Les nuits d'été Op.7 (High Voice & Piano)

Berlioz, Hector

£19.50
In stock

Hector Berlioz: Les nuits d'été for Solo Voice & Orchestra Op.7 Hol.81B . Original version for high voice.

BA 5784-90: Vocal score voice & piano (original keys, with alternatives of 2) and 3) in higher keys).

Berlioz composed these songs in 1840–41, between the composition of Roméo et Juliette and La damnation de Faust.  The poems were taken from a collection entitled La comédie de la mort by Théophlie Gautier, published in 1838.  The songs were for mezzo-soprano or tenor with piano accompaniment, and were published as a cycle under the title Les nuits d’été in 1841.  The second and fourth songs, Le spectre de la rose and Absence, were performed a few times at that period, and Absence was sung twice in February 1843 by Marie Recio on Berlioz’s first tour of Germany.  For Marie, who later became his second wife, Berlioz at once orchestrated the song for mezzo-soprano and small orchestra.  A dozen years later Berlioz orchestrated the remaining five songs of the cycle, which appeared in its orchestral form in 1856.  Two of these songs, Le spectre de la rose and Sur les lagunes, were now transposed to a lower key, so that the cycle was no longer within the compass of a single voice.

•1: Villanelle | A major (mezzo-soprano or tenor voice).

•2: Le spectre de la rose | B major (contralto voice; alternative provided in D major for high voice).

•3: Sur les lagunes | F minor (baritone or contralto or soprano voice; alternative provided in G minor for high voice).

•4: Absence | F sharp minor (mezzo-soprano or tenor voice).

•5: Au cimetière D major (tenor voice).

•6: L’îsle inconnue D major (tenor voice).

- Urtext of the New Berlioz Edition

- Full scores and parts available for hire (BA5784-72) contain both versions of 2) and 3) enabling the complete song cycle to be performed in concert by a single vocalist.

- English & German translations of the song texts printed sepatarely

 

Kemp, Ian
BA5784-90
9790006473595
Baerenreiter Germany

Additional Information

Romantic
Voice
French