Probably pretty much everyone is familiar with Géricault’s painting Le Radeau de la Méduse, depicting scenes of horror after a shipwreck. The story behind it is much less well known. The year is 1816 and a French expedition is off to reoccupy Senegal which had been occupied by the British during the recent wars. The flagship of the expedition is the frigate La Méduse, which carries the governor and his staff and so on. Well ahead of the rest of the flotilla, and out of sight, La Méduse runs aground and is eventually abandoned. The governor, the officers and other nobs take to the boats towing the rest of the crew (154 men and boys) on a hastily improvised raft. Finding progress too slow after 24 hours they cut the raft adrift. When the raft is finally spotted fifteen men are still alive. A fitting allegory for the Bourbon restoration perhaps. Continue reading
Tag Archives: orf vienna radio symphony
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Propheten
One of the strangest records of Kurt Weill’s music that I have ever listened to has just come my way. There are two pieces involved; Propheten and Four Walt Whitman Songs. Propheten has its roots in Weill’s six hour long, Old Testament inspired, opera The Eternal Road which premiered at the Manhattan Opera House in 1937 with a cast of 245 and which ran for 153 performances before, perhaps unsurprisingly, disappearing for a long,long time. Propheten is a 1998 adaptation of the last act by David Drew using the original German text by Franz Werfel plus biblical quotations and additional orchestration by Noam Sheriff. It basically deals with the sack of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar and comes in at a more digestible 45 minutes.