![]() This tidbit is the first stanza of the piece. “O Fortune/Like the moon/You are changeable/ever waxing/and waning/… poverty/and power/it melts them like ice.” ![]() ![]() Here are some lyrical gems from the piece that will capture all your frustrations in an eloquent bubble of creativity and angst. It seems as if our fate was decided for us long before we could do anything about it and we are powerless to change it. Everybody has those days when nothing is going right. Each small poem focuses on different topics like sex, love, flirtation and of course, the all too cruel and heartless fate, who has her way with innocent people and leaves them in misery and ruin.īesides the impressive force of the music (compliments of multiple choirs and a full-sized orchestra) the lyrics of this piece seem to perfectly capture human emotions. Composed by Carl Orff, this cantata is set to an epic ensemble of twenty-five Latin poems. Baritone Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau brings the nuance of a Lieder artist to his solos, while tenor Gerhard Stolze, in spite of some liberties with phrasing, proves unerringly comical.“ Carmina Burana” is the music you’ve heard, but probably couldn’t name. No one has ever done the Bavarian beer hall bit any better, and the whole performance is fun from start to finish. The orchestral playing sounds clean, characterful and suggestive the choral singing suitably lusty. German conductor Eugen Jochum's picturesque recording has a Germanness that is exactly on the mark. Orff's Carmina Burana invites the performer and listener alike to participate in the hedonistic enjoyment of rhythmically catchy and frequently repeated tunes, as well as equally simple forms, consonant harmony, powerful singing and colorful scoring marked by unstinting use of percussion. The score, completed in 1936, received its premiere in Frankfurt on June 8, 1937. He made use of some two dozen texts (though none of the melodies in the manuscript) to fashion one of the 20th century's most popular works for chorus and orchestra. In 1935, the German composer Carl Orff (1895-1982) encountered the collection and was immediately seized by the earthy, unbridled imagery of its material. To this day, the original manuscript remains the richest source of secular poetry by the goliards - itinerant scholars and monks active in Europe from the late 10th century to the early 1200s. Carmina Burana was the title of a collection of medieval Latin and German lyrics published in 1847, taken from a 13th century manuscript then in the possession of a Benedictine abbey near Munich. ![]()
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