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Betulia Liberata (Mozart 22)

Synopsis

Written in spring 1771, "Betulia Liberata" is an azione sacra, a sacred play in the style of the Italian oratorio. The libretto takes up the well-known biblical story of Judith and Holofernes. The Assyrian general and dictator is laying siege to the Jewish town of Betulia. He has the town surrounded and its water supplies cut off. While the Prince of Betulia, Ozias, and religious leaders discuss what to do, the widow Judith decides to act: she boldly strides into the enemy camp, where she wins Holofernes' trust, arouses his senses and cuts off his head. The work was commissioned by Don Giuseppe Ximenes, Prince of Aragon, a member of a noble Spanish family living in Padua. Years later, in 1784, Mozart took a renewed interest in the work and planned to use some of its music for a new oratorio – proof of his satisfaction with music he had written at 15. The libretto is by Pietro Metastasio (1698-1782), the leading author of opera and oratorio texts of his day (who also penned the libretti to Mozart's "Il re pastore," "La clemenza di Tito" and "Il sogno di Scipione"). "Betulia Liberata" owes much to the composer's early experiences with opera, especially "Mitridate," and contains some strikingly prophetic features. One finds the conventional aria types of the opera seria such as the rage aria and the bravura aria; there are powerful choruses and a remarkable C minor aria with choral interjections. The work is preceded by a stormy D minor overture that foreshadows the Sturm und Drang atmosphere of the "little" G minor Symphony K. 183 of 1773. As befits an oratorio, the Salzburg production of "Betulia Liberata" is a semi-staged concert performance. The incisive playing of the Munich Chamber Orchestra under its early-music-inspired conductor Christoph Poppen provides the dynamic basis for the homogeneous cast headed by Jeremy Ovenden as Ozias, a demanding tenor part sung with nimble bravura, Marjana Mijanovic as a darkly hued and sensual Judith, Franz-Josef Selig as a profound Alchior and Julia Kleiter as a luminous Amital. Noteworthy is the rousing vitality of the Chorus of the Vienna State Opera.

Additional Info

  • No: A04001464
  • Composer: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Conductor: Christoph Poppen
  • Orchestra: Münchener Kammerorchester / Chorus: KV Wiener Staatsopernchor
  • Artists: Jeremy Ovenden, Marijana Mijanovic, Julia Kleiter, Franz-Josef Selig, Irena Bespalovaite
  • Production year: 2006
  • Run time: 03:03:00
  • Director: Stefan Aglassinger / David Hermann
  • Producers: UNITEL and BFMI in co-production with CLASSICA in cooperation with the Salzburg Festival
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