Schneewittchen (opera) explained

Schneewittchen
Composer:Heinz Holliger
Librettist:Holliger
Based On:Poetry by Robert Walser
Premiere Location:Zürich Opera House

Schneewittchen (Snow White) is an opera by Heinz Holliger. He wrote the libretto based on a poetic text by Robert Walser in iambic trimeter. The opera received its première on 17 October 1998 at the Zürich Opera House which had commissioned the work. The work is a psychoanalytical reworking of the fairy tale of "Snow White", analysing the complex relationships between the roles. It is not a children's opera.

History

Heinz Holliger adapted Schneewittchen from a Robert Walser play written in free verse. The full-length opera opened in 1998 with four performances at the Zürich Opera and two performances in Frankfurt, Germany. The opera begins with a prologue, continues with three middle scenes, and finishes with a epilogue. The orchestra features several non-traditional instruments: accordion, celesta, harmonica, marimba, and vibraphone. It includes only a seven member string section.[1]

Roles

!Role!Voice type!Premiere cast: 17 October 1998
Conductor: Heinz Holliger
Schneewittchen (Snow White)sopranoJuliane Banse
Königin (Queen)mezzo-sopranoCornelia Kallisch
Prinz (Prince)tenorSteve Davislim
Jäger (Huntsman)baritoneOliver Widmer
König (King)bassWerner Gröschel
There are no dwarfs.

Scenes

  1. Prologue
  2. Scene 1
  3. Interlude 1–2 (Invention)
  4. Scene 2, part 1
  5. Fughetta (In nomine fluminis)
  6. Scene 2, part 2
  7. Interlude 2–3
  8. Quasi Fuga
  9. Scene 3
  10. Interlude 3–4
  11. Scene 4
  12. Interlude 4–5
  13. Scene 5
  14. Epilogue (Choral variations)

Recordings

ECM Records released a recording as a two-compact disc set in 2001, recorded by the same performers as in its 1998 premiere in Zürich. Juliane Barse starred as Schneewittchen, while Cornelia Kallisch performed as the Queen. In addition to the leads, tenor Steve Davislim, baritone Oliver Widmer, and bass Werner Gröschel were backed by the same orchestra as in the premiere.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. 31–32 (29–32). Heinz Holliger at Sixty . Tempo. Peter . Palmer . April 1999. 208. 944670.
  2. News: Music; Snow White Shows a Darker Side . Paul . Griffiths. Paul Griffiths (writer). 17 June 2021 . 21 February 2024 . The New York Times.