Jump to content

The Promised Land (Saint-Saëns)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Promised Land (French: La Terre promise), Op. 140, is an English and later French-language oratorio by Camille Saint-Saëns for the Three Choirs Festival of 1913 and which the composer conducted at Gloucester Cathedral.[1]

Saint-Saëns had asked Herman Klein to arrange the Biblical text for an oratorio, commissioned by the English publisher Novello and originally called The Death of Moses, in 1887, for Norwich. The composer wrote to the librettist Klein that "Moise will probably be my last work. It must worthily crown my career!" However the Norwich authorities were unwilling to pledge themselves in advance to a work of unknown proportions and the project was shelved.[2] In the winter of 1912 the composer took Klein's revised text to Cairo and finished setting it by 15 February 1913. It was then chosen by the Gloucester Festival for performance that year, in part due to Klein's advocacy.[3] Saint-Saëns dedicated the work to Queen Alexandra[4]

The French version was performed only once, at the inauguration of the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in 1916. The oratorio, which requires organ and full orchestra and choir was not revived until 2004 with a performance by the Académie de Musique, an orchestra of 75 with and choir of 250 singers, at the Église de la Sainte-Trinité, Paris, under Jeanne Roth and Jean-Philippe Sarcos.[5] A German version with text by Otto Neitzel, Das Gelobte Land, was published in 1914.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Stephen Studd Saint-Saëns: A Critical Biography, 1999, p. 262 "The Promised Land was the long-delayed realisation of an idea that had been with Saint-Saëns ever since his youth, when he was first attracted to the subject of Moses in the Sinai desert. Several attempts to set the story had come to nothing."
  2. ^ Herman Klein, Thirty Years of Musical Life in London, 1870–1900, 1903, p. 176: "It must worthily crown my career! Your faithful and affectionate, C. Saint-Saëns. But the Fates were not kind to Moise. The Norwich authorities were unwilling to pledge themselves so long beforehand to accept a work of unknown proportions."
  3. ^ K. M. Moody "The Promised Land": An examination, 2013: "The Promised Land, Op. 140, was Saint-Saëns's last major choral-orchestral work, and the work which he said 'must worthily crown my career!'"
  4. ^ See IMSLP score
  5. ^ 2004 performance
[edit]