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Music Text

Text by Randolph Stow and George III (E,F,G)

Scoring

fl(=picc).cl-perc(1): railway whistle/SD/2susp.cym/foot cyms/2wdbl/
BD/chains/ratchet/tom-t/tam-t/tamb/rototoms/toy bird-calls/2tpl.bl/
wind chimes/crot/sleigh bells/glsp/steel bars/crow/didgeridoo-
pft(=hpd,dulcimer)-vln.vlc

Abbreviations (PDF)

Publisher

Boosey & Hawkes

Territory
This work is available from Boosey & Hawkes for the world.

Availability

World Premiere
22/04/1969
Queen Elizabeth Hall, London
Roy Hart, voice
Conductor: Peter Maxwell Davies
Company: Pierrot Players

Roles

KING Baritone
Synopsis

Long established as a classic of music-theatre, the work is an extravagant, disturbing and poignant portrayal of madness. The king is George III of England - or maybe another madman who believes himself to be that monarch - vocalizing weirdly as he bemoans his fate and tries to teach his instrumentalist-birds to sing. The string and woodwind players are the captives of his insanity, intended to play from within giant cages, while the percussionist is his keeper, holding him within the confines of a maddened musical sensibility. But all the musicians are essentially projections from within his own mind. The focus is always on him, and on his wild vocal performances, which include various kinds of Sprechgesang, chords and a range of over four octaves. The virtuosity of the instrumentalists is no less, nor that of the composer in playing spikily over a range of eighteenth-century references.
by Paul Griffiths

Moods

Dramatic, Poetic, Tragic

Subjects
Recommended Recording
cd_cover

Julius Eastman, The Fires of London, Peter Maxwell Davies
Unicorn-Kanchana DKPCD9052

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