Szenen aus dem Leben der Heiligen Johanna explained

Composer:Walter Braunfels
Image Upright:0.8
Librettist:Braunfels
Language:German

Szenen aus dem Leben der Heiligen Johanna (Jeanne D'Arc) is an opera in three acts by Walter Braunfels to a libretto by the composer.

Composition history

Braunfels began the composition after attending the premiere of Hindemith's Mathis der Maler in May 1938, and he had completed the opera by 1943. The libretto, written by the composer, is based on the actual French and Latin documents of the trial of Joan of Arc in their German translation (1935), there are also a few references to the play Saint Joan by George Bernard Shaw and other 20th-century interpretations of Joan of Arc. The libretto produces many of Joan's naive statements verbatim from the trial documents.

Performance history

Despite Braunfels' intense affection for the opera, as an expression of his Roman Catholic belief, he was unable to obtain a performance after the war. His student Fritzjof Haas recorded that Braunfels, six months before his death in 1953, expressed as his biggest disappointment of all his unheard compositions that he had never heard Szenen aus dem Leben der Heiligen Johanna performed.[1] Following the reawakening in interest in Braunfels' work after Decca's recording of The Birds in 1996, the opera was finally first performed in Stockholm under the baton of Manfred Honeck in 2001. The performance was recorded by Sveriges Radio and in 2010 licensed to Decca and released on CD.

Roles

RoleVoice typePremiere Cast
2001
(Conductor: Manfred Honeck)
Joan of ArcJuliane Banse
Gilles de Raisbaritone Terje Stensvold
Günter Missenhardt
Gunnar Guðbjörnsson
tenor Robert Künzli

Recordings

Notes and References

  1. Jorgen Torp, essay in booklet to the Decca recording, 2010