Riders to the Sea (opera)
Ralph Vaughan Williams |
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Operas
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Riders to the Sea is a short one-act opera by Ralph Vaughan Williams, based on the play of the same name by John Millington Synge. The composer completed the score in 1927,[1] but it was not premiered until 1 December 1937, at the Royal College of Music, London. The opera remained largely the province of students and amateurs until it entered the repertoire of Sadler's Wells in 1953.[2]
Vaughan Williams set Synge's text essentially intact, with only a small number of changes. Although the vocal score had been in print since 1936, the full orchestral score was not published until 1973.[3] The composer Edmund Rubbra has characterised this work as less an opera than a "spoken drama raised in emotional power and expressiveness to the nth degree".[4] Hugh Ottaway and Michael Kennedy have commented on musical connections between the opera and Vaughan Williams's later Symphony No. 6.[3][5] Caireann Shannon has noted that Vaughan Williams deliberately avoided use of folksong in the music, and instead relied on the rhythms inherent in Synge's text for the composition.[6]
Roles
Role | Voice type | Premiere Cast, 1 December 1937 (Conductor: Malcolm Sargent) |
---|---|---|
Bartley | baritone | Alan Coed |
Cathleen | soprano | Janet Smith-Miller |
Maurya | contralto | Olive Hall |
Nora | soprano | Marjorie Steventon |
The woman | mezzo-soprano | Grace Wilkinson |
Synopsis
Before the opera begins: Maurya, an elderly Irishwoman, has lost her husband, father-in-law, and four of her six sons at sea.
Maurya's daughters Nora and Cathleen receive word that a body that may be their brother Michael, Maurya's fifth son, has washed up on shore in Donegal, far to the north. The sixth and last son, Bartley, is planning to go to Galway fair to sell horses. Maurya is fearful of the sea winds and pleads with Bartley to stay, but Bartley insists on going and will ride "on the red mare with the grey pony behind him". Maurya predicts that by nightfall she will have no living sons, and her daughters chide her for sending Bartley off with an ill word. Maurya goes after Bartley to bless his voyage. Nora and Cathleen receive clothing from the drowned corpse that confirms it as their brother. Maurya returns home, claiming to have seen the ghost of Michael riding behind Bartley and begins lamenting the loss of the men in her family to the sea. Nora then sees villagers carrying a load, which turns out to be the corpse of Bartley, who has fallen off his horse into the sea and drowned. Maurya laments: "They are all gone now, and there isn't anything more the sea can do to me."
Recordings
- EMI Classics CDM7647302 (CD reissue of the first recording): Norma Burrowes, Margaret Price, Helen Watts, Benjamin Luxon, Pauline Stevens; Ambrosian Singers; Orchestra Nova; Meredith Davies, conductor
- Chandos CHAN 9392: Linda Finnie, Ingrid Attrot, Lynne Dawson, Karl Morgan Daymond, Pamela Helen Stephen; Sinfonia Chorus; Northern Sinfonia; Richard Hickox, conductor
- Kultur D4390 (DVD reissue of the 1988 Kultur VHS recording D20475): Sarah Walker, Yvonne Brennan, Kathleen Tynan, Hugh Mackey, [Mary Sheridan de Bruin, Martin Murphy; Radio Telefís Éireann Chamber Choir and Concert Orchestra; Bryden Thomson, conductor
References
Notes
- ↑ Ottaway, Hugh,"Riders to the Sea", The Musical Times, August 1952, pp. 358–360 (subscription required)
- ↑ Chissell, Joan. "Opera in London: Sadler's Wells – Riders to the Sea", The Musical Times, August 1953, pp. 372–373 (subscription required)
- 1 2 Ottaway, Hugh, "Riders to the Sea", The Musical Times, January 1973, p. 45 (subscription required)
- ↑ Rubbra, Edmund, "The Later Vaughan Williams". Music & Letters, January 1937, pp. 1–8 (subscription required)
- ↑ Kennedy, Michael. "The Unknown Vaughan Williams", Proceedings of the Royal Musical Association, 1972–1973, p. 32 (subscription required)
- ↑ Shannon, Caireann. "The Duty of Words to Music: Ralph Vaughan Williams's Riders to the Sea", The Musicology Review (2), 2005–06
Source
- Holden, Amanda (Ed.), The New Penguin Opera Guide, New York: Penguin Putnam, 2001. ISBN 0-14-029312-4