Opera by David Hertzberg
The Wake World Language English Based on The Wake World by Aleister Crowley Premiere 18 September 2017
(2017-09-18 )
The Wake World is an opera with music and libretto by David Hertzberg . It premiered September 18, 2017, at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia .[ 1] [ 2] The Wake World was a co-presentation of Opera Philadelphia and the Barnes Foundation, directed by R. B. Schlather and conducted by Elizabeth Braden.[ 1] [ 2] The opera is based on the story "The Wake World" by Aleister Crowley .[ 1] The opera's debut recording was released April 24, 2020 on Tzadik Records .[ 3]
Critical reception
"The whole evening felt celebratory", Opera News wrote of The Wake World .[ 1] The New York Times called the music engrossing. "Just five instrumentalists produce wondrous colors and sonorities. The score, spiked with modernist elements, makes Mr. Hertzberg seem a 21st-century Ravel", wrote Anthony Tommasini .[ 4]
"The prose was purple, and so was the music, so thoroughly an antique musical language that it sounded like a half-remembered dream", wrote Peter Dobrin in The Philadelphia Inquirer .[ 5]
In 2018, The Wake World was awarded the Music Critics Association of North America Award for Best New Opera .[ 6]
The New York Times listed the track "Is that you, my love?" from the opera's debut recording among 'The 25 Best Classical Music Tracks of 2020'.[ 7]
Roles
Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role
Voice type
Premiere cast, 18 September 2017 Conductor: Elizabeth Braden[ 2]
Lola
soprano
Maeve Höglund
The Fairy Prince
mezzo-soprano
Rihab Chaieb
Parthenope
soprano
Rebecca Myers
Ligeia
soprano
Veronica Chapman-Smith
Leucosia
mezzo-soprano
Joanna Gates
Luna/Hecate
soprano
Jessica Beebe
Morbus
tenor
George Ross Somerville
Pestilitas
bass
John David Miles
Giant/Bone Man/Man in the Azure Coat/Man of the Blue House
bass
James Osby Gwathney, Jr.
Instrumentation
Recording
2020: Elizabeth Braden, conductor; Jessica Beebe, Andrew Bogard, Samantha Hankey, Maeve Hoglund. Tzadik (TZ 4030-2)[citation needed ]
References
^ a b c d "The Wake World " . www.operanews.com . Retrieved October 29, 2018 .
^ a b c "The Wake World " . Opera Philadelphia . September 9, 2017. Retrieved October 29, 2018 .
^ "Tzadik Records to Release its First Opera: David Hertzberg's Hallucinatory The Wake World " . BroadwayWorld . Retrieved September 17, 2020 .
^ Tommasini, Anthony (September 20, 2017). "5 Operas in 72 Hours: A Philadelphia Festival Is a Test of Survival" . The New York Times . Retrieved October 29, 2018 .
^ Dobrin, Peter. "O17 hits the Barnes with a hallucinatory fairy tale" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved October 29, 2018 .
^ "Hertzberg Wins New Opera Honor For Wake World " . classicalvoiceamerica.org . Retrieved October 29, 2018 .
^ Tommasini, Anthony (December 17, 2020). "The 25 Best Classical Music Tracks of 2020" . The New York Times . Archived from the original on February 21, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021 .