Carmina Burana – Re-Air!
May 28
After the incredibly successful premiere of his monumental work Carmina Burana, composer Carl Orff wrote to his publisher, saying: “Everything I have written to date, and which you have, unfortunately, printed, can be destroyed. With Carmina Burana my collected works begin.” It is truly music which has it all: that epic opening that has pervaded pop culture; moments of serenity and love songs; depictions of debaucherous behavior; and so much more.
Written when the composer was 42 years old, Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana is music that bears the subtitle “Secular songs to be sung by singers and choruses to the accompaniment of instruments and also of magic pictures.” Constructed of 24 movements, the text and inspiration draws on the original 12th-century Carmina Burana manuscript, the title itself essentially meaning “Songs from Bavaria,” much of which expressed the medieval sentiment of acceptance of a kind of fateful universe: that fortune is represented by a spinning wheel, and this conveys the way man’s fate is at the mercy of the wheel’s whimsy.
This is a work that notoriously traverses into some… well, interesting subject matter, to say the least. True Concord’s program booklet from this concert probably paints the picture best: the poets of Carmina Burana consisted of these kinds of medieval monks called “goliards,” said to have been “better known for their rioting, gambling, and intemperance than for their scholarship.” They wrote of subjects like love, exuberant drinking, sinners’ “confessions,” gluttony, and sensuality – just to name a few topics featured in the work we’re about to hear.
Tune in for a performance by True Concord from April 2021 of Carl Orff’s Carmina Burana on this Arizona Encore.
Featured in this episode:
Orff – Carmina Burana – True Concord; Eric Holtan, conductor; Hugh Russell, baritone; Patrick Muehleise, tenor; Chelsea Helm, soprano
- Fortuna, Imperatrix Mundi: O Fortuna
- Fortune plango vulnera
- Primo vere: Veris leta facies
- Omnia Sol temperat
- Ecce gratum
- Uf dem anger: Tanz
- Floret silva nobilis
- Swaz hie gat umbe
- Were diu werlt alle min
- In Taberna: Estuans interius
- Olim lacus colueram
- Ego sum abbas
- In taberna quando sumus
- Cour d’amours: Armor volat undique
- Dies, nox et omnia
- Stetit puella
- Circa mea pectora
- Si puer cum puellula
- Veni, veni, venias
- In trutina
- Tempus est iocundum
- Dulcissime
- Blanziflor et Helena: Ave formosissima
- Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi O Fortuna