Matthäus-Passion

Johann Sebastian Bach [1685 – 1750]

28
Thu
March
19:00 - 22:15
B-Prices: € 86,00 / € 66,00 / € 44,00 / € 26,00 / € 20,00
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Auf der Bühne finden sich Besucherplätze, und Formationen von Chor und Orchester sind im Besucherbereich platziert.
Information about the work

Oratorio in two parts by Johann Sebastian Bach
Presumed first performance on Good Friday, 11 April 1727 in St. Thomas Church, Leipzig
Premiere at the Deutsche Oper Berlin on 5 May 2023

3 Stunden 15 Minuten / Eine Pause

In German language with German and English surtitles

45 Minuten vor Vorstellungsbeginn: Einführung im Rang-Foyer rechts

recommended from 11 years
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Program / Informations
Sehen Sie hier unser Programmheft als PDF
Our thanks to our partners

Koproduktion zwischen der Deutschen Oper Berlin und dem Theater Basel. Der Kinderchor wird gefördert von Dobolino e.V. Präsentiert von rbb Kultur und taz

28
Thu
March
19:00 - 22:15
B-Prices: € 86,00 / € 66,00 / € 44,00 / € 26,00 / € 20,00
Buy tickets
Auf der Bühne finden sich Besucherplätze, und Formationen von Chor und Orchester sind im Besucherbereich platziert.
the content

On the work
Bach’s St Matthew Passion (1729) was originally a work designed for performance in St Thomas’s, Leipzig, as a religious ritual for the congregation during the Good Friday liturgy. On the death of Bach this vast and epic composition ceased to feature in the annual ecclesiastical calendar. A century was to pass before the work resurfaced in public consciousness, triggered by Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy’s legendary “Rediscovery” with the newly formed “Berliner Sing-Akademie”, which also opened a new page of Berlin culture. In 1829 this gathering of the faithful to sing the Passion and celebrate the values expressed within coincided with the movement to foster a national German identity. The emergence of a form of artistic/religious expression coined by an autonomous Berlin citizenry appears closely associated with performances of the St Matthew Passion, and to this day Bach Passions continue to feature prominently on the programmes of large choirs and choruses.

On the production
In his staging of the St Matthew Passion director Benedikt von Peter is interested in the extent to which the suffering of Christ can be considered meaningful to a diverse society in which the Christian religion is becoming less and less relevant. How can we grasp the core motif of suffering in today’s world? How much distance to the subject is created at a performance of the piece in a secular venue such as an opera house? And what kind of community is possible?

In his directorial work in musical theatre over recent years, Benedikt von Peter has attracted attention above all with some striking uses of performance space, focusing on the “architecture of a work”, which he seeks to extend from the composition to both stage and auditorium. A St Matthew Passion already written for two choirs by Bach is extended by von Peter over the entire auditorium and main stage. Four orchestras, assorted sections of the Deutsche Oper chorus and a number of Berlin choral societies are spread throughout the hall. The audience – some seated on the stage looking backwards into the auditorium – are encouraged to join in with the singing, with this dual-performative structure producing a sensation of community within the secular setting of the opera house. At the centre of these proceedings the staged action of the Gospel text is played out: children and teenagers narrate the story and provide portrayals of agony, suffering and death – in close proximity to the audience and dovetailing with the musical interpretations of the soloists. A conventional frontal perspective on a picture-frame stage is dispensed with in favour of a religious rite performed together by adults and children, by lay choral singers and professional artists, each with his or her own individual perspective on a 2,000-year-old text and its history of cultural impact.

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