Benjamin Britten Operas

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About

Benjamin Britten opera commissioned for the coronation of Elizabeth II (8) PEARS Peter -, English tenor who created the role of Peter Quint in 1954 Benjamin Britten opera The Turn of the Screw (5). Peter Grimes is an opera by Benjamin Britten, with a libretto adapted by Montagu Slater from the narrative poem, 'Peter Grimes', in George Crabbe 's book The Borough. The 'borough' of the opera is a fictional village which shares some similarities with Crabbe's, and later Britten's, own home of Aldeburgh, a town on England's east coast.

Following the monumental 3000-set Limited Edition Complete Works, we are delighted to present four boxed sets which together present Britten's Complete Works.* In each of the genres represented here, Britten created works which defined and shaped their genres going forward: opera was never the same after Peter Grimes in 1945; War Requiem re-defined the Oratorio genre; Britten's extraordinary gifts for choosing and setting texts, as well as his life-long artistic relationship with Peter Pears, reshaped the Song Cycle for the late 20th century; while his pioneering works like Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra and works for children to perform showed the world how composers could connect to and educate a wide audience. The sheer range of his creative work, and output, is astonishing.

  1. Operas by Benjamin Britten. Midsummer Night's Dream, A. Turn of the screw. The Rape of Lucretia. Beggar's Opera, The.
  2. Edward Benjamin Britten Born: 21 Kirkley Cliff Road, Lowestoft, England, 22 Nov. 1913 Died: the Red House, Aldeburgh, England, 4 Dec. 1976 Operas The dates and locations are those of the premieres. Listed in order of opus numbers. Paul Bunyan, Op. 17 (5.5.1941, Columbia University, New York).

Each set comes with a detailed article by Andrew Huth, full track listings and recording information. The Complete Works of each genre - conducted by Britten where Britten recorded the work – at an exceptionally-advantageous price. *Includes all works with opus numbers and all works commercially recorded to date. Includes folksongs, excludes Purcell realisations and Hindmarsh's arrangements of incidental music to King Arthur and World of the Spirit.

Artists

Pop Wagner (Narrator), James Lawless (Paul Bunyan), Dan Dressen (Johnny Inkslinger), Elisabeth Comeaux Nelson (Tiny), Clifton Ware (Slim), James Bohn (Hel Helson), Phil Jorgenson (First Swede), Tim Dahl (Second Swede), Thomas Shaffer (Third Swede), Lawrence Weller (Fourth Swede), James McKeel (John Shears), James Westbrock (Western Union Boy), Maria Jette (Fido), Sue Herber (Moppet), Janis Hardy (Poppet), Josephine Barstow (Elizabeth), Philip Langridge (Essex), Della Jones (Lady Essex), Jonathan Summers (Charles Blount), Alan Opie (Cecil), Yvonne Kenny (Lady Rich), Bryn Terfel (Henry Cuffe), Richard van Allan (Walter Ralegh), Peter Pears (Peter Grimes), Claire Watson (Ellen Orford), James Pease (Balstrode), Jean Watson (Auntie), Raymond Nilsson (Bob Boles), Owen Brannigan (Swallow), Geraint Evans (Ned Keene), Lauris Elms (Mrs Sedley), David Kelly (Hobson), Marion Studholme (First Niece), Iris Kells (Second Niece), John Lanigan (Horace Adams), Peter Pears (Prologue/Quint), Jennifer Vyvyan (Governess), Joan Cross (Mrs Grose), Olive Dyer (Flora), David Hemmings (Miles), Arda Mandikian (Miss Jessel), Janet Baker (Lucretia), Peter Pears (Male Chorus), Heather Harper (Female Chorus), Benjamin Luxon (Tarquinius), Bryan Drake (Junius), John Shirley-Quirk (Collatinus), Elizabeth Bainbridge (Bianca), Jenny Hill (Lucia), Elizabeth Harwood (Tytania), Alfred Deller (Oberon), Peter Pears (Lysander), Thomas Hemsley (Demetrius), Heather Harper (Helena), Josephine Veasey (Hermia), John Shirley-Quirk (Theseus), Helen Watts (Hippolyta), Owen Brannigan (Bottom), Norman Lumsden (Quince), Benjamin Luxon (Owen Wingrave), John Shirley-Quirk (Spencer Coyle), Sylvia Fisher (Miss Wingrave), Heather Harper (Mrs Coyle), Jennifer Vyvyan (Mrs. Julien), Peter Pears (Sir Philip Wingrave/Narrator), Janet Baker (Kate), Nigel Douglas (Lechmere), Peter Pears (Albert), Sylvia Fisher (Lady Billows), Sheila Rex (Mum), John Noble (Mr Gedge), Catherine Wilson (Nancy), Joseph Ward (Sid), Johanna Peters (Florence Pike), Edgar Evans (Mr Upfold), April Cantelo (Miss Wordsworth), Owen Brannigan (Budd), Sheila Amit (Emmie), Anne Pashley (Cis), Stephen Terry (Harry), Peter Pears (Aschenbach), John Shirley-Quirk (Traveller/Elderly Fop/Old Gondolier/Hotel Manager/Hotel Barber/Leader of the Players/Voice of Dionysus), James Bowman (Voice of Apollo), Peter Glossop (Billy Budd), Peter Pears (Captain Vere), Michael Langdon (Claggart), John Shirley-Quirk (Mr Redburn), Bryan Drake (Mr Flint), David Kelly (Mr Ratcliffe), Kenneth MacDonald (Red Whiskers), David Bowman (Donald), Dennis Wicks (Dansker), Robert Tear (Novice), Robert Bowman (Squeak), Benjamin Luxon (Novice's Friend)

Orchestra & Chorus of the Plymouth Music Series, Chorus of the Welsh National Opera & Orchestra of the Welsh National Opera, Chorus & Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, English Opera Group, English Chamber Orchestra, London Symphony Orchestra, Philip Brunelle, Charles Mackerras, Benjamin Britten, Steuart Bedford

With so much Britten being performed for the 2013 centenary, it is hard to know what to choose and where to begin – but if you don't know much about Britten's operas, here is a brief guide to get you started. Benjamin Britten was a talented musician who explored most types of composition, and as well as his instrumental and choral works, he composed sixteen magnificent operas. Each is very different but devilishly clever, and his compositional process as well as the works themselves have taught us a great deal about him. Many of his operas are established in the repertory and their regular performances represent a large percentage of the 20th-century output.

We've chosen five of his most popular operas and put together a short list of starting-points for anyone who's new to Britten's operas, as well as details of where to hear these works live in the months ahead.

Benjamin Britten Operas

Peter Grimes

Peter Grimes is the first work that gained Britten recognition and fame as a composer. It is set around the sea, which was a huge influence to Britten as he grew up in Suffolk very near the coast. The opera is centred around the story of an outsider – as are many of his operas – and one of its most notable features is the orchestra being used to create huge representations of the sea in its various states.

The role of Grimes is a good example of one written specifically for Peter Pears, Britten's life-long partner, with the song 'Now the Great Bear and Pleiades' written mainly on Pears' favourite note (E above middle C). The music is dramatic and emotional, and has success as separate orchestral publications as well as an opera, with the Passacaglia and Sea Interludes often performed in their own right.

There is an interesting series of letters relating to the composition of Peter Grimes, exchanged between Britten and Pears in 1944. On 10 January Britten wrote 'Actually in this scene there isn't much for you to do... I don't know whether I shall ever be a good opera composer, but it's wonderful fun to try once in a way!', and after hearing an extract a few days later, Pears replies 'Ben my darling, Peter Grimes was quite madly exciting! Really tremendously thrilling'. Pears also offered criticism however, about tempi and general capabilities of singers, but their joint effort resulted in a huge success, and one of Britten's finest compositions.

As Britten's most famous opera, Peter Grimes is central to the centenary with numerous performances, most notably the performances on Aldeburgh Beach this month, as part of the annual festival. Productions scheduled for 2014 include a revival at English National Opera starring Stuart Skelton, and Zurich Opera's staging by David Pountney, with Christopher Ventris as Grimes.

A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream is Britten's only Shakespeare opera and also the only opera with a libretto written by Pears. The story is familiar to most, with four young warring lovers, a comic group of amateur actors, and the controlling fairies who live in the forest nearby, where most of the plot takes place. This opera is not performed as often as it should be due to the large forces required: nineteen soloists, an orchestra and a stage band.

The Aldeburgh Festival saw the first performance of the opera in 1960, twelve years after Britten and Pears founded the festival, and the opera then had a successful run at Covent Garden from 1961, with six revivals. More recent productions have played around with the setting, such as ENO's modern take in 2011 with Oberon and Titania teachers and Puck and the other fairies students at a public boys' school.

Britten stayed very traditional, with the three groups of characters having appropriate music: the actors with folk-like tunes, the lovers with romantic, flowing melodies, and the fairies ethereal. However, he adds original touches too: it is unusual to have a countertenor lead as we see here with Oberon, written specifically for Alfred Deller, and although Peter Pears doesn't have a lead role here as he often did, his comic drag role of Flute/Thisbe has a hilarious song which has to be sung a semitone out of tune.

The music is based around a series of glissando chords, but although they are perfectly ordinary triads they swarm through all twelve keys to give a simultaneous feeling of the natural and the unnatural. Although the original critical reception was mixed, with many feeling that the opera didn't match the quality of Britten's earlier ones, David Drew (writing for the New Statesman in June, 1960) called it 'an achievement far beyond the capacity of any other living composer'. James Conlon will be coming to the Metropolitan Opera in New York this October to conduct Tim Albery's production, featuring Iestyn Davies as Oberon.

Billy Budd

Billy Budd is another of Britten's operas that focuses on the world's reactions to an outsider. The opera is set on board the battleship HMS Indomitable during the French Revolution, and we see a flashback from the ship's captain, Edward Fairfax Vere, who is grappling with guilt over Billy's fate. Billy was popular with the crew when he arrived, but had a fatal flaw: he stuttered under pressure. This flaw had disastrous consequences as Billy failed to defend himself, but at the end of the opera, Vere as an old man realises that Billy's downfall had in fact saved him.

The opera may at first seem striking because the cast is entirely male, and although it is strange seeing seventeen tenor and bass soloists, four trebles and a male chorus, it is appropriate for the setting, and is a refreshing change from convention. When writing the opera, Britten had no idea who would be performing it but he was optimistic with the orchestration, using large forces including six percussionists. Britten uses higher registers with wind and brass to make up for the lack of female voices, and the alto saxophone occasionally features prominently.

The opera has a libretto by novelist E.M. Forster and director Eric Crozier, and is based on a short novel by Herman Melville. Forster described the opera as 'my Nunc Dimittis', and the theme of the power of homosexual love is in common with his then unpublished book Maurice, which he had shown to Britten and Pears around that time. Billy Budd has always been a popular Britten opera; the première received seventeen curtain calls, and many of the most famous male opera singers have either Budd or Vere in their repertoire. Jacques Imbrailo and Mark Padmore are the leading two in Glyndebourne's production this August, and next year John Chest and Burkhard Ulrich take the roles for Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Curlew River

Benjamin Britton Artist

Curlew River is the first of Britten's three Church Parables (all written in the 1960s, and composed to suit the specific acoustics and atmosphere of a church performance), and it was premièred in June 1964 in Suffolk by the English Opera Group, with the original cast including Peter Pears and baritone Bryan Drake. The work is based on the Japanese noh play Sumidagawa ('Sumida River'), written by Juro Motomasa in the 15th century. Britten took a holiday with Pears to Japan and the Far East in 1956 and the influences are obvious here, not just in the plot and dramatic material, but also in the theatrical treatment and the music itself. Britten wanted to avoid pastiche with his setting of the play, but still used elements from a performance he saw in Tokyo in 1956, with no conductor and only seven instrumentalists required.

The librettist William Plomer transformed the original into a Christian parable, again to move it away from its Japanese origin, and set it in early medieval times near the fictional Curlew River in East Anglia. The action centres on the Madwoman – again, an outsider.

The lack of conductor allows different groups of performers to adopt different tempi, which harked back to the music of a Nobayashi ensemble in Japan. These different speeds led to the Curlew sign being created, used to resynchronise previously separated groups of musicians. The harp part is heavily influenced by music for the Japanese koto, and the chamber organ part features extensive use of tone clusters, sounding similar to the shō, an ancient Japanese mouth organ which Britten played whilst on holiday. Also, as in many of Britten's other dramatic works, individual instruments are used to represent particular characters, and here we see the flute and horn as the Madwoman and Ferryman respectively. The opera opens with the Gregorian chant Te lucis ante terminum and an interesting fusion is created throughout, with singers dressed as monks and accompanied by gamelan-style percussion.

The initial rehearsal period for the opera was particularly stressful as Britten worried about its critical reception: his writing was going in a new direction, and Pears was performing a drag part. Curlew River marks a departure in style for the remainder of Britten's creative life, paving the way for such works as Death in Venice and the Third String Quartet. Upcoming performances include a staging by Frederic Wake-Walker for Mahogany Opera as part of the City of London Festival this July, and Londoners will have a further chance to hear it in August at St John's Smith Square.

Death in Venice

Death in Venice was Britten's last opera, with a libretto by Myfanwy Piper. It is based on the novella of the same name by Thomas Mann, which Britten contemplated setting for many years before finally starting work on it in 1970. The first performance was at Snape Maltings near Aldeburgh in 1973, just three years before Britten's death. He was under huge physical and psychological stress whilst composing the opera and had to postpone major heart surgery in order to finish it.

The opera seems to provide a tribute to the voice and work of Peter Pears, but it also sums up his own life's work. The story shares many themes with Britten's other operas and his own life, and significant links can be made between Britten and the opera's hero, writer Gustav von Aschenbach. Aschenbach is aware that the end of his life is nearing, and he travels to Venice, where he falls in love with a young Polish boy, Tadzio, who is portrayed as a silent dancer in the opera.

Even though Britten was an experienced operatic composer by this time, he still had his doubts. He wrote to the choreographer Frederick Ashton on 21 October 1972, saying the opera was 'either the best or worst music [he'd] ever written' and that he had a 'terrible dread of playing [it] to anyone'. The biting score is full of haunting and ambiguous Venetian soundscapes, with the music overall being direct but movingly understated, and it is a wonderful and fitting culmination to Britten's operatic career. Deborah Warner's production of Death in Venice is coming to English National Opera this month, and the same production is then travelling to Amsterdam, with the same cast performing for the Netherlands Opera in early July.

For people who are new to Britten, opera is a very good place to start; and for people who feel like they know Britten, the operas always have more to give.

Billie is a keen music student in London, and a former Bachtrack intern. She started piano lessons and singing at the age of four and is still doing both regularly. She sings in Ralph Allwood's Rodolfus Choir and has a particular interest in Benjamin Britten.
B britten

Peter Grimes

Peter Grimes is the first work that gained Britten recognition and fame as a composer. It is set around the sea, which was a huge influence to Britten as he grew up in Suffolk very near the coast. The opera is centred around the story of an outsider – as are many of his operas – and one of its most notable features is the orchestra being used to create huge representations of the sea in its various states.

The role of Grimes is a good example of one written specifically for Peter Pears, Britten's life-long partner, with the song 'Now the Great Bear and Pleiades' written mainly on Pears' favourite note (E above middle C). The music is dramatic and emotional, and has success as separate orchestral publications as well as an opera, with the Passacaglia and Sea Interludes often performed in their own right.

There is an interesting series of letters relating to the composition of Peter Grimes, exchanged between Britten and Pears in 1944. On 10 January Britten wrote 'Actually in this scene there isn't much for you to do... I don't know whether I shall ever be a good opera composer, but it's wonderful fun to try once in a way!', and after hearing an extract a few days later, Pears replies 'Ben my darling, Peter Grimes was quite madly exciting! Really tremendously thrilling'. Pears also offered criticism however, about tempi and general capabilities of singers, but their joint effort resulted in a huge success, and one of Britten's finest compositions.

As Britten's most famous opera, Peter Grimes is central to the centenary with numerous performances, most notably the performances on Aldeburgh Beach this month, as part of the annual festival. Productions scheduled for 2014 include a revival at English National Opera starring Stuart Skelton, and Zurich Opera's staging by David Pountney, with Christopher Ventris as Grimes.

A Midsummer Night's Dream

A Midsummer Night's Dream is Britten's only Shakespeare opera and also the only opera with a libretto written by Pears. The story is familiar to most, with four young warring lovers, a comic group of amateur actors, and the controlling fairies who live in the forest nearby, where most of the plot takes place. This opera is not performed as often as it should be due to the large forces required: nineteen soloists, an orchestra and a stage band.

The Aldeburgh Festival saw the first performance of the opera in 1960, twelve years after Britten and Pears founded the festival, and the opera then had a successful run at Covent Garden from 1961, with six revivals. More recent productions have played around with the setting, such as ENO's modern take in 2011 with Oberon and Titania teachers and Puck and the other fairies students at a public boys' school.

Britten stayed very traditional, with the three groups of characters having appropriate music: the actors with folk-like tunes, the lovers with romantic, flowing melodies, and the fairies ethereal. However, he adds original touches too: it is unusual to have a countertenor lead as we see here with Oberon, written specifically for Alfred Deller, and although Peter Pears doesn't have a lead role here as he often did, his comic drag role of Flute/Thisbe has a hilarious song which has to be sung a semitone out of tune.

The music is based around a series of glissando chords, but although they are perfectly ordinary triads they swarm through all twelve keys to give a simultaneous feeling of the natural and the unnatural. Although the original critical reception was mixed, with many feeling that the opera didn't match the quality of Britten's earlier ones, David Drew (writing for the New Statesman in June, 1960) called it 'an achievement far beyond the capacity of any other living composer'. James Conlon will be coming to the Metropolitan Opera in New York this October to conduct Tim Albery's production, featuring Iestyn Davies as Oberon.

Billy Budd

Billy Budd is another of Britten's operas that focuses on the world's reactions to an outsider. The opera is set on board the battleship HMS Indomitable during the French Revolution, and we see a flashback from the ship's captain, Edward Fairfax Vere, who is grappling with guilt over Billy's fate. Billy was popular with the crew when he arrived, but had a fatal flaw: he stuttered under pressure. This flaw had disastrous consequences as Billy failed to defend himself, but at the end of the opera, Vere as an old man realises that Billy's downfall had in fact saved him.

The opera may at first seem striking because the cast is entirely male, and although it is strange seeing seventeen tenor and bass soloists, four trebles and a male chorus, it is appropriate for the setting, and is a refreshing change from convention. When writing the opera, Britten had no idea who would be performing it but he was optimistic with the orchestration, using large forces including six percussionists. Britten uses higher registers with wind and brass to make up for the lack of female voices, and the alto saxophone occasionally features prominently.

The opera has a libretto by novelist E.M. Forster and director Eric Crozier, and is based on a short novel by Herman Melville. Forster described the opera as 'my Nunc Dimittis', and the theme of the power of homosexual love is in common with his then unpublished book Maurice, which he had shown to Britten and Pears around that time. Billy Budd has always been a popular Britten opera; the première received seventeen curtain calls, and many of the most famous male opera singers have either Budd or Vere in their repertoire. Jacques Imbrailo and Mark Padmore are the leading two in Glyndebourne's production this August, and next year John Chest and Burkhard Ulrich take the roles for Deutsche Oper Berlin.

Curlew River

Benjamin Britton Artist

Curlew River is the first of Britten's three Church Parables (all written in the 1960s, and composed to suit the specific acoustics and atmosphere of a church performance), and it was premièred in June 1964 in Suffolk by the English Opera Group, with the original cast including Peter Pears and baritone Bryan Drake. The work is based on the Japanese noh play Sumidagawa ('Sumida River'), written by Juro Motomasa in the 15th century. Britten took a holiday with Pears to Japan and the Far East in 1956 and the influences are obvious here, not just in the plot and dramatic material, but also in the theatrical treatment and the music itself. Britten wanted to avoid pastiche with his setting of the play, but still used elements from a performance he saw in Tokyo in 1956, with no conductor and only seven instrumentalists required.

The librettist William Plomer transformed the original into a Christian parable, again to move it away from its Japanese origin, and set it in early medieval times near the fictional Curlew River in East Anglia. The action centres on the Madwoman – again, an outsider.

The lack of conductor allows different groups of performers to adopt different tempi, which harked back to the music of a Nobayashi ensemble in Japan. These different speeds led to the Curlew sign being created, used to resynchronise previously separated groups of musicians. The harp part is heavily influenced by music for the Japanese koto, and the chamber organ part features extensive use of tone clusters, sounding similar to the shō, an ancient Japanese mouth organ which Britten played whilst on holiday. Also, as in many of Britten's other dramatic works, individual instruments are used to represent particular characters, and here we see the flute and horn as the Madwoman and Ferryman respectively. The opera opens with the Gregorian chant Te lucis ante terminum and an interesting fusion is created throughout, with singers dressed as monks and accompanied by gamelan-style percussion.

The initial rehearsal period for the opera was particularly stressful as Britten worried about its critical reception: his writing was going in a new direction, and Pears was performing a drag part. Curlew River marks a departure in style for the remainder of Britten's creative life, paving the way for such works as Death in Venice and the Third String Quartet. Upcoming performances include a staging by Frederic Wake-Walker for Mahogany Opera as part of the City of London Festival this July, and Londoners will have a further chance to hear it in August at St John's Smith Square.

Death in Venice

Death in Venice was Britten's last opera, with a libretto by Myfanwy Piper. It is based on the novella of the same name by Thomas Mann, which Britten contemplated setting for many years before finally starting work on it in 1970. The first performance was at Snape Maltings near Aldeburgh in 1973, just three years before Britten's death. He was under huge physical and psychological stress whilst composing the opera and had to postpone major heart surgery in order to finish it.

The opera seems to provide a tribute to the voice and work of Peter Pears, but it also sums up his own life's work. The story shares many themes with Britten's other operas and his own life, and significant links can be made between Britten and the opera's hero, writer Gustav von Aschenbach. Aschenbach is aware that the end of his life is nearing, and he travels to Venice, where he falls in love with a young Polish boy, Tadzio, who is portrayed as a silent dancer in the opera.

Even though Britten was an experienced operatic composer by this time, he still had his doubts. He wrote to the choreographer Frederick Ashton on 21 October 1972, saying the opera was 'either the best or worst music [he'd] ever written' and that he had a 'terrible dread of playing [it] to anyone'. The biting score is full of haunting and ambiguous Venetian soundscapes, with the music overall being direct but movingly understated, and it is a wonderful and fitting culmination to Britten's operatic career. Deborah Warner's production of Death in Venice is coming to English National Opera this month, and the same production is then travelling to Amsterdam, with the same cast performing for the Netherlands Opera in early July.

For people who are new to Britten, opera is a very good place to start; and for people who feel like they know Britten, the operas always have more to give.

Billie is a keen music student in London, and a former Bachtrack intern. She started piano lessons and singing at the age of four and is still doing both regularly. She sings in Ralph Allwood's Rodolfus Choir and has a particular interest in Benjamin Britten.

Benjamin Britten Opera 1947

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Operas By Benjamin Britten

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