Mannenberg-Is Where It's Happening

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Tippett: King Priam
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • An AntiWar Masterpiece
  • Visceral power & beauty coupled with stunning performances!!
  • One of the best and most easily grasped of modern operas
Tippett: King Priam

Manufacturer: Chandos
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

All Works by TippettAll Works by Tippett | Tippett, Michael | ( T ) | Featured Composers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
Allen, ThomasAllen, Thomas | ( A ) | Featured Performers, A-Z | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
GeneralGeneral | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
EnglishEnglish | Languages | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
OperettasOperettas | Opera & Vocal | Styles | Music
ASIN: B000000AXV
Release Date: 1995-11-14

Tracks:

  1. King Priam: Prelude
  2. King Priam: Hecuba: What Is It, Nurse?
  3. King Priam: Priam: Old Man Of Troy, You're Welcome
  4. King Priam: Hecuba: Then Am I No Longer Mother To This Child
  5. King Priam: Priam: A Father And A King
  6. King Priam: Priam: The Queen Is Right
  7. King Priam: First Interlude - Nurse, Old Man: Thus Shall A Story Begin
  8. King Priam: 1st Huntsman: The Bull Is Away Over There
  9. King Priam: Paris: They Have Taken My Bull
  10. King Priam: Hector: Father, He's A Shepherd Boy
  11. King Priam: Priam: So I'd Hoped It Might Be
  12. King Priam: Second Interlude - Nurse, Young Guard, Old Man: Ah, But Life, Life Is A Bitter Charade
  13. King Priam: Helen, Paris: Ah, Ah ...
  14. King Priam: Hermes: Divine Go-between, That's Who I Am
  15. King Priam: Paris: Lady Athene, If I Honor You ...
  16. King Priam: Paris: Lady Hera, If I Honor You ...
  17. King Priam: Paris: Aphrodite, If I Honor You ...
  18. King Priam: Hector: So You've Given Up Fighting!
  19. King Priam: Priam: So Trojans Honor Menelaus ...
  20. King Priam: First Interlude - Old Man: Hermes, Hermes, With The Winged Feet Come Quick!
  21. King Priam: Achilles: O Rich-soiled Land
  22. King Priam: Achilles: Why Are You Weeping, Patroclus?
  23. King Priam: Second Interlude - Old Man: O, O, What A Threat To Troy
  24. King Priam: Hermes: A Hero In Achilles Armour ...
  25. King Priam: Hector: All Trojans, All Fought Bravely

Tracks:

  1. King Priam: Serving Woman: Lady Andromache, Should We Not Light The Fire?
  2. King Priam: Hecuba: Daughter Andromache, You Must Go Out ...
  3. King Priam: Andromache: Did You Hear?
  4. King Priam: Helen: Let Her Rave
  5. King Priam: Hecuba: O That My Ears Should Hear Impiety So Gross!
  6. King Priam: Andromache: Now You Shall Go
  7. King Priam: First Interlude - Serving Women: No ... No ... No ... We Have It From The Runner
  8. King Priam: Priam: What Is Happening?
  9. King Priam: Young Guard: A Crime
  10. King Priam: Nurse: The Soul Will Answer From Where The Pain Is Quickest
  11. King Priam: Second Interlude
  12. King Priam: Achilles: Priam! Here! What Is This?
  13. King Priam: Priam: I Clasp Your Knees, Achilles
  14. King Priam: Achilles: Old Man, I Am Touched
  15. King Priam: Third Interlude -
  16. King Priam: Paris: Where Is My Father, Where Is Priam?
  17. King Priam: Chorus: Ah, Ah! Ah, Ah!
  18. King Priam: Chorus: Ah, Ha, Ha, Ha
  19. King Priam: Chorus: Ah, Ah!

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars An AntiWar Masterpiece.......2002-08-26

Tippett and Britten were composers who, though very different in temperment and style, had many interests in common. One of the overiding concerns with both composers was the moral response to war and it's horrors. For Britten, the War Requiem and Owen Wingrave are his very clear moral response to war. Tippet, in his fashion is much more psychological in this work, which must rank as one of Tippett's best and most powerful operatic statements.

King Priam is a dramatic tour de force. Based on the Illiad as seen through the eyes of the Trojans, the work is a meditation on the inevitability of fate in mass movements like war. Priam, though illdisposed to the war, is unable to stop or control it as it takes both of his sons, his kingdom and then finally his own life. He emerges as a figure of moral power and grandeur, but ultimately as impotent and tragic. This libretto is one of Tippett's best and most clear statements.

Musically, Priam is a powerhouse, inaugurating Tippett's second major style. Priam is constructed in a mosaic style. Small chamber groups of instruments with defined musical content are assigned to characters. As the work develops, these small groups combine and recombine in a shifting maze of patterns that seems to endlessly reinvent itself. The music starts out as largely tonal, but the tonality breaks down as Fate takes over and dooms the Trojans. The work is never serial, but it takes an almost Bergian view of tonality, sometimes more and sometimes less tonal as the dramatic situation warrants. The vocal lines are mostly declaimed, but with moments of lyricism that are unfogettable, such as Priam's first aria, A Father and a King, or the beautiful scene between Priam and Achilles in the third act. And Achilles war cry at the end of act two is bone chilling!

This is a great performance of this piece. Many of the singers originated the roles and sing them with power and authority. Phillip Langridge is terrific as Paris. Robert Tear is a marvelous Achilles. David Aetherton conducts this difficult score with precision and a fine ear for balances.

This is a profound opera by a major 20th century composer. If you like Britten, you should own this as well. It is increasingly looking like Tippett's masterpiece.

5 out of 5 stars Visceral power & beauty coupled with stunning performances!!.......2001-06-13

I bought this on a whim, having heard only the slightest bit of Tippett's orchestral music and none of his operas. I expected the music to be "difficult," and the performances stilted, but I was oh so wrong! Yes, this is definitely late 20th century music -- often dissonant and atonal, but it is utterly beautiful, emotionally moving music. I'm a huge fan of Britten's operas, and judge all modern opera composers by his standards, and (pardon my gushing) Sir Michael is more than up to the challenge. First of all, he takes on the daunting task of adapting the Iliad into a opera libretto and manages to compress the drama beautifully into 3 acts that tell the story imaginatively, comprehensively and in a wholly theatrical manner. Second, he uses the music to heighten the sense of character by giving each persona a unique style of vocal line and orchestration (yes, this is what all composers do, or try to do, but Tippett succeeds in a way few others do). Several of the characters are accompanied by solo instruments (bravura parts of concerto-like difficulty performed brilliantly) -- Achilles by solo guitar, Helen by solo cello, King Priam by violin, etc. Three characters form a sort of Greek chorus who comment on the action and bring a sense of questioning morality to the whole.

All of the solo singers are astutely cast and sing with amazing power. Standouts (difficult to single out any of them, they're all so brilliant): Phillip Langridge is first-rate as Paris, Priam's second son -- he sings with enormous power and pathos at the same time. Felicity Palmer is velvety sex personified as Helen. Norman Bailey as Priam has a raw edginess to his sound, which lends such a sense of reality to a man pushed to the edge by fate and his warring sons. The London Philharmonia gives a virtuoso performance, led sensitively and intelligently by David Atherton. The digital sound is crystal clear and beautifully engineered: the sound couldn't be better live at the Met! Take a chance on this one, and enter into an operatic world you will never forget.

5 out of 5 stars One of the best and most easily grasped of modern operas.......1999-02-27

Contemporary opera was never the same after King Priam, a suitable irony given that the Opera is perhaps the most easily grasped by the listening public of the 5 Tippett Operas. Even so, the "crisis of King Prian" stylistically and emotionally is the germ-seed for the eccentrism yet to come in "The Knot Garden", "The Ice Break", and "New Year". Tippett's theme is the futility of choice and the nature of the impact of choice on humanity in the micro-sphere of the individual and the macro-sphere of the community and history. Tippett's unusual yet perfectly conceived recasting of the Iliad from the Trojan persepctive does more than summarize plot, but pauses to comment on the universal human potential implicit therein. A must-buy for Tippett fans and for anyone who likes opera, Greek Mythology, classical music, or a good story.

--Justin Laird Weaver

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