Melusine (Reimann)

Melusine
Opera by Aribert Reimann

The composer in 2011
Librettist Claus H. Henneberg
Language German
Based on Melusine
by Yvan Goll
Premiere 1971 (1971)
Schwetzingen Festival

Melusine is a 1971 German-language opera by Aribert Reimann, on a libretto by Claus H. Henneberg after Melusine, a 1920 play in four acts by Yvan Goll which transposes the legendary water-spirit to Goll's time. The opera was written for the Schwetzingen Festival, where it premiered in May 1971. It was recorded in 2010.

History

Melusine, Aribert Reimann's second opera, was written on the seventh commission from the Süddeutscher Rundfunk for a new opera for the Schwetzingen Festival, following for example Hans Werner Henze's Elegie für junge Liebende (1961) and Fortner's In seinem Garten liebt Don Perlimplin Belisa (1962).[1] The libretto was written in German by Claus H. Henneberg, based on a 1920 play of the same name by Yvan Goll,[2] which was again based on Mélusine, a French-language libretto written by Goll for an earlier – possibly unperformed – opera by Marcel Mihalovici in 1920.[3]

The title refers to the legendary water-spirit. Derived from French legend and later a German folk book by Thüring von Ringoltingen, the topic is transposed to modern everyday life ("modernes Alltagsleben") in France before World War I.[1][4] The main character is married to a real estate agent, but still a virgin, focused on the preservation of a local park (or forest) that she sees filled with nature spirits. She is unable to prevent that a castle is built on the land, a building in which she looses her virginity and dies.[2][4]

Melusine premiered at the opening of the festival Schlosstheater Schwetzingen in May 1971.[1] The opera was recorded by Wergo in 2010, from a live performance at the Staatstheater Nürnberg.[2] A 1974 handbook on opera production notes the features of aleatoric passages, dissonances and atonality.[4] A reviewer of The Guardian described the musical language is neo-expressionist, with writing for voices in declamatory style and with demanding coloraturas.[2] A reviewer of the premiere, writing for the weekly Die Zeit, found the vocal writing for the three main characters convincing, and compared the work's expressivity to Alban Berg's Lulu and its atmosphere to Debussy's Pelleas et Melisande, noting the similarities of the three female characters.[1]

In 2016, a production by the Berlin University of the Arts, where Reimann had been a professor of contemporary Lied, honoured the composer's 80th birthday.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Schwinger, Wolfram (7 May 1971). "Aribert Reimanns neue Oper in Schwetzingen uraufgeführt: Ein Stück Lulu in Melusine". Die Zeit (in German). Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Clements, Andrew (19 August 2010). "Reimann: Melusine". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  3. The Oxford Dictionary of Music 0199578540 2013
  4. 1 2 3 Eaton, Quaintance (1974). Melusine. Opera Production II: A Handbook. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816657544.
  5. Pachl, Peter P. (11 July 2016). "Das Geheimnis exponierter Töne – Aribert Reimanns „Melusine“ an der Universität der Künste Berlin". Neue Musikzeitung (in German). Retrieved 7 July 2017.
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