Der Silbersee

Der Silbersee

Der Silbersee: ein Wintermärchen (The Silver Lake: a Winter's Fairy Tale) is a 'play with music' in three acts by Kurt Weill to a German text by Georg Kaiser [1]

Contents

Premiere performances

Der Silbersee was premiered on 18 February 1933 simultaneously at the Altes Theater in Leipzig, the Stadttheater in Erfurt and the Stadttheater in Magdeburg, just three weeks after the Nazi Party's Machtergreifung on 30 January 1933. The Leipzig production was directed by Detlev Sierck, conducted by Gustav Brecher, and designed by Caspar Neher. It was the last production of both Weill and Kaiser in the Weimar Republic before they were forced to emigrate. It was banned on 4 March 1933 by the Nazis after having been performed 16 times.

Performance history

A complete performance of Der Silbersee runs about three hours, consisting of roughly equal parts of dialogue and music. The long and complex play requires skilled actors, but the vocal demands of Weill's score require trained singers. The difficulty in reconciling these needs make successful performance of the piece difficult, and modern productions have consisted mostly of abridged concert versions and adaptations.[2]

An abridged version with diminished orchestration was prepared by Boris Blacher and presented as part of the Berlin Festival at the Schlosspark-Theater, in West Berlin, on 19 September 1955.

At the Holland Festival at The Hague on 25 June 1971 a 90-minute concert version was prepared by Jozef Heinzelmann and David Drew. It included the entire score in its original orchestration, with narration spoken by Lotte Lenya. The performance was conducted by Gary Bertini.

The 1975 Berlin Festival in West Berlin on 10 September presented a 50-minute concert version devised by David Drew for five soloists, chorus and orchestra with no narration or dialogue. Performers included Anja Silja (soprano) and Günther Reich (baritone), conducted by Gary Bertini.

On 20 March 1980 in the New York State Theater in New York City the New York City Opera[3] presented a free adaptation entitled Silverlake with an English libretto by Hugh Wheeler and a musically continuous score devised by Lys Simonette. The score incorporated incidental music Weill had composed for the Berlin stage as well as music written for a 1927 production of August Strindberg's Gustav III, and interpolated the 'Muschel von Margate' (written for Leo Lania's 1928 play Konjunktur) with new lyrics by Wheeler to create a duet for Olim and Severin in act 3. This version also adds Olim to the Lottery Agent's Tango, making it a duet, transfers the 'Ballad of Caesar's Death' from the ingenue Fennimore to the villainess Frau von Luber, and adds a role for a dancer representing Hunger. The cast included Joel Grey (Olim), William Neill (Severin), Elizabeth Hynes (Fennimore), Elaine Bonazzi (Frau von Luber), and Gary Chryst (Hunger). The production was directed by Harold Prince, conducted by Julius Rudel, and designed by Manuel Lutgenhorst.

Roles

Role Voice type Premiere cast,
18 February 1933 (Leipzig)
Conductor: Gustav Brecher
Director: Detlef Sierck
Designer: Caspar Neher
Premiere cast,
18 February 1933 (Magdeburg)
Conductor: Georg Winkler
Director: Helmut Götze
Designer: Ernst Rufer
Premiere cast,
18 February 1933 (Erfurt)
Conductor: Friedrich Walter
Director: Hermann Pfeiffer
Designer: Walter Schröter
Severin, thief tenor Alexander Golling Ernst Busch Albert Johannes
Olim, police officer baritone Erhard Siedel Eduard Wandrey
Fennimore, Frau von Luber's niece soprano Gretel Berndt Elisabeth Lennartz Sieglinde Riesmann
Frau von Luber, Olim's housekeeper mezzo-soprano Lina Carstens Ruth Baldor
Baron Laur, Frau von Luber's friend tenor Ernst Satler
Lottery agent tenor Albert Garbe
First gravedigger baritone
Second gravedigger baritone
First shopgirl soprano
Second shopgirl mezzo-soprano
First young man bass
Second young man bass

Synopsis

Act 1

A band of unemployed men who live on the banks of the Silbersee are driven by their hunger and despair to rob a grocery store. Severin is making off with a pineapple when he is shot and wounded by Olim, a provincial policeman. While preparing his official report, Olim's conscience is troubled by the desperation that he imagines has motivated Severin's crime, and he is touched by Severin's unlikely choice of plunder. Thanks to an unexpected lottery win, Olim suddenly acquires a fortune. He destroys his police report of the incident and vows to make amends to Severin. Olim presents himself to the bitter, hospitalized Severin as his benefactor without revealing his true identity.

Act 2

Olim has purchased an ancient castle and is attending to Severin's recovery with the help of his housekeeper Frau von Luber and her good-hearted and somewhat mystical niece Fennimore. Frau von Luber is from an old aristocratic family that has fallen on hard times. Sensing that Olim is hiding some secret that she may be able to use to her advantage, she orders Fennimore to spy upon the master and his guest in an attempt to unlock the mystery of their relationship. Meanwhile, Severin is unmoved by Olim's generosity and remains morbidly focused on revenge. At Severin's request, Fennimore delivers a message to his comrades at the Silbersee, who thereby learn his whereabouts and come to the castle, where they recognize Olim as the policeman whose gunshot crippled Severin.

Act 3

Frau von Luber now exploits Olim's fear of the furious Severin and manages to acquire both the castle and Olim's fortune. Fennimore foils her aunt's plan to set Severin murderously upon Olim by moving the two men to reconcile. Frau von Luber, now restored to wealth and property, dispossesses Olim and Severin, who set out through the snow to the Silbersee with the intention of drowning themselves. As they journey there, winter turns to spring and the voices of Fennimore and the unseen chorus encourage them to remain true to each other and to mankind by going forward in confidence and hope. When they arrive at the Silbersee, they find it miraculously still frozen solid, and they set out across it as Fennimore's voice is heard singing, "Wer weiter muss, den trägt der Silbersee" (Silverlake will bear whoever must go farther).[4][5]

Musical numbers

[1a] Ouverture (Allegro assai) - orchestra
First Act
1 'Gräbst du?' – Two gravediggers
2 Alla marche funebre: 'Wir tragen den Toten zu Grabe' - Two gravediggers, two young men
3 'Der Bäkker bäckt ums Morgenrot' – Severin, two gravediggers, two young men
4 Song der beiden Verkäuferinnen: 'Wir zind Mädchen, die an jedermann verkaufen' - Two shopgirls
4a Walzer - orchestra
5 Choruses
Sostenuto - orchestra
'Olim! Tut es dir nicht leid?' - chorus
'Jetzt bist du auf dem Wege' - chorus
'Wenn die nicht schiltst' - chorus
'Immer weiter dringen' - chorus
'Noch hast du has Geld nicht' - chorus
6 Song von der Krone des Gewinns: 'Was zahlen Sie für einen Rat?' - Lottery agent
6a Choruses
'Olim! was willst du tun?' - chorus
'Olim! Willst du Vergessen? - chorus
'Du hast dich zum Aufbruch entschlossen' - chorus
Nachspiel - orchestra
[7a] Melodrama - Severin
7 'Was soll ich essen in der Morgenfrühe?' – Severin, Olim
Second Act
[8a] Moderato assai - orchestra
8 Fennimores Lied: 'Ich bin eine arme Verwandte' - Fennimore
9 Ballade von Cäsars Tod: 'Rom hiess eine Stadt' - Fennimore
10 Allegro moderato - orchestra [Fennimore's dance]
11 Rache-Arie: 'Erst trifft dich die Kugel' - Severin
12 Silbersee-Duett: 'Auf jener Strasse' - Severin, Fennimore
12a Choral reprise of 11
Third Act
13 Allegro assai - orchestra (shortened reprise of 1a)
14 Odysseus-Arie: 'Wie Odysseus an den Mast des Schiffes' - Severin
15 Totentanz - orchestra
15a Schlaraffenland-Song: 'Es wächst uns in den Mund der Wein' - Frau von Luber, Baron Laur
16 Finale
Andantino - orchestra
'Ir sollt den Weg nicht finden' - chorus
Allegretto - orchestra
'Alles, was ist, ist Beginnen' - Fennimore's voice, chorus[6]

Music

The theatrical form of Der Silbersee is difficult to classify and most closely resembles a singspiel, though with greater dramatic demands placed on the acting. As in his other works, Weill uses a broad variety of forms (songs, arias, duets, quartets, choruses), musical styles (tango, funeral march, waltz, polka, foxtrot, march) and conventions (revenge aria, moritat, Totentanz, and dialogue spoken over elaborate musical accompaniment, i.e., melodrama). The orchestration requires a string section plus 13 other instruments.[7]

The finale, depicting Severin and Olim's journey to the Silbersee through a stormy snowscape that transforms into spring, runs approximately 15 minutes and consists of melodrama, dialogue, instrumental passages, choruses, and an offstage solo.

Reception and consequences

As a result of the work's questioning of genre limitations, the Nazis labeled it Entartete Musik and placed a ban on the piece on 4 March 1933. The next day, Kaiser was expelled from the Akademie der Künste, of which he was a member. On 21 March, Silbersee designer and longtime Weill collaborator Caspar Neher and his wife Erika drove Weill across the border in their car and together they headed for Paris.[8] On 10 May the work with illustrations by Neher was burned on the Opera Plaza.

Recordings

Notes

  1. ^ Heinrich Heine, Germany. A Winter's Tale)
  2. ^ Drew, David. Kurt Weill: A Handbook. University of California Press, 1987, pp. 238-41.
  3. ^ Rich, Alan. "Just When You Thought It Was Safe to Go Back to the City Opera." New York Magazine, Vol. 13, No. 14, April 7 1980, p. 78.
  4. ^ Drew, David. Kurt Weill: A Handbook. University of California Press, 1987, p. 238.
  5. ^ Notes included in the 1992 Capriccio recording
  6. ^ Drew, David. Kurt Weill: A Handbook. University of California Press, 1987, pp. 238-9.
  7. ^ "Der Silbersee Ein Wintermärchen" (1932-33) on the Kurt Weill Foundation for Music website, kwf.org Retrieved 16 January 2011
  8. ^ Drew, David. Kurt Weill: A Handbook. University of California Press, 1987, p. 59.

References

External links


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