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Kung Karls jakt

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First performance
  
24 March 1852

Librettist
  
Zachris Topelius

Composer
  
Fredrik Pacius

Language
  
Swedish

Kung Karls jakt httpsiytimgcomvi2W56KP1870maxresdefaultjpg

Similar
  
The Ostrobothnians, The Last Temptations, Juha, Det sjungande trädet, Kullervo

Fredrik pacius kung karls jakt ouverture


Kung Karls jakt (English: King Charles' Hunt; Finnish: Kaarle-kuninkaan metsästys) is an opera with music by Fredrik Pacius and a libretto by Zacharias Topelius. It was the first opera to be composed in Finland. Kung Karls jakt was first performed in Helsinki on 24 March, 1852. Although the text is in Swedish(Swedish and Finnish are both official languages in Finland) it concerns an event from Finnish history when Finland was a province of Sweden in the 17th century. The work takes the form of a Singspiel with spoken dialogue between the musical numbers (the king himself does not sing). The music is heavily influenced by contemporary German and Italian opera, with a few Finnish elements such as the use of a kantele in one scene.

Contents

Fredrik pacius kung karls jakt finale iii och ila vi bort fr n finlands strand


Synopsis

The plot concerns the visit of the young King Charles XI to the Åland Islands to go hunting. Leonora, the daughter of a local fisherman, learns of a plot against the king's life and saves him. In return, the king spares the life of her fiancé Jonathan, who has been condemned to death for killing one of the royal elks.

Recordings

  • Kung Karls Jakt Soloists, Jubilate Choir, Finnish National Opera Orchestra, conducted by Ulf Söderblom (Finlandia, 1991)
  • The Hunt of King Charles (sung in Finnish translation) ( Kaarle-Kuninkaan Metsästys, in Finnish language) Soloists, Pori Opera Choir, Pori Sinfonietta, conducted by Ari Rasilainen (Marco Polo, 2007)
  • References

    Kung Karls jakt Wikipedia


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