Christus (opera)

Christus is an opera in seven scenes with a prologue and epilogue by Anton Rubinstein, written between the years 1887-1893 to a libretto after a poem by Heinrich Bulthaupt.

Background

Christus was described by its composer as a 'sacred opera'. This is a term invented by Rubinstein, ('geistliche Oper' in German) denoting staged works with 'use of polyphonic choruses and a sober, edifying style relying on ‘exalted declamation’.'[1] Rubinstein composed three other works of this type, Sulamith, Moses and Der Thurm zu Babel (The Tower of Babel). A fifth sacred opera, Cain, was uncompleted at his death.

Rubinstein considered Christus to be his finest composition.[2]

Performance history

Parts of the work were performed in Berlin in April 1894, and Rubinstein conducted a complete performance in Stuttgart on 2 June 1894. This was in fact his last public appearance as a conductor.[3] The work received a further series of complete performances, at Bremen, in 1895. Applause between scenes and after the performance was forbidden.[4] Apparently the work was not revived until a performance in Tyumen in 2002, conducted by the composer's great-grandson, Anton Sharoyev. This was also therefore the work's first performance in Russia. A recording of part of the work was made from live performances under Sharoyev in St. Petersburg in 2003.[5]

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere Cast, June 2, 1894
(Conductor:Anton Rubinstein )
Angel of the annunciation soprano
Jesus Christ tenor Raimund von zur-Mühlen
Satan bass
John the Baptist baritone
The Virgin Mary contralto
Pontius Pilate baritone
Judas Iscariot baritone
Mary Magdalene soprano
Chorus: mob, angels, demons, priests etc.

Synopsis

Christus treats the life of Jesus according to the New Testament. It is made up of the following scenes:

Sources

Notes

  1. Dixon and Taruskin, Sacred opera
  2. Maclean (1914)
  3. Taylor (2007), 235
  4. Taruskin (1990); Krehbiel
  5. Sleeve notes to recording of Christus, 2003
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 09, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.