Krása Brundibár
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Frantisek Domazlický, Hans Krása
Genre:
Opera
Label: Channel Classics
Magazine Review Date: 8/1993
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 42
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CCS5193
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Brundibár, '(The) Bumble Bee' |
Hans Krása, Composer
Barbora Drofová, Cat Disman Radio Children's Choir Disman Radio Children's Orchestra Dora Horácková, Policeman Gabriela Pribilová, Annette Hans Krása, Composer Jan Flegl, Dog Jana Kratenová, Sparrow Joza Karas, Conductor Klára Tichá, Milkman Michal Alexandridis, Baker Petra Kristofová, Brundibár Tomás Stanek, Ice cream man Vít Ondracka, Little Joe |
Czech Songs |
Frantisek Domazlický, Composer
Ann Hood, Phoebe, Mezzo soprano Ann Hood, Phoebe, Mezzo soprano Ann Hood, Phoebe, Mezzo soprano Anthony Raffell, Foreman, Baritone Anthony Raffell, Foreman, Baritone Anthony Raffell, Foreman, Baritone David Palmer, First Yeoman, Tenor David Palmer, First Yeoman, Tenor David Palmer, First Yeoman, Tenor Disman Radio Children's Choir Donald Adams, Usher, Baritone Donald Adams, Usher, Baritone Donald Adams, Usher, Baritone Elizabeth Harwood, Elsie, Soprano Frantisek Domazlický, Composer Gillian Knight, Dame Carruthers, Contralto (Female alto) Jan Mrácek, Violin John Reed, Judge, Baritone John Reed, Judge, Baritone John Reed, Judge, Baritone Joza Karas, Conductor Kenneth Sandford, Counsel, Baritone Kenneth Sandford, Counsel, Baritone Kenneth Sandford, Counsel, Baritone Margaret Eales, Kate, Soprano Oldrich Smola, Viola Peter Misejka, Cello Thomas Lawlor, Second Yeoman, Baritone Zdenek Jirousek, Violin |
Author:
The successful launch of Decca's Entartete Musik project should not obscure the dedicated work of smaller companies working in a similar field. For some time, Channel Classics have been disinterring much worthwhile music composed or performed in Theresienstadt, the notorious ghetto city established by the Nazis from 1941 and used in the main as a transit camp for Auschwitz. The Hawthorne Quartet, who so impressed with their Klein and Ullmann coupling (12/91), will also be participating in the Decca project with quartets by Hindemith and Krasa. Meanwhile, Channel Classics have stolen a march on their rivals with the present issue, and any future recording of Brundibar will have to be very good indeed to trump the work of Joza Karas and his Czech team.
It is hard to be objective about what is after all an essentially lightweight children's opera. Composed in 1938, Brundibar was subsequently reconstituted for performance by the musicians available in Theresienstadt. There it received as many as 55 performances and acquired unlikely resonances as it entered the group consciousness of the incarcerated deportees. Thousands of children passed through. How many who perished in the camps must have hummed Krasa's hit tunes?––the notes assure us that the score used here is very much the one they would have heard. The much-praised Czech TV recording available on Romantic Robot involves a larger complement of strings and creates a rather different effect: close-miked, bold, romanticized and 'commercial' in a way that I at least find less than affecting. Under Karas, cool, literal and idiomatic, the purely musical qualities of the score are more readily apparent. The genre is an inventive amalgam of popular Czech elements from Janacek, Martinu and Weill, and it is perhaps the veiled allusions to the famous Dvorak Humoresque (track 1, etc.), Petrushka (track 6) and Verklarte Nacht (track 9) which most clearly point up Krasa's own subversive pre-war personality. The only real drawback comes with the opulent packaging. To provide full librettos in (American) English, French and German without correlating them with the original Czech seems like a missed opportunity, and the inaccurate track listing for the Second Act makes it difficult to get your bearings in any language. The Czech song arrangements by Frantisek Domazlicky (with Karel Ancerl, a rare survivor of the camps) are an ungenerous bonus, executed without the high polish accorded the main work though not without their own quiet charm. There are no texts.'
It is hard to be objective about what is after all an essentially lightweight children's opera. Composed in 1938, Brundibar was subsequently reconstituted for performance by the musicians available in Theresienstadt. There it received as many as 55 performances and acquired unlikely resonances as it entered the group consciousness of the incarcerated deportees. Thousands of children passed through. How many who perished in the camps must have hummed Krasa's hit tunes?––the notes assure us that the score used here is very much the one they would have heard. The much-praised Czech TV recording available on Romantic Robot involves a larger complement of strings and creates a rather different effect: close-miked, bold, romanticized and 'commercial' in a way that I at least find less than affecting. Under Karas, cool, literal and idiomatic, the purely musical qualities of the score are more readily apparent. The genre is an inventive amalgam of popular Czech elements from Janacek, Martinu and Weill, and it is perhaps the veiled allusions to the famous Dvorak Humoresque (track 1, etc.), Petrushka (track 6) and Verklarte Nacht (track 9) which most clearly point up Krasa's own subversive pre-war personality. The only real drawback comes with the opulent packaging. To provide full librettos in (American) English, French and German without correlating them with the original Czech seems like a missed opportunity, and the inaccurate track listing for the Second Act makes it difficult to get your bearings in any language. The Czech song arrangements by Frantisek Domazlicky (with Karel Ancerl, a rare survivor of the camps) are an ungenerous bonus, executed without the high polish accorded the main work though not without their own quiet charm. There are no texts.'
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