 1993

The award-winning Polish premiere, directed by Henryk Baranowski, was on May 20, 2000, at the Grand Theatre in Łódź.[3] The French premiere was on September 23, 2002, at Opéra national du Rhin in Strasbourg[4] as a co-production with Boston Lyric Opera which had premiered the production in February 2002[5] A new co-production by English National Opera and LA Opera and in collaboration with Improbable directed by Phelim McDermott starring Anthony Roth Costanzo and Zachary James premiered at the London Coliseum on March 4, 2016, which won a 2017 Olivier Award, and at LA Opera on November 5, 2016.[6] A revival of this production in London took place in March 2019 and played at the Metropolitan Opera in their 2019/2020 season, winning the 2022 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording.[7] The 2019 Met production was streamed online on June 20 and November 14, 2020, and February 12, 2021, and returned in 2022.[8][9][10][11] A new production directed and choreographed by Nanine Linning premiered at Theater Heidelberg on June 6, 2014,[12] another new production directed by Laura Scozzi premiered at Oper Bonn on March 11, 2018.[13]

A November 2020 production at Opéra de Nice Côte d’Azur was performed without an audience and screened online, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This production was produced and choreographed by longtime Glass collaborator Lucinda Childs, who conducted rehearsals remotely. She also performed the speaking roles in the opera, which were pre-recorded and projected during the performance.[14][15]

Roles edit

Role Voice type Premiere cast, Stuttgart, 24 March 1984 ENO, London, June 1985[2] CBS recording, 1987[16] Oakland Opera Theater, 2004[17][18] ENO, London, March 2016,[6] March 2019[7][19] LA Opera, November 2016[20] Theater Bonn, March 2018[21] Metropolitan Opera, NY, November 2019[22]
Akhnaten countertenor Paul Esswood Christopher Robson (as Stuttgart) Paul Flight Anthony Roth Costanzo Anthony Roth Costanzo Benno Schachtner [de] Anthony Roth Costanzo
Nefertiti, Wife of Akhnaten contralto Milagro Vargas Sally Burgess (as Stuttgart) Darla Wigginton Emma Carrington (2016)
Katie Stevenson (2019)
J'Nai Bridges Susanne Blattert J'Nai Bridges
Queen Tye, Mother of Akhnaten soprano Maria Husmann/
Melinda Liebermann
Marie Angel Melinda Liebermann Angela Dean-Baham Rebecca Bottone Stacey Tappan Marie Heeschen Dísella Lárusdóttir
Horemhab, General and future Pharaoh baritone Wolfgang Probst [de]/
Tero Hannula [fi]
Christopher Booth-Jones Tero Hannula [fi] Martin Bell James Cleverton Kihun Yoon Giorgos Kanaris Will Liverman
High Priest of Amon tenor Helmut Holzapfel Graeme Matheson-Bruce (as Stuttgart) Alan Cochran Colin Judson Frederick Ballentine Johannes Mertes Aaron Blake
Aye, Father of Nefertiti and advisor to the Pharaoh bass Konrad Arlt/
Cornelius Hauptmann
Richard Angas Cornelius Hauptmann John Minagro Clive Bayley (2016)
Keel Watson (2019)
Patrick Blackwell Martin Tzonev/James Homman Richard Bernstein
Daughters of Akhnaten:
Beketaten
Meretaten
Maketaten
Ankhesenpaaten
Neferneferuaten
Sotopenre
3 sopranos,
3 contraltos
Victoria Schnieder
Lynna Wilhelm-Königer
Maria Koupilova-Ticha
Christina Wächtler
Geraldine Rose
Angelika Schwarz
Janis Kelly
Ethna Robinson
Tamsin Dives
Rosemary Ashe
Eileen Hulse
Linda Kitchen
(as Stuttgart)   Clare Eggington
Alexa Mason
Rosie Lomas
Anna Huntley
Katie Bray
Victoria Gray (2016);
Charlotte Shaw
Hazel McBain
Rosie Lomas
Lydia Marchione
Elizabeth Lynch
Martha Jones
Angharad Lyddon (2019)
So Young Park
Summer Hassan
Elizabeth Zharoff

Michelle Siemens
Michele Hemmings
Sharmay Musacchio
Vardeni Davidian
Brigitte Jung
Martina Kellermann
Mariane Freiburg
Joelle Fleury
Ramune Sliuauskiene
Lindsay Ohse
Karen-chia-ling Ho
Chrystal E Williams
Annie Rosen
Olivia Vote
Suzanne Hendrix
Amenhotep III, father of Akhnaten spoken role David Warrilow   (as Stuttgart) Michael Mohammed Thomas Dehler Zachary James
The Scribe / Tourist Guide narrator Hildegard Wensch/
David Warrilow
George Harewood David Warrilow   Zachary James Zachary James   Zachary James
Young Tutankhamun non-speaking role   Joshua Simpson/Dylan Rhodes (2016);
Ewan Hawkins/Tylan Hernandez (2019)
  Christian J. Conner
Two sisters     Rose Weissgerber/Sheva Tehoval
Ava Gesell
Small male chorus (priests), large opera chorus (the people of Egypt)
Creative team
Conductor   Dennis Russell Davies Paul Daniel (as Stuttgart) Deirdre McClure Karen Kamensek Matthew Aucoin Stephan Zillias Karen Kamensek
Director   Achim Freyer David Freeman Ellen Sebastian Chang Phelim McDermott Phelim McDermott Laura Scozzi Phelim McDermott
Set designer   Ilona and Achim Freyer David Roger   Tom Pye Tom Pye Natascha Le Guen de Kerneizon Tom Pye
Lighting designer   Hanns-Joachim Haas Richard Riddell   Bruno Poet; Gary James (2019) Bruno Poet Friedel Grass Bruno Poet

Music edit

The orchestra's size is about the size employed for early 19th-century opera: 2 flutes (one doubling piccolo), 2 oboes (both doubling oboe d'amore), 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 2 french horns, 2 trumpets, 2 trombones, tuba, percussion (3 players), celesta (doubling synthesizer), 12 violas, 8 celli, 6 double basses.[23]

Since the Stuttgart State Opera house was being restored in 1984 and the orchestra pit of the Kleines Haus at the Stuttgart State Theatre, where the premiere was to take place, was considerably smaller, Glass chose to completely leave out the violins (about 20), giving the orchestra a darker, sombre character, which fits the subject. Apart from this, this was Glass's most "conventional" opera orchestra until then (compared to Einstein on the Beach, written for the six-piece Philip Glass Ensemble, and Satyagraha, scored for woodwinds and strings only).[original research?]

Synopsis edit

The opera is divided into three acts:

Act 1: Year 1 of Akhnaten's Reign in Thebes edit

Thebes, 1370 BC

Prelude, verse 1, verse 2, verse 3

Set in the key of A minor, the strings introduce a ground bass theme, with following variations. (A passacaglia). The scribe recites funeral texts from the pyramids. "Open are the double doors of the horizon; unlocked are its bolts."

Scene 1: Funeral of Akhnaten's father Amenhotep III

Heralded by hammering drums, Aye and a small male chorus chant a funeral hymn in Egyptian, later joined by the full chorus. The music is basically a march, based on the chords of A major and F minor (with added major sixth),[24] and grows to ecstatic intensity towards the end.

Scene 2: The Coronation of Akhnaten

After a lengthy orchestral introduction, during which Akhnaten appears, heralded by a solo trumpet, the High Priest, Aye, and Horemhab sing a ritual text. After that, the Narrator recites a list of royal titles bestowed upon Akhnaten, while he is crowned. After the coronation, the chorus repeats the ritual text from the beginning of the scene. Again, the main key is A minor.

Scene 3: The Window of Appearances

After an introduction in A minor, dominated by tubular bells, Akhnaten sings a praise to the Creator (in Egyptian) at the window of public appearances. This is the first time he actually sings, after he has already been on stage for 20 minutes (and 40 minutes into the opera) and the effect of his countertenor voice (which in 1983 was even more rare than nowadays) is startling. He is joined by Queen Tye, whose soprano soars high above the soon intertwining voices of the royal couple, and later by Nefertiti, who actually sings lower notes than he.

Act 2: Years 5 to 15 in Thebes and Akhetaten edit

Scene 1: The Temple

The scene opens again in A minor, with the High Priest and a group of priests singing a hymn to Amun, principal god of the old order, in his temple. The music becomes increasingly dramatic, as Akhnaten, together with Queen Tye and his followers, attack the temple. This scene has only wordless singing. The harmonies grow very chromatic, finally reaching A major and E minor. The temple roof is removed and the sun god Aten's rays invade the temple, thus ending Amun's reign and laying the foundation for the worship of the One God: the Sun God Aten.

Scene 2: Akhnaten and Nefertiti

Two solo celli introduce a "love theme". Accompanied by a solo trombone while the harmony switches to H(sus), the Narrator recites a prayer-like poem to the sun god. The strings softly take over the music in E minor, and the same poem is recited again, this time actually as a love poem from Akhnaten to Nefertiti. Then Akhnaten and Nefertiti sing the same text to each other (in Egyptian), as an intimate love duet. After a while, the trumpet associated with Akhnaten joins them as the highest voice, turning the duet into a trio.

Scene 3: The City – Dance

The Narrator speaks a text taken from the boundary stones of the new capital of the empire, Akhet-Aten (The Horizon of Aten), describing the construction of the city, with large, light-filled spaces. After a brass fanfare, the completion of the city is celebrated in a light-hearted dance, contrasting with the stark, ritualistic music with which this act began. (In the Stuttgart premiere, the dance actually described the construction of the city.) The dance scene was omitted from the UK premiere production and its 1987 revival.[2]

Scene 4: Hymn

What now follows is a hymn to the only god Aten, a long aria (alternating between A minor and A major) by Akhnaten, and the central piece of the opera. Notably, it is the only text sung in the language of the audience, praising the sun giving life to everything. After the aria, an off-stage chorus sings Psalm 104 in Hebrew, dating some 400 years later, which has strong resemblances to Akhnaten's Hymn, thus emphasizing Akhnaten as the first founder of a monotheistic religion.

Act 3: Year 17 and the Present edit

Akhnaten, 1358 BC

Scene 1: The Family

Two oboes d'amore play the "love theme" from act 2. Akhnaten, Nefertiti and their six daughters, sing wordlessly in contemplation. They are oblivious to what happens outside of the palace. As the music switches from E minor to F minor, the Narrator reads letters from Syrian vassals, asking for help against their enemies. Since the king does not send troops, his land is being seized and plundered by their enemies. The scene focuses again on Akhnaten and his family, still oblivious to the country falling apart.

Scene 2: The Attack and Fall of the City

The music moves again to a vigorous F minor. Horemhab, Aye and the High Priest of Aten instigate the people (as the chorus), singing part of the vassal's letters (in their original Akkadian language) until finally the palace is attacked, the royal family killed, and the city of the sun destroyed.

Scene 3: The Ruins

The music of the very beginning of the opera returns. The scribe recites an inscription on Aye's tomb, praising the death of "the heretic" and the new reign of the old gods. He then describes the restoration of Amun's temple by Akhnaten's son Tutankhamun. The Prelude music grows stronger and the scene moves to present-day Egypt, to the ruins of Amarna, the former capital Akhetaten. The Narrator appears as a modern tourist guide and speaks a text from a guide book, describing the ruins. "There is nothing left of this glorious city of temples and palaces."

Scene 4: Epilogue

The ghosts of Akhnaten, Nefertiti and Queen Tye appear, singing wordlessly amongst the ruins. The funeral procession from the beginning of the opera appears on the horizon, and they join it. The music introduces a bass line from the beginning of Einstein on the Beach, the first part of Glass's "portrait" trilogy (The second one being Satyagraha and the third one Akhnaten), thus providing a musical bracket for the whole trilogy.

References edit

  1. ^ The composer uses the spelling Akhnaten, while the more conventional spelling of the name is Akhenaten. Given the nature of Egyptian hieroglyphs, the absence of a vowel is not linguistically significant. In this article, the first version refers to the opera and the second to the pharaoh.
  2. ^ a b c Akhnaten ENO programme (1985) and (1987)
  3. ^ "Echnaton". Cyfrowe Muzeum Teatru Wielkogo w Łodzi. Teatr Wielki w Łodzi. Retrieved 4 December 2019.
  4. ^ "Akhnaten, un Glass enchantant". Libération. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  5. ^ "Opera for the Masses". Deseret News. 17 February 2000. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  6. ^ a b Akhnaten ENO programme (2016)
  7. ^ a b "Akhnaten". eno.org. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  8. ^ "Week 14". www.metopera.org. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  9. ^ "Nightly Met Opera Streams". www.metopera.org. Retrieved 2020-10-28.
  10. ^ "The Metropolitan Opera Cancels Its 2020–21 Season". www.metopera.org. Retrieved 2020-10-15.
  11. ^ Barone, Joshua (20 May 2022). "Review: The Met's 'Akhnaten' Takes a Post-Grammys Victory Lap". The New York Times.
  12. ^ "Echnaton-Premiere in Heidelberg, Comeback-eines 30 Jahre alten Kultstücks". Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  13. ^ "Parabel über Religion und Gewalt »Echnaton« von Philip Glass in Bonn". Oper & Tanz. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  14. ^ Lloyd, Gilly (November 26, 2020). "Opéra de Nice Presents Philip Glass's 'Akhnaten' Online". Riviera Buzz. Retrieved January 2, 2021.
  15. ^ Opéra Nice Côte d'Azur (November 20, 2020). "AKHNATEN de Philip Glass 4K (sous-titres Français/Angais disponible)". Archived from the original on 2021-12-11. Retrieved January 2, 2021 – via YouTube.
  16. ^ Akhnaten CBS recording (1987)
  17. ^ "Philip Glass: Akhnaten". classical-music-review.org. Retrieved December 7, 2019.
  18. ^ "Akhnaten". The Opera Tattler. Retrieved Dec 7, 2019.
  19. ^ Akhnaten ENO Programme (2019)
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on May 4, 2018. Retrieved Dec 7, 2019.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-05-08.
  22. ^ . metopera.org. Archived from the original on May 22, 2019. Retrieved Dec 7, 2019.
  23. ^ "Philip Glass – Akhnaten (1983)". Wise Music Classical. Retrieved December 7, 2019.
  24. ^ or its equivalent chord, B major 9

Further reading edit

  • Stuttgart State Theater, world premiere, programme (1984)
  • A Composer's Notes – Philip Glass and the Making of an Opera, Michael Blackwood (Director), (1985)
  • CD booklet (Soloists, chorus and orchestra of the Stuttgart State Opera, Dennis Russell Davies, cond., CBS 1987)
  • Glass, Philip; Jones, Robert T (1995). Music by Philip Glass. Da Capo. ISBN 978-0-306-80636-0. OCLC 424030462.
  • Schwarz, K. Robert (2008). Minimalists. Phaidon. ISBN 978-0-7148-4773-3. OCLC 971783837.

External links edit

  • Akhnaten, philipglass.com
  • "Akhnaten" (work details) (in French and English). IRCAM.
  • Philip Glass: Akhnaten (Live from the Met), online streaming of a complete live recording at Bandcamp
  • "Massenmord am Nil", review of the premiere, by Rudolf Hohlweg, Die Zeit, 30 March 1984 (in German)
  • Opera Britannia review, 4 February 2016
  • Interview with the four main cast members from MET's 2019 production – Anthony Roth Costanzo, J'Nai Bridges, Dísella Lárusdóttir and Zakary James, by Egyptologist Dominic Perry, 29 October 2019 (date provided in e-mail by the interviewer)
  • How an opera gets made on YouTube published December 4, 2019 Vox Media

akhnaten, opera, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, akhnaten, opera, news, newspapers, books, scholar, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Akhnaten opera news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message Akhnaten is an opera in three acts based on the life and religious convictions of the Egyptian pharaoh Akhenaten Amenhotep IV 1 written by the American composer Philip Glass in 1983 The libretto is by Philip Glass in association with Shalom Goldman Robert Israel Richard Riddell and Jerome Robbins According to the composer this work is the culmination of a trilogy including his two other biographical operas Einstein on the Beach about Albert Einstein and Satyagraha about Mahatma Gandhi These three people were all driven by an inner vision which altered the age in which they lived Akhenaten in religion Einstein in science and Gandhi in politics AkhnatenOpera by Philip GlassPoster for the cinema broadcast of the 2019 production at the Metropolitan OperaLibrettistPhilip Glass Shalom Goldman Robert Israel Richard Riddell and Jerome RobbinsPremiereMarch 24 1984 1984 03 24 Staatstheater StuttgartThe text taken from original sources is sung in the original languages linked together with the commentary of a narrator in a modern language such as English or German Egyptian texts of the period are taken from a poem of Akhenaten himself from the Book of the Dead and from extracts of decrees and letters from the Amarna Period the seventeen year period of Akhenaten s rule Other portions are in Akkadian and Biblical Hebrew Akhnaten s Hymn to the Sun is sung in the language of the audience Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Music 4 Synopsis 4 1 Act 1 Year 1 of Akhnaten s Reign in Thebes 4 2 Act 2 Years 5 to 15 in Thebes and Akhetaten 4 3 Act 3 Year 17 and the Present 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksPerformance history editAkhnaten was commissioned by Wurttembergische Staatstheater Stuttgart and had its world premiere on March 24 1984 at the Stuttgart State Theatre under the German title Echnaton Paul Esswood sang the title role German director Achim Freyer staged the opera in an abstract style with highly ritualistic movements The American premiere directed by David Freeman was on October 12 1984 at the Houston Grand Opera where Glass s opera The Making of the Representative for Planet 8 also premiered The UK premiere based on the American production was on June 17 1985 by English National Opera at the London Coliseum 2 This production was revived at the London Coliseum in March 1987 nbsp The composer in 1993The award winning Polish premiere directed by Henryk Baranowski was on May 20 2000 at the Grand Theatre in Lodz 3 The French premiere was on September 23 2002 at Opera national du Rhin in Strasbourg 4 as a co production with Boston Lyric Opera which had premiered the production in February 2002 5 A new co production by English National Opera and LA Opera and in collaboration with Improbable directed by Phelim McDermott starring Anthony Roth Costanzo and Zachary James premiered at the London Coliseum on March 4 2016 which won a 2017 Olivier Award and at LA Opera on November 5 2016 6 A revival of this production in London took place in March 2019 and played at the Metropolitan Opera in their 2019 2020 season winning the 2022 Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording 7 The 2019 Met production was streamed online on June 20 and November 14 2020 and February 12 2021 and returned in 2022 8 9 10 11 A new production directed and choreographed by Nanine Linning premiered at Theater Heidelberg on June 6 2014 12 another new production directed by Laura Scozzi premiered at Oper Bonn on March 11 2018 13 A November 2020 production at Opera de Nice Cote d Azur was performed without an audience and screened online due to the COVID 19 pandemic This production was produced and choreographed by longtime Glass collaborator Lucinda Childs who conducted rehearsals remotely She also performed the speaking roles in the opera which were pre recorded and projected during the performance 14 15 Roles editThis section may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Role Voice type Premiere cast Stuttgart 24 March 1984 ENO London June 1985 2 CBS recording 1987 16 Oakland Opera Theater 2004 17 18 ENO London March 2016 6 March 2019 7 19 LA Opera November 2016 20 Theater Bonn March 2018 21 Metropolitan Opera NY November 2019 22 Akhnaten countertenor Paul Esswood Christopher Robson as Stuttgart Paul Flight Anthony Roth Costanzo Anthony Roth Costanzo Benno Schachtner de Anthony Roth CostanzoNefertiti Wife of Akhnaten contralto Milagro Vargas Sally Burgess as Stuttgart Darla Wigginton Emma Carrington 2016 Katie Stevenson 2019 J Nai Bridges Susanne Blattert J Nai BridgesQueen Tye Mother of Akhnaten soprano Maria Husmann Melinda Liebermann Marie Angel Melinda Liebermann Angela Dean Baham Rebecca Bottone Stacey Tappan Marie Heeschen Disella LarusdottirHoremhab General and future Pharaoh baritone Wolfgang Probst de Tero Hannula fi Christopher Booth Jones Tero Hannula fi Martin Bell James Cleverton Kihun Yoon Giorgos Kanaris Will LivermanHigh Priest of Amon tenor Helmut Holzapfel Graeme Matheson Bruce as Stuttgart Alan Cochran Colin Judson Frederick Ballentine Johannes Mertes Aaron BlakeAye Father of Nefertiti and advisor to the Pharaoh bass Konrad Arlt Cornelius Hauptmann Richard Angas Cornelius Hauptmann John Minagro Clive Bayley 2016 Keel Watson 2019 Patrick Blackwell Martin Tzonev James Homman Richard BernsteinDaughters of Akhnaten BeketatenMeretatenMaketatenAnkhesenpaatenNeferneferuatenSotopenre 3 sopranos 3 contraltos Victoria SchniederLynna Wilhelm KonigerMaria Koupilova TichaChristina WachtlerGeraldine RoseAngelika Schwarz Janis KellyEthna RobinsonTamsin DivesRosemary AsheEileen HulseLinda Kitchen as Stuttgart Clare EggingtonAlexa MasonRosie LomasAnna HuntleyKatie BrayVictoria Gray 2016 Charlotte ShawHazel McBainRosie LomasLydia MarchioneElizabeth LynchMartha JonesAngharad Lyddon 2019 So Young ParkSummer HassanElizabeth ZharoffMichelle SiemensMichele HemmingsSharmay Musacchio Vardeni DavidianBrigitte JungMartina KellermannMariane FreiburgJoelle FleuryRamune Sliuauskiene Lindsay OhseKaren chia ling HoChrystal E WilliamsAnnie RosenOlivia VoteSuzanne HendrixAmenhotep III father of Akhnaten spoken role David Warrilow as Stuttgart Michael Mohammed Thomas Dehler Zachary JamesThe Scribe Tourist Guide narrator Hildegard Wensch David Warrilow George Harewood David Warrilow Zachary James Zachary James Zachary JamesYoung Tutankhamun non speaking role Joshua Simpson Dylan Rhodes 2016 Ewan Hawkins Tylan Hernandez 2019 Christian J ConnerTwo sisters Rose Weissgerber Sheva TehovalAva Gesell Small male chorus priests large opera chorus the people of Egypt Creative teamConductor Dennis Russell Davies Paul Daniel as Stuttgart Deirdre McClure Karen Kamensek Matthew Aucoin Stephan Zillias Karen KamensekDirector Achim Freyer David Freeman Ellen Sebastian Chang Phelim McDermott Phelim McDermott Laura Scozzi Phelim McDermottSet designer Ilona and Achim Freyer David Roger Tom Pye Tom Pye Natascha Le Guen de Kerneizon Tom PyeLighting designer Hanns Joachim Haas Richard Riddell Bruno Poet Gary James 2019 Bruno Poet Friedel Grass Bruno PoetMusic editThe orchestra s size is about the size employed for early 19th century opera 2 flutes one doubling piccolo 2 oboes both doubling oboe d amore 2 clarinets bass clarinet 2 bassoons 2 french horns 2 trumpets 2 trombones tuba percussion 3 players celesta doubling synthesizer 12 violas 8 celli 6 double basses 23 Since the Stuttgart State Opera house was being restored in 1984 and the orchestra pit of the Kleines Haus at the Stuttgart State Theatre where the premiere was to take place was considerably smaller Glass chose to completely leave out the violins about 20 giving the orchestra a darker sombre character which fits the subject Apart from this this was Glass s most conventional opera orchestra until then compared to Einstein on the Beach written for the six piece Philip Glass Ensemble and Satyagraha scored for woodwinds and strings only original research Synopsis editThe opera is divided into three acts Act 1 Year 1 of Akhnaten s Reign in Thebes edit Thebes 1370 BCPrelude verse 1 verse 2 verse 3Set in the key of A minor the strings introduce a ground bass theme with following variations A passacaglia The scribe recites funeral texts from the pyramids Open are the double doors of the horizon unlocked are its bolts Scene 1 Funeral of Akhnaten s father Amenhotep IIIHeralded by hammering drums Aye and a small male chorus chant a funeral hymn in Egyptian later joined by the full chorus The music is basically a march based on the chords of A major and F minor with added major sixth 24 and grows to ecstatic intensity towards the end Scene 2 The Coronation of AkhnatenAfter a lengthy orchestral introduction during which Akhnaten appears heralded by a solo trumpet the High Priest Aye and Horemhab sing a ritual text After that the Narrator recites a list of royal titles bestowed upon Akhnaten while he is crowned After the coronation the chorus repeats the ritual text from the beginning of the scene Again the main key is A minor Scene 3 The Window of AppearancesAfter an introduction in A minor dominated by tubular bells Akhnaten sings a praise to the Creator in Egyptian at the window of public appearances This is the first time he actually sings after he has already been on stage for 20 minutes and 40 minutes into the opera and the effect of his countertenor voice which in 1983 was even more rare than nowadays is startling He is joined by Queen Tye whose soprano soars high above the soon intertwining voices of the royal couple and later by Nefertiti who actually sings lower notes than he Act 2 Years 5 to 15 in Thebes and Akhetaten edit Scene 1 The TempleThe scene opens again in A minor with the High Priest and a group of priests singing a hymn to Amun principal god of the old order in his temple The music becomes increasingly dramatic as Akhnaten together with Queen Tye and his followers attack the temple This scene has only wordless singing The harmonies grow very chromatic finally reaching A major and E minor The temple roof is removed and the sun god Aten s rays invade the temple thus ending Amun s reign and laying the foundation for the worship of the One God the Sun God Aten Scene 2 Akhnaten and NefertitiTwo solo celli introduce a love theme Accompanied by a solo trombone while the harmony switches to H sus the Narrator recites a prayer like poem to the sun god The strings softly take over the music in E minor and the same poem is recited again this time actually as a love poem from Akhnaten to Nefertiti Then Akhnaten and Nefertiti sing the same text to each other in Egyptian as an intimate love duet After a while the trumpet associated with Akhnaten joins them as the highest voice turning the duet into a trio Scene 3 The City DanceThe Narrator speaks a text taken from the boundary stones of the new capital of the empire Akhet Aten The Horizon of Aten describing the construction of the city with large light filled spaces After a brass fanfare the completion of the city is celebrated in a light hearted dance contrasting with the stark ritualistic music with which this act began In the Stuttgart premiere the dance actually described the construction of the city The dance scene was omitted from the UK premiere production and its 1987 revival 2 Scene 4 HymnWhat now follows is a hymn to the only god Aten a long aria alternating between A minor and A major by Akhnaten and the central piece of the opera Notably it is the only text sung in the language of the audience praising the sun giving life to everything After the aria an off stage chorus sings Psalm 104 in Hebrew dating some 400 years later which has strong resemblances to Akhnaten s Hymn thus emphasizing Akhnaten as the first founder of a monotheistic religion Act 3 Year 17 and the Present edit Akhnaten 1358 BCScene 1 The FamilyTwo oboes d amore play the love theme from act 2 Akhnaten Nefertiti and their six daughters sing wordlessly in contemplation They are oblivious to what happens outside of the palace As the music switches from E minor to F minor the Narrator reads letters from Syrian vassals asking for help against their enemies Since the king does not send troops his land is being seized and plundered by their enemies The scene focuses again on Akhnaten and his family still oblivious to the country falling apart Scene 2 The Attack and Fall of the CityThe music moves again to a vigorous F minor Horemhab Aye and the High Priest of Aten instigate the people as the chorus singing part of the vassal s letters in their original Akkadian language until finally the palace is attacked the royal family killed and the city of the sun destroyed Scene 3 The RuinsThe music of the very beginning of the opera returns The scribe recites an inscription on Aye s tomb praising the death of the heretic and the new reign of the old gods He then describes the restoration of Amun s temple by Akhnaten s son Tutankhamun The Prelude music grows stronger and the scene moves to present day Egypt to the ruins of Amarna the former capital Akhetaten The Narrator appears as a modern tourist guide and speaks a text from a guide book describing the ruins There is nothing left of this glorious city of temples and palaces Scene 4 EpilogueThe ghosts of Akhnaten Nefertiti and Queen Tye appear singing wordlessly amongst the ruins The funeral procession from the beginning of the opera appears on the horizon and they join it The music introduces a bass line from the beginning of Einstein on the Beach the first part of Glass s portrait trilogy The second one being Satyagraha and the third one Akhnaten thus providing a musical bracket for the whole trilogy References edit The composer uses the spelling Akhnaten while the more conventional spelling of the name is Akhenaten Given the nature of Egyptian hieroglyphs the absence of a vowel is not linguistically significant In this article the first version refers to the opera and the second to the pharaoh a b c Akhnaten ENO programme 1985 and 1987 Echnaton Cyfrowe Muzeum Teatru Wielkogo w Lodzi Teatr Wielki w Lodzi Retrieved 4 December 2019 Akhnaten un Glass enchantant Liberation Retrieved 23 May 2022 Opera for the Masses Deseret News 17 February 2000 Retrieved 23 May 2022 a b Akhnaten ENO programme 2016 a b Akhnaten eno org Retrieved 2 March 2019 Week 14 www metopera org Retrieved 2020 10 15 Nightly Met Opera Streams www metopera org Retrieved 2020 10 28 The Metropolitan Opera Cancels Its 2020 21 Season www metopera org Retrieved 2020 10 15 Barone Joshua 20 May 2022 Review The Met s Akhnaten Takes a Post Grammys Victory Lap The New York Times Echnaton Premiere in Heidelberg Comeback eines 30 Jahre alten Kultstucks Rhein Neckar Zeitung Retrieved 23 May 2022 Parabel uber Religion und Gewalt Echnaton von Philip Glass in Bonn Oper amp Tanz Retrieved 23 May 2022 Lloyd Gilly November 26 2020 Opera de Nice Presents Philip Glass s Akhnaten Online Riviera Buzz Retrieved January 2 2021 Opera Nice Cote d Azur November 20 2020 AKHNATEN de Philip Glass 4K sous titres Francais Angais disponible Archived from the original on 2021 12 11 Retrieved January 2 2021 via YouTube Akhnaten CBS recording 1987 Philip Glass Akhnaten classical music review org Retrieved December 7 2019 Akhnaten The Opera Tattler Retrieved Dec 7 2019 Akhnaten ENO Programme 2019 LA Opera Akhnaten Archived from the original on May 4 2018 Retrieved Dec 7 2019 Theatre Bonn Archived from the original on 2017 05 08 Akhnaten metopera org Archived from the original on May 22 2019 Retrieved Dec 7 2019 Philip Glass Akhnaten 1983 Wise Music Classical Retrieved December 7 2019 or its equivalent chord B major 9Further reading editStuttgart State Theater world premiere programme 1984 A Composer s Notes Philip Glass and the Making of an Opera Michael Blackwood Director 1985 CD booklet Soloists chorus and orchestra of the Stuttgart State Opera Dennis Russell Davies cond CBS 1987 Glass Philip Jones Robert T 1995 Music by Philip Glass Da Capo ISBN 978 0 306 80636 0 OCLC 424030462 Schwarz K Robert 2008 Minimalists Phaidon ISBN 978 0 7148 4773 3 OCLC 971783837 External links editAkhnaten philipglass com Akhnaten work details in French and English IRCAM Philip Glass Akhnaten Live from the Met online streaming of a complete live recording at Bandcamp Massenmord am Nil review of the premiere by Rudolf Hohlweg Die Zeit 30 March 1984 in German Opera Britannia review 4 February 2016 Interview with the four main cast members from MET s 2019 production Anthony Roth Costanzo J Nai Bridges Disella Larusdottir and Zakary James by Egyptologist Dominic Perry 29 October 2019 date provided in e mail by the interviewer How an opera gets made on YouTube published December 4 2019 Vox Media Portal nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Akhnaten opera amp oldid 1191073581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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