- Cantata Profana
"Cantata Profana" (subtitled "A kilenc csodaszarvas"; English: "The Nine Splendid Stags") Sz. 94, is a
choral work fortenor ,baritone ,choir andorchestra by the Hungarian composerBéla Bartók . It was written in 1930 and first performed onBBC Radio on25 May 1934 by theBBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Aylmer Buesst.The Hungarian text is based on a Romanian "colinda" (a type of
Christmas carol ) about a father who teaches his nine sons the art of hunting. One day they cross a haunted bridge deep in the forest and are turned into nine stags. Their father arrives and aims his bow at them but when he learns the truth he begs them to return home. The stags reply that this is no longer possible since their antlers would not fit through the door; their new life is in the forest. The critic Paul Griffiths believes Bartók was attracted to the story because it shows "the accordance of dignity and rightness to a natural as opposed to a civilised state: the implicit elevation of the peasant above the townsman..." (Griffiths p.140).Bartók's musical style in "Cantata Profana" was influenced by Bach's Passions, though as the title of the work suggests it is more pagan than Christian. The great technical difficulties the piece presents mean it has had few performances.
Recordings
*"Cantata Profana" Tamás Daróczy (tenor), Alexandru Agache (baritone), Choir of Hungarian Radio & TV (Kálmán Strauss, chorus master), Budapest Festival Orchestra, conducted by
Sir Georg Solti (London, 1998)
*"Cantata Profana" (with "The Wooden Prince") John Aler (tenor),John Tomlinson (baritone), Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, conducted byPierre Boulez (Deutsche Grammophon, 1992)ources
*Paul Griffiths: "Bartók" (J.M. Dent, "The Master Musicians", 1984)
*Booklet note to the Boulez recording
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