Everything about Carmina Burana Orff totally explained
Carmina Burana is a scenic
cantata composed by
Carl Orff between 1935 and 1936. It is based on 24 of the poems found in the
medieval collection
Carmina Burana. Its full
Latin title is
Carmina Burana: Cantiones profanae cantoribus et choris cantandae comitantibus instrumentis atque imaginibus magicis ("Songs of
Beuern: Secular songs for singers and
choruses to be sung together with instruments and magic images.")
Carmina Burana is part of
Trionfi, the musical
triptych that also includes the cantata
Catulli Carmina and
Trionfo di Afrodite. The best-known movement is "
O Fortuna" that opens and closes the piece.
Text
Orff first encountered the text in
John Addington Symonds's 1884 publication,
Wine, Women, and Song, which included English translations of 46 poems from the collection. Michel Hofmann, a young law student and Latin and Greek enthusiast, assisted Orff in the selection and organization of 24 of these poems into a
libretto, mostly in
Latin verse, with a small amount of
Middle High German and Old
Provençal. The selection covers a wide range of secular topics, as familiar in the 13th century as they're in the 21st century: the fickleness of
fortune and
wealth, the ephemeral nature of life, the joy of the return of Spring, and the pleasures and perils of
drinking,
gluttony,
gambling and
lust.
Instrumentation
Carmina Burana is scored for 3
flutes (two doubling
piccolo), 3
oboes (one doubling
English horn), 3
clarinets in B and A (one doubling
E clarinet, one doubling
bass clarinet), 2
bassoons,
contrabassoon, 4
horns in F, 3
trumpets in B and C, 3
trombones,
tuba, 2
pianos,
celesta, a large percussion section and
strings.
The percussion section consists of 8
timpani (one piccolo), 2
snare drums,
bass drum,
triangle,
antique cymbals,
crash cymbals,
suspended cymbals,
ratchet,
castanets,
sleigh bells,
tam-tam, 3
tambourines,
tubular bells, 3
bells, 3
glockenspiels and
xylophone.
The vocal parts include
soprano solo,
tenor solo,
baritone solo, soli of 3 tenors, baritone, and 2
basses, a large mixed
choir (soprano,
alto, tenor, bass), a chamber choir (soprano, alto, tenor, bass) and a children's choir (
ragazzi).
A reduced version for soloists, mixed choir, children's choir, 2 pianos and percussion was prepared by Orff's disciple
Wilhelm Killmayer in 1956 and authorised by Orff himself, to afford smaller ensembles the opportunity of performing the piece.
An arrangement for wind ensemble was prepared by Juan Vicente Mas Quiles (b. 1921), who wanted to both to give wind bands a chance to perform the work and to facilitate performances in cities that have a high quality choral union and wind band but lack a symphony orchestra. A performance of this arrangement was recorded by the North Texas Wind Symphony under
Eugene Corporon. In writing this transcription, Quiles maintained the original chorus, percussion, and piano parts.
Structure
Carmina Burana is structured into five major sections, containing thirteen
movements total. Orff indicates
attacca markings between all the movements within each scene.
- Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi ("Fortuna, Empress of the World")
- Primo vere ("Spring") - includes the internal scene Uf dem Anger ("In the Meadow", "On the Lawn")
- In Taberna ("In the Tavern")
- Cour d'amours ("Court of Love")
- Blanziflor et Helena ("Blanziflor (Blanchefleur) and Helena (Helen of Troy)")
Much of the compositional structure is based on the idea of the turning
Fortuna Wheel. The drawing of the wheel found on the first page of the
Burana Codex includes four phrases around the outside of the wheel:
» "Regnabo (I shall reign), Regno (I reign/I am reigning), Regnavi (I have reigned), Sum sine regno (I am without a kingdom)".
Within each scene, and sometimes within a single movement, the wheel of fortune turns, joy turning to bitterness, and hope turning to grief.
O Fortuna, the first poem in the
Schmeller edition, completes this circle, forming a compositional frame for the work through being both the opening and closing movements.
Musical style
Orff's style demonstrates a desire for directness of speech and of access.
Carmina Burana contains little or no
development in the classical sense, and
polyphony is also conspicuously absent.
Carmina Burana avoids overt harmonic complexities, a fact which many musicians and critics have pointed out, such as
Ann Powers of the
New York Times. Considering the complicated compositional techniques favored by almost all other renowned composers of the day, such as
Edgard Varèse, the work may be considered in this respect extremely bold.
Orff was influenced melodically by late Renaissance and early Baroque models including
William Byrd and
Claudio Monteverdi. It is a common misconception that Orff based the melodies of
Carmina Burana on
neumeatic melodies: while many of the lyrics in the
Burana Codex are enhanced with neumes, almost none of these melodies had been deciphered at the time of Orff's composition, and none of them had served Orff as a melodic model. His shimmering orchestration shows a deference to
Stravinsky. In particular, Orff's music is very reminiscent of Stravinsky's earlier work,
Les Noces (
The Wedding).
Rhythm for Orff, as for Stravinsky, is often the primary musical element. Overall, it
sounds rhythmically straightforward and simple, but the metre will change freely from one measure to the next. While the rhythmic arc in a section is taken as a whole, a measure of five may be followed by one of seven, to one of four, and so on, often with
caesura marked between them. These constant rhythmic changes combined with the caesura create a very "conversational" feel — so much so that the rhythmic complexities of the piece are often overlooked.
Some of the solo arias pose bold challenges for singers: the only solo tenor aria,
Olim lacus colueram, must be sung almost completely in falsetto to demonstrate the suffering of the character (in this case, a burning swan). The baritone arias often demand high notes not commonly found in baritone repertoire, and parts of the baritone aria
Dies nox et omnia must be sung in falsetto: a unique example in baritone repertoire. Also noted is the solo soprano aria,
Dulcissima which demands extremely high notes. Orff intended this aria for a regular soprano, not a coloratura one, so that the musical strain would be obvious.
Staging
Orff developed a dramatic concept he called "Theatrum Mundi" in which music, movement, and speech were inseparable. Babcock writes that "Orff's artistic formula limited the music in that every musical moment was to be connected with an action on stage. It is here that modern performances of
Carmina Burana fall short of Orff's intentions." Although
Carmina Burana was intended as a staged work involving dance, choreography, visual design and other stage action, the piece is now usually performed in concert halls as a cantata.
Reception
Carmina Burana was first staged in
Frankfurt by the
Frankfurt Opera on
June 8 1937 (Conductor:
Bertil Wetzelsberger, Choir
Cäcilienchor, staging by
Otto Wälterlin and sets and costumes by
Ludwig Sievert). Shortly after the greatly successful premiere, Orff wrote the following letter to his publisher,
Schott Music:
» "Everything I've written to date, and which you have, unfortunately, printed, can be destroyed. With Carmina Burana my collected works begin."
Several performances were repeated elsewhere in Germany, and though the
Nazi bureaucracy was at first nervous about the erotic tone of some of the poems, they eventually embraced it and it became the most famous piece of music composed in
Nazi Germany. The popularity of the work continued to rise after the war, and by the 1960s
Carmina Burana was well established as part of the international classic repertory.
Alex Ross writes: "[AlthoughOrff had collaborated with the Nazis] the music itself commits no sins simply by being and remaining popular. That 'Carmina Burana' has appeared in hundreds of films and television commercials is proof that it contains no diabolical message, indeed that it contains no message whatsoever."
(External Link
)
In retrospect the desire he expressed in the letter to his publisher has by and large been fulfilled: No other composition of his approaches its renown, as evidenced in both pop culture's appropriation of
O Fortuna and the classical world's persistent programming and recording of the work. In the United States,
Carmina Burana represents one of the few box office certainties in 20th-century music.
Notable recordings
Eugen Jochum with the Chor und Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin and Gundula Janowitz, Gerhard Stolze, and Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. Recorded October 1967 in Berlin's Ufa-Studio, released 1968 (Deutsche Grammophon). This version was endorsed by Carl Orff himself and was the first choice of the BBC Radio 3 CD Review "Building a Library" review in 1995 (External Link
).
Riccardo Muti with Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus and Arleen Auger, John van Kesteren, and Jonathan Summers. Recorded 1979 (EMI), featured in the top three of BBC Radio 3's review and is also recommended by Classics Today (External Link
)
Leonard Slatkin with Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, RCA 09026 61673-2, featured in the top three of BBC Radio 3's review
James Levine with Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus and June Anderson, Phillip Creech, and Bernd Weikl. Recorded 1984 (Deutsche Grammophon). This version won the 1987 Grammy Award for Best Choral Performance.
Christian Thielemann with Chor und Orchester der Deutschen Oper Berlin and Knabenchor Berlin. Released 2003 by Deutsche Grammophon GmbH, Hamburg. Named "Editor's Choice" by Gramophone (magazine).Further Information
Get more info on 'Carmina Burana Orff'.
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