List of Orphean operas

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Orpheus Playing the Violin, 17th-century painting by Cesare Gennari

Operas based on the Orphean myths, and especially the story of Orpheus' journey to the underworld to rescue his wife, Eurydice, were amongst the earliest examples of the art form and continue to be written into the 21st century. Orpheus, the Greek hero whose songs could charm both gods and wild beasts and coax the trees and rocks into dance, has achieved an emblematic status as a metaphor for the power of music.[1] The following is an annotated list of operas (and works in related genres) based on his myth. The works are listed with their composers and arranged by date of first performance. In cases where the opera was never performed, the approximate date of composition is given.

17th century[]

  • 1600 – Jacopo PeriEuridice, the first genuine opera whose music survives to this day.[2]
  • 1602 – Giulio CacciniEuridice
  • 1607 – Claudio Monteverdi – Monteverdi's L'Orfeo, widely regarded as the first operatic masterwork.[3]
  • 1616 – Domenico Belli's Orfeo dolente, a set of intermedi presented between the acts of Tasso's Aminta
  • 1619 – Stefano LandiLa morte d'Orfeo
  • 1638 – Heinrich SchützOrpheus und Euridice (music lost)
  • 1647 – Luigi RossiOrfeo, one of the first operas to be performed in France. Rossi's own wife died while he was composing the score.
  • 1654 – Carlo d'Aquino – Orfeo
  • 1659 – Johann Jakob Löwe von Eisenach – Orpheus von Thracien
  • 1672 – Antonio SartorioOrfeo
  • 1673 – Matthew LockeOrpheus and Euridice, a masque presented between the acts of Elkanah Settle's The Empress of Morocco
  • 1676 – Giuseppe di Dia – Orfeo
  • 1677 – Francesco della Torre – Orfeo
  • 1683 – Johann Philipp KriegerOrpheus und Eurydice
  • 1683 – Antonio DraghiLa lira d'Orfeo
  • c 1685 – Marc-Antoine CharpentierLa descente d'Orphée aux enfers H 488
  • 1689 – Bernardo SabadiniOrfeo
  • 1690 – Louis LullyOrphée
  • 1698 – Reinhard KeiserDie sterbende Eurydice oder Orpheus
  • 1699 – André CampraOrfeo nell'inferni, Italian-language intermedio of Le carnaval de Venise[4]

18th century[]

  • 1701 – John WeldonOrpheus and Euridice
  • 1715 – Johann FuxOrfeo ed Euridice
  • 1722 – Georg Caspar SchürmannOrpheus
  • 1726 – Georg Philipp TelemannOrpheus
  • 1740 – John Frederick LampeOrpheus and Eurydice
  • c. 1740 – Jean-Philippe Rameau – (unfinished project)
  • 1749 – Giovanni Alberto RistoriI lamenti d'Orfeo
  • 1750 – Georg Christoph WagenseilEuridice
  • 1752 – Carl Heinrich GraunOrfeo
  • 1762 – Christoph Willibald GluckOrfeo ed Euridice (French version, Orphée et Euridice, 1774)
  • 1767 – François-Hippolyte BarthélémonThe Burletta of Orpheus
  • 1775 – Antonio TozziOrfeo ed Euridice
  • 1776 – Ferdinando BertoniOrfeo ed Euridice (to the same libretto as Gluck's more famous work)
  • 1781 – Luigi TorelliOrfeo
  • 1785 – Friedrich BendaOrpheus
  • 1786 – Johann Gottlieb NaumannOrpheus og Eurydice
  • 1788 – Carl Ditters von DittersdorfOrpheus der Zweyte
  • 1788 – Johann Friedrich ReichardtOrpheus
  • 1789 – Vittorio TrentoOrfeo negli Elisi
  • 1791 – Joseph HaydnL'anima del filosofo, ossia Orfeo ed Euridice
  • 1791 – Ferdinando PaerOrphée et Euridice
  • 1792 – Yevstigney FominОрфей и Эвридика
  • 1792 – Peter WinterOrpheus und Euridice
  • 1793 – Prosper-Didier DeshayesLe petit Orphée (parody of Gluck's opera)
  • 1796 – Luigi LambertiOrfeo
  • 1796 – Francesco Morolin – Orfeo ed Euridice
  • c.1796, before 1797 – Antoine DauvergneOrphée (not performed)
  • 1798 –  [de]Der Tod des Orpheus/Orpheus und Euridice

19th century[]

  • 1802 – Carl Conrad Cannabich – Orpheus
  • 1807 – Friedrich August KanneOrpheus
  • 1813 – Ferdinand KauerOrpheus und Euridice, oder So geht es im Olympus zu
  • 1814 – Marchese Francesco Sampieri – Orfeo (cantata?)
  • 1858 – Jacques OffenbachOrphée aux enfers
  • 1860 – Gustav Michaelis – Orpheus auf der Oberwelt
  • 1867 – Karl Ferdinand Konradin – Orpheus im Dorfe (operetta)

20th century[]

  • 1907 – Fernando de Azevedo e Silva – A morte de Orfeu
  • 1907–16 – Claude Debussy – (unfinished project)
  • 1913 – Jean Roger-DucasseOrphée, premiered at the Palais Garnier in a production mounted by Ida Rubinstein.
  • 1925 – Gian Francesco MalipieroL'Orfeide, cycle in three parts: I. La morte delle maschere, II. Sette canzoni, III. Orfeo
  • 1925 – Darius MilhaudLes malheurs d'Orphée, chamber opera with a libretto by Armand Lunel
  • 1926 – Ernst KrenekOrpheus und Eurydike
  • 1932 – Alfredo CasellaLa favola d'Orfeo, chamber opera after Poliziano's L'Orfeo[5]
  • 1951 – Pierre SchaefferOrphée 51
  • 1953 – Pierre Schaeffer, Pierre HenryOrphée 53
  • 1978 – Tito Schipa Jr.Orfeo 9, the first Italian rock opera
  • 1978 – Hans Werner HenzeOrpheus (Viennese version 1986)
  • 1986 – Harrison BirtwistleThe Mask of Orpheus
  • 1993 – Philip GlassOrphée, chamber opera with a libretto adapted by the composer from Jean Cocteau's film of the same name
  • 1996 – Lorenzo FerreroLa nascita di Orfeo, musical action in one act, libretto by Lorenzo Ferrero and Dario Del Corno, premiered at the Teatro Filarmonico

21st century[]

  • 2001 – Jonathan DoveL'altra Euridice, a 30-minute opera in one act for baritone and ensemble, based on a story by Italo Calvino, which retells the Orphean myth from the perspective of Pluto, god of the underworld.[6]
  • 2009 – Harrison BirtwistleThe Corridor, a 48-minute chamber opera for two singers and small ensemble.
  • 2015 – John RobertsonOrpheus, an hour-long masque in six scenes commissioned and performed by Rousse State Opera[7]
  • 2020 – Matthew AucoinEurydice, a three-act opera in English with libretto by Sarah Ruhl based on her play of the same name, premiered at the Los Angeles Opera[8]

References[]

Orpheus by Odilon Redon (1840–1916)

Notes

  1. ^ Agnew (2008) pp. 7–10
  2. ^ Rosand, "Opera: III. Early opera, 1600–90"
  3. ^ Whenham (1986) p. xi
  4. ^ Le carnaval de Venise, Le magazine de l'opéra baroque , performance details (in French)
  5. ^ Orfeo 9 – Sito ufficiale (archived)
  6. ^ L'altra Euridice, Edition Peters
  7. ^ Rousse State Opera. "Световна премиера на операта „Орфей” от канадския композитор Джон Робъртсън в МФ „Сцена край реката”-Русе" ("World Premiere of the opera Orpheus by Canadian composer John Robertson"). Retrieved 22 February 2016 (in Bulgarian).
  8. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (February 3, 2020). "Review: Eurydice, a New Opera, Looks Back All Too Tamely". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 February 2020.

Sources

External links[]

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