La Passion de Simone

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La Passion de Simone
A musical journey in 15 stations
Oratorio by Kaija Saariaho
Simone Weil 1931.jpg
Simone Weil on whose life and writings the libretto is based
Textby Amin Maalouf
LanguageFrench
Based onlife and writings of Simone Weil
Performed26 November 2006 (2006-11-26): Vienna
Movements15
Scoring
  • soprano
  • spoken voice
  • choir
  • orchestra
  • electronic instruments

La Passion de Simone is an oratorio composed by Kaija Saariaho to a libretto in French by Amin Maalouf, first premiered in a staging by Peter Sellars. The work, subtitled "a musical journey in 15 stations", centers on the life and writings of Simone Weil and was conceived in the Passion Play tradition with episodes in her life linked to the Stations of the Cross. It is composed for SATB chorus, soprano soloist, spoken voice, orchestra and electronic instruments.

Performance history[]

La Passion de Simone was commissioned jointly by the New Crowned Hope festival in Vienna, the Barbican Centre, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. It had its world premiere on 26 November 2006 at the Jugendstiltheater in Vienna as part of Peter Sellars' New Crowned Hope festival. The world premiere performers were the Klangforum Wien orchestra conducted by Susanna Mälkki; the Arnold Schoenberg Choir conducted by Erwin Ortner; Finnish soprano  [fi; sv] as the narrator;  [nl; de] as the silent dancer (a directorial addition by Sellars), and Dominique Blanc as the voice of Simone Weil.

The work had its United Kingdom premiere at the Barbican Centre, London in July 2007 and its US premiere in August 2008 at the Lincoln Center, New York City, as part of the Mostly Mozart Festival. Unlike previous performances, the French premiere at the Opéra Bastille in June 2009 was performed without Sellars' staging. Nevertheless, Dawn Upshaw, for whom the role of the narrator was originally written, performed in all three premieres.

Chamber version[]

The composer created a chamber version of the piece. It is the same length as the original version and the soloist's vocal line and the spoken text are unchanged. The orchestration is for 19 musicians and uses no electronic elements. Four solo voices replace the SATB chorus.

This version was premiered on 14 November 2013 at the P.O. Hviezdoslav City Theatre]] in Bratislava, in the framework of the Melos-Ethos Festival for Contemporary Music, in a production conceived and realized by the French music theatre company La Chambre aux échos. The main character was performed by soprano  [fr], accompanied by a vocal quartet and an actress, and the chamber ensemble Secession Orchestra, conducted by Clément Mao-Takacs. The stage direction was devised by . Sydney Chamber Opera performed the Australian premiere at the Carriageworks for the 2019 Sydney Festival with soprano Jane Sheldon, conducted by Jack Symonds and directed by Imara Savage.[1][2]

References[]

  1. ^ "Finland's premier composer" by Andrew Ford, The Music Show, Radio National, 16 December 2018
  2. ^ "Meditations on a life of grace" by Matthew Westwood, The Australian, 7 January 2019

General references[]

External links[]

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