Oresteia (opera)

Oresteia (Орестея in Cyrillic) is an opera in three parts, eight tableaux, with music by Sergei Taneyev, composed during 1887-1894. The composer titled this work, his only opera, a "musical trilogy." The Russian libretto was adapted by A.A. Wenkstern from the The Oresteia of Aeschylus. The opera was premiered on October 29 [O.S. October 17] 1895 at the Mariinsky Theatre. Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov wrote that soon after the premiere, the Mariinsky management made cuts to the opera, which angered Taneyev.[1]

The best-known excerpt from Oresteia is the entr'acte played before the second tableau of Part III, "The Temple of Apollo at Delphi." This passage, as well as other themes from the opera, figured into one of Taneyev's other works, namely, his orchestral overture entitled Oresteia (1889). This overture—not included in the printed score of this opera—constitutes a separate 18-minute-long symphonic poem based on themes from the trilogy.

Harlow Robinson has noted that the opera avoids dramatic treatment of the murders of Agamemnon, Cassandra, Clytemnestra and Aegisthus, depicting those events off-stage.[1]

Contents

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast

(Conductor: - )
Agamemnon, king of Argos bass
Clytemnestra, his wife alto
Aegisthus, his first cousin baritone
Cassandra, a Trojan prisoner soprano
A Guard bass
Elektra, daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra soprano
Orestes, son of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra tenor
Apollo Loxias baritone
Pallas Athena soprano
Areopagite bass
Libation-Bearer bass
Part 1: People, female servants of Clytemnestra, warriors, captives, bodyguards. Part 2: Female servants of Clytemnestra. Part 3: Furies, Athenian people, areopagites participating in the pan-Athenian procession

Synopsis

Argos, before the Atrides palace.

Part 1: Agamemnon

Part 2: The Libation Bearers

Tableau 1: The interior of the Atrides palace

Tableau 2: An olive grove

Tableau 3: Setting as in Part 1

Part 3: The Eumenides

Tableau 1: A deserted place on the seashore

Tableau 2: Interior of Apollo's temple at Delphi

Tableau 3: Athens

Selected recordings

This performance was later released on two cds on the Melodiya label, but is sadly long out of print. (Reference: Amazon/classical music/Taneyev:Oresteia)

References

  1. ^ a b c Robinson, Harlow (1991). "The Oresteia. Sergei Taneyev". The Opera Quarterly 8 (1): 159–161. doi:10.1093/oq/8.1.159. http://oq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/8/1/159. Retrieved 2007-09-16. 
  2. ^ Norris, Geoffrey, Review of Taneyev's Oresteia (1980). The Musical Times, 121 (1644): p. 109.

Bibliography

External links