Gurre-Lieder

Gurre-Lieder
Oratorio by Arnold Schoenberg
A performance at the Graz Opera in 2013,
conducted by Dirk Kaftan
EnglishSongs of Gurre
Full titleGurre-Lieder von Jens Peter Jacobsen, Deutsch von Robert Franz Arnold, für Soli, Chor, und Orchester
Other nameGurrelieder
StyleRomantic
Textpoems by Jens Peter Jacobsen
LanguageGerman
Composed1900 (1900)–1903, 1910
Performed23 February 1913 (1913-02-23): Vienna
PublishedVienna, 1920
PublisherUniversal Edition
Durationat least 90 minutes
MovementsI: 11; II: 1, III: 7; Epilogue: 3
Scoring
  • 5 solo singers
  • narrator
  • mixed choir
  • symphony orchestra
Premiere
Date23 February 1913
LocationMusikverein
ConductorFranz Schreker
Ruins of Gurre Castle, 2007

Gurre-Lieder (Songs of Gurre) is a tripartite oratorio followed by a melodramatic epilogue for five vocal soloists, narrator, three choruses, and grand orchestra. The work, which is based on an early song cycle for soprano, tenor and piano, was composed by the then-Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg from 1900 to 1903. Following a break, he resumed orchestration in 1910 and completed it in November 1911. It sets to music the poem cycle Gurresange by the Danish novelist Jens Peter Jacobsen (translated from Danish to German by Robert Franz Arnold).

The Gurre Castle and its surrounding areas in Denmark are the settings of the plot, which involves the mediæval love-tragedy (related in Jacobsen's poems) revolving around a legend of the love of king Valdemar Atterdag (Valdemar IV, 1320–1375, German: Waldemar) for his mistress, Tove, and her subsequent murder by Valdemar's jealous wife, Queen Helvig of Schleswig, (a legend which is historically more likely connected with his ancestor Valdemar I).

It is the most important tonal work of the composer, alongside Verklärte Nacht.


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