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La muerte de Ofelia

Berlioz Hector | Davis Colin

Information about this music video:

Duration:
7m 51s
Information:
Partitura reducida
Title on Youtube:
Berlioz - La mort d'Ophélie - John Alldis Choir, Davis
Description on Youtube:
In memory of Sir Colin Davis: Rest in peace ... Hector Berlioz (11 December 1803 - 8 March 1869) http://home.vicnet.net.au/~bard/Berlioz%20and%20Shakespeare.htm#top La mort d'Ophélie, ballade, Op. 18 No. 2 [H. 92b] Text: Ernest Legouvé (1807--1903) Composition: May 1842 for the original version, arranged for female choir and orchestra in 1848 Document with full score, separate parts and vocal score: http://wso.williams.edu/cpdl/sheet/hb92full.pdf I used the choir and piano version in the video simply because it was not practical to use the orchestrated one. In this recording: John Alldis Choir London Symphony Orchestra Colin Davis Philips (1980) La mort d'Ophélie (The death of Ophelia) is "a setting of a ballad by Ernest Legouvé, based on Gertrude's description of Ophelia's drowning in Act IV of Hamlet. It was originally composed for solo voice and piano in 1842, but in 1848 Berlioz revised it for female choir and orchestra. The verses of Ernest Legouvé were adapted from Gertrude's speech in Act 4, Scene 7 of Hamlet "There is a willow grows aslant a brook"." - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristia_%28Berlioz%29 "... in 1842, Berlioz collaborated with Legouvé by setting to music the ballad La Mort d'Ophélie on a text by his friend after Shakespeare (Holoman no. 92). A letter of Berlioz refers to this: 'Let me know when you are coming to Paris. I want you to hear the piece I wrote last week on your delightful poem The Death of Ophelia [...] If you like it I will orchestrate the piano accompaniment for a nice little orchestra and I could include the whole piece in one of my concerts' (CG no. 769bis, 8 May 1842). The work was subsequently orchestrated by Berlioz (in July 1848), and eventually published as the second of the three pieces entitled Tristia in 1851 (Holoman no. 119B), though it was never performed in Berlioz's lifetime. Legouvé himself does not mention this collaboration in his Souvenirs." - From the article "Ernest Legouvé and Berlioz": http://www.hberlioz.com/others/Legouvee.htm "Tristia Op. 18 is a musical work consisting of three short pieces for orchestra and chorus by the French composer Hector Berlioz. Apart from its title, it has nothing to do with the collection of Latin poems by Ovid (the word tristia in Latin means 'sad things'). The individual works were composed at different times and published together in 1852. Berlioz associated them in his mind with Shakespeare's Hamlet, one of his favourite plays." - From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tristia_%28Berlioz%29 H92a: soprano or tenor and piano, 1842 H92a2: female choir (SA) and piano, 1848 H92b: female choir (SA) and orchestra 1848 La mort d'Ophélie Auprès d'un torrent Ophélie cueillait, tout en suivant le bord, dans sa douce et tendre folie, des pervenches, des boutons d'or, des iris aux couleurs d'opale, et de ces fleurs d'un rose pâle qu'on appelle des doigts de mort. Puis, élevant sur se