Turandot K 273
A Chinese Fable in 2 Acts after Carlo Gozzi - Urtext
by Ferruccio Busoni
SSAATB - Sheet Music

Item Number: 2657620
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Chorus (with soloists) and piano (solos: 2S2Mez6TBar7B - choir: SSAATB - 2(picc).2(cor ang).2(Bb-clar).2(dble bsn) - 4.2.3.0 - timp.perc(3) - hp - cel - str - stage music: trp.2tbne.perc)

SKU: BR.EB-5314

A Chinese Fable in 2 Acts after Carlo Gozzi - Urtext. Composed by Ferruccio Busoni. Edited by Philipp Jarnach. Arranged by Philipp Jarnach. Choir; Softcover. Edition Breitkopf. Opera; Music theatre; Early modern. Piano/Vocal Score. 154 pages. Duration 80'. Breitkopf and Haertel #EB 5314. Published by Breitkopf and Haertel (BR.EB-5314).

ISBN 9790004163931. 7.5 x 10.5 inches. German.

Text by the composer based on a drama by Carlo GozziTranslation: engl. (L. Salter), ital. (O. Previtali)Place: Im aussersten Orient. Vor dem Stadttor Pekings, Thronsaal im Kaiserpalast, das Frauengemach TurandotsCharacters: Altoum, Kaiser (bass) - Turandot, seine Tochter (soprano) - Adelma, ihre Vertraute (mezzo-soprano) - Kalaf, Sohn des Timur, ein Prinz (tenor) - Barak, sein Getreuer (baritone) - Die Koniginmutter von Samarkand, eine Mohrin (soprano) - Truffaldino, Haupt der Eunuchen (tenor) - Pantalone, Minister (bass) - Tartaglia, Minister (bass) - Acht Doktoren (4 tenors, 4 basses) - Eine Vorsangerin (mezzo-soprano) - Der Scharfrichter (stumme Rolle)Busoni's work, which antedates Puccini's famous setting by a few years, seems rather cool in com-parison to the later piece. Busoni tones down the colors of his orientalisms and totally eschews sentimental lyricism. His strengths lie especially in the scintillating, unfathomable characters and in a music that hovers in an ambivalent manner between brightness and darkness, sadness and humor, danger and harmlessness. This work of art makes its references clear: Gozzi's play about the murderous princess is peopled with familiar commedia dell'arte figures, and one is not quite sure whether this mixture of fun and danger gives a more relaxed feeling to the activity on the stage or whether it does not do precisely the opposite, adding the irreconcilable perspective of a gondola trip on the edge of a bottomless gulf. Busoni is more faithful to Gozzi than Puccini and thus to the gracious levity that hovers over the excesses of the action. His mild chinoiseries repeatedly lead to a Neo-Classicism inspired by Venetian folklore. (Hans-Klaus Jungheinrich, 1985) Turandot was premiered with Arlecchino in Zurich on 11 May 1917.