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‘Der Weg der Verheissung’ and the Prophecies of Jeremiah (I)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2016

Extract

A vast epic of the Jewish people in four Acts (or Parts), Der Weg der Verheissung is Kurt Weill's only collaboration with the poet, playwright, and novelist Franz Werfel (1890–1945). The text was written in Austria in the spring and summer of 1934, and the score was drafted during the second half of the same year – mostly in the village of Louveciennes outside Paris. The musical perspectives are exceptionally wide: on the one hand they afford a view of all Weill's major compositions from the Mahagonny opera (1927–29) to Tlie Seven Deadly Sins and the Second Symphony (1933); on the other, they look forward to his very last stage work for Broadway, the ‘Musical Tragedy’ Lost in the Stars (1949) which he and Maxwell Anderson based on Alan Paton's anti-apartheid novel, Cry, the Beloved Country.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1998

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References

page 13 note * Though never reprinted, the little album still retained its unique status sixty years later. By then, however, great changes were already afoot: the complete orchestral score was about to be computer-set under the supervision of Dr Edward Harsh, Managing Editor of the Kurt Weill Edition; and European American Music (President: Ronald Freed) were about to acquire from the original publishers the publishing interests in The Eternal Road. Without these developments, and without the active participation of Dr Harsh, the 1998 performances of Propheten would not have been feasible.

page 16 note * Meyer Weisgal at Seventy, p.59.

page 16 note † Ibid., p.34