fbpx
Wikipedia

The Fairy-Queen

The Fairy-Queen (1692; Purcell catalogue number Z.629) is a semi-opera by Henry Purcell; a "Restoration spectacular".[1] The libretto is an anonymous adaptation of William Shakespeare's comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream.[2] First performed in 1692, The Fairy-Queen was composed three years before Purcell's death at the age of 35. Following his death, the score was lost and only rediscovered early in the twentieth century.

The Fairy-Queen
Semi-opera by Henry Purcell
Title page of the original printed edition
DescriptionRestoration spectacular
Based onA Midsummer Night's Dream
by William Shakespeare
Premiere
2 May 1692 (1692-05-02)

Purcell did not set any of Shakespeare's text to music; instead he composed music for short masques in every act but the first. The play itself was also slightly modernised in keeping with seventeenth-century dramatic conventions, but in the main the spoken text is as Shakespeare wrote it. The masques are related to the play metaphorically, rather than literally. Many critics have stated that they bear no relationship to the play. Recent scholarship has shown that the opera, which ends with a masque featuring Hymen, the God of Marriage, was composed for the fifteenth wedding anniversary of William III and Mary II.[3]

Growing interest in Baroque music and the rise of the countertenor contributed to the work's re-entry into the repertoire. The opera received several full-length recordings in the latter part of the 20th century and several of its arias, including "The Plaint" ("O let me weep"), have become popular recital pieces.

In July 2009, in celebration of the 350th anniversary of Purcell's birth, The Fairy-Queen was performed by Glyndebourne Festival Opera using a new edition of the score, prepared for the Purcell Society by Bruce Wood and Andrew Pinnock.

Original production

The Fairy-Queen was first performed on 2 May 1692 at the Queen's Theatre, Dorset Garden in London by the United Company. The author or at least co-author of the libretto was presumably Thomas Betterton, the manager of Dorset Garden Theatre, with whom Purcell worked regularly. This belief is based on an analysis of Betterton's stage directions.[3] A collaboration between several playwrights is also feasible.[4] Choreography for the various dances was provided by Josias Priest, who also worked on Dioclesian and King Arthur, and who was associated with Dido and Aeneas.

A letter describing the original performance shows that the parts of Titania and Oberon were played by children of eight or nine.[5] Presumably other fairies were also played by children; this affects our perspective on the staging.

Context and analysis

Following the huge success of his operas Dioclesian (1690) and King Arthur (1691), Purcell composed The Fairy-Queen in 1692. Purcell's "First" and "Second Music" were played while the audience were taking their seats. The "Act Tunes" are played between acts, as the curtain was normally raised at the beginning of a performance and not lowered until the end. After act 1, each act commences with a short symphony (3–5 minutes).

The English tradition of semi-opera, to which The Fairy-Queen belongs, demanded that most of the music within the play be introduced through the agency of supernatural beings, the exception being pastoral or drunken characters. All the masques in The Fairy-Queen are presented by Titania or Oberon. Originally act 1 contained no music, but due to the work's enormous success it was revived in 1693, when Purcell added the scene of the Drunken Poet and two further songs later on in the work; "Ye gentle spirits of the air" and "The Plaint".[6] As noted above, each masque is subtly related to the action in the play during that particular act in a metaphorical way. In this manner we have Night and Sleep in act 2, which is apt as that act of the play consists of Oberon's plans to use the power of the "love-in-idleness" flower to confuse various loves, and it is therefore appropriate for the allegorical figures of Secrecy, Mystery et al. to usher in a night of enchantment. The masque for Bottom in act 3 includes metamorphoses, songs of both real and feigned love, and beings who are not what they seem. The Reconciliation masque between Oberon and Titania at the end of act 4 prefigures the final masque. The scene changes to a Garden of Fountains, denoting King William's hobby, just after Oberon says "bless these Lovers' Nuptial Day". The Four Seasons tell us that the marriage here celebrated is a good one all year round and "All Salute the rising Sun"/...The Birthday of King Oberon". The kings of England were traditionally likened to the sun (Oberon = William. Significantly, William and Mary were married on his birthday, 4 November.). The Chinese scene in the final masque is in homage to Queen Mary's famous collection of china. The garden shown above it and the exotic animals bring King William back into the picture and Hymen's song in praise of their marriage, plus the stage direction bringing (Mary's) china vases containing (William's) orange trees to the front of the stage complete the symbolism.[3]

The music

Written as he approached the end of his brief career, The Fairy-Queen contains some of Purcell's finest theatre music,[6] as musicologists have agreed for generations. In particular, Constant Lambert was a great admirer; from it he arranged a suite and in collaboration with Edward Dent arranged the work to form the then new Covent Garden opera company's first postwar production.[7] It shows to excellent effect Purcell's complete mastery of the pungent English style of Baroque counterpoint, as well as displaying his absorption of Italian influences. Several arias such as "The Plaint", "Thrice happy lovers" and "Hark! the echoing air" have entered the discographic repertory of many singers outside their original context.

The orchestra for The Fairy-Queen consists of two recorders, two oboes, two trumpets, timpani, string instruments and harpsichord continuo.

Performance history

 
The Queen's Theatre, Dorset Garden where The Fairy-Queen was first performed.

Following Purcell's premature death, his opera Dioclesian remained popular until well into the eighteenth century,[8] but the score of The Fairy-Queen was lost and only rediscovered early in the twentieth century.[9] Other works like it fell into obscurity. Changing tastes were not the only reason for this; the voices employed had also become difficult to find. The list of singers below shows the frequent employment of the male alto, or countertenor, in the semi-opera, a voice which, after Purcell, essentially vanished from the stage, probably due to the rise of Italian opera and the attendant castrati. After that Romantic opera emerged, with the attendant predominance of the tenor. Until the early music revival, the male alto survived mainly in the ecclesiastical tradition of all-male church choirs and twentieth-century American vocal quartets.

However, Purcell's music (and with it The Fairy-Queen) was resuscitated by two related movements: a growing interest in Baroque music and the rise of the countertenor, led by pioneers such as Alfred Deller and Russell Oberlin. The former movement led to performances of long-neglected composers such as Purcell, John Dowland, John Blow and even George Frideric Handel, while the latter complemented it by providing a way of making such performances as authentic as possible as regards the original music and the composer's intentions (less true for Handel, where countertenors appear as castrati replacements).[10] This has led to The Fairy-Queen's increased popularity, and numerous recordings have been made, often using period instruments. The format of the work presents problems to modern directors, who must decide whether or not to present Purcell's music as part of the original play, which uncut is rather lengthy. Savage calculated a length of four hours.[11] The decision to curtail the play is usually taken together with the resolution to modernise to such an extent that the cohesion between music, text and action sketched above is entirely lost, a criticism levelled at the English National Opera's 1995 production directed by David Pountney.[12] The production was released on video the same year, and revived by the company in 2002. A bold approach was taken at the Brazilian Opera Company's 2000 staging by Luiz Päetow, with the libretto becoming unstuck in time.[13]

In July 2009, two months before the 350th anniversary of Purcell's birth, The Fairy-Queen was performed in a new edition, prepared for The Purcell Society by Bruce Wood and Andrew Pinnock, which restored the entire theatrical entertainment as well as the original pitch used by Purcell. The performance by Glyndebourne Festival Opera with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment conducted by William Christie was repeated later that month at the Royal Albert Hall as part of the BBC Proms.[14]

In June 2016, the opera was performed by the Hungarian State Opera, in a new, neo-noir production directed by András Almási-Tóth [hu]

Roles

The role of Mopsa was originally performed by a soprano; however, a later revision by Purcell stated that it was to be performed by "Mr. Pate in woman's habit", presumably to have a grotesque effect and highlight the refrain "No, no, no, no, no; no kissing at all" in the dialogue between Corydon and Mopsa.[6] Also, it is not entirely clear what the word "countertenor" means in this context. The record is ambivalent as to whether Purcell (himself a countertenor) used a tenor with a particularly high range (though lighter at the top) and tessitura (known sometimes as an haute-contre, the descendants of the contratenors alti of medieval polyphony) or a falsettist. It seems that throughout his career he used both.[15] However, purely for reasons of dramatic verisimilitude, it is more likely than not that the travesty role of Mopsa was taken by a falsettist, and the presence of a duet for two male altos ("Let the fifes and the clarions") makes it seem more probable that for this work falsettists were employed.

For a list of non-singing characters see A Midsummer Night's Dream, with the exception of Hippolyta, who was removed by Purcell's librettist.

Roles, voice types
Role Voice type Premiere cast, 2 May 1692
Drunken Poet bass
First Fairy soprano
Second Fairy soprano
Night soprano
Mystery soprano Mary Hodgson[16]
Secrecy countertenor
Sleep bass
Corydon bass
Mopsa soprano/countertenor
Nymph soprano
3 Attendants to Oberon 1 soprano, 2 countertenors
Phoebus tenor
Spring soprano
Summer countertenor
Autumn tenor
Winter bass
Juno soprano
Chinese Man countertenor
Chinese Woman, Daphne soprano
Hymen bass
Chorus: Fairies and Attendants.[17]

Synopsis

 
View of the stage of the Dorset Garden Theatre, as it was pictured in the libretto of The Empress of Morocco (1673), see Elkanah Settle.

For the plot of the play see A Midsummer Night's Dream. Only a synopsis of scenes provided with music is given here.

Act 1

The first scene set to music occurs after Titania has left Oberon, following an argument over the ownership of a little Indian boy. Two of her fairies sing of the delights of the countryside ("Come, come, come, come, let us leave the town"). A drunken, stuttering poet enters, singing "Fill up the bowl". The stuttering has led many to believe the scene is based on the habits of Thomas d'Urfey. However, it may also be poking fun at Elkanah Settle, who stuttered as well and was long thought to be the librettist, due to an error in his 1910 biography.[6]

The fairies mock the drunken poet and drive him away. With its quick repartee and its broadly "realistic" portrayal of the poor victim, the Masque of the Drunken Poet is the closest episode in Purcell's London stage works to full-fledged opera as the Italians knew it.[18]

Act 2

It begins after Oberon has ordered Puck to anoint the eyes of Demetrius with the love-juice. Titania and her fairies merrily revel ("Come all ye songsters of the sky"), and Night ("See, even Night"), Mystery ("Mystery's song"), Secrecy ("One charming night") and Sleep ("Hush, no more, be silent all") lull them asleep and leave them to pleasant dreams.

Act 3

Titania has fallen in love with Bottom (now equipped with his ass' head), much to Oberon's gratification. A Nymph sings of the pleasures and torments of love ("If love's a sweet passion") and after several dances, Titania and Bottom are entertained by the foolish, loving banter of two haymakers, Corydon and Mopsa.

Act 4

It begins after Titania has been freed from her enchantment, commencing with a brief divertissement to celebrate Oberon's birthday ("Now the Night", and the abovementioned "Let the fifes and the clarions"), but for the most part it is a masque of the god Phoebus ("When the cruel winter") and the Four Seasons (Spring; "Thus, the ever grateful spring", Summer; "Here's the Summer", Autumn; "See my many coloured fields", and Winter; "Now Winter comes slowly").

Act 5

After Theseus has been told of the lovers' adventures in the wood, it begins with the goddess Juno singing an epithalamium, "Thrice happy lovers", followed by a woman who sings the well-known "The Plaint" ("O let me weep"). A Chinese man and woman enter singing several songs about the joys of their world. ("Thus, the gloomy world", "Thus happy and free" and "Yes, Xansi"). Two other Chinese women summon Hymen, who sings in praise of married bliss, thus uniting the wedding theme of A Midsummer Night's Dream, with the celebration of William and Mary's anniversary.[3]

Recordings

Audio

Video

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Milhous, pp. 50–61
  2. ^ It has nothing to do with Edmund Spenser's poem The Faerie Queene
  3. ^ a b c d Muller 2005 pp. 667–681
  4. ^ Savage 2000
  5. ^ Burden 2003 pp. 596–607
  6. ^ a b c d Price 2006
  7. ^ Ashman 7 May 2005
  8. ^ Milhous 1984 p. 57
  9. ^ Westrup & Harrison p.199
  10. ^ Steane
  11. ^ Savage 1973 pp. 201–222
  12. ^ White 29 October 1995. For a contrasting view, see Kimberley 21 October 1995.
  13. ^ . O Estado de S. Paulo. 25 April 2000. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  14. ^ Breen 2009
  15. ^ Steane. See also DeMarco 2002 pp. 174–185.
  16. ^ Baldwin, Olive; Wilson, Thelma (23 September 2004). Hodgson [Hudson; née Dyer], Mary (bap. 1673?, d. 1719?), singer. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/70107.
  17. ^ Typically, the chorus is used at the end of airs to provide a recapitulation of the main theme of the air, as well as at moments of particular dramatic grandeur, such as at the entry of Phoebus during act 4.
  18. ^ http://www.oxfordwesternmusic.com ex. 3-13 Henry Purcell, The Fairy Queen, act 2 masque, Secrecy's song

Sources

  • Ashman, Mike, "Lost in Music." The Guardian, 7 May 2005
  • Breen, Ed, "Purcell: The Fairy Queen", Musical Criticism, July 2009
  • Burden, Michael. "Casting issues in the original production of Purcell's opera The Fairy-Queen " Music & Letters 84/4 (Nov.2003) oxfordjournals.org (subscription access)
  • DeMarco, Laura. oxfordjournals.org "The Fact of the Castrato and the Myth of the Countertenor." The Musical Quarterly 86 (2002), 174–185. (subscription access). An argument against the use of countertenors as castrati replacements, but the relevance to this article comes in the more balanced discussion of countertenors as used by Purcell.
  • Dent, Edward J. Foundations of English Opera, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1928.
  • Holst, Imogen [ed]. Henry Purcell 1659–1695: Essays on His Music, Oxford University Press, London, 1959.
  • Kimberley, Nick, "The Fairy Queen Crass? Vulgar? Magic!", The Independent, 21 October 1995
  • van Lennep, William et al. [eds], The London Stage, parts 1 (1965) and 2 (1959), Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.
  • Moore, R. E. Henry Purcell and the Restoration Theatre, Greenwood Press, Westport CT, 1961.
  • Milhous, Judith, "The Multimedia Spectacular on the Restoration Stage", in British Theatre and the Other Arts, 1660–1800, ed. Shirley Strum Kenny, Associated University Presses, Cranbury, New Jersey, 1984
  • Muller, Frans and Julia, oxfordjournals.org "Completing the picture: the importance of reconstructing early opera". Early Music, vol XXXIII/4 (November 2005). (subscription access).
  • Price, Curtis A. Henry Purcell and the London Stage,Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1984.
  • Price, Curtis. grovemusic.com "The Fairy-Queen" 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed 25 January 2006), (subscription access).
  • Savage, Roger. "The Shakespeare-Purcell Fairy-Queen: A Defence and Recommendation", Early Music, vol I (1973) oxfordjournals.org (subscription access).
  • Savage, Roger. "The Fairy-Queen: an Opera" in Henry Purcell's Operas, The Complete Texts, ed. Michael Burden, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000.
  • Shay, Robert, and Robert Thompson. Purcell Manuscripts: The Principal Musical Sources (Cambridge, 2000).
  • Steane, J. B. grovemusic.com "Countertenor" 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed 25 July 2006), (subscription access).
  • Westrup, Sir Jack and Harrison, F.Ll. Collins Encyclopedia of Music, William Collins Sons & Company, London and Glasgow, 1976, ISBN 0-00-434331-X.
  • White, Michael, "What a drag – it's just not Purcell", The Independent on Sunday, 29 October 1995

External links

fairy, queen, other, uses, fairy, queen, disambiguation, 1692, purcell, catalogue, number, semi, opera, henry, purcell, restoration, spectacular, libretto, anonymous, adaptation, william, shakespeare, comedy, midsummer, night, dream, first, performed, 1692, co. For other uses see Fairy Queen disambiguation The Fairy Queen 1692 Purcell catalogue number Z 629 is a semi opera by Henry Purcell a Restoration spectacular 1 The libretto is an anonymous adaptation of William Shakespeare s comedy A Midsummer Night s Dream 2 First performed in 1692 The Fairy Queen was composed three years before Purcell s death at the age of 35 Following his death the score was lost and only rediscovered early in the twentieth century The Fairy QueenSemi opera by Henry PurcellTitle page of the original printed editionDescriptionRestoration spectacularBased onA Midsummer Night s Dream by William ShakespearePremiere2 May 1692 1692 05 02 Queen s Theatre Dorset Garden LondonPurcell did not set any of Shakespeare s text to music instead he composed music for short masques in every act but the first The play itself was also slightly modernised in keeping with seventeenth century dramatic conventions but in the main the spoken text is as Shakespeare wrote it The masques are related to the play metaphorically rather than literally Many critics have stated that they bear no relationship to the play Recent scholarship has shown that the opera which ends with a masque featuring Hymen the God of Marriage was composed for the fifteenth wedding anniversary of William III and Mary II 3 Growing interest in Baroque music and the rise of the countertenor contributed to the work s re entry into the repertoire The opera received several full length recordings in the latter part of the 20th century and several of its arias including The Plaint O let me weep have become popular recital pieces In July 2009 in celebration of the 350th anniversary of Purcell s birth The Fairy Queen was performed by Glyndebourne Festival Opera using a new edition of the score prepared for the Purcell Society by Bruce Wood and Andrew Pinnock Contents 1 Original production 2 Context and analysis 3 The music 4 Performance history 5 Roles 6 Synopsis 6 1 Act 1 6 2 Act 2 6 3 Act 3 6 4 Act 4 6 5 Act 5 7 Recordings 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksOriginal production EditThe Fairy Queen was first performed on 2 May 1692 at the Queen s Theatre Dorset Garden in London by the United Company The author or at least co author of the libretto was presumably Thomas Betterton the manager of Dorset Garden Theatre with whom Purcell worked regularly This belief is based on an analysis of Betterton s stage directions 3 A collaboration between several playwrights is also feasible 4 Choreography for the various dances was provided by Josias Priest who also worked on Dioclesian and King Arthur and who was associated with Dido and Aeneas A letter describing the original performance shows that the parts of Titania and Oberon were played by children of eight or nine 5 Presumably other fairies were also played by children this affects our perspective on the staging Context and analysis EditFollowing the huge success of his operas Dioclesian 1690 and King Arthur 1691 Purcell composed The Fairy Queen in 1692 Purcell s First and Second Music were played while the audience were taking their seats The Act Tunes are played between acts as the curtain was normally raised at the beginning of a performance and not lowered until the end After act 1 each act commences with a short symphony 3 5 minutes The English tradition of semi opera to which The Fairy Queen belongs demanded that most of the music within the play be introduced through the agency of supernatural beings the exception being pastoral or drunken characters All the masques in The Fairy Queen are presented by Titania or Oberon Originally act 1 contained no music but due to the work s enormous success it was revived in 1693 when Purcell added the scene of the Drunken Poet and two further songs later on in the work Ye gentle spirits of the air and The Plaint 6 As noted above each masque is subtly related to the action in the play during that particular act in a metaphorical way In this manner we have Night and Sleep in act 2 which is apt as that act of the play consists of Oberon s plans to use the power of the love in idleness flower to confuse various loves and it is therefore appropriate for the allegorical figures of Secrecy Mystery et al to usher in a night of enchantment The masque for Bottom in act 3 includes metamorphoses songs of both real and feigned love and beings who are not what they seem The Reconciliation masque between Oberon and Titania at the end of act 4 prefigures the final masque The scene changes to a Garden of Fountains denoting King William s hobby just after Oberon says bless these Lovers Nuptial Day The Four Seasons tell us that the marriage here celebrated is a good one all year round and All Salute the rising Sun The Birthday of King Oberon The kings of England were traditionally likened to the sun Oberon William Significantly William and Mary were married on his birthday 4 November The Chinese scene in the final masque is in homage to Queen Mary s famous collection of china The garden shown above it and the exotic animals bring King William back into the picture and Hymen s song in praise of their marriage plus the stage direction bringing Mary s china vases containing William s orange trees to the front of the stage complete the symbolism 3 The music EditWritten as he approached the end of his brief career The Fairy Queen contains some of Purcell s finest theatre music 6 as musicologists have agreed for generations In particular Constant Lambert was a great admirer from it he arranged a suite and in collaboration with Edward Dent arranged the work to form the then new Covent Garden opera company s first postwar production 7 It shows to excellent effect Purcell s complete mastery of the pungent English style of Baroque counterpoint as well as displaying his absorption of Italian influences Several arias such as The Plaint Thrice happy lovers and Hark the echoing air have entered the discographic repertory of many singers outside their original context The orchestra for The Fairy Queen consists of two recorders two oboes two trumpets timpani string instruments and harpsichord continuo Performance history Edit The Queen s Theatre Dorset Garden where The Fairy Queen was first performed Following Purcell s premature death his opera Dioclesian remained popular until well into the eighteenth century 8 but the score of The Fairy Queen was lost and only rediscovered early in the twentieth century 9 Other works like it fell into obscurity Changing tastes were not the only reason for this the voices employed had also become difficult to find The list of singers below shows the frequent employment of the male alto or countertenor in the semi opera a voice which after Purcell essentially vanished from the stage probably due to the rise of Italian opera and the attendant castrati After that Romantic opera emerged with the attendant predominance of the tenor Until the early music revival the male alto survived mainly in the ecclesiastical tradition of all male church choirs and twentieth century American vocal quartets However Purcell s music and with it The Fairy Queen was resuscitated by two related movements a growing interest in Baroque music and the rise of the countertenor led by pioneers such as Alfred Deller and Russell Oberlin The former movement led to performances of long neglected composers such as Purcell John Dowland John Blow and even George Frideric Handel while the latter complemented it by providing a way of making such performances as authentic as possible as regards the original music and the composer s intentions less true for Handel where countertenors appear as castrati replacements 10 This has led to The Fairy Queen s increased popularity and numerous recordings have been made often using period instruments The format of the work presents problems to modern directors who must decide whether or not to present Purcell s music as part of the original play which uncut is rather lengthy Savage calculated a length of four hours 11 The decision to curtail the play is usually taken together with the resolution to modernise to such an extent that the cohesion between music text and action sketched above is entirely lost a criticism levelled at the English National Opera s 1995 production directed by David Pountney 12 The production was released on video the same year and revived by the company in 2002 A bold approach was taken at the Brazilian Opera Company s 2000 staging by Luiz Paetow with the libretto becoming unstuck in time 13 In July 2009 two months before the 350th anniversary of Purcell s birth The Fairy Queen was performed in a new edition prepared for The Purcell Society by Bruce Wood and Andrew Pinnock which restored the entire theatrical entertainment as well as the original pitch used by Purcell The performance by Glyndebourne Festival Opera with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment conducted by William Christie was repeated later that month at the Royal Albert Hall as part of the BBC Proms 14 In June 2016 the opera was performed by the Hungarian State Opera in a new neo noir production directed by Andras Almasi Toth hu Roles EditThe role of Mopsa was originally performed by a soprano however a later revision by Purcell stated that it was to be performed by Mr Pate in woman s habit presumably to have a grotesque effect and highlight the refrain No no no no no no kissing at all in the dialogue between Corydon and Mopsa 6 Also it is not entirely clear what the word countertenor means in this context The record is ambivalent as to whether Purcell himself a countertenor used a tenor with a particularly high range though lighter at the top and tessitura known sometimes as an haute contre the descendants of the contratenors alti of medieval polyphony or a falsettist It seems that throughout his career he used both 15 However purely for reasons of dramatic verisimilitude it is more likely than not that the travesty role of Mopsa was taken by a falsettist and the presence of a duet for two male altos Let the fifes and the clarions makes it seem more probable that for this work falsettists were employed For a list of non singing characters see A Midsummer Night s Dream with the exception of Hippolyta who was removed by Purcell s librettist Roles voice types Role Voice type Premiere cast 2 May 1692Drunken Poet bassFirst Fairy sopranoSecond Fairy sopranoNight sopranoMystery soprano Mary Hodgson 16 Secrecy countertenorSleep bassCorydon bassMopsa soprano countertenorNymph soprano3 Attendants to Oberon 1 soprano 2 countertenorsPhoebus tenorSpring sopranoSummer countertenorAutumn tenorWinter bassJuno sopranoChinese Man countertenorChinese Woman Daphne sopranoHymen bassChorus Fairies and Attendants 17 Synopsis Edit View of the stage of the Dorset Garden Theatre as it was pictured in the libretto of The Empress of Morocco 1673 see Elkanah Settle For the plot of the play see A Midsummer Night s Dream Only a synopsis of scenes provided with music is given here Act 1 Edit The first scene set to music occurs after Titania has left Oberon following an argument over the ownership of a little Indian boy Two of her fairies sing of the delights of the countryside Come come come come let us leave the town A drunken stuttering poet enters singing Fill up the bowl The stuttering has led many to believe the scene is based on the habits of Thomas d Urfey However it may also be poking fun at Elkanah Settle who stuttered as well and was long thought to be the librettist due to an error in his 1910 biography 6 The fairies mock the drunken poet and drive him away With its quick repartee and its broadly realistic portrayal of the poor victim the Masque of the Drunken Poet is the closest episode in Purcell s London stage works to full fledged opera as the Italians knew it 18 Act 2 Edit It begins after Oberon has ordered Puck to anoint the eyes of Demetrius with the love juice Titania and her fairies merrily revel Come all ye songsters of the sky and Night See even Night Mystery Mystery s song Secrecy One charming night and Sleep Hush no more be silent all lull them asleep and leave them to pleasant dreams Act 3 Edit Titania has fallen in love with Bottom now equipped with his ass head much to Oberon s gratification A Nymph sings of the pleasures and torments of love If love s a sweet passion and after several dances Titania and Bottom are entertained by the foolish loving banter of two haymakers Corydon and Mopsa Act 4 Edit It begins after Titania has been freed from her enchantment commencing with a brief divertissement to celebrate Oberon s birthday Now the Night and the abovementioned Let the fifes and the clarions but for the most part it is a masque of the god Phoebus When the cruel winter and the Four Seasons Spring Thus the ever grateful spring Summer Here s the Summer Autumn See my many coloured fields and Winter Now Winter comes slowly Act 5 Edit After Theseus has been told of the lovers adventures in the wood it begins with the goddess Juno singing an epithalamium Thrice happy lovers followed by a woman who sings the well known The Plaint O let me weep A Chinese man and woman enter singing several songs about the joys of their world Thus the gloomy world Thus happy and free and Yes Xansi Two other Chinese women summon Hymen who sings in praise of married bliss thus uniting the wedding theme of A Midsummer Night s Dream with the celebration of William and Mary s anniversary 3 Recordings EditAudio Bruno Maderna Excerpts Orchestra dell Angelicum of Milan 1 LP 1957 Fonit Angelicum LPA970 This was also the first recording of Cathy Berberian mentioned on the cover as Catherine Berio Benjamin Britten English Chamber Orchestra Ambrosian Opera Chorus 2 CDs 1970 Decca 4685612 Alfred Deller The Deller Consort Stour Music Chorus 2 CDs 1972 Harmonia Mundi John Eliot Gardiner The English Baroque Soloists The Monteverdi Choir 2 CDs 1982 Archiv Produktion 419 221 2 William Christie Les Arts Florissants 2 CDs 1989 Harmonia Mundi HMC 90 1308 0 David van Asch The Scholars Baroque Ensemble 2 CDs 1992 Naxos 8 550660 1 Roger Norrington The London Classical Players The Schutz Choir of London 2 CDs 1994 EMI Classics 7243 5 55234 2 6 Harry Christophers The Sixteen 2 CDs 1993 Coro COR16005 Ton Koopman Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra amp Choir 2 CDs 1994 Erato 98507 Nikolaus Harnoncourt Concentus Musicus Wien Arnold Schoenberg Choir 2 CDs 1995 Teldec Classics 4509 97684 2 Antony Walker Cantillation Orchestra of the Antipodes 2 CDs 2005 ABC Classics ABC4762879 Christopher Monks Armonico Consort 1 CD 2006 Deux Elles DXL1120 Ottavio Dantone Accademia Bizantina amp New English Voices 2 CDs 2012 Brilliant Classics 94221 Paul McCreesh Gabrieli Consort 2 CDs 2020 Signum Records SIGCD615Video Nicholas Kok David Pountney stage director English National Opera 1 DVD 1995 Arthaus Musik 100200 William Christie Jonathan Kent stage director The Glyndebourne Chorus amp Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment 2 DVDs 2010 Opus Arte OA1031D Cathryn Robertson director producer Ballet B C and CBC television Inside the Faerie QueeneSee also Edit Opera portalList of compositions by Henry Purcell A Midsummer Night s Dream opera by Britten The Modification and Instrumentation of a Famous Hornpipe as a Merry and Altogether Sincere Homage to Uncle AlfredReferences EditNotes Milhous pp 50 61 It has nothing to do with Edmund Spenser s poem The Faerie Queene a b c d Muller 2005 pp 667 681 Savage 2000 Burden 2003 pp 596 607 a b c d Price 2006 Ashman 7 May 2005 Milhous 1984 p 57 Westrup amp Harrison p 199 Steane Savage 1973 pp 201 222 White 29 October 1995 For a contrasting view see Kimberley 21 October 1995 opera apresenta versao moderna de Shakespeare O Estado de S Paulo 25 April 2000 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 4 March 2016 Breen 2009 Steane See also DeMarco 2002 pp 174 185 Baldwin Olive Wilson Thelma 23 September 2004 Hodgson Hudson nee Dyer Mary bap 1673 d 1719 singer Vol 1 Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 70107 Typically the chorus is used at the end of airs to provide a recapitulation of the main theme of the air as well as at moments of particular dramatic grandeur such as at the entry of Phoebus during act 4 http www oxfordwesternmusic com ex 3 13 Henry Purcell The Fairy Queen act 2 masque Secrecy s song Sources Ashman Mike Lost in Music The Guardian 7 May 2005 Breen Ed Purcell The Fairy Queen Musical Criticism July 2009 Burden Michael Casting issues in the original production of Purcell s opera The Fairy Queen Music amp Letters 84 4 Nov 2003 oxfordjournals org subscription access DeMarco Laura oxfordjournals org The Fact of the Castrato and the Myth of the Countertenor The Musical Quarterly 86 2002 174 185 subscription access An argument against the use of countertenors as castrati replacements but the relevance to this article comes in the more balanced discussion of countertenors as used by Purcell Dent Edward J Foundations of English Opera Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1928 Holst Imogen ed Henry Purcell 1659 1695 Essays on His Music Oxford University Press London 1959 Kimberley Nick The Fairy Queen Crass Vulgar Magic The Independent 21 October 1995 van Lennep William et al eds The London Stage parts 1 1965 and 2 1959 Southern Illinois University Press Carbondale Moore R E Henry Purcell and the Restoration Theatre Greenwood Press Westport CT 1961 Milhous Judith The Multimedia Spectacular on the Restoration Stage in British Theatre and the Other Arts 1660 1800 ed Shirley Strum Kenny Associated University Presses Cranbury New Jersey 1984 Muller Frans and Julia oxfordjournals org Completing the picture the importance of reconstructing early opera Early Music vol XXXIII 4 November 2005 subscription access Price Curtis A Henry Purcell and the London Stage Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1984 Price Curtis grovemusic com The Fairy Queen Archived 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Grove Music Online ed L Macy accessed 25 January 2006 subscription access Savage Roger The Shakespeare Purcell Fairy Queen A Defence and Recommendation Early Music vol I 1973 oxfordjournals org subscription access Savage Roger The Fairy Queen an Opera in Henry Purcell s Operas The Complete Texts ed Michael Burden Oxford University Press Oxford 2000 Shay Robert and Robert Thompson Purcell Manuscripts The Principal Musical Sources Cambridge 2000 Steane J B grovemusic com Countertenor Archived 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Grove Music Online ed L Macy accessed 25 July 2006 subscription access Westrup Sir Jack and Harrison F Ll Collins Encyclopedia of Music William Collins Sons amp Company London and Glasgow 1976 ISBN 0 00 434331 X White Michael What a drag it s just not Purcell The Independent on Sunday 29 October 1995External links EditThe Fairy Queen Z 629 Purcell Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Libretto opera stanford edu Facsimile of the libretto Early English Books Online login required Purcell The Fairy Queen The Prophetess classicalacarte net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Fairy Queen amp oldid 1171798249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.