Der Thurm zu Babel

{{Italic title}}

{{Short description|Opera by Anton Rubinstein}}

File:Marten van Valckenborch Tower of babel-large.jpg

Der Thurm zu Babel (The Tower of Babel) is a one-act 'sacred opera' by Anton Rubinstein to a libretto by Julius Rodenberg based on the story in the Book of Genesis, chapter II. The opera was written in 1869 and had its first performance in Königsberg on 9 February 1870.

Background

The term 'sacred opera' (geistliche Oper in German) was invented by Rubinstein to denote staged works with "use of polyphonic choruses and a sober, edifying style relying on ‘exalted declamation’."Dixon and Taruskin, Sacred opera Rubinstein composed three other works of this type (Sulamith,

Moses and Christus). A fifth sacred opera, Cain, was uncompleted at his death.

The composer had hoped for a premiere in Berlin, but was consoled by the work's second production in Vienna on 20 February 1870, (which was attended by Johannes Brahms), after which Rubinstein wrote it had been 'brilliantly performed and very well received by the public.' The work's first performance in America was in May 1881 in New York City, when it was conducted by Leopold Damrosch.Rice and Damrosch (1942), p. 272

The destruction of the Tower in Der Thurm zu Babel is imaginatively realized by discordant passages in the orchestra (involving some passages in quintuple metre) and the chorus beginning to sing in three different languages.Gerbrand, p. 272 A performance lasts about 45 minutes.

Roles

class="wikitable"

!Role

!Voice type

!Premiere cast, 1870

Nimrod

|bass

|

Abraham

|tenor

|

Master Builder

|baritone

|

Four Angels

|children's voices

|

colspan="3"|Chorus: Shemites, Hamites, Japhetites, demons, crowd etc.

Synopsis

Nimrod and the Master Builder exult at the imminent success of their project to reach Heaven by building the Tower. Abraham rebukes them and is thrown into a fiery furnace at Nimrod's orders. As the workers praise Baal, angels descend and destroy the Tower, to the confusion of Nimrod and all present. Both the angels and the demons claim victory. 'As usual', Richard Taruskin has commented, 'the last-named get the most imaginative music'.Taruskin, Thurm zu Babel, Der

Notes

{{Reflist}}

Sources

  • Graham Dixon and Richard Taruskin. "Sacred opera." Grove Music Online accessed 17 April 2010
  • Carl Gerbrand, Sacred music drama: the producer's guide; second edition, Bloomington, 2006. Accessed in [https://books.google.com/books?id=MWNYaXL2ngYC&dq=Der+Thurm+zu+Babel+Rubinstein&pg=PA272 Google Books], April 18, 2010{{Self-published inline|date=July 2022}}
  • {{cite journal | last=RICE | first=EDWIN T. | title=Personal Recollections of Leopold Damrosch | journal=The Musical Quarterly | publisher=Oxford University Press (OUP) | volume=XXVIII | issue=3 | year=1942 | issn=0027-4631 | doi=10.1093/mq/xxviii.3.269 | pages=269–275}}
  • Richard Taruskin. Thurm zu Babel, Der. Grove Music Online accessed 18 April 2010

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Category:Operas

Category:1870 operas

Category:German-language operas

Category:Operas by Anton Rubinstein

Category:Operas based on the Bible

Category:One-act operas

Category:Tower of Babel