Rossini's Stabat Mater
Programme
- Ferruccio Busoni Elegiac Lullaby
- Richard Strauss Death and Transfiguration
- Gioacchino Rossini Stabat Mater
A deeply religious meditation from the composer of lighthearted operaslike*TheBarber of Seville*? Rossini proved it was possible. His*Stabat Mater*is an emotional union of comforting piety and operatic grandeur. A work that leaves no one unmoved. Especially when it is preceded by two other deeply felt masterpieces by Busoni and Strauss. A concert that is a bittersweet delight.
Rossini in Retirement?
Starting in 1830, Gioachino Rossini turned his back on opera and planned to enjoy a long retirement. When, a year later, he was asked to write aStabat Materwhile traveling through Spain, he simply couldn’t resist composing it. It wasn’t until 1841 that the version we know today was completed. Despite fierce opposition from the young Wagner, the work was acclaimed right from its premiere.
Young Strauss Contemplates Death
Whereasthe *Stabat Mater*focuses on a mother’s suffering following the death of her son, Strauss’s*Tod und Verklärung*deals with the “blissful” death of a composer. A striking detail: Strauss was only 25 years old when he wrote this work. On his deathbed, some sixty years later, he said to his daughter-in-law: ‘Dying is just as I composed it inTod und Verklärung.’