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ISMN:
979-0-9002171-1-0
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Richard
Wagner
Arrangement: James Francis
Brown
£25.95
+
£3.00
p&p
€30.95 +
€5.75
p&p
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Product Description
Two complete numbers from an early comic opera
by Wagner that were discovered in 1994. Published here for the first
time, this full orcehstral score also features an essay (in English and
German) by Barry Millington.
As Millington says in The Wagner Journal
(vol.1 No 3 - Happy Families: A Wagner Singspiel
Rediscovered):
“The likelihood of previously unknown
music of Wagner’s coming to light over a century after his death might
be thought remote. Yet that is exactly what happened in the summer of
1994, when sketches for Wagner’s youthful comic opera
Männerlist größer als Frauenlist oder Die
glückliche Bärenfamilie (Men are
more Cunning than Women, or The Happy Bear Family), WWV48, previously
thought to be irretrievably lost, surfaced in a private
collection. Männerlist, which
dates from 1838 – in other words immediately prior to
Rienzi and Der fliegende
Holländer – was to have been an opera in the light French
style. Why was Wagner contemplating writing an opera in what was
surely an antipathetic style to him? What would it have sounded
like? And why did he abandon it?”
In the autumn of 2006, Millington gave the
sketches to James Francis Brown to see if it might be possible to bring
them to life. The Royal
Opera House became interested in the project and when it seemed clear
that the material was indeed suitable for reconstruction James Francis
Brown was commissioned to transcribe, realise and orchestrate the
sketches. A date was set for a Wagner
premiere!
Working on the
sketches
Although each of the two movements
was found to be complete in formal and melodic content, the harmonic
and textural implications were often ambiguous. I had to work with
photocopies of Wagner’s hasty and nearly illegible autograph piano
drafts. This sometimes consisted of a melodic line and sporadic base
support. It was also necessary to decipher the libretto which was
written inFraktur
– an antiquated Gothic
script. Fortunately I understood German well enough to attempt a
translation of the texts (admittedly with the help of a good
dictionary) which was necessary for me to understand the dramatic
emphasis in the realisation of the harmonies and
orchestration.
So
the first stage was to make a transcript of what actually existed. This
was fascinating but time-consuming (often involving a magnifying
glass!). The next stage demanded an intuitive leap and was a more risky
affair. I am not a musicologist so my approach was rather to “inhabit”
these somewhat tenuous ideas as though they had been my own and then to
measure my inclinations against the style and atmosphere of the
1830s.
When I had
arrived at a full harmonic realisation, I then orchestrated the
material. Here there was, necessarily, more of a compromise and
awareness of the appropriate forces since I had to deploy the
orchestral manner of the early 19thCentury. Although the judgement of
timbre, texture and figuration was still mine, there were various
performance and instrumental techniques which had to be observed
and
assimilated.
The première - October
13th
2007
There was quite a sense of
excitement at the première in the Linbury theatre. Two rising
stars, from the world of opera (Ailish Tynan and Robert Murray)
took on the main roles with gusto and Stephen Barlow conducted
the South Bank Sinfonia and the ROH chorus (Chorus Master,
Rennato Balsadonna) in what was a very successful
première.
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