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Turandot (Busoni)

Turandot (BV 273) is a 1917 opera with spoken dialogue and in two acts by Ferruccio Busoni. Busoni prepared his own libretto, in German, based on the play of the same name by Count Carlo Gozzi. The music for Busoni's opera is based on the incidental music, and the associated Turandot Suite (BV 248), which Busoni had written in 1905 for a production of Gozzi's play. The opera is often performed as part of a double bill with Busoni's earlier one-act opera Arlecchino.

Turandot
Opera by Ferruccio Busoni
Poster for the premiere
LibrettistFerruccio Busoni
LanguageGerman
Based onCarlo Gozzi's play Turandot
Premiere
11 May 1917 (1917-05-11)

Composition of the music for Turandot edit

Source and previous versions edit

Carlo Gozzi's play Turandot first appeared in 1762. It was originally written to be performed in the small theatre of San Samuele in Venice, and was deliberately written in the Commedia dell'arte style as a reaction to the more modern, realistic plays of Goldoni and others.[1]

Schiller made an adapted translation of Turandot which was published in 1802.[2] Weber wrote his Incidental music for Turandot, Op. 37, for a production of this play. It was composed in 1809 and included the earlier Overtura cinese ("Chinese Overture"), which he had composed on a Chinese theme in 1805. Busoni thought that between them Schiller and Weber had ruined a masterpiece of Italian literature.[3]

Incidental music and orchestral suite edit

Gozzi's Turandot – in one form or another – occupied Busoni at various times in the years 1904–1917. He was very fond of fantastical and magical tales: his immediately preceding work was the Piano Concerto, Op. 39 BV247, which included music from an unfinished adaptation of Adam Oehlenschläger's Aladdin.[4] In 1904 Busoni began sketching incidental music for Gozzi's Chinese fable. He also arranged a concert suite, which was first performed in 1905 and published in 1906. A production of Gozzi's play with Busoni's music was mounted by Max Reinhardt in Berlin in 1911, and for the second and last time in London in 1913. For more information on the composition of the incidental music and the suite, and the productions of the play with Busoni's music, see the article on the Turandot Suite.[5]

Composition of the opera edit

After the outbreak of World War I, Busoni, as an Italian, found it increasingly difficult to stay in Berlin and eventually moved to neutral Zürich where he did not have to take sides. Between late 1915 and August 1916 he was occupied with writing his one-act opera Arlecchino, but the Stadttheater (municipal theatre) in Zürich was unwilling to mount a production without a companion piece. He swiftly wrote a libretto in German based on Gozzi's original and adapted his Turandot Suite into a short two-act opera with some spoken dialogue.[6] Busoni wrote to Egon Petri on 9 November 1916:

The important question as to which piece should be coupled with the hour-long Arlecchino so as to fill an evening, my resultant difficulties and the desire to establish such a programme in a durably valid form have led me to the hasty decision to form an opera in two acts out of the material and substance of Turandot. For a few weeks now I have been hard at work on this delightful task, writing the libretto and music for a Turandot opera. I am re-writing the text completely and independently, and bringing it closer in tone to a pantomime or stage play. It is a more arduous task than I had initially assumed, but it is coming easily to me. The masque-figures common to both pieces serve to link them (although they otherwise contrast completely with each other).[7]

Busoni completed the opera Turandot in double-quick time (300 pages in 100 days) in late 1916, and it was first performed with Arlecchino as a double bill – Busoni conducting – in Zürich in 1917. Dent mentions how pleased Busoni was with his own workmanship.[6]

There are various oddities in Busoni's libretto which recall the play's Commedia dell'arte roots: characters with Italian names like Truffaldino and Pantalone; Allah is praised in China; and there are references to Venice, St. Mark's, and gondolas. The spoken dialogue harks back to Mozart's operas, especially The Magic Flute.[8] In comparison to Puccini's opera on the same subject, Busoni retains the intimate, unreal atmosphere of Gozzi's play.[9] Busoni's princess Turandot is not quite so implacable; her heart is readier to melt.

Composer's revisions edit

Re-using some of the material he had composed for the opera, Busoni again revised the orchestral Turandot Suite in 1917, replacing the Funeral March of the last movement with Altoum's Warning, BV 248b.[10] Busoni also separately published Altoums Gebet from Act 2 (newly written for the opera) as Altoum's Prayer, BV 277 op. 49 no. 1 for baritone and small orchestra.

Performance history edit

The premiere performance of Busoni's Turandot took place on 11 May 1917 at the Stadttheater Zürich. The producer was Hans Rogorsch, and the designer, Albert Isler. Busoni's one-act opera, Arlecchino, was also performed as part of a double-bill.[11]

Turandot and Arlecchino were first performed in Germany on 20 October 1918 in Frankfurt with Gustav Brecher as the conductor,[12] and again beginning on 26 January 1919 at the Cologne opera, conducted by Otto Klemperer, who had recently been appointed as "First Conductor."[13] The two operas were performed in Berlin on 19 May 1921 at the Berliner Staatsoper under the baton of the Wagnerian conductor Leo Blech, with considerable success.[14]

The first performance in Italy (without Arlecchino) was on 29 November 1936 in Rome, conducted by Fernando Previtali. Previtali, a Busoni champion, went on to conduct performances in other Italian cities and conducted the premiere of the opera at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires in 1964.

The first performance in England was in London on 19 August 1966, in an English translation by Lionel Salter. The performance was broadcast on the BBC Third Programme. The American premiere was a concert performance on 10 October 1967 in New York's Philharmonic Hall, followed by a semi-staged version on 28 January 1980 at the First Presbyterian Church in Berkeley, California, conducted by the 28-year-old Kent Nagano; a fully staged performance was given on 15 November 1986 by the Connecticut Grand Opera in Stamford with Gregory Stapp as Emperor Altoum, Juan Luque Carmona as Calaf, and Patricia Craig in the title role.[12]

Roles edit

Role Voice type Premiere cast, 11 May 1917[11]
(Conductor: Ferruccio Busoni)
Altoum, emperor bass Laurenz Saeger-Pieroth
Turandot, his daughter soprano Inez Encke
Adelma, her confidante mezzo-soprano Marie Smeikal
Kalaf tenor August Richter
Barak, his servant baritone Tristan Rawson
Queen mother of Samarkand, a Moor soprano Elisabeth Rabbow
Truffaldino, chief eunuch tenor Eugen Nusselt
Pantalone, minister bass Heinrich Kuhn
Tartaglia, minister bass Wilhelm Bockholt
A singer mezzo-soprano Marie Smeikal
The executioner silent Eduard Siding
Eight doctors, chorus of slaves, dancers, mourners, eunuchs, soldiers

Instrumentation edit

3 flutes (3rd doubling piccolo), 3 oboes (3rd doubling English horn), 3 clarinets (3rd doubling bass clarinet), 3 bassoons (3rd doubling contrabassoon); 4 horns, 4 trumpets, 3 trombones, 1 tuba; timpani, percussion (glockenspiel, triangle, tambourine, covered drum, bass drum, tam-tam); 2 harps; soloists, chorus; strings.[5][15][16]

Synopsis edit

Busoni greatly simplified Gozzi's 5-act play into an opera of two acts of two scenes each.[17] However,the basic plot is the same. Turandot, daughter of the Emperor, challenges all suitors for her hand with three riddles. She will marry the one who answers correctly, but those who fail are executed. Kalaf, an exiled prince in disguise, takes up the challenge.

Act 1 edit

Scene 1:

Kalaf comes upon the picture discarded by an earlier executed suitor, and determines to win Turandot.

Scene 2:

Emperor Altoum complains of Turandot's intransigence. Kalaf says he would rather die than fail to win Turandot. Turandot enters with her maid Adelma who recognises the Prince, but remains silent. Kalaf correctly answers the three riddles, and challenges Turandot to discover his name and parentage; if she does so, he will depart.

Act 2 edit

Scene 1:

Slave girls dance to a wordless choral version of "Greensleeves".[18] Turandot confesses her mixed feelings for the Prince. Adelma says she knows the Prince's name, and will tell Turandot if she can have her freedom; Turandot agrees.

Scene 2:

Turandot announces Kalaf's name to general consternation, and he makes ready to depart. But Turandot stops him, saying he has awakened her heart. The work closes with a final ensemble 'Was ist das alle Menschen bindet?' ("What is it that rules all men?") to which is the reply 'Die Liebe' ("Love").

Recordings edit

Busoni: Arlecchino & TurandotChorus & Orchestra of the Opéra de Lyon[19][20]

  • Conductor: Kent Nagano
  • Principal singers: Mechthild Gessendorf (Turandot); Stefan Dahlberg (Kalaf); Franz-Josef Selig (Altoum); Gabriele Sima (Adelma); Falk Struckman (Barak); Anne-Marie Rodde (Queen Mother); Markus Schäfer (Truffaldino); Michael Kraus (Pantalone); Wolfgang Holzmair (Tartaglia)
  • Label: Virgin Classics VCD7 59313-2 (2 CDs)

Busoni: TurandotBerlin Radio Symphony Orchestra[21]

  • Conductor: Gerd Albrecht
  • Principal singers: René Pape (Altoum); Linda Plech (Turandot); Gabriele Schreckenbach (Adelma); Josef Protschka (Kalaf); Friedrich Molsberger (Barak); Celina Lindsley (Queen Mother); Robert Wörle (Truffaldino); Johannes Werner Prein (Pantalone); Gotthold Schwarz (Tartaglia)
  • Label: Capriccio 60 039-1 (1 CD)

Other versions of the Turandot story edit

Puccini had heard about the 1911 Max Reinhardt production of Gozzi's play with Busoni's incidental music, and this may have played a role in his decision to write his own version. Andrea Maffei (who also wrote the libretto for Verdi's I Masnadieri) had translated his friend Schiller's version of Gozzi's play back into Italian.[22] The librettists for Puccini's Turandot, Adami and Simoni, used Maffei's translation, but also turned to Gozzi's original. In addition they made reference to the libretto by Gazzoletti for a little-known opera Turanda by Antonio Bazzini, who had been one of Puccini's teachers at the Milan Conservatory. As a result, the libretto for Puccini's opera differs considerably from Gozzi's play. Ashbrook and Powers note that several skillful changes in the 'falling action' of the plot (Busoni's Act 2) enabled Busoni to avoid the pitfalls which plagued Puccini's attempt to set Act 3 of his version of the story.[23]

Bertolt Brecht also prepared a version of the story (1953–54).

Detailed list of performances edit

The information in this list is from Roberge,[12] unless otherwise noted.

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Ashbrook and Powers (1991), pp. 44 and 58
  2. ^ Schiller (1802) Schiller's 1802 version was freely translated into English verse by Sabilla Novello, published in 1872. Gutenberg Project Accessed 19 September 2009.
  3. ^ Couling (2005), p. 204
  4. ^ Dent (1933), p. 148
  5. ^ a b Beaumont (1985), p. 76.
  6. ^ a b Dent (1933), p. 233
  7. ^ Beaumont (1987), pp. 251–252
  8. ^ Couling (2005), p. 300
  9. ^ Ashbrook and Powers, p. 58
  10. ^ Beaumont (1985), p.76)
  11. ^ a b c Chapter XV Turandot in Beaumont (1985), pp. 240–245.
  12. ^ a b c d Roberge, pp. 335–341.
  13. ^ Letter from Busoni to Otto Klemperer, 26 September 1919, and footnote in Beaumont (1987), p. 275.
  14. ^ Dent (1933), pp. 262–263
  15. ^ Kindermann, pp. 229–231
  16. ^ Roberge, pp. 32–33.
  17. ^ Beaumont (1985), pp. 77, 241.
  18. ^ Ronald Stevenson has determined that Busoni saw a famous 16th-century manuscript of "Greensleeves" by William Ballet during a visit to Trinity College, Dublin, in 1903, and has noted that the song was originally connected with public executions. In a diary entry from 9 October 1910, Busoni refers to Turandot as "the lady with the green sleeves," and the cover design for the original publication of the orchestral score of the Suite depicts Turandot in a costume with green sleeves (Beaumont, 1985, p. 82). The song was also associated with Anne Boleyn's initial rejection of Henry VIII's sexual advances (see "Greensleeves").
  19. ^ William Lloyd, "Busoni: Arlecchino & Turandot". Musical Times, 112 (1994).
  20. ^ Review of the Nagano recording in The Gramophone, November, 1993, p. 139. Retrieved on 2 February 2009.
  21. ^ Capriccio 60 039-1 OCLC 611429107
  22. ^ Turandot, fola tragicomica di Carlo Gozzi. Imitate da Federico Schiller e tradotte dal cav. Andrea Maffei (1863). Florence: Successori Le Monnier.
  23. ^ Ashbrook and Powers (1991), pp. 54–58
  24. ^ ABC (2 February 2010). "El Maestranza estrena hoy «Turandot» de Busoni en versión de concierto. Retrieved 10 March 2015 (in Spanish).
  25. ^ Diapason (11 March 2011). "Vu et entendu : Turandot de Busoni à Dijon". Retrieved 10 March 2015 (in French).
  26. ^ "Festival ao Largo – Ópera e Música de Cena; 27.28.julho; Turandot; Ferruccio Busoni; Ópera em Versão de Concerto" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 28 July 2012.

Bibliography edit

  • Ambros, August Wilhelm (1862). Geschichte der Musik, Vol. 1. Breslau: F.E.C. Leuckhart. Google Books: Full Preview. Accessed 24 September 2009.
  • Ashbrook, William; Powers, Harold (1991). Puccini's Turandot: The End of the Great Tradition, Ch II, pp. 56–58. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-02712-9.
  • Beaumont, Antony (1985). Busoni the Composer. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-13149-2.
  • Beaumont, Antony, ed. (1987). Busoni: Selected Letters. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-06460-8.
  • Carter, Huntly (1914). The Theatre of Max Reinhardt. New York: Mitchell Kennerley. Archive.org OCR text. Accessed 24 September 2009.
  • Couling, Della (2005). Ferruccio Busoni: A musical Ishmael. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-5142-3.
  • Dent, Edward J. (1933). Ferruccio Busoni: A Biography. London: Oxford University Press. (Reprint: London: Ernst Eulenberg, 1974. ISBN 0-903873-02-8.)
  • Kindermann, Jürgen (1980). Thematisch-chronologisches Verzeichnis der Werke von Ferruccio B. Busoni. Studien zur Musikgeschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts, vol. 19. Regensburg: Gustav Bosse Verlag [de]. ISBN 3-7649-2033-5.
  • Ley, Rosamond, translator (1938). Ferruccio Busoni: Letters to His Wife. London: Edward Arnold & Co.
  • Lo, Kii-Ming (1994). Kii-Ming Lo, Ping, Pong, Pang. Die Gestalten der Commedia dell'arte in Busonis und Puccinis »Turandot«-Opern, in Peter Csobádi, Ulrich Müller et al. (eds.), Die lustige Person auf der Bühne, Anif/Salzburg (Müller-Speiser) 1994, pp. 311–323.
  • Lo, Kii-Ming (1996). Kii-Ming Lo, Turandot auf der Opernbühne, Frankfurt/Bern/New York (Peter Lang) 1996, ISBN 3-631-42578-3.
  • Lo, Kii-Ming (2004). Kii-Ming Lo, Zur Entstehungsgeschichte von Ferruccio Busonis »Turandot«-Werkgruppe und ihrer musiktheatralischen Ästhetik, in Albrecht Riethmüller/Hyesu Shin (eds.), Busoni in Berlin. Facetten eines kosmopolitischen Komponisten, Stuttgart (Franz Steiner) 2004, pp. 143–175.
  • Lo, Kii-Ming/Maehder, Jürgen (2004). Kii-Ming Lo/Jürgen Maehder, Turandot de tui bian [The Transformations of »Turandot«], Taipei (Gao Tan Publishing Co.) 2004, ISBN 986-7542-50-9..
  • Roberge, Marc-André (1991). Ferruccio Busoni: a bio-bibliography. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-25587-3.
  • Schiller, Friedrich (1802). Turandot, Prinzessin von China. Ein tragicomisches Märchen nach Gozzi. Tübingen: J. G. Cotta'schen Buchhandlung. Google Books: Full preview. Accessed 19 September 2009.
  • Vollmöller, Karl (1911). Turandot chinesisches Märchenspiel von Carlo Gozzi; Deutsch von Karl Vollmoeller. Berlin: S. Fischer.
  • Vollmöller, Karl (1913). Turandot, Princess of China. A Chinoiserie in Three Acts. Authorized English version by Jethro Bithell. London: T. Fisher Unwin. Project Gutenberg. Accessed 15 September 2009.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Turandot (opera by Busoni) at Wikimedia Commons

turandot, busoni, opera, giacomo, puccini, turandot, other, uses, turandot, disambiguation, turandot, 1917, opera, with, spoken, dialogue, acts, ferruccio, busoni, busoni, prepared, libretto, german, based, play, same, name, count, carlo, gozzi, music, busoni,. For the opera by Giacomo Puccini see Turandot For other uses see Turandot disambiguation Turandot BV 273 is a 1917 opera with spoken dialogue and in two acts by Ferruccio Busoni Busoni prepared his own libretto in German based on the play of the same name by Count Carlo Gozzi The music for Busoni s opera is based on the incidental music and the associated Turandot Suite BV 248 which Busoni had written in 1905 for a production of Gozzi s play The opera is often performed as part of a double bill with Busoni s earlier one act opera Arlecchino TurandotOpera by Ferruccio BusoniPoster for the premiereLibrettistFerruccio BusoniLanguageGermanBased onCarlo Gozzi s play TurandotPremiere11 May 1917 1917 05 11 Zurich Opera House Contents 1 Composition of the music for Turandot 1 1 Source and previous versions 1 2 Incidental music and orchestral suite 1 3 Composition of the opera 1 4 Composer s revisions 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Instrumentation 5 Synopsis 5 1 Act 1 5 2 Act 2 6 Recordings 7 Other versions of the Turandot story 8 Detailed list of performances 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksComposition of the music for Turandot editSource and previous versions edit Carlo Gozzi s play Turandot first appeared in 1762 It was originally written to be performed in the small theatre of San Samuele in Venice and was deliberately written in the Commedia dell arte style as a reaction to the more modern realistic plays of Goldoni and others 1 Schiller made an adapted translation of Turandot which was published in 1802 2 Weber wrote his Incidental music for Turandot Op 37 for a production of this play It was composed in 1809 and included the earlier Overtura cinese Chinese Overture which he had composed on a Chinese theme in 1805 Busoni thought that between them Schiller and Weber had ruined a masterpiece of Italian literature 3 Incidental music and orchestral suite edit Gozzi s Turandot in one form or another occupied Busoni at various times in the years 1904 1917 He was very fond of fantastical and magical tales his immediately preceding work was the Piano Concerto Op 39 BV247 which included music from an unfinished adaptation of Adam Oehlenschlager s Aladdin 4 In 1904 Busoni began sketching incidental music for Gozzi s Chinese fable He also arranged a concert suite which was first performed in 1905 and published in 1906 A production of Gozzi s play with Busoni s music was mounted by Max Reinhardt in Berlin in 1911 and for the second and last time in London in 1913 For more information on the composition of the incidental music and the suite and the productions of the play with Busoni s music see the article on the Turandot Suite 5 Composition of the opera edit After the outbreak of World War I Busoni as an Italian found it increasingly difficult to stay in Berlin and eventually moved to neutral Zurich where he did not have to take sides Between late 1915 and August 1916 he was occupied with writing his one act opera Arlecchino but the Stadttheater municipal theatre in Zurich was unwilling to mount a production without a companion piece He swiftly wrote a libretto in German based on Gozzi s original and adapted his Turandot Suite into a short two act opera with some spoken dialogue 6 Busoni wrote to Egon Petri on 9 November 1916 The important question as to which piece should be coupled with the hour long Arlecchino so as to fill an evening my resultant difficulties and the desire to establish such a programme in a durably valid form have led me to the hasty decision to form an opera in two acts out of the material and substance of Turandot For a few weeks now I have been hard at work on this delightful task writing the libretto and music for a Turandot opera I am re writing the text completely and independently and bringing it closer in tone to a pantomime or stage play It is a more arduous task than I had initially assumed but it is coming easily to me The masque figures common to both pieces serve to link them although they otherwise contrast completely with each other 7 Busoni completed the opera Turandot in double quick time 300 pages in 100 days in late 1916 and it was first performed with Arlecchino as a double bill Busoni conducting in Zurich in 1917 Dent mentions how pleased Busoni was with his own workmanship 6 There are various oddities in Busoni s libretto which recall the play s Commedia dell arte roots characters with Italian names like Truffaldino and Pantalone Allah is praised in China and there are references to Venice St Mark s and gondolas The spoken dialogue harks back to Mozart s operas especially The Magic Flute 8 In comparison to Puccini s opera on the same subject Busoni retains the intimate unreal atmosphere of Gozzi s play 9 Busoni s princess Turandot is not quite so implacable her heart is readier to melt Composer s revisions edit Re using some of the material he had composed for the opera Busoni again revised the orchestral Turandot Suite in 1917 replacing the Funeral March of the last movement with Altoum s Warning BV 248b 10 Busoni also separately published Altoums Gebet from Act 2 newly written for the opera as Altoum s Prayer BV 277 op 49 no 1 for baritone and small orchestra Performance history editSee also Detailed list of performances The premiere performance of Busoni s Turandot took place on 11 May 1917 at the Stadttheater Zurich The producer was Hans Rogorsch and the designer Albert Isler Busoni s one act opera Arlecchino was also performed as part of a double bill 11 Turandot and Arlecchino were first performed in Germany on 20 October 1918 in Frankfurt with Gustav Brecher as the conductor 12 and again beginning on 26 January 1919 at the Cologne opera conducted by Otto Klemperer who had recently been appointed as First Conductor 13 The two operas were performed in Berlin on 19 May 1921 at the Berliner Staatsoper under the baton of the Wagnerian conductor Leo Blech with considerable success 14 The first performance in Italy without Arlecchino was on 29 November 1936 in Rome conducted by Fernando Previtali Previtali a Busoni champion went on to conduct performances in other Italian cities and conducted the premiere of the opera at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires in 1964 The first performance in England was in London on 19 August 1966 in an English translation by Lionel Salter The performance was broadcast on the BBC Third Programme The American premiere was a concert performance on 10 October 1967 in New York s Philharmonic Hall followed by a semi staged version on 28 January 1980 at the First Presbyterian Church in Berkeley California conducted by the 28 year old Kent Nagano a fully staged performance was given on 15 November 1986 by the Connecticut Grand Opera in Stamford with Gregory Stapp as Emperor Altoum Juan Luque Carmona as Calaf and Patricia Craig in the title role 12 Roles editRole Voice type Premiere cast 11 May 1917 11 Conductor Ferruccio Busoni Altoum emperor bass Laurenz Saeger PierothTurandot his daughter soprano Inez EnckeAdelma her confidante mezzo soprano Marie SmeikalKalaf tenor August RichterBarak his servant baritone Tristan RawsonQueen mother of Samarkand a Moor soprano Elisabeth RabbowTruffaldino chief eunuch tenor Eugen NusseltPantalone minister bass Heinrich KuhnTartaglia minister bass Wilhelm BockholtA singer mezzo soprano Marie SmeikalThe executioner silent Eduard SidingEight doctors chorus of slaves dancers mourners eunuchs soldiersInstrumentation edit3 flutes 3rd doubling piccolo 3 oboes 3rd doubling English horn 3 clarinets 3rd doubling bass clarinet 3 bassoons 3rd doubling contrabassoon 4 horns 4 trumpets 3 trombones 1 tuba timpani percussion glockenspiel triangle tambourine covered drum bass drum tam tam 2 harps soloists chorus strings 5 15 16 Synopsis editBusoni greatly simplified Gozzi s 5 act play into an opera of two acts of two scenes each 17 However the basic plot is the same Turandot daughter of the Emperor challenges all suitors for her hand with three riddles She will marry the one who answers correctly but those who fail are executed Kalaf an exiled prince in disguise takes up the challenge Act 1 edit Scene 1 Kalaf comes upon the picture discarded by an earlier executed suitor and determines to win Turandot Scene 2 Emperor Altoum complains of Turandot s intransigence Kalaf says he would rather die than fail to win Turandot Turandot enters with her maid Adelma who recognises the Prince but remains silent Kalaf correctly answers the three riddles and challenges Turandot to discover his name and parentage if she does so he will depart Act 2 edit Scene 1 Slave girls dance to a wordless choral version of Greensleeves 18 Turandot confesses her mixed feelings for the Prince Adelma says she knows the Prince s name and will tell Turandot if she can have her freedom Turandot agrees Scene 2 Turandot announces Kalaf s name to general consternation and he makes ready to depart But Turandot stops him saying he has awakened her heart The work closes with a final ensemble Was ist das alle Menschen bindet What is it that rules all men to which is the reply Die Liebe Love Recordings editBusoni Arlecchino amp Turandot Chorus amp Orchestra of the Opera de Lyon 19 20 Conductor Kent Nagano Principal singers Mechthild Gessendorf Turandot Stefan Dahlberg Kalaf Franz Josef Selig Altoum Gabriele Sima Adelma Falk Struckman Barak Anne Marie Rodde Queen Mother Markus Schafer Truffaldino Michael Kraus Pantalone Wolfgang Holzmair Tartaglia Label Virgin Classics VCD7 59313 2 2 CDs Busoni Turandot Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra 21 Conductor Gerd Albrecht Principal singers Rene Pape Altoum Linda Plech Turandot Gabriele Schreckenbach Adelma Josef Protschka Kalaf Friedrich Molsberger Barak Celina Lindsley Queen Mother Robert Worle Truffaldino Johannes Werner Prein Pantalone Gotthold Schwarz Tartaglia Label Capriccio 60 039 1 1 CD Other versions of the Turandot story editMain article Turandot Gozzi Puccini had heard about the 1911 Max Reinhardt production of Gozzi s play with Busoni s incidental music and this may have played a role in his decision to write his own version Andrea Maffei who also wrote the libretto for Verdi s I Masnadieri had translated his friend Schiller s version of Gozzi s play back into Italian 22 The librettists for Puccini s Turandot Adami and Simoni used Maffei s translation but also turned to Gozzi s original In addition they made reference to the libretto by Gazzoletti for a little known opera Turanda by Antonio Bazzini who had been one of Puccini s teachers at the Milan Conservatory As a result the libretto for Puccini s opera differs considerably from Gozzi s play Ashbrook and Powers note that several skillful changes in the falling action of the plot Busoni s Act 2 enabled Busoni to avoid the pitfalls which plagued Puccini s attempt to set Act 3 of his version of the story 23 Bertolt Brecht also prepared a version of the story 1953 54 Detailed list of performances editThe information in this list is from Roberge 12 unless otherwise noted 11 May 1917 Zurich Stadttheater Ferruccio Busoni conductor Inez Encke Turandot August Richter Kalaf Laurenz Saeger Pieroth Altoum premiere double bill with Arlecchino see Performance history above for more detail 20 October 1918 Frankfurt Oper Frankfurt Gustav Brecher conductor Else Gentner Fischer Turandot Erik Wirl Kalaf Hans Erl Altoum first performance in Germany double bill with Arlecchino 26 January 1919 Cologne Cologne Opera Otto Klemperer conductor double bill with Arlecchino 11 1920 Saarbrucken double bill with Arlecchino no further details 19 May 1921 Berlin Berlin State Opera Leo Blech conductor Lola Artot de Padilla Turandot double bill with Arlecchino 12 8 January 1922 Berlin double bill with Arlecchino no further details 1925 Mainz no further details 1926 Leipzig Oper Leipzig double bill with Arlecchino conducted by Oskar Braun 1928 Wiesbaden no further details 1930 Konigsberg Ludwig conductor no further details 4 October 1930 Mannheim Nationaltheater Mannheim Ernst Cremer conductor Else Schulz Turandot Helmut Neugebauer Kalaf Wilhelm Fenton Altoum 29 November 1936 Rome Auditorium EIAR Fernando Previtali conductor Gabriella Gatti Turandot Piero Pauli Kalaf Gregorio Pasetti Altoum concert version first performance in Italy 18 May 1940 Florence Teatro della Pergola Fernando Previtali conductor Maria Carbone Turandot Alessandro Ziliani Kalaf Alfredo Coletta Altoum 7 March 1942 Rome Teatro Reale del Opera Fernando Previtali conductor Maria Carbone Turandot Aurelio Marcato Kalaf Giulio Neri Altoum 12 January 1947 London broadcast Nordwestdeutscher Rundfunk Philipp Jarnach conductor Klara Ebers Turandot Wilhelm Luckert Kalaf Theo Herman Altoum first performance in Germany after the war 28 October 1947 Hamburg Hamburgische Staatsoper Arthur Gruber conductor Helene Werth Turandot Helmut Melchert Kalaf Sigmund Roth Altoum 21 January 1953 Rome Auditorium RAI Fernando Previtali conductor Magda Laszlo Turandot Amadeo Berdini Kalaf Antonio Cassinelli Altoum first performance in Italy after the war 5 December 1953 Naples Teatro San Carlo Gianandrea Gavazzeni conductor Anna de Cavalieri Turandot Giuseppe Campora Kalaf Raffaele Arie Altoum 1958 Landestheater Darmstadt Hans Zanotelli conductor Ursula Lippman Turandot double bill with Arlecchino 10 December 1959 Hamburg Norddeutscher Rundfunk Wolfgang Ebert conductor Edith Lang Turandot Heinz Hoppe Kalaf Ernst Wiemann Altoum 6 May 1961 Geneva Teatro Carlo Felice Franco Capuana conductor Anna de Cavalieri Turandot Renato Cioni Kalaf Paolo Montarsolo Altoum 17 February 1962 Milan La Scala Nino Sanzogno conductor Raina Kabaivanska Turandot Renato Cioni Kalaf Nicola Zaccaria Altoum Italian translation by Oriana Previtali 14 August 1964 Buenos Aires Teatro Colon Fernando Previtali conductor Margherita Roberti Turandot Carlo Cossutta Kalaf Jorge Algorta Altoum first performance outside Europe 1965 Berlin 1966 Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen 1966 Hamburg double bill with Arlecchino 1 February 1966 Berlin Deutsche Oper Berlin Giuseppe Patane conductor Annabelle Bernard Turandot Ernst Haefliger Kalaf Ivan Sardi Altoum 19 April 1966 London BBC 19 August 1966 London BBC Third Programme Broadcast performance Lawrence Leonard conductor Pauline Tinsley Turandot John Mitchinson Kalaf first performance in England 19 January 1967 Turin Auditorium RAI Mario Rossi conductor Floriana Cavalli Turandot Herbert Handt Kalaf Ferruccio Mazzoli Altoum 10 October 1967 New York City Philharmonic Hall Little Orchestra Society Thomas Scherman conductor Hanne Lore Kuhse Turandot William Brown Kalaf Guus Hoekman Altoum concert version first performance in the United States 13 November 1967 Cologne Westdeutscher Rundfunk Mario Rossi conductor Charlotte Berthold Turandot Eberhard Katz de Kalaf Eduard Wollitz de Altoum 8 March 1969 Stockholm first performance in Sweden 27 March 1973 Venice La Fenice Ettore Gracis conductor Virginia Zeani Turandot Angelo Mori Kalaf Mario Rinaudo Lorenzo Gaetani Altoum 1978 before May London Abbey Opera Cockpit Theatre 28 January 1980 Berkeley California First Presbyterian Church Berkeley Promenade Orchestra Kent Nagano conductor Betsy Bell Taylor Turandot Jeffrey Carney Kalaf William De Valentine Altoum semi staged version colloquial translation by Ross Halper 24 April 1980 Theater Trier Rainer Baum conductor Hara Savino Turandot Antonis J Constantino Kalaf Nick Herbosch Altoum double bill with Arlecchino 7 November 1985 Frankfurt am Main Hessischer Rundfunk Rundfunk Konzerte in der Alten Oper Sabine Hass Turandot Josef Protschka Kalaf Harald Stamm Altoum concert version 15 November 1986 Connecticut Grand Opera and Stamford State Opera Laurence Gilgore conductor Patricia Craig Turandot Juan Luque Carmona Kalaf Gregory Strapp Altoum repeated on 22 November 1986 in Bridgeport 23 October 1988 Wexford Wexford Festival Simon Joly conductor Kristine Ciesinski Turandot Milan Voldrich Kalaf Norman Bailey Altoum first performance in Ireland 11 November 1988 Oberhausen Theater Oberhausen Thomas Modos conductor Martha Winkelmann Turandot Max Voigt Kalaf Gottfried Driesch Altoum 06 February 2010 Sevilla Teatro de la Maestranza Pedro Halffter conductor concert version 24 9 March 2011 Dijon Opera de Dijon Daniel Kawka conductor 25 27 July 2012 Lisbon St Charles Theatre Moritz Gnann conductor Sonia Alcobaca Turandot Mario Joao Alves Kalaf Nuno Dias Altoum concert version 26 References editNotes Ashbrook and Powers 1991 pp 44 and 58 Schiller 1802 Schiller s 1802 version was freely translated into English verse by Sabilla Novello published in 1872 Gutenberg Project Accessed 19 September 2009 Couling 2005 p 204 Dent 1933 p 148 a b Beaumont 1985 p 76 a b Dent 1933 p 233 Beaumont 1987 pp 251 252 Couling 2005 p 300 Ashbrook and Powers p 58 Beaumont 1985 p 76 a b c Chapter XV Turandot in Beaumont 1985 pp 240 245 a b c d Roberge pp 335 341 Letter from Busoni to Otto Klemperer 26 September 1919 and footnote in Beaumont 1987 p 275 Dent 1933 pp 262 263 Kindermann pp 229 231 Roberge pp 32 33 Beaumont 1985 pp 77 241 Ronald Stevenson has determined that Busoni saw a famous 16th century manuscript of Greensleeves by William Ballet during a visit to Trinity College Dublin in 1903 and has noted that the song was originally connected with public executions In a diary entry from 9 October 1910 Busoni refers to Turandot as the lady with the green sleeves and the cover design for the original publication of the orchestral score of the Suite depicts Turandot in a costume with green sleeves Beaumont 1985 p 82 The song was also associated with Anne Boleyn s initial rejection of Henry VIII s sexual advances see Greensleeves William Lloyd Busoni Arlecchino amp Turandot Musical Times 112 1994 Review of the Nagano recording in The Gramophone November 1993 p 139 Retrieved on 2 February 2009 Capriccio 60 039 1 OCLC 611429107 Turandot fola tragicomica di Carlo Gozzi Imitate da Federico Schiller e tradotte dal cav Andrea Maffei 1863 Florence Successori Le Monnier Ashbrook and Powers 1991 pp 54 58 ABC 2 February 2010 El Maestranza estrena hoy Turandot de Busoni en version de concierto Retrieved 10 March 2015 in Spanish Diapason 11 March 2011 Vu et entendu Turandot de Busoni a Dijon Retrieved 10 March 2015 in French Festival ao Largo opera e Musica de Cena 27 28 julho Turandot Ferruccio Busoni opera em Versao de Concerto in Portuguese Retrieved 28 July 2012 Bibliography editAmbros August Wilhelm 1862 Geschichte der Musik Vol 1 Breslau F E C Leuckhart Google Books Full Preview Accessed 24 September 2009 Ashbrook William Powers Harold 1991 Puccini s Turandot The End of the Great Tradition Ch II pp 56 58 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 02712 9 Beaumont Antony 1985 Busoni the Composer London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 13149 2 Beaumont Antony ed 1987 Busoni Selected Letters New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 06460 8 Carter Huntly 1914 The Theatre of Max Reinhardt New York Mitchell Kennerley Archive org OCR text Accessed 24 September 2009 Couling Della 2005 Ferruccio Busoni A musical Ishmael Lanham MD Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 5142 3 Dent Edward J 1933 Ferruccio Busoni A Biography London Oxford University Press Reprint London Ernst Eulenberg 1974 ISBN 0 903873 02 8 Kindermann Jurgen 1980 Thematisch chronologisches Verzeichnis der Werke von Ferruccio B Busoni Studien zur Musikgeschichte des 19 Jahrhunderts vol 19 Regensburg Gustav Bosse Verlag de ISBN 3 7649 2033 5 Ley Rosamond translator 1938 Ferruccio Busoni Letters to His Wife London Edward Arnold amp Co Lo Kii Ming 1994 Kii Ming Lo Ping Pong Pang Die Gestalten der Commedia dell arte in Busonis und Puccinis Turandot Opern in Peter Csobadi Ulrich Muller et al eds Die lustige Person auf der Buhne Anif Salzburg Muller Speiser 1994 pp 311 323 Lo Kii Ming 1996 Kii Ming Lo Turandot auf der Opernbuhne Frankfurt Bern New York Peter Lang 1996 ISBN 3 631 42578 3 Lo Kii Ming 2004 Kii Ming Lo Zur Entstehungsgeschichte von Ferruccio Busonis Turandot Werkgruppe und ihrer musiktheatralischen Asthetik in Albrecht Riethmuller Hyesu Shin eds Busoni in Berlin Facetten eines kosmopolitischen Komponisten Stuttgart Franz Steiner 2004 pp 143 175 Lo Kii Ming Maehder Jurgen 2004 Kii Ming Lo Jurgen Maehder Turandot de tui bian The Transformations of Turandot Taipei Gao Tan Publishing Co 2004 ISBN 986 7542 50 9 Roberge Marc Andre 1991 Ferruccio Busoni a bio bibliography New York Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 25587 3 Schiller Friedrich 1802 Turandot Prinzessin von China Ein tragicomisches Marchen nach Gozzi Tubingen J G Cotta schen Buchhandlung Google Books Full preview Accessed 19 September 2009 Vollmoller Karl 1911 Turandot chinesisches Marchenspiel von Carlo Gozzi Deutsch von Karl Vollmoeller Berlin S Fischer Vollmoller Karl 1913 Turandot Princess of China A Chinoiserie in Three Acts Authorized English version by Jethro Bithell London T Fisher Unwin Project Gutenberg Accessed 15 September 2009 External links edit nbsp Media related to Turandot opera by Busoni at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turandot Busoni amp oldid 1164961755, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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