

Johannes Maria Staud
Berenice
Short instrumentation: 1 0 1 0 - 1 2 1 1 - perc(2), harm, pno, sax, vln(2), vla(2), vc(2), cb(1), tape, live-electronics
Duration: 85'
Libretto von: Durs Grünbein
Dichter der Textvorlage: Edgar Allan Poe
Dedication: für Heidrun
Choir: Chor der Familiengeister, mixed 8-part vocal ensemble
Roles:
Egaeus 1
actor
Egaeus 2
bassbaritone
Berenice
soprano
Der Vamp
mezzo-soprano
Edgar Allen Poe
actor
Das Hausmädchen
high soprano in the choir
Die tote Mutter
alto in the choir
Der Hausarzt
bass in the choir
Ein Diener
tenor in the choir
Instrumentation details:
flute (+picc
alto fl
bass fl)
clarinet in Bb (+cb.cl(Bb))
soprano saxophone in Bb (+alto sax(Eb)
t.sax(Bb)
bar.sax(Eb))
horn in F (+t.tuba(Bb)
wagner tuba)
1st trumpet in C (+picc.tpt in Bb)
2nd trumpet in Bb (+flhn)
trombone (+t.hn(Bb))
contrabass tuba (+cb.tuba)
1st percussion
2nd percussion
harmonium
piano
1st violin
2nd violin
1st viola
2nd viola
1st violoncello
2nd violoncello
contrabass
tape
Staud - Berenice
Translation, reprints and more

Johannes Maria Staud
Staud: Berenice (Revision 2006)Type: Studienpartitur (Sonderanfertigung)
Language: Englisch (Großbritannien)
Sample pages
Audio preview
Work introduction
My first full-length work is based on the arabesque Berenice, published in 1835 by Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849). This dark horror story revolves around the unequal, incestuous marriage of Egaeus and Berenice, facing each other like archetypal opposites. The underlying horror at the heart of the piece comes out from human anatomy, the human soul. It plays out, like so much of Poe’s work, on the threshold between daily life and the world of nightmares.
Strings of variations arise from the most varied seeds of inspiration, constantly combining and recombining, and developing gradually into an almost inescapable tangle of relationships, in which unexpected trapdoors and dead ends threaten to open up at any minute. Sung passages are interspersed with the spoken passages, underlining the schizophrenic separation of the role of Egaeus between a singer and an actor. This also heightens the contrast with the fragile figure of Berenice.
An eight-voice vocal ensemble playing the choir of family ghosts commentates on the action as if in a Greek tragedy, with a range of expressions from whispers to shouts. Minor characters like the Dead Mother are recruited from the vocal ensemble, the performers momentarily escaping from the shadows of anonymity. The musical basis of the whole piece is a lightly amplified harmonium and five electronically generated spatial sound patterns based on the sounds of metalworking machines. The aim was not to integrate these electronic textures into the rest of the work, but rather to replicate a sonic idea which would not have been possible with voices or instruments alone.
(Johannes Maria Staud)