Ritter Blaubart

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Ritter Blaubart (Knight Bluebeard) is a fairy-tale opera (German: Märchenoper) in three acts by the Austrian composer Emil Nikolaus von Reznicek. Herbert Eulenberg wrote the German libretto, based on his own five-act play with the same title, which had been first performed unsuccessfully at the Lessing Theater in Berlin in 1906.[1]

Composition history

Reznicek's first sketches date from the autumn of 1915. Eulenberg revised the text of his play in consultation with the composer, reducing the number of acts to three (the original acts one and two, and the original acts four and five were both condensed to one act). Several cuts were made, and a few minor scenes were eliminated. This resulted in the story becoming much more focused on the psychology and pathological character of the title figure. Reznicek composed the music during 1917-18.[1] The score was published by Universal Edition Vienna.[2]

Performance history

After an unsuccessful attempt to get the opera staged in Berlin in 1918 (despite the support of Richard Strauss), it was first performed on 29 January 1920 at the Darmstadt State Theater, with Michael Balling conducting and Johannes Bischoff in the title role.[2] The same year, further performances took place at the Berlin State Opera (first performance on 31 October 1920 conducted by Leo Blech, followed by a further twenty-six performances during the following six years),[1] and also in Vienna and Leipzig.[3]

Roles

Role Voice type[2] Premiere cast
29 January 1920
(Conductor: Michael Balling)
Knight Bluebeard (Ritter Blaubart) baritone Johannes Bischoff
Count Nikolaus (Graf Nikolaus) bass
Werner, his son tenor
Judith, his daughter soprano
Agnes, his daughter soprano
Josua, Bluebeard's blind servant tenor
The Pastor (Der Pfarrer) bass
Hinz, a graverobber bass
Ratte, a graverobber tenor

Instrumentation

The orchestral score requires:

Recordings

In 2003 CPO released the world premiere recording. This recording was made in March 2002 with Michail Jurowski conducting the Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra, and baritone David Pittman-Jennings in the title role.[4][5]

References

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