Opera in two acts
Music Text Libretto by E M Forster and Eric Crozier, adapted from the story by Herman Melville (E,G,I)
ScoringMajor roles: T,Bar,B; minor roles: 4T,7Bar,BBar,2B;
children's roles: 4Tr,boy speaker,boy actors; men's chorus
4(II,III,IV=picc).2.corA.3(II=Ebcl/bcl,III=bcl).asax.2.dbn-
4.4(III in D).3.1-timp(3).perc(6):xyl/glsp/tgl/wdbl/tamb/SD/TD/BD/
whip/cyms/small gong/4drums(on-stage)-harp-strings

For full details on this stagework, including synopsis and roles, please visit our
Opera section.
World Premiere12/1/1951
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London
Basil Coleman, director / Royal Opera Covent Garden / Benjamin Britten
World premiere of version1/9/1964
Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London
Basil Coleman, director / Royal Opera Covent Garden / Georg Solti
Repertoire Note Billy Budd was written during 1950-51 and first performed in December 1951 as part of that year’s ‘Festival of Britain’ celebrations. In 1960, Britten revised the work, contracting the original four acts into two, in which form it is now generally performed (though the original version is now again available for performance). The work is based on Herman Melville’s posthumous novel
Billy Budd,
Foretopman which Britten and his librettists (E.M.Forster and Eric Crozier) transformed into an opera of great musico-dramatic power and psychological subtlety. Although Billy is the opera’s eponymous hero, the real focus of the work is the moral dilemma facing Captain Vere who, confronted with an agonising decision between saving Billy and his sense of duty as the ship’s Captain is at the centre of the drama (a theme further explored by Britten in
Gloriana).
Billy Budd employs the largest orchestra of any Britten opera, capable of unleashing an elemental power when the moment demands it, but in general, the orchestration favours the more sharply etched, transparent textures developed in the chamber operas.
Reproduced by kind permission of the
Britten-Pears LibraryMore on this Composer