Die Tote Stadt Op. 12
Opera in 3 Acts Study Score
by Erich Wolfgang Korngold
Orchestra - Sheet Music

Item Number: 21143968
4.9 out of 5 Customer Rating
Price reduced from $99.00 to $94.05
In Stock
  • Ships in 24 hours

Taxes/VAT calculated at checkout.

Ensembles
Publishers
Formats
Item Types
Orchestra (Study Score)

SKU: HL.49045924

Opera in 3 Acts Study Score. Composed by Erich Wolfgang Korngold. This edition: Hardback/Hard Cover. Sheet music. Study Score. Die tote Stadt war von Anfang an ein durchschlagender Erfolg. Bei der Urauffuhrung 1920 war der Komponist Korngold, der spater in Hollywood Karriere als Filmkomponist machte, gerade einmal 23 Jahre alt. Das Libretto, ein vielschichtig gebrochenes, morbide. Classical, Opera. Hardcover. Composed 1916-1919. Op. 12. 696 pages. Duration 8700 seconds. Eulenburg Edition #ETP8113. Published by Eulenburg Edition (HL.49045924).

ISBN 9783795711764. UPC: 888680949426. 8.0x10.5x1.8 inches. German. Korngold - Librettist: Paul Schott; Author of Original Text: Georges Rodenbach.

This masterpiece, composed by Erich Wolfgang Korngold when he was only 23, was one of the great stage successes of the 1920s and 30s before being removed from theatre schedules by the National Socialists. Rediscovered in the 1970s, it has enjoyed continuing popularity ever since. The libretto was compiled by the composer's father, the music critic Julius Korngold, writing under the pseudonym 'Paul Schott', a combination of the name of the protagonist and the publishing house. A vivacious theatre group comes to liven up the gloomy city of Bruges (here, a symbol of death) and the widower Paul is forced to decide between the past and the present. Korngold was fascinated by this symbolic plot and created an iridescent orchestral score washed in vivid colours. A variety of operatic devices are intermingled as if viewed through a kaleidoscope: opulent melodic arias, advanced harmonies, psychoanalytic profundity and cinematic transitions oscillating between reality and dream worlds guarantee the continuing modernity of this work up to the present day.