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Sardanapalo

Sardanapalo or Sardanapale (Italian or French for Sardanapalus), S.687, is an unfinished opera by Franz Liszt based on the 1821 verse play Sardanapalus by Lord Byron. Liszt was ambitious for his project, and planned to dovetail his retirement as a virtuoso with the premiere of his opera. He worked on it intermittently between 1845 and 1852, once declaring it 'well on the way toward completion,' but ceased work on it thereafter.[1] The first act had been completed in a detailed, continuous particell, but there is no evidence of any music being notated for Acts 2–3. As an Italian opera, it would almost certainly have been called Sardanapalo, though Liszt referred to it as Sardanapale in his French correspondence. The music Liszt completed remained silent until 2016 when British musicologist David Trippett first established the legibility of Liszt's N4 manuscript, and produced both a critical edition and realized an orchestral performing edition (after Liszt's own instrumental cues for orchestration). This received its world premiere in Weimar on 19 August 2018.[2][3]

Eugène Delacroix's Death of Sardanapalus (1827), which contributed to Liszt's treatment of the story in his opera
This well-known 1840 painting of Liszt at the piano, surrounded by musical contemporaries, by the artist Josef Danhauser, features on the rear wall a portrait of Lord Byron, author of Sardanapalus

Background

Liszt first mentions his desire to compose a large-scale opera in October 1841. Alongside his interest in the genre's capacity for realizing literary narratives in music, he was motivated, in part, by the prospect of being recognised as more than a travelling keyboard virtuoso; with Rossini's stature in mind, a major opera offered Liszt a way of entering 'the musical guild'.[4] (His early one-act opera, Don Sanche, composed aged 13, closed after four performances at the Paris Opéra, and could hardly qualify to raise his status.) Among the range of opera subjects he considered, he initially settled on an opera based on Byron's The Corsair, and even obtained in 1844 a libretto by Alexandre Dumas, but nothing came of this.[5]

Towards the end of 1845 he settled on the subject of Byron's tragedy Sardanapalus (1821). At this time Liszt had been appointed at the court in Weimar, but had not yet taken up residence. He briefly considered a possible opportunity at the Hoftheater, Vienna, where the Kapellmeister, Gaetano Donizetti, was seriously ill (he would die in 1848). A large-scale Italian opera could have placed him in the running for Donizetti's influential post, as he wrote in an 1846 letter to the Comtesse d'Agoult.[6] Yet he told her only a few months later that, given the conduct of the people involved, "that post will do me no good" and was no longer a consideration.[7]

In correspondence with his close associate the Princess Belgiojoso, Liszt first planned to have the opera performed in Milan in 1846–47, later switching the venue to the Kärntnertor Theater in Vienna (1847), and finally to "Paris or London" (1852).

Sardanapalus was, according to the writer Ctesias, the last king of Assyria. Some have identified him with Assurbanipal, but the Sardanapalus of Ctesias, "an effeminate debauchee, sunk in luxury and sloth, who at the last was driven to take up arms, and, after a prolonged but ineffectual resistance, avoided capture by suicide"[8] is not an identifiable historical character. Ctesias's tale (the original is lost) was preserved by Diodorus Siculus, and it is on this account that Byron based his play.

Liszt had been present at the second performance in 1830 of the oratorio The Death of Sardanapalus by Hector Berlioz, which featured an immolation scene, in preparation for which a "sacrifice of the innocents" took place, as famously depicted in Eugène Delacroix's sensational 1828 painting of the subject (illustration). These influences may have stoked Liszt's interest in the tale's potential for operatic treatment. With reference to the inferno that ends Byron's play, he tells Belgiojoso that his finale will "aim to set the entire audience alight".[9] By 1849, when he at last began to write the music, he conceived the idea of further altering the libretto by adding an orgy scene, perhaps after Delacroix, but this was turned down by Belgiojoso.[10]

Finding a libretto

Liszt's librettist of choice, Félicien Mallefille, agreed to the commission and received a down-payment, but missed several deadlines and - when prompted by Liszt's assistant - requested additional funds. Growing frustrated at the delay, Liszt decided to end the agreement and move on. (Mallefille did finally submit a prose scenario, but it was too late for Liszt to consider continuing his planned collaboration with the Frenchman.) Belgiojoso then procured an unnamed Italian poet ('my nightingale') as the new librettist, a poet who was under house arrest at the time for agitating towards Italian independence. In December 1846, Liszt sent his assistant, Gaetano Belloni, to Paris with orders 'to bring me back, dead or alive, a poem [libretto]'; he managed to deliver the first act, in Italian, on New Year's Day 1847.[11] The remainder followed 18 months later, though Liszt wrote to Belgiojoso querying aspects of the text for Acts 2–3. She replied with further suggestions, and it is unclear whether the correspondence continued. Liszt delayed for a time, perhaps awaiting revisions to Acts 2 and 3, but began composing the first act in earnest around 11 April 1850.[12]

Between April 1850 and December 1851 Liszt notated 110 pages of music (now in the Goethe- und Schiller-Archiv in Weimar, and digitised in 2019) and wrote to Richard Wagner that the opera would be ready for production in Paris or London in 1852. Liszt's assistant, Joachim Raff, notes in December 1851 that he would soon be asked to produce a provisional orchestration of the opera for Liszt, but this never took place. Shortly thereafter Liszt seems to have abandoned his work on the opera. It is possible that his diffidence resulted from reading Wagner's essay Opera and Drama, by whose criteria an Italian opera could have appeared somewhat outmoded (even as Liszt's ambition was expressly to modernise the genre, the better to translate a literary source into 'musical drama'). But Trippett has argued this was unlikely to have been a decisive factor, and suggested instead that Liszt's abandonment resulted from his concern over the libretto, and the fact that he never received a revised libretto for Acts 2 and 3, so could not set these to music.[13]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 19 August 2018
(Conductor: Kirill Karabits)[14]
Sardanapalo, King of Assyria tenor Airam Hernández
Mirra, an Ionian slavegirl soprano Joyce El-Khoury
Beleso, a priest bass Oleksandr Pushniak
Female chorus, concubines soprano & alto Chorus of the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar

Synopsis

Scene 1

The royal palace at Nineveh. Evening.

A festival is underway. The women of the harem invite revellers to dance, with erotic intent. They surround Mirra, telling her to forget her troubles and revive her spirits through love (‘the light and air speak of love / Come, rejoice in the shared joy’). Mirra is sad, nostalgic for her home in Greece and tearfully broken hearted (‘Have no further thought for me! Leave!’). The women, undeterred, encourage her to enjoy her position as the King's favourite and embrace a life of ‘boundless ecstasy’ enraptured by ‘angelic kisses’.

Scene 2

Mirra, unpersuaded, begs to be left alone, and the chorus departs. Now by herself, she daydreams of the lost happiness of her life in Ionia, prompted by the memory of her mother's smile. Awakening from the dream, she remonstrates at being torn in two directions (‘a slave, alone, plaything of fate’): she loves the King deeply, yet is ridden with guilt, for it was he who conquered and destroyed her homeland. While a majority of his subjects don't respect him (owing to his effeminate, non-brutal ways), she closes the scene with a virtuosic cabaletta that celebrates the sincerity of her love for him (‘my heart was blessed with indescribable contentment’).

Scene 3

The King enters, and—seeing Mirra's tears—seeks to comfort her. She says she has not the strength to tell him her woes and he should not ask her, but he implores her (‘Speak! Speak! At hearing your voice I tremble with joy and hope’). At his repeated insistence, she explains only that theirs is an ‘ill-fated flame that brings nothing but shame and grief’. At this the king chides her, leading to the exchange: Sard: ‘Do you love me?’ Mirra: ‘Would that I could not!’ The scene now turns, developing into a triumphant love duet. And the king, unaware of Mirra's complex motives, declares the strength and purity of their love (‘let us love as long as the fervid age smiles upon us’), even as she notes only the lack of dignity her adulterous role carries.

Scene 4

At the height of the lovers' passion, Beleso—an elder statesman—arrives suddenly, warning of war. He chides the king for not taking his role seriously, for forgetting his people's needs, and ignoring the ‘inner voice of duty’. A band of rebel Satraps are readying forces against the empire, and Beleso invokes the ancient kings of Assyria in disgust (‘witness the error of your successor, forgetting the sceptre for a base slave mistress’) before urging the king to fight: ‘set aside the distaff, grasp the sword!’ Sardanapalo hesitates, fearing that violence leads only to the suffering of innocents (‘every glory is a lie, if it must be bought with the weeping of afflicted humankind’). In a lyric aside, Mirra wonders aloud why he is hesitating, and seeks to reawaken his noble valour through her sensuous appeal. Finally, he is persuaded, and agrees to resist the rebels with force. A closing trio sees the king growing more contented as military ruler, Mirra praising his new noble demeanour, and Beleso beating the drums of war as the army mobiles and begins to march into battle.

First edition

Initial comments on Liszt's manuscript had declared it 'a series of sketches' (1911).[15] But in 2016, musicologist David Trippett discovered that the music and libretto are both decipherable and continuous, constituting the first act of Liszt's planned three-act opera.[16][17][18] Two separate editions of Liszt's manuscript were published in 2019: a critical edition for the Neue Liszt Ausgabe, and an orchestrated performing edition (Schott) that draws critically on all Liszt's indications and cues for orchestration.[19][20] No music or libretto text is known to exist for Acts 2–3. The manuscript N4 was digitised and made available online by Klassik Stiftung Weimar in 2019.

In 2022, scholarly reviews of the critical edition appeared in Notes and the Research Chronicle of the Royal Musical Society.

Instrumentation

The performing edition of Sardanapalo is scored for 1 piccolo, 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 1 cor anglais, 2 clarinets, 1 bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 1 contrabassoon, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 2 trombones, 1 bass trombone, 1 tuba, percussion, 2 harps, strings.

First recording and press reception

Sardanapalo (2019). Joyce El-Khoury (Mirra), Airam Hernández (King Sardanapalo), Oleksandr Pushniak (Beleso) Weimar Staatskapelle, conducted by Kirill Karabits. Audite CD 97764. This recording was released on 8 February 2019 and arose from the world premiere performance in Weimar, 19–20 August 2018. Upon its release the recording received international critical acclaim, and became the best-selling classical CD (across all platforms) in the UK Official Charts.

The Times declared it "A torridly exciting recording … It is not too big a statement to say that the work’s emergence changes music history. ... You wonder what heights were left to breach in the unwritten acts. … A most special and historic release"[21]

Gramophone awarded it 'Editor's Choice' declaring it: "immensely important … the act is beautifully shaped, while Liszt’s fluid treatment of bel canto structures reveals an assured musical dramatist at work. Trippett has carefully modelled his orchestration on Liszt’s works on the 1850s, and it sounds unquestionably authentic. A fine work by one of the most inventive of composers."[22]

For The Guardian it was "a lost opera of glittering scope,"[23] The Sunday Times (Album of the week) spoke of "rip-roaring stuff, characteristic of the dramatic orchestral narratives of the composer’s neglected tone poems,"[24] and Opera Now (Critics Choice) declared it "lush and Romantic to a fault, with long-spun melodies, an innate sense of dramatic thrust and some thrilling choral work. ... Liszt does forge his own voice."[25]

The New York Times, responding to a fragment released in 2017, spoke of Liszt's 'white-hot aria ... The music is a great tide of chromatic lushness'.[26]

Bachtrack wrote of "an entirely convincing drama, packed with incident and bursting with thrilling vocal and orchestral colour – think Bellini reimagined by Wagner and you have some idea of the vast emotional sweep of this gripping music."[27]

In December 2019 it was listed in The Guardian's Top 10 Classical CDs of 2019,[28] in Gramophone's Recordings of the Year,[29] and was awarded 'Recording of the Year' in the category 'Premiere Recording (rediscovery / reconstruction)' by Presto Classical.[30]

Sources

  • Kenneth Hamilton, "Not with a bang but a whimper: The death of Liszt's 'Sardanapale' ", Cambridge Opera Journal 8/1 (1996), 45–58.
  • Daniel Ollivier, Correspondence de Liszt et de la Comtesse d'Agoult, Paris, 1933–4.
  • David Trippett, "An Uncrossable Rubicon: Liszt's Sardanapalo Revisited," Journal of the Royal Music Association 143 (2018), 361–432.
  • Franz Liszt, Sardanapalo: atto primo (Fragment), ed. David Trippett, with Marco Beghelli (libretto), critical edition, Neue Liszt Ausgabe Series IX, Vol. 2 (Editio Musica Budapest, 2019), 180pp.

References

  1. ^ Hans von Bülow to his mother, 21 June 1849. Hans von Bülow: Briefe und Schriften, ed. Marie von Bülow, 8 vols. (Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1895–1908), i, 180.
  2. ^ Connolly, Kate (August 17, 2018). "Liszt's lost opera: 'beautiful' work finally brought to life after 170 years". Theguardian.com.
  3. ^ "Music to the ears". 18 February 2019.
  4. ^ Trippett (2018) 380-82
  5. ^ Hamilton (1996) 48
  6. ^ Ollivier, (1934), II 209
  7. ^ Trippett (2018) 389
  8. ^ E. H. Coleridge, in his notes on Byron
  9. ^ David Trippett (2018), 385
  10. ^ Trippett (2018) 398
  11. ^ Trippett (2018): 389
  12. ^ Trippett (2018): 394
  13. ^ Trippett (2018) 397
  14. ^ "NEW! Abandoned Liszt Opera Sardanapalo Premieres in Weimar in August". Seenandheard-international.com.
  15. ^ La Mara [Ida Marie Lipsius], Liszt und die Frauen (Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel, 1911), 49.
  16. ^ Cooper, Michael (March 6, 2017). "Listen to the First Glimpse of a Long-Lost Liszt Opera". The New York Times.
  17. ^ Arts Correspondent, Jack Malvern (March 7, 2017). "Liszt's lost opera is deciphered at last from a jumble of notes". Thetimes.co.uk.
  18. ^ "Abandoned Liszt opera finally brought to life - 170 years later". University of Cambridge. March 7, 2017.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-04-26. Retrieved 2018-04-25.
  20. ^ "Sardanapalo". En.schott-music.com.
  21. ^ Brown, Geoff (February 8, 2019). "Kirill Karabits: Sardanapalo review". Thetimes.co.uk.
  22. ^ Ashley, Tim (January 22, 2019). "LISZT Sardanapalo. Mazeppa (Karabits)". Gramophone.co.uk.
  23. ^ Jeal, Erica (February 7, 2019). "Franz Liszt: Sardanapalo, Mazeppa review – lost opera of glittering scope | Classical CD of the week". Theguardian.com.
  24. ^ Pettitt, Hugh Canning, David Cairns, Paul Driver and Stephen. "On record: Classical, Feb 17". Thetimes.co.uk.
  25. ^ "Opera Now". Rhinegold.co.uk.
  26. ^ "White-Hot Aria, Engulfing Bass: This Week's 8 Best Classical Moments". The New York Times. 10 March 2017.
  27. ^ "Bachtrack". Bachtrack.com.
  28. ^ Clements, Andrew (19 December 2019). "Classical CDS of the year: a lost Liszt, Feldman, Clara Schumann and small-scale gems". The Guardian.
  29. ^ "Gramophone - Recordings of the Year 2019".
  30. ^ O'Reilly, Chris (6 December 2019). "Recordings of the Year 2019 - Our Top 10". prestomusic.com.

sardanapalo, sardanapale, redirects, here, racehorse, sardanapale, horse, sardanapale, italian, french, sardanapalus, unfinished, opera, franz, liszt, based, 1821, verse, play, sardanapalus, lord, byron, liszt, ambitious, project, planned, dovetail, retirement. Sardanapale redirects here For the racehorse see Sardanapale horse Sardanapalo or Sardanapale Italian or French for Sardanapalus S 687 is an unfinished opera by Franz Liszt based on the 1821 verse play Sardanapalus by Lord Byron Liszt was ambitious for his project and planned to dovetail his retirement as a virtuoso with the premiere of his opera He worked on it intermittently between 1845 and 1852 once declaring it well on the way toward completion but ceased work on it thereafter 1 The first act had been completed in a detailed continuous particell but there is no evidence of any music being notated for Acts 2 3 As an Italian opera it would almost certainly have been called Sardanapalo though Liszt referred to it as Sardanapale in his French correspondence The music Liszt completed remained silent until 2016 when British musicologist David Trippett first established the legibility of Liszt s N4 manuscript and produced both a critical edition and realized an orchestral performing edition after Liszt s own instrumental cues for orchestration This received its world premiere in Weimar on 19 August 2018 2 3 Eugene Delacroix s Death of Sardanapalus 1827 which contributed to Liszt s treatment of the story in his operaThis well known 1840 painting of Liszt at the piano surrounded by musical contemporaries by the artist Josef Danhauser features on the rear wall a portrait of Lord Byron author of Sardanapalus Contents 1 Background 2 Finding a libretto 3 Roles 4 Synopsis 4 1 Scene 1 4 2 Scene 2 4 3 Scene 3 4 4 Scene 4 5 First edition 6 Instrumentation 7 First recording and press reception 8 Sources 9 ReferencesBackground EditLiszt first mentions his desire to compose a large scale opera in October 1841 Alongside his interest in the genre s capacity for realizing literary narratives in music he was motivated in part by the prospect of being recognised as more than a travelling keyboard virtuoso with Rossini s stature in mind a major opera offered Liszt a way of entering the musical guild 4 His early one act opera Don Sanche composed aged 13 closed after four performances at the Paris Opera and could hardly qualify to raise his status Among the range of opera subjects he considered he initially settled on an opera based on Byron s The Corsair and even obtained in 1844 a libretto by Alexandre Dumas but nothing came of this 5 Towards the end of 1845 he settled on the subject of Byron s tragedy Sardanapalus 1821 At this time Liszt had been appointed at the court in Weimar but had not yet taken up residence He briefly considered a possible opportunity at the Hoftheater Vienna where the Kapellmeister Gaetano Donizetti was seriously ill he would die in 1848 A large scale Italian opera could have placed him in the running for Donizetti s influential post as he wrote in an 1846 letter to the Comtesse d Agoult 6 Yet he told her only a few months later that given the conduct of the people involved that post will do me no good and was no longer a consideration 7 In correspondence with his close associate the Princess Belgiojoso Liszt first planned to have the opera performed in Milan in 1846 47 later switching the venue to the Karntnertor Theater in Vienna 1847 and finally to Paris or London 1852 Sardanapalus was according to the writer Ctesias the last king of Assyria Some have identified him with Assurbanipal but the Sardanapalus of Ctesias an effeminate debauchee sunk in luxury and sloth who at the last was driven to take up arms and after a prolonged but ineffectual resistance avoided capture by suicide 8 is not an identifiable historical character Ctesias s tale the original is lost was preserved by Diodorus Siculus and it is on this account that Byron based his play Liszt had been present at the second performance in 1830 of the oratorio The Death of Sardanapalus by Hector Berlioz which featured an immolation scene in preparation for which a sacrifice of the innocents took place as famously depicted in Eugene Delacroix s sensational 1828 painting of the subject illustration These influences may have stoked Liszt s interest in the tale s potential for operatic treatment With reference to the inferno that ends Byron s play he tells Belgiojoso that his finale will aim to set the entire audience alight 9 By 1849 when he at last began to write the music he conceived the idea of further altering the libretto by adding an orgy scene perhaps after Delacroix but this was turned down by Belgiojoso 10 Finding a libretto EditLiszt s librettist of choice Felicien Mallefille agreed to the commission and received a down payment but missed several deadlines and when prompted by Liszt s assistant requested additional funds Growing frustrated at the delay Liszt decided to end the agreement and move on Mallefille did finally submit a prose scenario but it was too late for Liszt to consider continuing his planned collaboration with the Frenchman Belgiojoso then procured an unnamed Italian poet my nightingale as the new librettist a poet who was under house arrest at the time for agitating towards Italian independence In December 1846 Liszt sent his assistant Gaetano Belloni to Paris with orders to bring me back dead or alive a poem libretto he managed to deliver the first act in Italian on New Year s Day 1847 11 The remainder followed 18 months later though Liszt wrote to Belgiojoso querying aspects of the text for Acts 2 3 She replied with further suggestions and it is unclear whether the correspondence continued Liszt delayed for a time perhaps awaiting revisions to Acts 2 and 3 but began composing the first act in earnest around 11 April 1850 12 Between April 1850 and December 1851 Liszt notated 110 pages of music now in the Goethe und Schiller Archiv in Weimar and digitised in 2019 and wrote to Richard Wagner that the opera would be ready for production in Paris or London in 1852 Liszt s assistant Joachim Raff notes in December 1851 that he would soon be asked to produce a provisional orchestration of the opera for Liszt but this never took place Shortly thereafter Liszt seems to have abandoned his work on the opera It is possible that his diffidence resulted from reading Wagner s essay Opera and Drama by whose criteria an Italian opera could have appeared somewhat outmoded even as Liszt s ambition was expressly to modernise the genre the better to translate a literary source into musical drama But Trippett has argued this was unlikely to have been a decisive factor and suggested instead that Liszt s abandonment resulted from his concern over the libretto and the fact that he never received a revised libretto for Acts 2 and 3 so could not set these to music 13 Roles EditRole Voice type Premiere cast 19 August 2018 Conductor Kirill Karabits 14 Sardanapalo King of Assyria tenor Airam HernandezMirra an Ionian slavegirl soprano Joyce El KhouryBeleso a priest bass Oleksandr PushniakFemale chorus concubines soprano amp alto Chorus of the Deutsches Nationaltheater WeimarSynopsis EditScene 1 Edit The royal palace at Nineveh Evening A festival is underway The women of the harem invite revellers to dance with erotic intent They surround Mirra telling her to forget her troubles and revive her spirits through love the light and air speak of love Come rejoice in the shared joy Mirra is sad nostalgic for her home in Greece and tearfully broken hearted Have no further thought for me Leave The women undeterred encourage her to enjoy her position as the King s favourite and embrace a life of boundless ecstasy enraptured by angelic kisses Scene 2 Edit Mirra unpersuaded begs to be left alone and the chorus departs Now by herself she daydreams of the lost happiness of her life in Ionia prompted by the memory of her mother s smile Awakening from the dream she remonstrates at being torn in two directions a slave alone plaything of fate she loves the King deeply yet is ridden with guilt for it was he who conquered and destroyed her homeland While a majority of his subjects don t respect him owing to his effeminate non brutal ways she closes the scene with a virtuosic cabaletta that celebrates the sincerity of her love for him my heart was blessed with indescribable contentment Scene 3 Edit The King enters and seeing Mirra s tears seeks to comfort her She says she has not the strength to tell him her woes and he should not ask her but he implores her Speak Speak At hearing your voice I tremble with joy and hope At his repeated insistence she explains only that theirs is an ill fated flame that brings nothing but shame and grief At this the king chides her leading to the exchange Sard Do you love me Mirra Would that I could not The scene now turns developing into a triumphant love duet And the king unaware of Mirra s complex motives declares the strength and purity of their love let us love as long as the fervid age smiles upon us even as she notes only the lack of dignity her adulterous role carries Scene 4 Edit At the height of the lovers passion Beleso an elder statesman arrives suddenly warning of war He chides the king for not taking his role seriously for forgetting his people s needs and ignoring the inner voice of duty A band of rebel Satraps are readying forces against the empire and Beleso invokes the ancient kings of Assyria in disgust witness the error of your successor forgetting the sceptre for a base slave mistress before urging the king to fight set aside the distaff grasp the sword Sardanapalo hesitates fearing that violence leads only to the suffering of innocents every glory is a lie if it must be bought with the weeping of afflicted humankind In a lyric aside Mirra wonders aloud why he is hesitating and seeks to reawaken his noble valour through her sensuous appeal Finally he is persuaded and agrees to resist the rebels with force A closing trio sees the king growing more contented as military ruler Mirra praising his new noble demeanour and Beleso beating the drums of war as the army mobiles and begins to march into battle First edition EditInitial comments on Liszt s manuscript had declared it a series of sketches 1911 15 But in 2016 musicologist David Trippett discovered that the music and libretto are both decipherable and continuous constituting the first act of Liszt s planned three act opera 16 17 18 Two separate editions of Liszt s manuscript were published in 2019 a critical edition for the Neue Liszt Ausgabe and an orchestrated performing edition Schott that draws critically on all Liszt s indications and cues for orchestration 19 20 No music or libretto text is known to exist for Acts 2 3 The manuscript N4 was digitised and made available online by Klassik Stiftung Weimar in 2019 In 2022 scholarly reviews of the critical edition appeared in Notes and the Research Chronicle of the Royal Musical Society Instrumentation EditThe performing edition of Sardanapalo is scored for 1 piccolo 2 flutes 2 oboes 1 cor anglais 2 clarinets 1 bass clarinet 2 bassoons 1 contrabassoon 4 horns 3 trumpets 2 trombones 1 bass trombone 1 tuba percussion 2 harps strings First recording and press reception EditSardanapalo 2019 Joyce El Khoury Mirra Airam Hernandez King Sardanapalo Oleksandr Pushniak Beleso Weimar Staatskapelle conducted by Kirill Karabits Audite CD 97764 This recording was released on 8 February 2019 and arose from the world premiere performance in Weimar 19 20 August 2018 Upon its release the recording received international critical acclaim and became the best selling classical CD across all platforms in the UK Official Charts The Times declared it A torridly exciting recording It is not too big a statement to say that the work s emergence changes music history You wonder what heights were left to breach in the unwritten acts A most special and historic release 21 Gramophone awarded it Editor s Choice declaring it immensely important the act is beautifully shaped while Liszt s fluid treatment of bel canto structures reveals an assured musical dramatist at work Trippett has carefully modelled his orchestration on Liszt s works on the 1850s and it sounds unquestionably authentic A fine work by one of the most inventive of composers 22 For The Guardian it was a lost opera of glittering scope 23 The Sunday Times Album of the week spoke of rip roaring stuff characteristic of the dramatic orchestral narratives of the composer s neglected tone poems 24 and Opera Now Critics Choice declared it lush and Romantic to a fault with long spun melodies an innate sense of dramatic thrust and some thrilling choral work Liszt does forge his own voice 25 The New York Times responding to a fragment released in 2017 spoke of Liszt s white hot aria The music is a great tide of chromatic lushness 26 Bachtrack wrote of an entirely convincing drama packed with incident and bursting with thrilling vocal and orchestral colour think Bellini reimagined by Wagner and you have some idea of the vast emotional sweep of this gripping music 27 In December 2019 it was listed in The Guardian s Top 10 Classical CDs of 2019 28 in Gramophone s Recordings of the Year 29 and was awarded Recording of the Year in the category Premiere Recording rediscovery reconstruction by Presto Classical 30 Sources EditKenneth Hamilton Not with a bang but a whimper The death of Liszt s Sardanapale Cambridge Opera Journal 8 1 1996 45 58 Daniel Ollivier Correspondence de Liszt et de la Comtesse d Agoult Paris 1933 4 David Trippett An Uncrossable Rubicon Liszt s Sardanapalo Revisited Journal of the Royal Music Association 143 2018 361 432 Franz Liszt Sardanapalo atto primo Fragment ed David Trippett with Marco Beghelli libretto critical edition Neue Liszt Ausgabe Series IX Vol 2 Editio Musica Budapest 2019 180pp References Edit Hans von Bulow to his mother 21 June 1849 Hans von Bulow Briefe und Schriften ed Marie von Bulow 8 vols Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel 1895 1908 i 180 Connolly Kate August 17 2018 Liszt s lost opera beautiful work finally brought to life after 170 years Theguardian com Music to the ears 18 February 2019 Trippett 2018 380 82 Hamilton 1996 48 Ollivier 1934 II 209 Trippett 2018 389 E H Coleridge in his notes on Byron David Trippett 2018 385 Trippett 2018 398 Trippett 2018 389 Trippett 2018 394 Trippett 2018 397 NEW Abandoned Liszt Opera Sardanapalo Premieres in Weimar in August Seenandheard international com La Mara Ida Marie Lipsius Liszt und die Frauen Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel 1911 49 Cooper Michael March 6 2017 Listen to the First Glimpse of a Long Lost Liszt Opera The New York Times Arts Correspondent Jack Malvern March 7 2017 Liszt s lost opera is deciphered at last from a jumble of notes Thetimes co uk Abandoned Liszt opera finally brought to life 170 years later University of Cambridge March 7 2017 Editio Musica Budapest Sheet Music from Hungary Archived from the original on 2018 04 26 Retrieved 2018 04 25 Sardanapalo En schott music com Brown Geoff February 8 2019 Kirill Karabits Sardanapalo review Thetimes co uk Ashley Tim January 22 2019 LISZT Sardanapalo Mazeppa Karabits Gramophone co uk Jeal Erica February 7 2019 Franz Liszt Sardanapalo Mazeppa review lost opera of glittering scope Classical CD of the week Theguardian com Pettitt Hugh Canning David Cairns Paul Driver and Stephen On record Classical Feb 17 Thetimes co uk Opera Now Rhinegold co uk White Hot Aria Engulfing Bass This Week s 8 Best Classical Moments The New York Times 10 March 2017 Bachtrack Bachtrack com Clements Andrew 19 December 2019 Classical CDS of the year a lost Liszt Feldman Clara Schumann and small scale gems The Guardian Gramophone Recordings of the Year 2019 O Reilly Chris 6 December 2019 Recordings of the Year 2019 Our Top 10 prestomusic com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sardanapalo amp oldid 1107711461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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