César Franck. Hulda
Category :
Date:
CD-Book. Bru Zane Label. French Opera Collection n. 36.
Hulda, completed in 1885, was never staged in César Franck’s lifetime. This gory medieval legend recounts the multiple acts of vengeance its heroine inflicts on the Aslak clan, which slaughtered her family, and on her unfaithful lover Eiolf. Although the imaginary Norwegian setting brings Wagner to mind, the composer continues the tradition of French grand-opéra while adopting the contemporary Verdian idiom. The intensity of the action is reflected in harmonic and instrumental experiments that place Franck in the vanguard of the modernists of his time. The inventiveness of the ballet is matched only by the splendour of the choral writing. How could such a masterpiece have languished in oblivion for so long? Quite simply, because it was deliberately buried by Franck's pupils, who preferred to conserve the image of a composer of ‘pure’ music and to keep for themselves the glory of personifying the French operatic revival. But injustices are made to be redressed, and the team of artists placed under the direction of Gergely Madaras devotes itself to the task with exemplary conviction.
Content
Alexandre Dratwicki – Through the trapdoor of history
Gérard Condé – ‘Modulez, modulez!’
Alfred Bruneau – Hulda at the Théâtre de Monte-Carlo
Vincent Giroud – Nordic and Merovingian inspiration in late nineteenth-century French opera
Scientific publications
Related works
Related persons
Permalink
https://www.bruzanemediabase.com/en/node/68039
publication date : 12/01/24