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Albert Herring

Albert Herring, Op. 39, is a chamber opera in three acts by Benjamin Britten.

Albert Herring
Chamber opera by Benjamin Britten
The composer in 1968
LibrettistEric Crozier
LanguageEnglish
Based onLe Rosier de Madame Husson
by Guy de Maupassant
Premiere
20 June 1947 (1947-06-20)

Composed in the winter of 1946 and the spring of 1947, this comic opera was a successor to his serious opera The Rape of Lucretia. The libretto, by Eric Crozier, was based on Guy de Maupassant's novella Le Rosier de Madame Husson, with the action transposed to an English setting.[1]

Composition history

After having composed and staged The Rape of Lucretia, Britten decided he should attempt a comedy, preferably set in England.[2] Crozier suggested adapting the Maupassant short story Le rosier de Madame Husson and transplanting it to the Suffolk landscape already familiar to Britten from his home in Snape.[2] Britten composed Albert Herring at his home, The Old Mill at Snape, in the winter of 1946 and the spring of 1947.[2] He scored the opera for the same instrumental forces he had used in his first chamber opera The Rape of Lucretia, intending it like the earlier opera for performance by the English Opera Group.[2]

Performance history and reception

The opera premiered on 20 June 1947 at Glyndebourne, conducted by the composer. According to one writer, the owner and founder of Glyndebourne, John Christie, "disliked it intensely and is said to have greeted members of the first night audience with the words: 'This isn't our kind of thing, you know'."[3] Some 38 years later Glyndebourne's 1985 production was "one of the most successful the opera has had".[3]

The opera received its U.S. premiere on 8 August 1949 at the Tanglewood Music Festival.[3] In 1949, Britten's English Opera Group toured with both Rape of Lucretia and Albert Herring, giving ten performances between 12 and 23 September in Copenhagen and Oslo.[4] An almost complete recording of one of the Copenhagen performances has been released commercially.

Sviatoslav Richter called it "the greatest comic opera of the century"[5] and in 1983 staged Albert Herring as part of the December Nights Festival at Moscow's Pushkin Museum.[6]

The opera was performed at Buenos Aires's Teatro Colón in 1972. The Chicago premiere was given by Chicago Opera Theater in 1979. In 2008–2010, over 55 performances were given by companies such as those at Glyndebourne and the Portland Opera in Oregon (2008 season); the Opéra-Comique in Paris and the Opéra de Normandie in Rouen (2009);and, for 2010, at the Landestheater in Linz, the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki and the Santa Fe Opera.[7] The Santa Fe production was given by the Los Angeles Opera in 2011. Vancouver Opera presented the work, in a co-production with Pacific Opera Victoria, in 2013.

Australian television production

Australian television aired a live performance in 1959.[8] This was at a time when Australian TV productions were rare.[9]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 20 June 1947[10]
(Conductor: Benjamin Britten)
Lady Billows, an elderly aristocrat soprano Joan Cross
Florence Pike, her housekeeper contralto Gladys Parr
Miss Wordsworth, a schoolteacher soprano Margaret Ritchie
Mr. Gedge, the vicar baritone William Parsons
Mr. Upfold, the mayor tenor Roy Ashton
Superintendent Budd bass Norman Lumsden[11]
Sid, a butcher's assistant baritone Frederick Sharp
Albert Herring, from the greengrocer's tenor Peter Pears
Nancy, from the bakery mezzo-soprano Nancy Evans[12]
Mrs. Herring, Albert's mother mezzo-soprano Betsy de la Porte
Emmie soprano Lesley Duff
Cis soprano Anne Sharp
Harry treble David Spenser

Synopsis

Time: April and May 1900
Place: Loxford, a small market town in East Suffolk, England

Act 1

Housekeeper Florence Pike is run ragged. Her mistress Lady Billows is organising the annual May Day festival and has gathered all the important people of the village to elect the May Queen. But Florence has dug up dirt on every single girl nominated, proving that none is worthy to wear the once-much-coveted crown. Lady Billows is depressed. Superintendent Budd suggests that the solution may be to select, this year, a May King instead. He knows of a young man in town who is as certainly virginal as the girls are not: Albert Herring.

Working at the greengrocer's, Albert is teased for his timidity by the easygoing butcher Sid. Sid's girlfriend Nancy comes in to do some shopping, and the couple shares a tender moment while Albert looks on. The lovers leave, and Albert reflects on his miserable existence under his mother's thumb. The Festival Committee arrives with the news of his selection as May King. Mrs. Herring is thrilled by the prize of £25, but Albert balks at being paraded in swan-white and mother and son quarrel to the mocking commentary of the village children.

Act 2

It is the day of the festival. Sid and Nancy are preparing the banquet tent, and they take the opportunity to slip some rum into Albert's lemonade glass. Together with a crown of flowers and the gruesome but improving Foxe's The Book of Martyrs, Albert is awarded twenty-five pounds in prize money. Asked to make a speech, he is tongue-tied and becomes an object of pity at the feast in his honour, but after draining his lemonade glass (which Britten satirically underlines with a Tristan chord, alluding to the philter in that opera).[13] and having a fit of hiccups he manages a few hip-hip, hurrahs.

That night, Albert arrives home alone and quite drunk. In the street, Sid keeps a rendezvous with Nancy, and the two discuss their sympathetic pity for Albert before going off together. This is the breaking point for Albert, who has overheard. He takes the prize money and heads out looking for adventure.

Act 3

The next morning Albert has not returned, and the village is in a panic. Superintendent Budd is leading the search, while the guilt-stricken Nancy tends to Mrs. Herring. A boy shouts that a "Big White Something" has been found in a well, and the village worthies file in to break the news en masse that Albert's crown of flowers has been discovered, crushed by a cart. A lengthy threnody of grief follows, but is interrupted by the surprise return of Albert. He thanks the Festival Committee for funding his night out. They, in turn, are outraged by his tale of drunken debauchery and leave in a huff. Albert finally stands up to his mother and invites the village children into the shop to enjoy some fruit at his expense.

Musical style and character themes

Albert Herring is a musically complex work, despite its somewhat light-hearted subject matter. The text is genuinely humorous, and the score, while matching the text in character, includes myriad musical quotations as well as some complex forms. Like Peter Grimes and other works by Britten, this opera explores society's reaction to an odd individual, although, in this case at least, it is from a generally humorous and lighthearted perspective.[14][15] Some of Britten's contemporaries saw in the title character a satirical self-portrait of the composer.[16]

Recordings

There are five audio recordings of Albert Herring and one DVD recording, with the following artists:

Year Cast:
(Albert,
Lady Billows,
Sid,
Nancy,
Mrs Herring,
Florence Pike,
Miss Wordsworth,
Mr Gedge,
Mr Upfold,
Superintendent Budd)
Conductor,
Orchestra,
Notes
Label,
Cat. No.,
Year (re)issued[17]
1949 Peter Pears*,
Joan Cross*,
Denis Dowling,
Nancy Evans*,
Catherine Lawson,
Gladys Parr*,
Margaret Ritchie*,
Otakar Kraus,
Roy Ashton*,
Norman Lumsden*
Benjamin Britten,
English Opera Group Orchestra
(Live recording of a performance in the Theatre Royal, Copenhagen, on 15 September)
  • Members of the original cast.
Nimbus
NI 5824/6
(2008)[18]
1964 Peter Pears,
Sylvia Fisher,
Joseph Ward,
Catherine Wilson,
Sheila Rex,
Johanna Peters,
April Cantelo,
John Noble,
Edgar Evans,
Owen Brannigan
Benjamin Britten,
English Chamber Orchestra
Decca
421,849–2
(1989)[19]
1985 John Graham-Hall,
Patricia Johnson,
Alan Opie,
Jean Rigby,
Patricia Kern,
Felicity Palmer,
Elizabeth Gale,
Derek Hammond-Stroud,
Alexander Oliver,
Richard Van Allan
Bernard Haitink,
London Philharmonic Orchestra
(Video recording of a performance at the Glyndebourne Festival Opera)
Director: Peter Hall
Designer: John Gunter
Warner Music Vision
5046 78790-2
1996 Christopher Gillett,
Josephine Barstow,
Gerald Finley,
Ann Taylor,
Della Jones,
Felicity Palmer,
Susan Gritton,
Peter Savidge,
Stuart Kale,
Robert Lloyd
Steuart Bedford,
Northern Sinfonia
Naxos Records
8.660170/8
(2003)[20]
1996 Christopher Pfund,
Kirsten Dickerson,
Samuel Hepler,
Nancy Maria Balach,
Barbara Kokolus,
Tara Venditti,
Lynette Binford,
Scott Bearden,
James Powell,
Scott Altman
David Gilbert,
Manhattan School of Music Orchestra
Vox Records
VXP2 7900
[21]
2001 James Gilchrist,
Susan Bullock,
Roderick Williams,
Pamela Helen Stephen,
Anne Collins,
Sally Burgess,
Rebecca Evans,
Alan Opie,
Robert Tear,
Stephen Richardson
Richard Hickox,
City of London Sinfonia
Chandos
CHAN 10036
(2003)[22]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Fiona Maddocks, "Queen for a day. And his name's Albert". The Observer, 17 February 2002.]
  2. ^ a b c d Nigel Douglas. "Some personal memories of Benjamin Britten, the English Opera Group and Albert Herring". Booklet note to Nimbus NI 5824/6 (2008).
  3. ^ a b c Kennedy, Michael, "Benjamin Britten", in Holden, p. 124
  4. ^ Paul Francis Kildea. Britten on Music. Oxford University Press, 2003: p. 92
  5. ^ Personal diary, published in Bruno Monsaingeon Sviatoslav Richter: Notebooks and Conversations. London: Faber, 2001: p. 292
  6. ^ Letters from a Life: the Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten, Vol. 5 1958–65 ed. Philip Reed & Mervyn Cooke. Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2010: p. 339.
  7. ^ Performances from 2011 on Operabase.com Retrieved 20 July 2013
  8. ^ Albert Herring presented on television on 28 October 1959
  9. ^ Vagg, Stephen (18 February 2019). "60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s & '60s". Filmink.
  10. ^ Britten, Benjamin; Mitchell, Donald (2004). Letters from a Life: The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten, Volume III, 1946–1951. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 057122282X., p. 293
  11. ^ Dennis Barker,Obituary for Norman Lumsden, The Guardian (London), 5 December 2001
  12. ^ Tim McDonald, Obituary for Nancy Evans, The Guardian, 24 August 2000
  13. ^ Tom Service, "Albert Herring" (Glyndebourne review). The Guardian, 22 October 2002
  14. ^ Michael Kennedy,, Telegraph (London), 22 March 1997
  15. ^ Andrew Clements, "Britten: Albert Herring; Gillett, Bedford et al.", The Guardian, 7 February 2003
  16. ^ Alfred Hickling, 'It's quite New Labour', The Guardian, 9 February 2002.
  17. ^ Recordings on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  18. ^ John Quinn (July 2008). "CD review Albert Herring". MusicWeb International. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  19. ^ M.K. (June 1989). "Britten Albert Herring". Gramophone. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  20. ^ Robert Levine. "CD review Albert Herring". ClassicsToday.com. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  21. ^ Recording source on opera-collection.net
  22. ^ Robert McKechnie (April 2003). "CD review Albert Herring". MusicWeb International. Retrieved 30 November 2011.

Additional sources

  • Holden, Amanda (ed.), The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 0-14-029312-4
  • Recordings of Albert Herring on operadis-opera-discography.org.uk
  • Whittall, Arnold, "Albert Herring" in Stanley Sadie, (Ed.), The New Grove Dictionary of Opera, Vol. One, pp. 54–55. London: Macmillan Publishers, Inc. 1998 ISBN 0-333-73432-7 ISBN 1-56159-228-5

albert, herring, 1959, australian, television, play, based, opera, film, chamber, opera, three, acts, benjamin, britten, chamber, opera, benjamin, brittenthe, composer, 1968librettisteric, crozierlanguageenglishbased, onle, rosier, madame, hussonby, maupassant. For the 1959 Australian television play based on the opera see Albert Herring film Albert Herring Op 39 is a chamber opera in three acts by Benjamin Britten Albert HerringChamber opera by Benjamin BrittenThe composer in 1968LibrettistEric CrozierLanguageEnglishBased onLe Rosier de Madame Hussonby Guy de MaupassantPremiere20 June 1947 1947 06 20 Glyndebourne Festival OperaComposed in the winter of 1946 and the spring of 1947 this comic opera was a successor to his serious opera The Rape of Lucretia The libretto by Eric Crozier was based on Guy de Maupassant s novella Le Rosier de Madame Husson with the action transposed to an English setting 1 Contents 1 Composition history 2 Performance history and reception 3 Australian television production 4 Roles 5 Synopsis 5 1 Act 1 5 2 Act 2 5 3 Act 3 6 Musical style and character themes 7 Recordings 8 ReferencesComposition history EditAfter having composed and staged The Rape of Lucretia Britten decided he should attempt a comedy preferably set in England 2 Crozier suggested adapting the Maupassant short story Le rosier de Madame Husson and transplanting it to the Suffolk landscape already familiar to Britten from his home in Snape 2 Britten composed Albert Herring at his home The Old Mill at Snape in the winter of 1946 and the spring of 1947 2 He scored the opera for the same instrumental forces he had used in his first chamber opera The Rape of Lucretia intending it like the earlier opera for performance by the English Opera Group 2 Performance history and reception EditThe opera premiered on 20 June 1947 at Glyndebourne conducted by the composer According to one writer the owner and founder of Glyndebourne John Christie disliked it intensely and is said to have greeted members of the first night audience with the words This isn t our kind of thing you know 3 Some 38 years later Glyndebourne s 1985 production was one of the most successful the opera has had 3 The opera received its U S premiere on 8 August 1949 at the Tanglewood Music Festival 3 In 1949 Britten s English Opera Group toured with both Rape of Lucretia and Albert Herring giving ten performances between 12 and 23 September in Copenhagen and Oslo 4 An almost complete recording of one of the Copenhagen performances has been released commercially Sviatoslav Richter called it the greatest comic opera of the century 5 and in 1983 staged Albert Herring as part of the December Nights Festival at Moscow s Pushkin Museum 6 The opera was performed at Buenos Aires s Teatro Colon in 1972 The Chicago premiere was given by Chicago Opera Theater in 1979 In 2008 2010 over 55 performances were given by companies such as those at Glyndebourne and the Portland Opera in Oregon 2008 season the Opera Comique in Paris and the Opera de Normandie in Rouen 2009 and for 2010 at the Landestheater in Linz the Finnish National Opera in Helsinki and the Santa Fe Opera 7 The Santa Fe production was given by the Los Angeles Opera in 2011 Vancouver Opera presented the work in a co production with Pacific Opera Victoria in 2013 Australian television production EditAustralian television aired a live performance in 1959 8 This was at a time when Australian TV productions were rare 9 Roles EditRole Voice type Premiere cast 20 June 1947 10 Conductor Benjamin Britten Lady Billows an elderly aristocrat soprano Joan CrossFlorence Pike her housekeeper contralto Gladys ParrMiss Wordsworth a schoolteacher soprano Margaret RitchieMr Gedge the vicar baritone William ParsonsMr Upfold the mayor tenor Roy AshtonSuperintendent Budd bass Norman Lumsden 11 Sid a butcher s assistant baritone Frederick SharpAlbert Herring from the greengrocer s tenor Peter PearsNancy from the bakery mezzo soprano Nancy Evans 12 Mrs Herring Albert s mother mezzo soprano Betsy de la PorteEmmie soprano Lesley DuffCis soprano Anne SharpHarry treble David SpenserSynopsis EditTime April and May 1900 Place Loxford a small market town in East Suffolk EnglandAct 1 Edit Housekeeper Florence Pike is run ragged Her mistress Lady Billows is organising the annual May Day festival and has gathered all the important people of the village to elect the May Queen But Florence has dug up dirt on every single girl nominated proving that none is worthy to wear the once much coveted crown Lady Billows is depressed Superintendent Budd suggests that the solution may be to select this year a May King instead He knows of a young man in town who is as certainly virginal as the girls are not Albert Herring Working at the greengrocer s Albert is teased for his timidity by the easygoing butcher Sid Sid s girlfriend Nancy comes in to do some shopping and the couple shares a tender moment while Albert looks on The lovers leave and Albert reflects on his miserable existence under his mother s thumb The Festival Committee arrives with the news of his selection as May King Mrs Herring is thrilled by the prize of 25 but Albert balks at being paraded in swan white and mother and son quarrel to the mocking commentary of the village children Act 2 Edit It is the day of the festival Sid and Nancy are preparing the banquet tent and they take the opportunity to slip some rum into Albert s lemonade glass Together with a crown of flowers and the gruesome but improving Foxe s The Book of Martyrs Albert is awarded twenty five pounds in prize money Asked to make a speech he is tongue tied and becomes an object of pity at the feast in his honour but after draining his lemonade glass which Britten satirically underlines with a Tristan chord alluding to the philter in that opera 13 and having a fit of hiccups he manages a few hip hip hurrahs That night Albert arrives home alone and quite drunk In the street Sid keeps a rendezvous with Nancy and the two discuss their sympathetic pity for Albert before going off together This is the breaking point for Albert who has overheard He takes the prize money and heads out looking for adventure Act 3 Edit The next morning Albert has not returned and the village is in a panic Superintendent Budd is leading the search while the guilt stricken Nancy tends to Mrs Herring A boy shouts that a Big White Something has been found in a well and the village worthies file in to break the news en masse that Albert s crown of flowers has been discovered crushed by a cart A lengthy threnody of grief follows but is interrupted by the surprise return of Albert He thanks the Festival Committee for funding his night out They in turn are outraged by his tale of drunken debauchery and leave in a huff Albert finally stands up to his mother and invites the village children into the shop to enjoy some fruit at his expense Musical style and character themes EditAlbert Herring is a musically complex work despite its somewhat light hearted subject matter The text is genuinely humorous and the score while matching the text in character includes myriad musical quotations as well as some complex forms Like Peter Grimes and other works by Britten this opera explores society s reaction to an odd individual although in this case at least it is from a generally humorous and lighthearted perspective 14 15 Some of Britten s contemporaries saw in the title character a satirical self portrait of the composer 16 Recordings EditThere are five audio recordings of Albert Herring and one DVD recording with the following artists Year Cast Albert Lady Billows Sid Nancy Mrs Herring Florence Pike Miss Wordsworth Mr Gedge Mr Upfold Superintendent Budd Conductor Orchestra Notes Label Cat No Year re issued 17 1949 Peter Pears Joan Cross Denis Dowling Nancy Evans Catherine Lawson Gladys Parr Margaret Ritchie Otakar Kraus Roy Ashton Norman Lumsden Benjamin Britten English Opera Group Orchestra Live recording of a performance in the Theatre Royal Copenhagen on 15 September Members of the original cast NimbusNI 5824 6 2008 18 1964 Peter Pears Sylvia Fisher Joseph Ward Catherine Wilson Sheila Rex Johanna Peters April Cantelo John Noble Edgar Evans Owen Brannigan Benjamin Britten English Chamber Orchestra Decca421 849 2 1989 19 1985 John Graham Hall Patricia Johnson Alan Opie Jean Rigby Patricia Kern Felicity Palmer Elizabeth Gale Derek Hammond Stroud Alexander Oliver Richard Van Allan Bernard Haitink London Philharmonic Orchestra Video recording of a performance at the Glyndebourne Festival Opera Director Peter HallDesigner John Gunter Warner Music Vision5046 78790 21996 Christopher Gillett Josephine Barstow Gerald Finley Ann Taylor Della Jones Felicity Palmer Susan Gritton Peter Savidge Stuart Kale Robert Lloyd Steuart Bedford Northern Sinfonia Naxos Records8 660170 8 2003 20 1996 Christopher Pfund Kirsten Dickerson Samuel Hepler Nancy Maria Balach Barbara Kokolus Tara Venditti Lynette Binford Scott Bearden James Powell Scott Altman David Gilbert Manhattan School of Music Orchestra Vox RecordsVXP2 7900 21 2001 James Gilchrist Susan Bullock Roderick Williams Pamela Helen Stephen Anne Collins Sally Burgess Rebecca Evans Alan Opie Robert Tear Stephen Richardson Richard Hickox City of London Sinfonia ChandosCHAN 10036 2003 22 References EditNotes Fiona Maddocks Queen for a day And his name s Albert The Observer 17 February 2002 a b c d Nigel Douglas Some personal memories of Benjamin Britten the English Opera Group and Albert Herring Booklet note to Nimbus NI 5824 6 2008 a b c Kennedy Michael Benjamin Britten in Holden p 124 Paul Francis Kildea Britten on Music Oxford University Press 2003 p 92 Personal diary published in Bruno Monsaingeon Sviatoslav Richter Notebooks and Conversations London Faber 2001 p 292 Letters from a Life the Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten Vol 5 1958 65 ed Philip Reed amp Mervyn Cooke Woodbridge Boydell Press 2010 p 339 Performances from 2011 on Operabase com Retrieved 20 July 2013 Albert Herring presented on television on 28 October 1959 Vagg Stephen 18 February 2019 60 Australian TV Plays of the 1950s amp 60s Filmink Britten Benjamin Mitchell Donald 2004 Letters from a Life The Selected Letters of Benjamin Britten Volume III 1946 1951 London Faber and Faber ISBN 057122282X p 293 Dennis Barker Obituary for Norman Lumsden The Guardian London 5 December 2001 Tim McDonald Obituary for Nancy Evans The Guardian 24 August 2000 Tom Service Albert Herring Glyndebourne review The Guardian 22 October 2002 Michael Kennedy Herring stock soars Telegraph London 22 March 1997 Andrew Clements Britten Albert Herring Gillett Bedford et al The Guardian 7 February 2003 Alfred Hickling It s quite New Labour The Guardian 9 February 2002 Recordings on operadis opera discography org uk John Quinn July 2008 CD review Albert Herring MusicWeb International Retrieved 30 November 2011 M K June 1989 Britten Albert Herring Gramophone Retrieved 25 July 2014 Robert Levine CD review Albert Herring ClassicsToday com Retrieved 30 November 2011 Recording source on opera collection net Robert McKechnie April 2003 CD review Albert Herring MusicWeb International Retrieved 30 November 2011 Additional sources Holden Amanda ed The New Penguin Opera Guide New York Penguin Putnam 2001 ISBN 0 14 029312 4 Recordings of Albert Herring on operadis opera discography org uk Whittall Arnold Albert Herring in Stanley Sadie Ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera Vol One pp 54 55 London Macmillan Publishers Inc 1998 ISBN 0 333 73432 7 ISBN 1 56159 228 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albert Herring amp oldid 1131373729, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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