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De temporum fine comoedia

De temporum fine comoedia (Latin for A Play on the End of Time) is a choral opera-oratorio by 20th-century German composer Carl Orff. His last large work, and a personal one, it took ten years to compile the text (1960 to 1970) and another two years to compose (1969 to 1971); he revised it in 1979 and again in 1981. Orff presents a mystery play summarizing his view of the end of time sung in Ancient Greek, Latin, and a German translation by Wolfgang Schadewaldt.[1][2] De temporum fine comoedia was recorded before it was premiered. Herbert von Karajan conducted sessions from 16 to 21 July 1973 in a studio in Leverkusen-Wiesdorf, employing three choruses (the Tölzer Knabenchor, the RIAS Kammerchor and the Kölner Rundfunkchor) and the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra. The public and stage premiere took place at the Salzburg Festival a month later, on 20 August, with the same forces and stage direction by August Everding.

De temporum fine comoedia
mystery play by Carl Orff
The composer
TranslationA Play on the End of Time
Language
  • Greek
  • German
  • Latin
Premiere
20 August 1973 (1973-08-20)

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 20 August 1973[3]
Conductor: Herbert von Karajan
1st Sibyl soprano Anna Tomowa-Sintow
2nd Sibyl soprano Colette Lorand
3rd Sibyl soprano Jane Marsh
4th Sibyl soprano Kay Griffel
5th Sibyl soprano Gwendolyn Killebrew
6th Sibyl soprano Kari Løvaas
7th Sibyl mezzo-soprano Heljä Angervo [fi]
8th Sibyl mezzo-soprano Sylvia Anderson
9th Sibyl mezzo-soprano Glenys Loulis
1st Anachoret tenor Erik Geisen
2nd Anachoret tenor Hans Wegmann
3rd Anachoret baritone Hans Helm
4th Anachoret baritone Wolfgang Anheisser
5th Anachoret baritone Siegfried Rudolf Frese
6th Anachoret baritone Hermann Patzalt
7th Anachoret baritone Hannes Jokel
8th Anachoret bass Anton Diakov [de]
9th Anachoret bass Boris Carmeli
Voice mezzo-soprano Christa Ludwig
Voice tenor Peter Schreier
Chorus Leader bass Josef Greindl
Luzifer spoken Hartmut Forche
Prologue spoken Rolf Boysen [de]

Music edit

Summary/dramatis personae edit

The opera is in 3 parts, with each part having its own characters. Part 1 involves 9 Sibyls, represented by female singers.

Part 2 involves 9 anchorites, represented by male singers

There is also a children's choir, along with a tenor section that is heard on a magnetic tape.

Part 3 involves the following roles:

  • The last beings; represented by three large mixed choirs
  • The choral leader, a speaking part
  • Lucifer, who appears near the end, a speaking role

There is also a double chorus of sopranos and altos used near the end, as well as two soloists, tenor and contralto, to represent the "Vox Mundana". A children's choir is also used to represent the "Voces caelestes".

1. Die Sibyllen (The Sibyls) edit

  1. "Heis theós estin anarchos, hypermegéthaes, agénaetos" (A god is, without beginning, immense, unformed)
  2. "Opse theü g’aléüsi myloi" (The mills of God are late to grind)
  3. "Pasin homü nyx estin isae tois plüton echusin kai ptochois" (The same night awaits all, rich and poor)
  4. "Choneusó gar hapanta kai eis katharón dialexó" (I will melt everything down and purify it)
  5. "Vae! Ibunt impii in gehennam ignis eterni" (Woe! The impious shall enter the hell of the eternal fire)

2. Die Anachoreten (The Anchorites) edit

  1. "Upote, maepote, maepu, maedépote… ignis eterni immensa tormenta" (Never, never, in no place, at no time the measureless torment of the eternal fire)
  2. "Unus solus Deus ab aeterno in aeternum" (God is One alone from eternity to eternity)
  3. "Nicht Satanas... nicht Lucifer... damnatus nunquam condemnatus in aeternum" (Not Satan... not Lucifer... the damned are not condemned for eternity)
  4. "Mundus terrenus volvitur" (The terrestrial world revolves)
  5. "Wann endet die Zeit?" (When will time end?)
  6. "Gott, schenk uns Wahrsagung, Weissagung, Hellsicht im Traum. Gott, schenk uns den Traum" (God, grant us the gifts of prophecy, sagacity, clairvoyance in dreaming. God, grant us the dream.)

3. Dies illa (That Day) edit

  1. "Wo irren wir ihn, verloren, verlassen" (Whither do we stray, lost, abandoned)
  2. "Kyrie! Serva nos, salva nos, eripe nos!" (Lord! Help us, save us, take us away!)
  3. "Angor, timor, horror, terror ac pavor invadit omnes" (Dread, fear, horror, terror and dismay seize us all)
  4. "Omne genus daemoniorum caecorum, claudorum sive confusorum, attendite iussum meorum et vocationem verborum" (Every type of demon, blind, lame or mad, mark the command and the call of my words.)
  5. "Vae, Portae Inferi oculus aspicit nos tenebrarius tenebris" (Woe, the eye, the dark eye looks upon us, with darkness, at the gates of the underworld)
  6. "Pater peccavi" (Father, I have sinned)
  7. "Con sublima spiritualità" (With highest spirituality)

Orchestration edit

The music requires a very unusual, and possibly symmetrical orchestra:

  • In an intermediary revision of the work, Orff had all six clarinets in B.

The percussion section, requiring about 25 to 30 players, consists of:

  • The hyoshigi are used only on the inside of the piano at the climax of part 3, where they are struck hard on the piano strings by a percussionist. In the original score, they were used in one other passage as well.

The total forces used for the taped sections are

There is also one spoken part, an echo of one of the sibyls' spoken dialogue, accompanied by wind machine.

Tape sections edit

The music on the magnetic tape is used in four different places, most notably at the end when Lucifer appears.

The first section is used in part 1, and requires the following instruments:

The second section, also used in part 1 utilizes the following:

  • wind machine, accompanying an echo of one of the Sibyl's dialogue.

The third section is used in part 2:

The fourth and final section is used towards the end of part 3. In Orff's final revision in 1981, this taped section was omitted and instead given to players in the orchestra:

  • 8 flutes
  • 10 trumpets in C, intoning a fanfare to heaven
  • 4 trombones
  • A female chorus (SSAA)
  • tenor and contralto soloists
  • children's choir

1979 revision edit

Orff later made extensive revisions to De temporum fine comoedia with many changes in orchestration. In his 1981 revision the following instruments were added:

  • 1 snare drum, bringing the total number to 3
  • 7 water glasses, bringing the total to 11
  • grand church organ, in return omitting it on tape

The following instruments were eliminated:

  • triangle
  • 3 timpanetti, leaving only 1 (alto)
  • All 3 copper tam-tams
  • 2 church ratchets, leaving only 1
  • 2 suspended cymbals, bringing the number down to 3

The modifications to the pre-recorded music consist of the addition of the following:

  • 1 piano, bringing the total up to 3
  • 3 contrabasses

The omissions consisted of:

  • All 8 flutes
  • 8 trumpets, leaving only 2
  • All 4 trombones
  • grand church organ, instead brought into the orchestra
  • double-chorus of sopranos and altos, replaced by a small chorus in the orchestra pit
  • tenor and alto soloists, whose parts are reduced and sung live

In addition to loud percussive passages, there are also as periods of calm piano and straight dialogue. In this culmination of his stage works, Orff almost abandons his diatonicism to chromaticism, which enriches and thickens the musical texture, and octatonicism.

As the play is about to finish, after the destruction of all worldly material, Satan asks for forgiveness and is restored to Angel Lucifer, thus forgiven. The unsettling chromaticism here ends and Bach's Before Thy Throne (Vor deinen Thron tret ich hiermit, BWV 668) strikes up in a canon from the four viols. This canon is pandiatonic and upon its completion, its mirror image is stated (that is the identical material played backward).

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Boyer (1994) p. 10
  2. ^ De temporum fine comoedia at Schott Music
  3. ^ Casaglia (2005)

Sources

  • Boyer, Paul S. (1994), When Time Shall Be No More: Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture, Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-95129-8
  • Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "De temporum fine comoedia". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).

Further reading edit

Bibliography edit

  • Alberto Fassone, Carl Orff, Libreria Musicale Italiana, 2. edition, Lucca 2009. ISBN 978-88-7096-580-3.
  • Horst Leuchtmann (ed.), Carl Orff. Ein Gedenkbuch, Hans Schneider, Tutzing 1985. ISBN 3-7952-0451-8.
  • Carl Orff, Carl Orff und sein Werk. Dokumentation, vol. VIII, Theatrum Mundi, Hans Schneider, Tutzing 1983; ISBN 3-7952-0373-2.
  • Thomas Rösch (ed.), Text, Musik, Szene ─ Das Musiktheater von Carl Orff. Symposium Orff-Zentrum München 2007, Schott Verlag, Mainz 2015; ISBN 978-3-7957-0672-2.
  • Thomas Rösch, Zur Bedeutung der »hypokryphen Zitate« im letzten Teil »Dies illae« von Carl Orffs »De temporum fine comoedia«, in: Thomas Rösch (ed.), Text, Musik, Szene ─ Das Musiktheater von Carl Orff. Symposium Orff-Zentrum München 2007, Schott Verlag, Mainz 2015, pp. 247–299; ISBN 978-3-7957-0672-2.
  • Werner Thomas, Carl Orff, »De temporum fine comoedia«. Das Spiel vom Ende der Zeiten. Vigilia, Hans Schneider, Tutzing 1973, ISBN 3-7952-0132-2.
  • Werner Thomas, Das Rad der Fortuna ─ Ausgewählte Aufsätze zu Werk und Wirkung Carl Orffs, Schott Verlag, Mainz 1990, ISBN 3-7957-0209-7.
  • Werner Thomas, Dem unbekannten Gott. Ein nicht ausgeführtes Chorwerk von Carl Orff, Schott Verlag, Mainz 1997, ISBN 3-7957-0323-9.

External links edit

  • De temporum fine comœdia – a play on the end of time (1973/1981), orff.de

temporum, fine, comoedia, latin, play, time, choral, opera, oratorio, 20th, century, german, composer, carl, orff, last, large, work, personal, took, years, compile, text, 1960, 1970, another, years, compose, 1969, 1971, revised, 1979, again, 1981, orff, prese. De temporum fine comoedia Latin for A Play on the End of Time is a choral opera oratorio by 20th century German composer Carl Orff His last large work and a personal one it took ten years to compile the text 1960 to 1970 and another two years to compose 1969 to 1971 he revised it in 1979 and again in 1981 Orff presents a mystery play summarizing his view of the end of time sung in Ancient Greek Latin and a German translation by Wolfgang Schadewaldt 1 2 De temporum fine comoedia was recorded before it was premiered Herbert von Karajan conducted sessions from 16 to 21 July 1973 in a studio in Leverkusen Wiesdorf employing three choruses the Tolzer Knabenchor the RIAS Kammerchor and the Kolner Rundfunkchor and the Cologne Radio Symphony Orchestra The public and stage premiere took place at the Salzburg Festival a month later on 20 August with the same forces and stage direction by August Everding De temporum fine comoediamystery play by Carl OrffThe composerTranslationA Play on the End of TimeLanguageGreekGermanLatinPremiere20 August 1973 1973 08 20 Salzburg Festival Contents 1 Roles 2 Music 2 1 Summary dramatis personae 2 2 1 Die Sibyllen The Sibyls 2 3 2 Die Anachoreten The Anchorites 2 4 3 Dies illa That Day 2 5 Orchestration 2 6 Tape sections 2 7 1979 revision 3 References 4 Further reading 5 Bibliography 6 External linksRoles editRoles voice types premiere cast Role Voice type Premiere cast 20 August 1973 3 Conductor Herbert von Karajan1st Sibyl soprano Anna Tomowa Sintow2nd Sibyl soprano Colette Lorand3rd Sibyl soprano Jane Marsh4th Sibyl soprano Kay Griffel5th Sibyl soprano Gwendolyn Killebrew6th Sibyl soprano Kari Lovaas7th Sibyl mezzo soprano Helja Angervo fi 8th Sibyl mezzo soprano Sylvia Anderson9th Sibyl mezzo soprano Glenys Loulis1st Anachoret tenor Erik Geisen2nd Anachoret tenor Hans Wegmann3rd Anachoret baritone Hans Helm4th Anachoret baritone Wolfgang Anheisser5th Anachoret baritone Siegfried Rudolf Frese6th Anachoret baritone Hermann Patzalt7th Anachoret baritone Hannes Jokel8th Anachoret bass Anton Diakov de 9th Anachoret bass Boris CarmeliVoice mezzo soprano Christa LudwigVoice tenor Peter SchreierChorus Leader bass Josef GreindlLuzifer spoken Hartmut ForchePrologue spoken Rolf Boysen de Music editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Summary dramatis personae edit The opera is in 3 parts with each part having its own characters Part 1 involves 9 Sibyls represented by female singers 3 dramatic sopranos 4 mezzo sopranos 1 alto 1 deep contraltoPart 2 involves 9 anchorites represented by male singers 1 tenor 5 baritones 2 basses 1 basso profondoThere is also a children s choir along with a tenor section that is heard on a magnetic tape Part 3 involves the following roles The last beings represented by three large mixed choirs The choral leader a speaking part Lucifer who appears near the end a speaking roleThere is also a double chorus of sopranos and altos used near the end as well as two soloists tenor and contralto to represent the Vox Mundana A children s choir is also used to represent the Voces caelestes 1 Die Sibyllen The Sibyls edit Heis theos estin anarchos hypermegethaes agenaetos A god is without beginning immense unformed Opse theu g aleusi myloi The mills of God are late to grind Pasin homu nyx estin isae tois pluton echusin kai ptochois The same night awaits all rich and poor Choneuso gar hapanta kai eis katharon dialexo I will melt everything down and purify it Vae Ibunt impii in gehennam ignis eterni Woe The impious shall enter the hell of the eternal fire 2 Die Anachoreten The Anchorites edit Upote maepote maepu maedepote ignis eterni immensa tormenta Never never in no place at no time the measureless torment of the eternal fire Unus solus Deus ab aeterno in aeternum God is One alone from eternity to eternity Nicht Satanas nicht Lucifer damnatus nunquam condemnatus in aeternum Not Satan not Lucifer the damned are not condemned for eternity Mundus terrenus volvitur The terrestrial world revolves Wann endet die Zeit When will time end Gott schenk uns Wahrsagung Weissagung Hellsicht im Traum Gott schenk uns den Traum God grant us the gifts of prophecy sagacity clairvoyance in dreaming God grant us the dream 3 Dies illa That Day edit Wo irren wir ihn verloren verlassen Whither do we stray lost abandoned Kyrie Serva nos salva nos eripe nos Lord Help us save us take us away Angor timor horror terror ac pavor invadit omnes Dread fear horror terror and dismay seize us all Omne genus daemoniorum caecorum claudorum sive confusorum attendite iussum meorum et vocationem verborum Every type of demon blind lame or mad mark the command and the call of my words Vae Portae Inferi oculus aspicit nos tenebrarius tenebris Woe the eye the dark eye looks upon us with darkness at the gates of the underworld Pater peccavi Father I have sinned Con sublima spiritualita With highest spirituality Orchestration edit The music requires a very unusual and possibly symmetrical orchestra 6 flutes all doubling on piccolos 6 E clarinets 3 doubling on B clarinets contrabassoon 6 horns in F 8 trumpets in C 6 trombones tuba a consort of 4 viols 8 contrabasses electronic tape an enormous amount of percussion including about 100 instruments 3 harps 3 pianos each with two players electronic organ In an intermediary revision of the work Orff had all six clarinets in B The percussion section requiring about 25 to 30 players consists of 2 snare drums 6 tambourines 3 tenor drums 2 bass drums one with attached cymbal 3 darabukka alto tenor and bass 3 tom toms 6 congas bass conga 4 timpanetti with unpitched wooden drum heads soprano alto tenor and bass 5 timpani 3 with cymbals 5 crotales 5 suspended cymbals 1 pair of crash cymbals 3 copper tam tams 40 60 centimetres in diameter 2 tam tams large amp very large gong pitched to low C dobaci a Japanese temple bell pitched to C 5 high bronze bells at the interval of a semitone two sets of tubular bells triangle guiro whip maracas 6 castanets hyoshigi angklung 3 wood bells actually referring to temple blocks 5 wood blocks simple and double ratchets 3 large church ratchets 4 water glasses celesta 2 glockenspiels lithophone metallophone xylophone tenor xylophone bass xylophone 2 marimbas The hyoshigi are used only on the inside of the piano at the climax of part 3 where they are struck hard on the piano strings by a percussionist In the original score they were used in one other passage as well The total forces used for the taped sections are piccolo 8 flutes 10 trumpets in C 4 trombones 2 pianos grand church organ glockenspiel marimba crotales timpano as well as large vocal forces tenor and contralto solos a large chorus emitting a loud scream a tenor section and double chorus of sopranos and altos a children s chorus soprano There is also one spoken part an echo of one of the sibyls spoken dialogue accompanied by wind machine Tape sections edit The music on the magnetic tape is used in four different places most notably at the end when Lucifer appears The first section is used in part 1 and requires the following instruments piccolo glockenspiel marimba pianoThe second section also used in part 1 utilizes the following wind machine accompanying an echo of one of the Sibyl s dialogue The third section is used in part 2 A children s choir and tenor section 2 trumpets in C crotales glockenspiel marimba timpano 2 pianosThe fourth and final section is used towards the end of part 3 In Orff s final revision in 1981 this taped section was omitted and instead given to players in the orchestra 8 flutes 10 trumpets in C intoning a fanfare to heaven 4 trombones A female chorus SSAA tenor and contralto soloists children s choir1979 revision edit Orff later made extensive revisions to De temporum fine comoedia with many changes in orchestration In his 1981 revision the following instruments were added 1 snare drum bringing the total number to 3 7 water glasses bringing the total to 11 grand church organ in return omitting it on tapeThe following instruments were eliminated triangle 3 timpanetti leaving only 1 alto All 3 copper tam tams 2 church ratchets leaving only 1 2 suspended cymbals bringing the number down to 3The modifications to the pre recorded music consist of the addition of the following 1 piano bringing the total up to 3 3 contrabassesThe omissions consisted of All 8 flutes 8 trumpets leaving only 2 All 4 trombones grand church organ instead brought into the orchestra double chorus of sopranos and altos replaced by a small chorus in the orchestra pit tenor and alto soloists whose parts are reduced and sung liveIn addition to loud percussive passages there are also as periods of calm piano and straight dialogue In this culmination of his stage works Orff almost abandons his diatonicism to chromaticism which enriches and thickens the musical texture and octatonicism As the play is about to finish after the destruction of all worldly material Satan asks for forgiveness and is restored to Angel Lucifer thus forgiven The unsettling chromaticism here ends and Bach s Before Thy Throne Vor deinen Thron tret ich hiermit BWV 668 strikes up in a canon from the four viols This canon is pandiatonic and upon its completion its mirror image is stated that is the identical material played backward References editNotes Boyer 1994 p 10 De temporum fine comoedia at Schott Music Casaglia 2005 Sources Boyer Paul S 1994 When Time Shall Be No More Prophecy Belief in Modern American Culture Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 95129 8 Casaglia Gherardo 2005 De temporum fine comoedia L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Further reading editRockwell John December 5 2003 Gong Beyond Carmina Burana and Beyond Orff s Stigma The New York TimesBibliography editAlberto Fassone Carl Orff Libreria Musicale Italiana 2 edition Lucca 2009 ISBN 978 88 7096 580 3 Horst Leuchtmann ed Carl Orff Ein Gedenkbuch Hans Schneider Tutzing 1985 ISBN 3 7952 0451 8 Carl Orff Carl Orff und sein Werk Dokumentation vol VIII Theatrum Mundi Hans Schneider Tutzing 1983 ISBN 3 7952 0373 2 Thomas Rosch ed Text Musik Szene Das Musiktheater von Carl Orff Symposium Orff Zentrum Munchen 2007 Schott Verlag Mainz 2015 ISBN 978 3 7957 0672 2 Thomas Rosch Zur Bedeutung der hypokryphen Zitate im letzten Teil Dies illae von Carl Orffs De temporum fine comoedia in Thomas Rosch ed Text Musik Szene Das Musiktheater von Carl Orff Symposium Orff Zentrum Munchen 2007 Schott Verlag Mainz 2015 pp 247 299 ISBN 978 3 7957 0672 2 Werner Thomas Carl Orff De temporum fine comoedia Das Spiel vom Ende der Zeiten Vigilia Hans Schneider Tutzing 1973 ISBN 3 7952 0132 2 Werner Thomas Das Rad der Fortuna Ausgewahlte Aufsatze zu Werk und Wirkung Carl Orffs Schott Verlag Mainz 1990 ISBN 3 7957 0209 7 Werner Thomas Dem unbekannten Gott Ein nicht ausgefuhrtes Chorwerk von Carl Orff Schott Verlag Mainz 1997 ISBN 3 7957 0323 9 External links editDe temporum fine comœdia a play on the end of time 1973 1981 orff de Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title De temporum fine comoedia amp oldid 1175260015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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