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Les Troyens

Les Troyens

Les Troyens - The Trojans: Opera in 5 ActsBerlioz composed Les Troyens towards the end of his life, drawing on Virgil’s epic poem The Aeneid, which he had admired since his childhood. In his Memoirs he recounts how hisfather, a country doctor, read Virgil to him and how the story of Dido’s tragic fate reduced him to tears which he tried hard to conceal.The score was finished in April 1858, but he was unable to persuade the Paris Opera tomount it (his earlier opera Benvenuto Cellini had been a failure there in 1838), and eventually he agreed to allow the last three acts to be performed under the title Les Troyens Carthage. This took place at theThé tre-lyrique,an enterprising but ill-equipped theatre, in November 1863, and although it was much admired, there were no more performances before Berlioz’s death in 1869.In the history of French music, Les Troyens stand out as a grandopera that avoided the shallow glamour of Meyerbeer and Halévy, but therefore paid the price of long neglect. In our own time the opera has finally come to be seen as one of the greatest operas of the 19th century.Thevocal score to “Les Troyens” presents the text Berlioz conceived as a great five act opera. During the composition of this work between 1856 and 1858 and up until June 1863, Berlioz perceived “Les Troyens ” as one opera. Becauseof performance difficulties, the composition had to be divided into two operas, “La Prise de Troie” and “Les Toyens Carthage”.The vocal score is based on the three-volume New Berlioz Edition and also on the one-volumevocal score edition that under Berlioz’s supervision, was privately printed in 1861-62 and then distributed. The appendix contains two complete scenes: The Sinon scene from the first act and the original finale from the fifthact.Urtext of the New Berlioz EditionFull score (BA5442) and vocal score (BA5442-90) available for salePerformance material (BA5442-72) available for hire

SEK 1130.00
1

Les nuits d'été for solo voice and orchestra : op. 7 Hol. 81B / Six Songs

Les nuits d'été for solo voice and orchestra : op. 7 Hol. 81B / Six Songs

Hector Berlioz: Les nuits d'Ete for Solo Voice & Orchestra Op.7 Hol.81B . Version for medium voice. BA 5786-90: Vocal score voice & piano Berlioz composed these songs in 1840–41, between thecomposition of Roméo et Juliette and La damnation de Faust. The poems were taken from a collection entitled La comédie de la mort by Théophlie Gautier, published in 1838. The songs were for mezzo-soprano ortenor with piano accompaniment, and were published as a cycle under the title Les nuits d’été in 1841. The second and fourth songs, Le spectre de la rose and Absence, were performed a few times at thatperiod,and Absence was sung twice in February 1843 by Marie Recio on Berlioz’s first tour of Germany. For Marie, who later became his second wife, Berlioz at once orchestrated the song for mezzo-soprano and small orchestra.A dozen years later Berlioz orchestrated the remaining five songs of the cycle, which appeared in its orchestral form in 1856. Two of these songs, Le spectre de la rose and Sur les lagunes, were now transposed to a lower key, sothat the cycle was no longer within the compass of a single voice. 1: Villanelle F major 2: Le spectre de la rose B major 3: Sur les lagunes F minor 4: Absence E-flat major5: Au cimetière B-flat major 6: L’îsle inconnue D major Urtext of the New Berlioz Edition Full scores and parts available for hire (BA5786-72) English &German translations of the song texts printed sepatarely

SEK 266.00
1

Les Fêtes de lHymen et de lAmour : Ballet héroïque in a prologue and 3 acts

Les Fêtes de lHymen et de lAmour : Ballet héroïque in a prologue and 3 acts

With a brief foreword (Fr/Eng) containing salient information on the genesis of the work, the synopsis and the edition. Les Fêtes de l’Hymen et de l’Amour was performed on 15 March 1747on the occasion of the second marriage of the Dauphin Louis Ferdinand de Bourbon and Maria Josepha of Saxony in the Manège de la Grande Écurie in Versailles. This second collaboration between Rameau and Cahusac makesuse of the “ballet héroïque” genre, usually known today as “opéra-ballet” based on various story lines which run independently of each other. The score is based on a libretto inspiredbyEgyptian mythology and freemasonry. Rameau's “Les Fêtes de l'Hymen et de l'Amour” was long considered second-rate because its première was associated with a political event. Yet this balletabounds in novel dramaturgical effects that foreshadow his later operas, such as “Zaïs”, “Zoroastre” and “Les Boréades”. Working together with his librettist Cahusac, Rameau soughtto weave the dance numbers, choruses and stage machinery more tightly into the main plot. He also experimented with stylistic devices unique to this work, the most famous being unquestionably the scene in which the Nile overflowsits banks (an impressive ten-voice double chorus with solo voices and orchestra) and the sextet from “Aruéris”, a scoring found nowhere else in his œuvre. For the first time, this scholarly-criticaledition of “Les Fêtes de l'Hymen et de l'Amour” presents a reference version of the work that is based on all the major sources for both the libretto and the music, including two recent musical discoveries. Asmost of the performance material for the première has vanished, this edition is based on the version prepared for the Académie Royale de Musique in 1748.

SEK 664.00
1

Les Nuits D'Ete : op. 7 Hol. 81B / Six Melodies

Les Indes Galantes RCT 44 : Ballet Heroïque With A Prologue and Four Acts

Hoffmanns Erzahlungen -Les Contes dHoffmann : An Operatic Fantasy in Five Acts

Les Paladins RCT 51 : Comédie-ballet in three Acts

Les Paladins RCT 51 : Comédie-ballet in three Acts

This edition presents a further dramatic jewel for the stage by Jean-Philippe Rameau. It comes with a vocal score for study and rehearsals as well as with a compilation of the purely instrumental parts for performance as a suitein the concert hall.In view of the wealth of the work’s musical treasures and the stylistic innovations similar to the “Boréades” the rather frosty reception of the premiere series in the spring of 1760 seems completelyincomprehensible to us today. It led to this Comédie ballet not being performed until well into the 20th century. The story that the ballet tells is based on a fable by La Fontaine, “Le Petit chien qui secoue de l’argent et despierreries” (i.e. “The little dog who shakes silver and stones”). In medieval Veneto, the guardian Anselme undermines the love affairs of his ward Argies. Scenes of tragic expression are contrasted with folk-comic ones: and lastbut not least, the sexually ambiguous fairy Manto may have caused difficulties for the bold work at the Paris Opéra.The critical new edition published as part of the “Opera omnia Rameau” series offers the final version,supplemented in the appendix by the variants of the original version. Since “Les Paladins” remained unpublished during Rameau’s lifetime and was also not included in the “Œuvres complètes”, this is the first edition of the work.It satisfies both scholarly demand and the practical needs of musicians.

SEK 664.00
1

Music to Soliman second, ou Les Trois Sultanes : Comédie (Laxenburg 1765)

Les Indes Galantes RCT 44 : Ballet Heroïque With A Prologue and Four Acts