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Henry Faust for tenor and piano

Klassische Musik/Oper • 1993 • Texter: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
 
     
 

Henry Faust for tenor and piano

Titel nach Uploader: Gregory Sullivan Isaacs: Henry Faust for tenor and piano


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Verkäufer Musik Fabrik
PDF, 2.77 Mb ID: SM-000323565 Datum des Uploads: 14 Jan 2018
Instrumentierung
Klavier, Tenor
Partitur für
Solo, Klavierbegleitung
Art der Partitur
Klavierauszug mit Singstimmen
Satz, Nr.
1 bis 1 von 1
Übersetzer
Anna Swanwick
Verleger
Musik Fabrik
Schwierigkeitsgrad
Sehr schwer
Länge
95'0
Described as a « tour de force«  during the opera’s initial run of performances “Henry Faust” by Gregory Sullivan Isaacs is a three-act, one character opera based on Goëthe’s play as translated by Anna Swanwich (1859) with a libretto by the composer. It was premièred at the Circle Theatre in Chicago on April 11, 1993 with the Composer as Faust and Kevin Hinton, pianist

“Henry Faust” started out as a thought about the “essence” of opera. Isaacs thought that one singer, one piano, and a black box theater were all that was really needed to achieve “opera-ness”. Goethe’s play, “Faust,” immediately came to mind. The tale of the professor who makes a deal with the devil for infinite knowledge and the restoration of youth, only to betray himself by lust, seemed perfect.
The three-act opera is for tenor and piano and in a Goethe-era English translation by Anna Swanwick. She was the leading translator of Goethe of her day and one of the first advocates for women’s rights. Every word Faust sings is a line from the play.

The opera is set in a miserable single-occupancy hotel room furnished with an iron cot, a beat-up dresser and a tattered arm chair. Faust, disheveled and in his pajamas, lives out the drama. The ensuing events, the feverish creations of an addled brain, are all real to Faust. He sees and interacts with the other two characters – the devil and Gretchen – and flies to hell to dance at the Witches Sabbath.

Both the tenor and piano parts are equally demanding and require artists of the first order. The tenor part covers a great range – both vocally and dramatically. The piano part requires a virtuoso and musically expresses all of the imaginary characters.

SOME SELECTED HENRY FAUST REVIEWS

“You can add Henry Faust to that short list of successful single-singer operas (Schoenberg’s Ewartung and Poulenc’s La Voix Humaine) ... it proved to be a moving experience. Isaacs’ music, cast in traditional forms, such as fugue, passacaglia, rondo and variation, is always accessible... often strikingly beautiful, as in the Ländler that closes act two.”
THE DETROIT FREE PRESS (John Guinn) - Detroit


“Written in what Isaacs calls ‘refreshed tonality,’ this lush, supplely intense music serves the drama well ... from the despairing agitato of Faust's opening agonies to the lyrical frenzy of his first glimpse of Gretchen to a hushed declaration of love as tender as we could wish... Isaacs' tour de force certainly has a future.”
THE CHICAGO READER (Larry Bommer) - Chicago


“...the first (full evening) operatic monodrama ever promises to give Goethe's thrice-told tale a fresh contemporary slant… a theater piece that uses opera as its language... a prototype of a new kind of small theater piece, eminently practical at a time of reduced opera company budgets... (Isaacs) brings solid professional credits ... an experienced conductor as well as composer/performer.”
THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE (John von Rhein) – Chicago
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