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Der Freischütz

Der Freischütz (J. 277, Op. 77 The Marksman[1] or The Freeshooter[2]) is a German opera with spoken dialogue in three acts by Carl Maria von Weber with a libretto by Friedrich Kind, based on a story by Johann August Apel and Friedrich Laun[3] from their 1810 collection Gespensterbuch. It premiered on 18 June 1821 at the Schauspielhaus Berlin.[4] It is considered the first German Romantic opera.[5]

Der Freischütz
Opera by Carl Maria von Weber
Costume designs for Samiel and Kaspar in the original production
TranslationThe Marksman or The Freeshooter
LibrettistFriedrich Kind
LanguageGerman
Premiere
18 June 1821 (1821-06-18)

The opera's plot is mainly based on August Apel's tale "Der Freischütz" from the Gespensterbuch though the hermit, Kaspar and Ännchen are new to Kind's libretto. That Weber's tunes were just German folk music is a common misconception.[6] Its unearthly portrayal of the supernatural in the famous Wolf's Glen scene has been described as "the most expressive rendering of the gruesome that is to be found in a musical score".[7]

Performance history edit

The reception of Der Freischütz surpassed Weber's own hopes and it quickly became an international success, with productions in Vienna the same year followed by Dresden, Leipzig, Hamburg, Munich, Karlsruhe, Königsberg, Prague, other German centres, Riga and Copenhagen. 1824 saw productions in four London theatres in four different adaptations, as well as an inadequate[8] adaptation by François Castil-Blaze in French, named Robin des Bois at the Théâtre de l'Odéon.[9]

In order to get round the Paris Opera's ban on spoken text,[citation needed] a version in French with recitatives was prepared in 1841 by Hector Berlioz – who greatly admired the opera and feared other arrangers might do worse[citation needed] – which incorporated his orchestration of Weber's Invitation to the Dance[10] to serve as a ballet, another Paris Opera requirement.[citation needed] Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky criticised Berlioz's arrangement in the Bolshoi Theatre production of 1873 as "utterly incongruous", "tasteless" and "silly"[11] because it inserted into the rustic opera an urban piece of music. In 1879 he again criticised a performance in Paris:

Der Freischütz afforded me great pleasure; in many places in the first act my eyes were moist with tears. In the second act Krauss pleased me greatly by her wonderful rendition of Agathe's aria. The Wolf's Glen was staged not at all as splendidly as I had expected. The third act was curious because of the French brazenness with which they took the liberty, on the one hand, of inserting Invitation à la valse with the most stupid dances, and, on the other, of cutting out the role of the hermit who appears at the end for the dénouement.[12]

Berlioz's arrangement again underlay the production at the Paris Opéra-Comique in 2011.[13] His orchestration of Invitation à la valse soon became a concert piece in its own right.

Weber's overture and the "Huntsmen's Chorus" from act 3 ("With princely enjoyment and manly employment") are often performed as concert pieces.

Roles edit

Roles, voice types, and premiere cast
Role[14] Voice type[14] Premiere cast, 18 June 1821[14]
Conductor: Carl Maria von Weber
Ottokar, a sovereign prince baritone Gottlieb Rebenstein
Kuno, a hereditary forester[a] bass Carl Wauer
Agathe, his daughter soprano Caroline Seidler
Ännchen, a young relative soprano Johanna Eunike[b]
Caspar, first assistant forester bass Heinrich Blume
Max, second assistant forester tenor Heinrich Stümer[15]
Samiel, the 'Black Huntsman' spoken Joseph Hillebrand
Hermit bass Johann Georg Gern
Kilian, a wealthy peasant baritone August Wiedemann
Four bridesmaids soprano Henriette Reinwald etc.
Hunters, peasants, spirits, attendants

Synopsis edit

 
An 1822 illustration of Der Freischütz depicting the opening scene with Max and Kilian
Place: Bohemia
Time: shortly after the end of the Thirty Years' War[14]

Act 1 edit

At a shooting contest, the second assistant forester, Max, loses to a peasant, Kilian, who is proclaimed "King of marksmen" (Chorus: Viktoria! Der Meister soll leben—"Victory! Long live the master"). Kilian mocks him good-naturedly (Schau der Herr mich an als König—"Let him gaze on me as king").

Max wants to marry Agathe, daughter of the head forester Kuno. In order to marry her and succeed her father as head forester, he has to prove his marksmanship and score in a shooting trial before Ottokar, the sovereign prince, on the following day.

As Max has had ill luck for several days, he muses upon his prospects of losing Agathe by failing the shooting test (Trio of Kuno, Kaspar, and Max; chorus: O diese Sonne—"O this sun"). Left alone in deep melancholy, he recalls happy days (Aria: Durch die Wälder, durch die Auen—"Through the forests, through the meadows").

Kaspar, the first assistant forester, falsely tries to imbue Max with wine and courage (Hier im ird'schen Jammerthal—"Here in this vale of tears"). He had hoped to marry Agathe himself but she had rejected him and chosen Max. The marriage would make Max the heir of Kuno who would see Max as a son. Kaspar seeks revenge upon all three—his rival, his former sweetheart and her father.[c] He hands Max his gun and Max, to his own astonishment, hits an eagle soaring at a great height. Kaspar explains that the gun had been loaded with his last magic bullet.

He persuades Max to meet him at midnight in the terrible Wolf's Glen to cast seven more of the magic bullets. (Six hit, but the seventh belongs to the Evil One who can guide it wherever he pleases.) He warns Max not to tell a soul about their purpose so as not to endanger them. Left alone, Kaspar triumphs and boasts of his insidiousness (Aria: Schweig’! damit dich niemand warnt—"Silence! So that nobody warns you.").

Act 2 edit

 
Design for the Wolf's Glen (1822, Weimar)

Agathe's chamber

At the moment when Max shoots the magic bullet, a picture of Agathe's ancestor hanging on the wall falls to the floor, slightly wounding her. Agathe's cousin and companion Ännchen refastens the hook (Duet: Schelm, halt fest!—"Rogue, hold fast!"). She endeavours to cheer Agathe with jests (Ännchen: Kommt ein schlanker Bursch gegangen—"Comes a pretty boy this path"). Agathe, still disturbed, tells of her meeting with the hermit. He had indicated a danger from which his white consecrated roses would protect her.

Left alone, Agathe awaits Max with the news of his success (Recitative and aria: Wie nahte mir der Schlummer...Leise, leise—"How did slumber approach me...Low, low"). Max arrives, acknowledging that while he has not been the victor, he has killed an eagle. Though the night is falling, he has to leave again to bring in a stag which he had shot in the Wolf's Glen (Trio: Wie? Was? Entsetzen!—"What? What? Oh, horror!").

The Wolf's Glen at night

As the bell chimes twelve Kaspar calls upon Samiel, the Black Huntsman, for assistance in casting the magic bullets. Having already sold his own soul, which is due the next day, Kaspar offers Max’s soul in exchange for a prolongation of his soul of three years. Agathe is to be killed by Max's magic bullet, despair will then make Max and Kuno the Devil's. Samiel agrees ambiguously: "So be it—By the gates of hell! Tomorrow he or you!"

As Max arrives, the spirit of his mother warns him to abandon the project. But Samiel conjures up Agathe, seemingly drowning herself in despair, whereupon Max plunges into the glen. With demoniacal noise, the casting of the bullets begins.

Act 3 edit

The meeting of the marksmen[d]

Having split the seven bullets between them, Max has used three during the hunt in the morning. Kaspar spoils his three on a fox. Thus Max's remaining bullet is the seventh, the Devil's bullet.

Agathe's chamber

 
Wir winden dir den Jungfern-Kranz

Agathe is praying (Aria: Und ob die Wolke sie verhülle—"Through clouds obscure"), her doubts having returned owing to a dream of ill omen where she was a white dove which Max shot. Ännchen tries to cheer her with a ghost tale (Aria: Einst träumte meiner sel'gen Base—"My deceased cousin had a dream"). The bridesmaids bring the box with the bridal wreath (Song: Wir winden dir den Jungfern-Kranz—"We wind round thee the bridal wreath"). But as they open it they find a funeral wreath. Recalling the hermit's promise that the white roses will protect her, Agathe proposes to twine them to the bridal wreath.

 
Design for the act 3 finale (original 1821 production)

The marksmanship trial

Prince Ottokar awaits Max at his tent (Chorus of foresters: Was gleicht wohl auf Erden—"What excels the pleasures of the chase"). As a test, Max is ordered to shoot the dove pointed out to him. Max takes aim, fires and Agathe, who has just entered the scene, falls as if hit (Finale: Schaut, o schaut—"See, oh see"). But her bridal wreath and the hermit behind her have deflected the bullet. It strikes Kaspar. Agathe revives from her faint and Kaspar, seeing a holy hermit by her side, realizes that he has failed. Samiel grasps him instead of Max, whereupon Kaspar expires, cursing hell and heaven.

Prince Ottokar orders the corpse to be thrown into the Wolf's Glen. Then he demands an explanation from Max, who confesses to shooting with magic bullets. Regardless of pleas from Kuno, Agathe, peasants, and huntsmen, the infuriated Prince forbids the marriage and banishes Max from the country.

The hermit seeks to appease the Prince (Aria: Wer legt auf ihn so strengen Bann! Ein Fehltritt, ist er solcher Büssung wert?—"Who lays so strict a sentence upon him? An error, is it worthy of such atonement?"). Only love of Agathe and fear of losing her had caused Max to stray from a life that was formerly without fault. Who is to raise the first stone? Who does not look into his own heart? Once he has completed a faultless probationary year, Max should be allowed to marry Agathe. To the exuberant joy of all the Prince accepts this judgement. After the probation, he himself will place the hand of Agathe in that of Max.

In the end, all join in a prayer of thanks.

Instrumentation edit

The opera is scored for a standard-sized orchestra composed of:

Recordings edit

Recordings
Year Cast (Agathe,
Ännchen,
Max,
Caspar)
Conductor,
Opera house and orchestra
Label
1954 Elisabeth Grümmer,
Rita Streich,
Hans Hopf,
Kurt Böhme
Wilhelm Furtwängler,
Vienna Philharmonic and Vienna State Opera
CD: EMI Classics
Cat: 67419
1955 Elisabeth Grümmer,
Rita Streich,
Hans Hopf,
Max Proebstl
Erich Kleiber,
WDR Rundfunkorchester and WDR Rundfunkchor Köln, (WDR radio production)
CD: Opera D'Oro
Cat: 7038
1959 Elisabeth Grümmer,
Lisa Otto,
Rudolf Schock,
Karl-Christian Kohn
Joseph Keilberth,
Berlin Philharmonic
CD: EMI Classics
Cat: 69342
1959 Irmgard Seefried,
Rita Streich,
Richard Holm,
Kurt Böhme
Eugen Jochum,
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
CD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 000459302
1967 Claire Watson,
Lotte Schädle,
Rudolf Schock,
Gottlob Frick
Lovro von Matačić,
Chorus and orchestra Deutsche Oper Berlin
CD: Eurodisc
Cat: 7791-2-RG
1969 Birgit Nilsson,
Erika Köth,
Nicolai Gedda,
Walter Berry
Robert Heger,
Chor and orchestra Bavarian State Opera Munich
CD: EMI Electrola Collection
Cat: 7235482
1973 Gundula Janowitz,
Edith Mathis,
Peter Schreier,
Theo Adam
Carlos Kleiber,
Staatskapelle Dresden and MDR Rundfunkchor, Leipzig
CD: Deutsche Grammophon
Cat: 457 736–2
1980 Hildegard Behrens,
Helen Donath,
René Kollo,
Peter Meven
Rafael Kubelík,
Bavarian Radio Symphony and chorus
CD: Decca
Cat: 417119
1990 Karita Mattila,
Eva Lind,
Francisco Araiza,
Ekkehard Wlaschiha
Sir Colin Davis,
Staatskapelle Dresden and MDR Rundfunkchor, Leipzig
CD: Decca/Philips
Cat: 478015
1999 Inga Nielsen,
Malin Hartelius,
Peter Seiffert,
Matti Salminen
Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
Zürich Opera
Blu-ray: Arthaus Musik[16]
Cat: 8556882
2010 Juliane Banse,
Regula Mühlemann,
Michael König,
Michael Volle
Daniel Harding,
London Symphony Orchestra and Berlin Radio Choir
Hunter's Bride[e]
DVD: Constantin Film
Cat: HC087848
Blu-ray: Arthaus Musik[17]
2012 Christine Brewer,
Sally Matthews,
Simon O'Neill,
Lars Woldt
Sir Colin Davis,
London Symphony Orchestra and London Symphony Chorus,
(Recording of a live concert performance at the Barbican in London on 21 April)
CD: LSO Live
Cat: 0726
2019 Lise Davidsen,
Sofia Fomina,
Andreas Schager,
Alan Held
Marek Janowski,
MDR Rundfunkchor, Leipzig, Frankfurt Radio Symphony
CD: Pentatone
Cat: PTC5186788

Derivative works edit

  • Franz Liszt wrote a piano transcription of the overture in 1846 (S.575).
  • Carolus Arnoldus Craeyvanger [nl] wrote an introduction and variations on a theme from Der Freischütz for guitar in c. 1851.[18]
  • Stephen Heller composed 4 piano études on the Freischütz themes (Op. 127)[19]
  • Sigismond Thalberg included an arrangement of the duet "Schelm, halt fest!" (Ännchen and Agathe) in his L'art du chant appliqué au piano (Op.70).

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sometimes anglicized as "Cuno"
  2. ^ Weber added a romanza to the third act ("Einst träumte meiner sel'gen Base") especially for Johanna Eunike, which she performed to great acclaim at the premiere.
  3. ^ This motive is omitted in the English translation.
  4. ^ This scene is omitted in the English translation.
  5. ^ Not a video of a stage production, but instead designated a "film opera".

Citations edit

  1. ^ Scholes, Percy A., 1952, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, London: Oxford University Press, p. 219.
  2. ^ Brown 1992.
  3. ^ Betsy Schwarm, Der Freischütz at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  4. ^ Casaglia 2005.
  5. ^ Boyden 1959, p. 339: "The German Romantic opera really began with Der Freischütz of Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826)." See also p. 284 n. 2: "Indeed from Weber's Freischütz (1821) one can date the beginning of musical Romanticism."
  6. ^ Taruskin, Richard; Gibbs, Christopher H. (2013). The Oxford History of Western Music (College ed.). Oxford University Press, Inc. p. 527. ISBN 978-0-19-509762-7.
  7. ^ Kobbé 1997, p. 958.
  8. ^ Turner, Walter J. (1934). Berlioz: The Man and His Work. p. 69.
  9. ^ "Carl Maria von Weber: Der Freischütz". In: Kamiński, Piotr [fr]. Mille et un opéras. Fayard, 2003, pp. 1726–1727.
  10. ^ Berlioz and the Romantic Imagination. Catalogue for exhibition at Victoria and Albert Museum for Berlioz centenary. Art Council, London, 1969, p. 84.
  11. ^ "The Italian Opera". en.tchaikovsky-research.net.
  12. ^ "Carl Maria von Weber". en.tchaikovsky-research.net.
  13. ^ Le Freischütz. Opéra-Comique season book 2010–2011, pp. 37–38.
  14. ^ a b c d "Announcement of the Premiere" (in German). 1893.
  15. ^ "Heinrich Stümer" (in German).
  16. ^ Zürich, 1999. Blu-ray: Arthaus Musik (2016), OCLC 990952043.
  17. ^ Hunter's Bride film, 2010. Blu-ray: Arthaus Musik (2013), OCLC 857678779.
  18. ^ "K. A. Craeyvanger Introduction & Variations: On Theme from Der Freischutz (Guitar Solo), score, Chanterelle Verlag (Musikverlag Zimmermann), 2011
  19. ^ Freischütz Studien, Op. 127 (Stephen Heller): Scores at the International Music Score Library Project

Sources edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

freischütz, marksman, freeshooter, german, opera, with, spoken, dialogue, three, acts, carl, maria, weber, with, libretto, friedrich, kind, based, story, johann, august, apel, friedrich, laun, from, their, 1810, collection, gespensterbuch, premiered, june, 182. Der Freischutz J 277 Op 77 The Marksman 1 or The Freeshooter 2 is a German opera with spoken dialogue in three acts by Carl Maria von Weber with a libretto by Friedrich Kind based on a story by Johann August Apel and Friedrich Laun 3 from their 1810 collection Gespensterbuch It premiered on 18 June 1821 at the Schauspielhaus Berlin 4 It is considered the first German Romantic opera 5 Der FreischutzOpera by Carl Maria von WeberCostume designs for Samiel and Kaspar in the original productionTranslationThe Marksman or The FreeshooterLibrettistFriedrich KindLanguageGermanPremiere18 June 1821 1821 06 18 Schauspielhaus BerlinThe opera s plot is mainly based on August Apel s tale Der Freischutz from the Gespensterbuch though the hermit Kaspar and Annchen are new to Kind s libretto That Weber s tunes were just German folk music is a common misconception 6 Its unearthly portrayal of the supernatural in the famous Wolf s Glen scene has been described as the most expressive rendering of the gruesome that is to be found in a musical score 7 Contents 1 Performance history 2 Roles 3 Synopsis 3 1 Act 1 3 2 Act 2 3 3 Act 3 4 Instrumentation 5 Recordings 6 Derivative works 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksPerformance history editThe reception of Der Freischutz surpassed Weber s own hopes and it quickly became an international success with productions in Vienna the same year followed by Dresden Leipzig Hamburg Munich Karlsruhe Konigsberg Prague other German centres Riga and Copenhagen 1824 saw productions in four London theatres in four different adaptations as well as an inadequate 8 adaptation by Francois Castil Blaze in French named Robin des Bois at the Theatre de l Odeon 9 In order to get round the Paris Opera s ban on spoken text citation needed a version in French with recitatives was prepared in 1841 by Hector Berlioz who greatly admired the opera and feared other arrangers might do worse citation needed which incorporated his orchestration of Weber s Invitation to the Dance 10 to serve as a ballet another Paris Opera requirement citation needed Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky criticised Berlioz s arrangement in the Bolshoi Theatre production of 1873 as utterly incongruous tasteless and silly 11 because it inserted into the rustic opera an urban piece of music In 1879 he again criticised a performance in Paris Der Freischutz afforded me great pleasure in many places in the first act my eyes were moist with tears In the second act Krauss pleased me greatly by her wonderful rendition of Agathe s aria The Wolf s Glen was staged not at all as splendidly as I had expected The third act was curious because of the French brazenness with which they took the liberty on the one hand of inserting Invitation a la valse with the most stupid dances and on the other of cutting out the role of the hermit who appears at the end for the denouement 12 Berlioz s arrangement again underlay the production at the Paris Opera Comique in 2011 13 His orchestration of Invitation a la valse soon became a concert piece in its own right Weber s overture and the Huntsmen s Chorus from act 3 With princely enjoyment and manly employment are often performed as concert pieces Roles editRoles voice types and premiere cast Role 14 Voice type 14 Premiere cast 18 June 1821 14 Conductor Carl Maria von WeberOttokar a sovereign prince baritone Gottlieb RebensteinKuno a hereditary forester a bass Carl WauerAgathe his daughter soprano Caroline SeidlerAnnchen a young relative soprano Johanna Eunike b Caspar first assistant forester bass Heinrich BlumeMax second assistant forester tenor Heinrich Stumer 15 Samiel the Black Huntsman spoken Joseph HillebrandHermit bass Johann Georg GernKilian a wealthy peasant baritone August WiedemannFour bridesmaids soprano Henriette Reinwald etc Hunters peasants spirits attendantsSynopsis edit nbsp Overture source source Performed by the Skidmore College Orchestra Problems playing this file See media help nbsp An 1822 illustration of Der Freischutz depicting the opening scene with Max and KilianPlace Bohemia Time shortly after the end of the Thirty Years War 14 Act 1 edit At a shooting contest the second assistant forester Max loses to a peasant Kilian who is proclaimed King of marksmen Chorus Viktoria Der Meister soll leben Victory Long live the master Kilian mocks him good naturedly Schau der Herr mich an als Konig Let him gaze on me as king Max wants to marry Agathe daughter of the head forester Kuno In order to marry her and succeed her father as head forester he has to prove his marksmanship and score in a shooting trial before Ottokar the sovereign prince on the following day As Max has had ill luck for several days he muses upon his prospects of losing Agathe by failing the shooting test Trio of Kuno Kaspar and Max chorus O diese Sonne O this sun Left alone in deep melancholy he recalls happy days Aria Durch die Walder durch die Auen Through the forests through the meadows Kaspar the first assistant forester falsely tries to imbue Max with wine and courage Hier im ird schen Jammerthal Here in this vale of tears He had hoped to marry Agathe himself but she had rejected him and chosen Max The marriage would make Max the heir of Kuno who would see Max as a son Kaspar seeks revenge upon all three his rival his former sweetheart and her father c He hands Max his gun and Max to his own astonishment hits an eagle soaring at a great height Kaspar explains that the gun had been loaded with his last magic bullet He persuades Max to meet him at midnight in the terrible Wolf s Glen to cast seven more of the magic bullets Six hit but the seventh belongs to the Evil One who can guide it wherever he pleases He warns Max not to tell a soul about their purpose so as not to endanger them Left alone Kaspar triumphs and boasts of his insidiousness Aria Schweig damit dich niemand warnt Silence So that nobody warns you Act 2 edit nbsp Design for the Wolf s Glen 1822 Weimar Agathe s chamberAt the moment when Max shoots the magic bullet a picture of Agathe s ancestor hanging on the wall falls to the floor slightly wounding her Agathe s cousin and companion Annchen refastens the hook Duet Schelm halt fest Rogue hold fast She endeavours to cheer Agathe with jests Annchen Kommt ein schlanker Bursch gegangen Comes a pretty boy this path Agathe still disturbed tells of her meeting with the hermit He had indicated a danger from which his white consecrated roses would protect her Left alone Agathe awaits Max with the news of his success Recitative and aria Wie nahte mir der Schlummer Leise leise How did slumber approach me Low low Max arrives acknowledging that while he has not been the victor he has killed an eagle Though the night is falling he has to leave again to bring in a stag which he had shot in the Wolf s Glen Trio Wie Was Entsetzen What What Oh horror The Wolf s Glen at nightAs the bell chimes twelve Kaspar calls upon Samiel the Black Huntsman for assistance in casting the magic bullets Having already sold his own soul which is due the next day Kaspar offers Max s soul in exchange for a prolongation of his soul of three years Agathe is to be killed by Max s magic bullet despair will then make Max and Kuno the Devil s Samiel agrees ambiguously So be it By the gates of hell Tomorrow he or you As Max arrives the spirit of his mother warns him to abandon the project But Samiel conjures up Agathe seemingly drowning herself in despair whereupon Max plunges into the glen With demoniacal noise the casting of the bullets begins Act 3 edit The meeting of the marksmen d Having split the seven bullets between them Max has used three during the hunt in the morning Kaspar spoils his three on a fox Thus Max s remaining bullet is the seventh the Devil s bullet Agathe s chamber nbsp Wir winden dir den Jungfern KranzAgathe is praying Aria Und ob die Wolke sie verhulle Through clouds obscure her doubts having returned owing to a dream of ill omen where she was a white dove which Max shot Annchen tries to cheer her with a ghost tale Aria Einst traumte meiner sel gen Base My deceased cousin had a dream The bridesmaids bring the box with the bridal wreath Song Wir winden dir den Jungfern Kranz We wind round thee the bridal wreath But as they open it they find a funeral wreath Recalling the hermit s promise that the white roses will protect her Agathe proposes to twine them to the bridal wreath nbsp Design for the act 3 finale original 1821 production The marksmanship trialPrince Ottokar awaits Max at his tent Chorus of foresters Was gleicht wohl auf Erden What excels the pleasures of the chase As a test Max is ordered to shoot the dove pointed out to him Max takes aim fires and Agathe who has just entered the scene falls as if hit Finale Schaut o schaut See oh see But her bridal wreath and the hermit behind her have deflected the bullet It strikes Kaspar Agathe revives from her faint and Kaspar seeing a holy hermit by her side realizes that he has failed Samiel grasps him instead of Max whereupon Kaspar expires cursing hell and heaven Prince Ottokar orders the corpse to be thrown into the Wolf s Glen Then he demands an explanation from Max who confesses to shooting with magic bullets Regardless of pleas from Kuno Agathe peasants and huntsmen the infuriated Prince forbids the marriage and banishes Max from the country The hermit seeks to appease the Prince Aria Wer legt auf ihn so strengen Bann Ein Fehltritt ist er solcher Bussung wert Who lays so strict a sentence upon him An error is it worthy of such atonement Only love of Agathe and fear of losing her had caused Max to stray from a life that was formerly without fault Who is to raise the first stone Who does not look into his own heart Once he has completed a faultless probationary year Max should be allowed to marry Agathe To the exuberant joy of all the Prince accepts this judgement After the probation he himself will place the hand of Agathe in that of Max In the end all join in a prayer of thanks Instrumentation editThe opera is scored for a standard sized orchestra composed of In the orchestra pit 2 piccolos 2 flutes 2 oboes 2 clarinets 2 bassoons 4 horns 2 trumpets 3 trombones timpani strings violin I and II viola cello double bass Onstage 1 clarinet 2 horns 1 trumpet violins cellos Recordings editRecordings Year Cast Agathe Annchen Max Caspar Conductor Opera house and orchestra Label1954 Elisabeth Grummer Rita Streich Hans Hopf Kurt Bohme Wilhelm Furtwangler Vienna Philharmonic and Vienna State Opera CD EMI ClassicsCat 674191955 Elisabeth Grummer Rita Streich Hans Hopf Max Proebstl Erich Kleiber WDR Rundfunkorchester and WDR Rundfunkchor Koln WDR radio production CD Opera D OroCat 70381959 Elisabeth Grummer Lisa Otto Rudolf Schock Karl Christian Kohn Joseph Keilberth Berlin Philharmonic CD EMI ClassicsCat 693421959 Irmgard Seefried Rita Streich Richard Holm Kurt Bohme Eugen Jochum Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra and Chorus CD Deutsche GrammophonCat 0004593021967 Claire Watson Lotte Schadle Rudolf Schock Gottlob Frick Lovro von Matacic Chorus and orchestra Deutsche Oper Berlin CD EurodiscCat 7791 2 RG1969 Birgit Nilsson Erika Koth Nicolai Gedda Walter Berry Robert Heger Chor and orchestra Bavarian State Opera Munich CD EMI Electrola CollectionCat 72354821973 Gundula Janowitz Edith Mathis Peter Schreier Theo Adam Carlos Kleiber Staatskapelle Dresden and MDR Rundfunkchor Leipzig CD Deutsche GrammophonCat 457 736 21980 Hildegard Behrens Helen Donath Rene Kollo Peter Meven Rafael Kubelik Bavarian Radio Symphony and chorus CD DeccaCat 4171191990 Karita Mattila Eva Lind Francisco Araiza Ekkehard Wlaschiha Sir Colin Davis Staatskapelle Dresden and MDR Rundfunkchor Leipzig CD Decca PhilipsCat 4780151999 Inga Nielsen Malin Hartelius Peter Seiffert Matti Salminen Nikolaus Harnoncourt Zurich Opera Blu ray Arthaus Musik 16 Cat 85568822010 Juliane Banse Regula Muhlemann Michael Konig Michael Volle Daniel Harding London Symphony Orchestra and Berlin Radio Choir Hunter s Bride e DVD Constantin FilmCat HC087848Blu ray Arthaus Musik 17 2012 Christine Brewer Sally Matthews Simon O Neill Lars Woldt Sir Colin Davis London Symphony Orchestra and London Symphony Chorus Recording of a live concert performance at the Barbican in London on 21 April CD LSO LiveCat 07262019 Lise Davidsen Sofia Fomina Andreas Schager Alan Held Marek Janowski MDR Rundfunkchor Leipzig Frankfurt Radio Symphony CD Pentatone Cat PTC5186788Derivative works editFranz Liszt wrote a piano transcription of the overture in 1846 S 575 Carolus Arnoldus Craeyvanger nl wrote an introduction and variations on a theme from Der Freischutz for guitar in c 1851 18 Stephen Heller composed 4 piano etudes on the Freischutz themes Op 127 19 Sigismond Thalberg included an arrangement of the duet Schelm halt fest Annchen and Agathe in his L art du chant applique au piano Op 70 References editNotes edit Sometimes anglicized as Cuno Weber added a romanza to the third act Einst traumte meiner sel gen Base especially for Johanna Eunike which she performed to great acclaim at the premiere This motive is omitted in the English translation This scene is omitted in the English translation Not a video of a stage production but instead designated a film opera Citations edit Scholes Percy A 1952 The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music London Oxford University Press p 219 Brown 1992 Betsy Schwarm Der Freischutz at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Casaglia 2005 Boyden 1959 p 339 The German Romantic opera really began with Der Freischutz of Carl Maria von Weber 1786 1826 See also p 284 n 2 Indeed from Weber s Freischutz 1821 one can date the beginning of musical Romanticism Taruskin Richard Gibbs Christopher H 2013 The Oxford History of Western Music College ed Oxford University Press Inc p 527 ISBN 978 0 19 509762 7 Kobbe 1997 p 958 Turner Walter J 1934 Berlioz The Man and His Work p 69 Carl Maria von Weber Der Freischutz In Kaminski Piotr fr Mille et un operas Fayard 2003 pp 1726 1727 Berlioz and the Romantic Imagination Catalogue for exhibition at Victoria and Albert Museum for Berlioz centenary Art Council London 1969 p 84 The Italian Opera en tchaikovsky research net Carl Maria von Weber en tchaikovsky research net Le Freischutz Opera Comique season book 2010 2011 pp 37 38 a b c d Announcement of the Premiere in German 1893 Heinrich Stumer in German Zurich 1999 Blu ray Arthaus Musik 2016 OCLC 990952043 Hunter s Bride film 2010 Blu ray Arthaus Musik 2013 OCLC 857678779 K A Craeyvanger Introduction amp Variations On Theme from Der Freischutz Guitar Solo score Chanterelle Verlag Musikverlag Zimmermann 2011 Freischutz Studien Op 127 Stephen Heller Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Sources edit Boyden David D 1959 An Introduction to Music London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 09149 2 Brown Clive 1992 Freischutz Der The Freeshooter In Stanley Sadie ed The New Grove Dictionary of Opera London Macmillan pp 296 299 ISBN 978 1 56159 228 9 Casaglia Gherardo 2005 Der Freischutz 18 June 1821 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian Kobbe Gustav 1997 The Earl of Harewood Antony Peattie eds The New Kobbe s Opera Book New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 978 0 399 14332 8 Further reading editFinscher Ludwig 1983 1984 Weber s Freischutz Conceptions and Misconceptions Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association Taylor amp Francis 110 79 90 doi 10 1093 jrma 110 1 79 JSTOR 766237 Fisher Burton 2002 Weber s Der Freischutz Opera Journeys Publishing ISBN 1 930841 56 6 Singleton Esther 1899 Der Freischutz A Guide to the Opera pp 77 90 Dodd Mead amp Company Tusa Michael C 2006 Cosmopolitanism and the National Opera Weber s Der Freischutz Journal of Interdisciplinary History MIT Press 36 3 483 506 doi 10 1162 002219506774929809 JSTOR 3656477 S2CID 144738574 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Der Freischutz Der Freischutz Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Libretto opera guide ch in German English libretto opera arias com Recordings of Der Freischutz Creative Commons licensed in Ogg and MP3 formats Der Freischutz The Marksman Archived 2016 10 17 at the Wayback Machine details and synopsis Naxos Records dead link Discography opera stanford edu Portals nbsp Classical music nbsp Opera nbsp Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Der Freischutz amp oldid 1184585375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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